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Community At Odds Over Use Of A Plot Of Land In Queens

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  • Community At Odds Over Use Of A Plot Of Land In Queens

    NY1, NY
    Jan 13 2007

    Community At Odds Over Use Of A Plot Of Land In Queens

    January 12, 2007

    Some Queens residents are seeing red over a plan to turn a piece of
    green space in their neighborhood into a daycare center. NY1's
    Ruschell Boone filed the following report.

    `We don't need that,' said Ann Jawin of the Douglaston Bay Manor
    Civic Association. `What they need is outdoor playing space. That's
    what these kids need.'

    Some Douglaston residents and a local church are at odds over what to
    do with this city-owned land on 234th Street and 39th Avenue. Many in
    the neighborhood say the city should build a public park here.

    `This community has no parkland whatsoever,' said Queens City
    Councilman Tony Avella. `There is no opportunity for a passive
    recreation park or for children to come and play. It's about time for
    this community to have a park just like every other community in the
    city.'

    `It would be lovely to have a park here in the summer where you could
    just sit and relax or maybe have a picnic,' added resident Marie
    Marsina. `And we don't have that here and I think it's vital to a
    community to have a place where everyone feels it's a neighborhood.'

    But church leaders at St. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church, which is
    next to the vacant land, are trying to buy the property so it can
    build a daycare center on the lot.

    `I believe that a daycare center is much more important to the
    community,' said the head of the church, Aram Cazazian.

    But many here say the daycare center would mostly benefit the people
    who drive to the area and commute from the nearby Long Island
    Railroad station. The head of the church agrees, but he says having
    the center is still better than building a park.

    `We believe that each house in this neighborhood has a big backyard,'
    added Cazazian. `Those backyards will serve very well for any kind of
    playing grounds for the kids that live here.'

    The church is in talks with the city's Housing Preservation and
    Development agency to buy the property, which condemned the land
    decades ago to make way for an extension of 39th Avenue, a plan that
    was later scrapped.

    The residents are now trying convince HPD to turn the property over
    the Parks Department, but HPD did not return NY1's calls for comment.


    A sale of the land to the church would have to go through the
    community board and the city council for approval, but the residents
    say they are hoping it will not get that far. They say they may try
    to purchase the land and build their own park.

    - Ruschell Boone NY1
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