The Brooklyn Paper: SNA Newspaper of the Year, 2007

The current issue
Neighborhood Map
Bay Ridge
  • Bensonhurst, Dyker Heights
Brooklyn Heights
  • Downtown, DUMBO
Carroll Gardens
  • Cobble Hill, Red Hook, Boerum Hill
Fort Greene
  • Clinton Hill, Crown Heights
North Brooklyn
  • Williamsburg, Greenpoint, Bushwick
Park Slope
  • Prospect Heights, Windsor Terrace, Greenwood Heights
GO Brooklyn
Brooklyn Cyclones
Not Just Nets
Police Blotter
Perspective
Parenting
Politics
Transit
Podcasts
The Brooklyn Bride
Brooklyn Boom
Classifieds
Merchant news
About The Paper
RSS Feeds
Mikey’s Hookup

$weetest deal for Domino lobbyists

The Brooklyn Paper

A development firm hoping to build nine luxury condo towers on the Williamsburg waterfront has paid lobbyists more than a half-million dollars to convince city officials to approve its plan.

Over the past two years, Community Preservation Corporation paid the firm Herrick Feinstein at least $537,000 to prod the city to OK the zoning change necessary to build the $1.2-billion, 2,400-unit project on an 11-acre Domino Sugar site currently set aside for manufacturing.

The rezoning application is pending.

Lloyd Kaplan, a spokesman for CPC, told The Brooklyn Paper that lobbying is “a necessary function of doing business with the city” for developers.

Brooklyn Bridge Realty

“It’s as essential to development as a blueprint,” Kaplan said. “And what New York City calls lobbying, other places call lawyering. The city takes a very broad view on who has to register as a lobbyist.

“Herrick Feinstein is doing legal work that relates to the rezoning and development process,” he added. “These are land-use lawyers who have the skills needed to navigate the complexities of the city’s land-use policy. They’re not influence peddlers.”

Perhaps, but Herrick Feinsten does boast on its Web site about how its “network of government contacts” helps secure “land-use permits” for clients.

And New York Public Interest Research Group lawyer and spokesman Gene Russianoff says lobbyists often exploit connections with the government offices they are paid to lobby.

“It’s a sad fact of New York life that developers feel like they have to hire lobbyists to dot their i’s and cross their t’s on their paperwork, especially the ones that use their former connections with city government to influence decisions,” Russianoff said. “The community, by contrast, often doesn’t have the resources or the connections to hire lobbyists and it creates the feeling of a David and Goliath situation.”

Before its latest lobbying work, Herrick Feinstein helped grease the wheels for Muss Development’s 850-unit Oceana Condominium and Club in Brighton Beach, where two-bedroom condos start at $680,000 and three-bedroom penthouses go for as much as $1.9 million. Muss shelled out more than $237,000 in lobbying fees to Herrick Feinstein from 2000–2005.

Those lobbying figures pale by comparison to Forest City Ratner, which spent more than $2 million to lobby state and local officials to support the Atlantic Yards project in 2006, state records show.

Reader Feedback

Enter your comment below

By submitting this comment, you agree to the following terms:

You agree that you, and not BrooklynPaper.com or its affiliates, are fully responsible for the content that you post. You agree not to post any abusive, obscene, vulgar, slanderous, hateful, threatening or sexually-oriented material or any material that may violate applicable law; doing so may lead to the removal of your post and to your being permanently banned from posting to the site. You grant to BrooklynPaper.com the royalty-free, irrevocable, perpetual and fully sublicensable license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform and display such content in whole or in part world-wide and to incorporate it in other works in any form, media or technology now known or later developed.

First name
Last name
Your neighborhood
Email address
Daytime phone

Your letter must be signed and include all of the information requested above. (Only your name and neighborhood are published with the letter.) Letters should be as brief as possible; while they may discuss any topic of interest to our readers, priority will be given to letters that relate to stories covered by The Brooklyn Paper.

Letters will be edited at the sole discretion of the editor, may be published in whole or part in any media, and upon publication become the property of The Brooklyn Paper. The earlier in the week you send your letter, the better.

Buffalo Wild Wings
Frame It in Brooklyn
Corcoran
La Bagel Delight