AP Newsbreak: Spitzer unveils first policy plans
Aug 21, 2013, 7:11 AM
NEW YORK (AP) – Unveiling the first policy proposals of his comeback campaign, comptroller candidate Eliot Spitzer called for sweeping reforms to the New York City public housing system and delivered a sharp rebuke of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s suggestion of fingerprinting tenants.
Spitzer, the former governor who resigned in disgrace in 2008 after admitting to paying for sex with prostitutes, was scheduled to announce the wide-ranging housing plans at a news conference Wednesday. They include a critique of the city’s plan to lease public housing land to private developers.
“Sweetheart lease deals with private developers shortchange (the New York City Housing Authority) and its residents,” writes Spitzer in his policy proposal, which was obtained by The Associated Press. He calls for a resident advisory board to review any sales.
His Democratic primary opponent for comptroller, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, has also cautioned the Bloomberg administration to increase community involvement with the so-called “infill” plan. Housing authority officials believe selling land at eight Manhattan housing developments could provide up to $50 million annually for the cash-strapped agency.
Spitzer has made it central to his campaign that he would expand the reach of the office of comptroller, the city’s financial officer. His initial policy rollout clearly wades beyond the normal boundaries of the office, in particular in his condemnation of Bloomberg’s idea to have building doors at housing developments only open by a resident’s fingerprint.
“Like stop-and-frisk, this practice unfairly targets people of color without addressing the heart of the problem,” the comptroller candidate wrote in the policy proposal,
Bloomberg’s comments about fingerprinting Friday appeared offhanded, and his spokesman later clarified that the city was not working on a proposal to fingerprint the 400,000 housing authority residents, the majority of whom are black and Latino. The same minority groups are frequently questioned by police using the New York Police Department’s stop-and-frisk tactic, which is used to stop people deemed acting suspiciously.
A judge has ordered a federal monitor to oversee the tactic. Bloomberg is appealing the decision.
Spitzer’s criticism of the fingerprinting suggestion appears to be a subtle twist on a recent campaign theme _ to attack Stringer by linking him to contentious Bloomberg ideas.
“The reason why we had a third term is that the political establishment, with Scott’s support and participation, gave the mayor a third term,” Spitzer said during a debate last week.
Stringer supported the change in the city charter that allowed Bloomberg to seek re-election in 2009 but later campaigned for Bloomberg’s opponent. He blasted the fingerprinting suggestion as “outrageous.”
In the policy statement, Spitzer also chided the housing authority for not spending all of the federal funding it received in capital improvements, as well over $40 million given by the City Council and state lawmakers to put security cameras in high-crime areas.
Cameras had only been installed at 11 of the 86 high-crime buildings as of last month, though housing authority officials insist they will all be operational by year’s end.
“The establishment has failed NYCHA residents for too long,” Spitzer campaign spokesman Hari Sevugan said in a statement. “What they deserve, and the city needs, is an independent voice who will fight to bring them improved safety, higher quality and greater responsiveness.”
Stringer has also been critical of housing authority delays in installing the cameras.
A Quinnipiac University poll released last week had Spitzer ahead of Stringer 56 percent to 37 percent. The poll of 579 likely Democratic primary voters had a margin of error of 4.1 percentage points.
The two men square off in their final debate Thursday night. The primary is Sept. 10.
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