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Bedfellows! Rival pols Levin, Restler battle — together and apart — to move MTA bus depot

The Brooklyn Paper

Two young political rivals are working separately to move the MTA from a waterfront lot in Greenpoint that has been slated to become a park since 2005.

Councilman Steve Levin (D–Greenpoint) and Democratic District Leader Lincoln Restler — likely opponents in many upcoming elections — are pressuring the transit agency and the city to move a bus depot to another site and facilitate the construction of a new park.

The pols are going about it in very different ways — mirroring their different approaches to politics and policy.

On Tuesday morning, Restler staged a mock eviction at the site and posted an “eviction” notice on the property’s chain-link fence, just below the official “No trespassing” sign.

“The community of Greenpoint will not tolerate the MTA’s ongoing disregard for the urgent lack of park space in our neighborhood,” thundered Restler. “We demand that the MTA live up to its promise to vacate.”

Meanwhile, Levin has been working the back rooms, meeting with city officials and wrote a scathing letter to MTA Chairman Jay Walder pointedly reminding him of the authority’s promise to turn over the property six years ago, and questioning why several alternative sites in Brooklyn and Queens were continuously rejected.

“The commitment made by the city for open space at 65 Commercial was perhaps the most promising provision of the 2005 rezoning for the residents of northern Greenpoint,” said Levin. “It is my hope that all interested parties — the city, the MTA, local elected officials, and the community — can work together expeditiously to resolve any outstanding issues.”

Community leaders have harangued Bloomberg administration officials and the MTA for not getting the relocation out of first gear for several years.

But this uncoordinated, political tag-team approach appears to be working.

On Tuesday afternoon, MTA spokesman Aaron Donovan said that the authority still plans to vacate the site “as soon as appropriate replacement sites are available,” and two vacant, city-owned sites in Maspeth, Queens and Williamsburg are promising.

“We are pleased to be actively moving forward on two viable sites,” said Donovan. “We are optimistic that a replacement facility can be built there once environmental issues are resolved.”

Levin praised the move, noting he “expects to see significant progress in the near future.”

And Restler called the announcement “a potentially a big win for Greenpoint.”

Both budding pols attended the same college — Brown University, the quirky “black sheep” of the Ivy League — bonding during late-night study breaks at the campus library in 2003.

But the men pursued divergent paths in Brooklyn politics several years later, when Levin began working for Assemblyman Vito Lopez (D–Williamsburg), the county’s party leader, and Restler helped found an insurgent political club whose goal is to oust Lopez from power.

Each secured dramatic election victories — Levin emerging from a bloody seven-way primary in 2009, and Restler toppling a county-backed candidate by less than 150 votes last year— and both are seen as rising on the Democratic Party.

Or, more accurately, supernovas on an explosive collision course.

Updated 10:56 pm, February 16, 2011: Full disclosure: Aaron Short got a Masters Degree in History from Brown University, whatever good it did him.

Reader Feedback

Ben from Greenpoint says:
this Restler guy looks like to be a very aggressive person, we need him to change, a lot of corruption in the district,

just keep up your good work!! we all looking forward working with you and for you....

Feb. 17, 2011, 1:19 pm
voter from park slope says:
It must be nice to be Restler. Levin does all the real work, but Restler holds at fifteen minute press event and gets to share the credit. To argue that one lightly attended press event influenced anything just proves this paper's incredible bias.
Feb. 17, 2011, 1:54 pm
Besty from Brooklyn Heights says:
I don't think I can bear to see Restler's face on campaign posters in a couple of years. For the sake of our eyes (and our neighborhoods), please do not run.

What is the opposite of the Warren G. Harding effect?
Feb. 18, 2011, 9:16 pm
Gary from Greenpoint says:
It feels like the Brooklyn Paper is trying to start some sort of political rivalry that doesn't exist. Levin isn't up for reelection for years. Why not just write about the issues and the park. Are actual community issues not sensational or juicy enough for the Brooklyn Paper?
Feb. 20, 2011, 12:31 am
George from Slope says:
What the hell does Lincoln Restler know about politics? Just because he became a carpet-bagging district leader and he goes to every political event in town to show-face, doesn't make him an expert on anyones political motives. Let's be serious and clear about Lincoln Restler: Mr. Restler is using this "meaningless" position as a district leader as a stepping stone to challenge Councilman Levin in 2013. Much to Restler's chagrin, Levin is working very hard in the 33rd Council District and winning the hearts and minds of constituents across his district. (Might I remind you, Levin is an extension of the great work that Assemblyman Vito Lopez has done for the County of Kings.)
Feb. 28, 2011, 4:45 pm

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