Urge Support for the National Heritage Area Act

This advocacy alert is reposted from our colleagues at Preservation Action 

Urgent action is needed to advance the National Heritage Area Act of 2021 (S. 1942H.R. 1316). This important bill would create a much-needed uniform system to reauthorize National Heritage Areas, allocate standard funding, and provide universal standards to how current and future National Heritage Areas (NHAs) are managed and designated. This bill would reauthorize and provide certainty for the 55 current NHAs, including reauthorizing 30 NHAs that are in immediate need and establish 5 new ones. NHAs produce nearly $13 billion in annual economic impact and every dollar in federal funding is matched by an average of $5.50 from other funding sources.

The National Heritage Area Act was advanced by the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee with strong, bipartisan support and was added to the Senate Calendar for the current legislative session. This does not mean the Senate will get to it and time is running out, as Congress needs to take action before the end of the year.

Take action! Urge your Representative and Senators to support the National Heritage Area Act and include it as part of any omnibus package. Check out the Alliance of National Heritage Areas to learn more about National Heritage Areas and this important bill. 

FederalPLNYS Staff
Letter to the Governor: Sign the Unmarked Burial Site Protection Act

The Unmarked Burial Site Protection Act (S5701 / A6724) was passed by both the NYS Senate and Assembly earlier this year. This legislation is long overdue and the League strongly encourages the Governor to sign it into law. If she does not sign the bill before December 31, 2022, it will be effectively vetoed. For more about this issue, please also follow the Shinnecock Graves Protection Warrior Society, who have led much of the advocacy around this topic on Long Island.

December 1, 2022

The Honorable Kathy Hochul
Governor of New York State
NYS Capitol Building
Albany, NY 12224

Dear Governor Hochul,

On behalf of the Preservation League of New York State, I write to urge you to sign the Unmarked Burial Site Protection Act, which provides important protections for human remains in unmarked burial sites across the state that are in danger of damage from construction and other disruptions.

New York is one of only three states that lack statewide protection for unmarked burial sites. In recent years, graves associated with Native American Nations, African American communities, and Revolutionary War soldiers have been discovered during construction or development. In the absence of clear legal protocols, the human remains in these sites have lacked protection from desecration and destruction, as do those in other such sites yet to be discovered. The Unmarked Burial Site Protection Act will finally establish a clear legal process to protect human remains discovered during construction, by requiring that these sites and remains are treated with respect, the proper authorities are notified, and the remains are ultimately handled in an appropriate way. 

The League strongly encourages you to sign this important legislation.

Sincerely,

Katie Eggers Comeau
Vice President for Policy and Preservation

Joint Letter to the East Hampton Town Board in Support of the James Brooks and Charlotte Park Home and Studios

Click here for a PDF of this support letter.

November 17, 2022

Supervisor Peter Van Scoyoc and Members of the Town Board
Town of East Hampton
159 Pantigo Road
East Hampton, New York 11937

Dear Supervisor Van Scoyoc and Members of the East Hampton Town Board,

Preservation Long Island, the Preservation League of New York State, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the leading historic preservation advocacy organizations at the regional, state, and national levels, have all identified the James Brooks and Charlotte Park Studios and Residence as a top priority for preservation and rehabilitation due to the property’s exceptional significance in the history of mid-century modern art and design. The buildings used and occupied by Charlotte Park and James Brooks represent a unique opportunity to celebrate their legacy for the benefit of East Hampton residents and visitors, connecting their lives and careers to a broader culture of artistic achievement in this part of Long Island. In 2021, Preservation Long Island listed the site in its Endangered Historic Places List; the National Trust similarly included it on its the “Eleven Most Endangered Places” list in 2022; and the Preservation League named the site one of its “Seven to Save” properties in 2022.

We continue to express our concern for the buildings’ condition if they remain poorly maintained, and urge, in the strongest possible terms, the Town of East Hampton to take swift and significant steps to stabilize and protect the Brooks-Park Studios and Residence ahead of the 2022-23 winter season to prevent further damage, particularly due to water infiltration.

We know full well that their current unprotected status is not due to a funding constraint, but a deficit of political will. The Town has the authority – in fact, the obligation – as well as the funding necessary to stabilize the buildings, and to hire a consulting preservation architect qualified to conduct a thorough assessment of the buildings’ condition and the feasibility of rehabilitation. In § 112-1-50A[4], the East Hampton Town Code requires the Town to “manage and maintain historic properties consistent with accepted standards for historic preservation” (see also § 64-E.9[d] of the enabling New York Town Law). In regard to hiring a consulting preservation architect, please see § 64- E.13 of the enabling New York Town Law for the Peconic Bay Region Community Preservation Fund, which explicitly permits expenditure of fund monies for “cost of employees and independent contractors to implement the provisions of this section.”

Preservation Long Island, the Preservation League of New York State, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation encourage the Town of East Hampton to treat the Brooks-Park Historic Landmark as the treasure that it is, a place that tells the stories of James Brooks and Charlotte Park and their contributions to the development of Abstract Expressionism, as well as an opportunity to celebrate the extraordinary artistic heritage of the Springs. Given the property’s historic significance and cultural importance, we urge the Town of East Hampton to secure the site.

Our collective lenses are focused on preserving this unique, irreplaceable cultural and historic heritage site. Further neglect is the least attractive and most unpopular option. We will follow up in 30 days and eagerly await news of your action.

Sincerely,

Seri Worden
Senior Field Director, National Trust for Historic Preservation

Sarah Kautz
Preservation Director, Preservation Long Island

Katie Eggers Comeau
VP for Policy and Preservation, Preservation League of NYS

NYSPLNYS StaffBrooks-Park
Letter of Support: Former Masonic Temple in Schenectady

Local advocates in Schenectady, led by our colleagues at Schenectady Heritage Foundation, are currently lobbying for historic overlay zoning of the 1918 Masonic Temple. Located on the corner of State Street and Erie Blvd, the building occupies a prominent location in Schenectady’s Downtown district — a neighborhood included on the League’s Seven to Save list back in 2000. The League’s VP for Policy & Preservation Katie Comeau submitted the following letter to the Schenectady Planning Commission in support of the local historic designation of the former Masonic Temple.


To: Planning Commission, City of Schenectady Department of Development
Schenectady City Hall, 105 Jay Street Schenectady, NY 12305

Dear Commissioners:

On behalf of the Preservation League of New York State, I am writing in support of the local historic designation of the former Masonic Temple at the intersection of State Street and Erie Boulevard. This building has been determined eligible for the State and National Registers of Historic Places “as an excellent local example of an early twentieth century Neoclassical commercial building,” and meets the criteria for local landmark designation as well.

Constructed in 1912 as retail and showroom space for a local furniture store, the building was remodeled several years later to serve as a Masonic temple. Its historic association with the local Masonic organization, as well as its architectural significance and visual prominence, all contribute to its significance and worthiness for landmark status.

At the League, we support efforts by local preservation advocates and municipal preservation boards to designate and protect historic buildings, districts, and landscapes that are important to their communities. Retention and reuse of historic buildings is beneficial to community character, economic revitalization, and environmental sustainability. We encourage the Planning Commission to recommend inclusion of this building in the OH Overlay Historic District.

Sincerely,

Katie Eggers Comeau
Vice President for Policy and Preservation, Preservation League of NYS

NYSPLNYS Staffsupport letter
HTC-GO Approaching 100 House Cosponsors!: Continue to Request Cosponsorship and Connect with Legislators Back Home

Cross-posted from our colleagues at the National Trust Community Investment Corporation, a subsidiary of the National Trust for Historic Preservation

Thank you to all the advocates who reached out to congressional offices, led local meetings, and hosted tours of HTC projects in August! At this critical time, we continue to gain support for the HTC-GO, with 97 House members and 14 Senators cosponsoring the bill. We are steadily approaching our goal of 100 cosponsors in the House and 20 cosponsors in the Senate!

As the 117th Congress winds down, members of Congress will head home in October ahead of the November elections. Depending on the outcome of the elections, Congress will determine whether it will be an active lame-duck session or if it will limit activity to organizing for the new Congress. Scores of federal tax incentives have expired or will expire in 2022, resulting in growing interest from Republicans and Democrats to extend these tax provisions.

Year-end legislation may be a vehicle for HTC improvements. Building support for the HTC-GO now will pave a path for success when year-end legislative vehicles begin to move, possibly during a lame-duck session of Congress.

With about seven remaining weeks until the election, advocates are encouraged to do the following:

  1. Use the National Trust E-advocacy tool to contact offices to request cosponsorship of the Historic Tax Credit Growth and Opportunity Act (HTC-GO, HR 2294/S. 2266)

  2. Look for opportunities to meet with legislators when they are back home in October. Please connect with Senators and Representatives back home to request cosponsorship of HTC-GO. We encourage you to safely attend upcoming political events and gatherings to discuss the HTC-GO bill. As many did in August, you can also proactively schedule a time to meet with legislators for a meeting or a tour of a local HTC project, especially projects that will become easier to undertake with the HTC if the proposed changes are enacted.

Take Action:

  1. Request cosponsorship through the National Trust for Historic Preservation's E-Advocacy tool.

  2. Review the HTC-GO fact sheets to stay informed:

    1. House HTC-GO (HR 2294) Fact Sheet

    2. Senate HTC-GO (S. 2266) Fact Sheet

  3. Search local and political events or join a local political party's email list to learn about events your members of Congress might be attending.

  4. Invite your members of Congress to tour successful historic preservation projects. Take a look at the National Trust's guide to arranging a site visit.

  5. Email Michael Phillips (mphillips@ntcic.com) to receive the schedulers' email addresses for your members of Congress and for additional assistance in making your request.

  6. Check to see if your members of Congress have already cosponsored:

    1. House HTC-GO Cosponsors

    2. Senate HTC-GO Cosponsors

Talking Points for Discussions with your Members of Congress:

  • "Now is the time to strengthen this proven incentive to address the slowdown and challenges in rehabilitation projects across the country."

  • "Would you please cosponsor House Bill H.R. 2294/Senate Bill S. 2266-The Historic Tax Credit Growth and Opportunity Act (HTC-GO) and work to include these provisions in year-end legislation?" If the legislator has already cosponsored the bill, thank them instead of asking them to cosponsor.

  • Explain how enacting these provisions would benefit your community.

  • Please share the "State of the Historic Rehabilitation Industry" and either the House HTC-GO Fact Sheet or the Senate HTC-GO Fact Sheet as printed handouts or links/attachments as a follow-up.

Resources

Thank you for your advocacy! For assistance in contacting the offices of your members of Congress, please contact us at the email addresses below.

Mike Phillips mphillips@ntcic.com
Shaw Sprague
ssprague@savingplaces.org
Patrick Robertson
probertson@confluencegr.com

Federal, Tax CreditsPLNYS Staff
Preservation Action Launches 2022 Historic Preservation Congressional Candidate Survey

Shared from our colleagues at Preservation Action:

Preservation Action is excited announce the launch of our 2022 Congressional Candidate Historic Preservation Survey. For the fourth time, Preservation Action is surveying U.S House and Senate candidates across the country to gauge support of key national preservation programs and policies. We plan to share the results of the survey widely before the Midterm elections in November. We conducted a candidate survey prior to the 2016, 2018, and 2020 elections and received hundreds of responses. We are excited to hear from even more candidates this year and will be working with our network of state and local preservation organizations to help spread the word.

The goal of the survey is multi-faceted; to educate congressional candidates on the federal historic preservation program, gauge their level of support for critically important preservation programs and policies, educate PA members and supporters on the candidates positions and gain useful insights into congressional candidates background with historic preservation. Using the results of our Grassroots Survey as a guide, the survey asks the following questions:

  1. Do you support stable and robust funding for the Historic Preservation Fund?

  2. Would you support efforts to permanently reauthorize and enhance the Historic Preservation Fund?

  3. Would you support efforts to update the Federal Rehabilitation Tax Credit (HTC) program?

  4. Would you support policies that assure the impact to historic and cultural resources continue to be considered in the federal project planning process?

  5. Does historic preservation play an important role in your state/district? How so? Describe any personal connections to historic preservation or historic sites. Is there a specific historic place in your district that is important to you and your constituents?

Help support this important work by following up with congressional candidates in your state, urging them to complete Preservation Action’s 2022 Congressional Candidate Survey. A copy of the survey and letter are available here. A list of contact information for congressional candidates (divided by state) is available here. Candidates that have already responded are highlighted in yellow.

FederalPLNYS Staff
Advocacy Alert: Speak Out Against the Penn Area Plan

Penn Station needs to be improved, but the current Penn Area Plan is not the answer. Join us in speaking out against it!

What's at stake

The League included the Penn Area Neighborhood on our Seven to Save list because Empire State Development's (ESD) proposed Penn Area redevelopment plan would demolish multiple city blocks, including over 40 historic buildings and structures, displacing thousands of residents and businesses. The negative environmental impact of this needless demolition would be a catastrophe. The plan itself raises numerous, serious questions that have yet to be answered, especially regarding how the project will be paid for. The lack of transparency is an insult to locals, and this kind of top-down governmental overreach poses a threat to communities across the state — not just our largest city.

Click here to read an open letter to Governor Hochul from League President Jay DiLorenzo.

What can you do? 

From our colleagues at Human-Scale NYC and the Empire Station Coalition:

Write to the Public Authorities Control Board and tell them to reject the General Project Plan for Penn Station. It is fiscally irresponsible and puts taxpayers statewide on the hook for an unknowable amount of money. This is contrary to the public interest. The project speculates on a revenue stream that might never come to fruition after what Empire State Development says will be a 22-year build out of supertall office towers by Vornado. This project does nothing for transit efficiency. Instead of doing real economic development, this project merely turns our government into a real estate speculator.

Write or call the members of the Public Authorities Control Board today:


Empire Station Coalition is a group of concerned community organizations led by co-coordinators Sam Turvey of RethinkNYC and Lynn Ellsworth of Human-Scale NYC, who banded together in 2020 to fight the Penn Area Plan. ESC has worked tirelessly to push the Plan's many flaws to the forefront of public attention.

NYSPLNYS Staff
A Letter to Governor Hochul: Pause the Penn Area Plan

In this open letter to Governor Kathy Hochul, League President Jay DiLorenzo urges her to use her authority to halt Empire State Development’s planned approval of the Penn Station Area project on July 21. The League included the Penn Area Neighborhood on our Seven to Save list because that plan would demolish multiple city blocks, including over 40 historic buildings and structures, displacing thousands of residents and businesses. The negative environmental impact of this needless demolition would be a catastrophe. The plan itself raises numerous, serious questions that have yet to be answered. The lack of transparency is an insult to locals, and this kind of top-down governmental overreach poses a threat to communities across the state — not just our largest city.

Penn Station needs to be improved, but the current plan is not the answer. Join us in demanding that Governor Hochul put a stop to Empire State Development’s planned approval on July 21!


July 15, 2022

The Honorable Kathy Hochul
Governor of New York State
NYS State Capitol Building
Albany, NY 12224

Dear Governor Hochul,

The Preservation League of New York State respectfully asks that you use your authority as Governor to delay Empire State Development Corporation’s planned approval of the Penn Station area project, currently scheduled for July 21. 

The plan raises numerous, serious questions about its viability that have not been addressed, including how it will be financed, and what will happen if, especially given the weak demand for office space in a pandemic and post-pandemic world, the expected revenue does not materialize. Even if all those questions could be answered, the plan would still represent a colossal waste of resources, energy, irreplaceable architecture, and building materials.

The Empire State Development Corporation’s proposed Pennsylvania Station Civic and Land Use Project (the "Penn Area Plan") represents an unfortunate return to the Urban Renewal mindset of the mid-20th century, which promised that large-scale demolition would somehow lead to more viable and vibrant cities. Cities throughout the state and nation bear witness to the devastation caused by speculative demolition without a feasible rebuilding plan. Thousands of irreplaceable historic resources – of which the original Penn Station is an iconic example – were lost and wastefully discarded. Governor Hochul, we urge you to avoid repeating the mistakes of the past by halting this ill-conceived plan.

The current Penn Station is, without doubt, in need of improvement, and the League has no objection to upgrades that will improve the station’s functionality and aesthetics. What we strongly oppose is the plan to demolish multiple blocks of historic buildings in the vicinity of the station in the hope that private redevelopment will raise revenue for station improvements. We also oppose the opaque and top-down planning approach, which has utterly lacked the transparency and respect for local land-use procedures we thought the current administration championed.

All told, over 40 historic buildings and structures stand to be lost while displacing thousands of residents and businesses. The immediate impact on the people who live and work in this neighborhood would be devastating. The needless demolition is an environmental catastrophe. The negative environmental impact related to the embodied carbon that is wasted when buildings are demolished and put in a landfill, combined with the carbon output of major new construction projects, is in direct opposition to New York State’s proclaimed climate action goals. It is for these reasons that the Preservation League included the Penn Neighborhood on our current Seven to Save list of endangered historic places – underscoring the magnitude of the threat this community faces given the proposed Penn Area Plan. 

Penn Station needs to be improved, but the current Penn Area Plan is not the answer. The people of New York deserve better. Along with our New York City-based colleagues at the New York Landmarks Conservancy and the grassroots activists of the Empire Station Coalition, the League strongly urges Governor Hochul to put a stop to Empire State Development’s planned approval on July 21.

 

Sincerely,

Jay DiLorenzo
President, Preservation League of NYS

Click here for a PDF of this letter.

NYSPLNYS Staff
Letter of Support for the Proposed South of Union Square Historic District

The proposed South of Union Square Historic District is one of this year’s Seven to Save. This neighborhood in Manhattan boasts a wide variety of of building types, many of which have ties to important social and cultural movements. Our colleagues at Village Preservation have been pushing for landmark designation and zoning protections to preserve the area’s historic character, limit out-of-scale construction, and prevent needless demolition. The League’s Vice President for Policy & Preservation Katie Comeau recently submitted a public letter of support for these efforts.

“We recognize that no historic district, whether in Manhattan or anywhere else in New York State, can or should be frozen in time. Change defines this and other Manhattan neighborhoods and will continue to do so. As you know, historic district designation does not and should not prevent all change, but provides a mechanism for managing change in a way that is respectful of the history and character of the district, balances competing concerns, and does not cede control over the process to aggressive development interests.

On behalf of the Preservation League, I urge you to support the designation of the proposed South of Union Square Historic District.”

Click here to read the full letter.

NYSPLNYS Staff
Letter of Support for the Brooks-Park Home and Studios

Through the recent inclusion of the James Brooks-Charlotte Park Home and Studios on the 2022-2023 Seven to Save list, the League is working alongside local advocates as well as colleagues at Preservation Long Island and the National Trust for Historic Preservation to advocate for the protection of this important historic site. As the East Hampton Town Council deliberates over how to proceed with the Brooks-Park site, VP for Policy and Preservation Katie Comeau sent a letter of support to East Hampton Town Supervisor Peter Van Scoyoc and members of the Town Council to publicly and explicitly encourage the Town to preserve the site and all four buildings on its grounds. As Katie details in her letter, “Our Seven to Save selection committee was impressed by the Brooks-Park property due to its unique architectural and historical significance and its potential to be both a recreational and historical asset to the town of East Hampton. The committee was equally impressed by the passion of local advocates and their vision for the future of the property as an artistic and environmental sanctuary. Charlotte Park and James Brooks drew inspiration from the natural world while in their home and studios; those who visit today can similarly immerse themselves in nature while also experiencing and learning about the artists’ contributions to Abstract Expressionism and their place in the remarkable Long Island art community in the mid-twentieth century.”

Click here to read the full support letter.

NYSPLNYS Staff