CD 3 candidate Corey Johnson misrepresents his role in developing
affordable housing in Brooklyn, repeatedly taking credit for a project that
not only has no affordable housing: it has no housing at all.
Last month, City Council Watch broke the story of Corey
Johnson’s work for real estate developer GFI, which he had scrubbed from his
record. In response, Johnson has changed
his campaign website, adding some information about his work history and his
present employment:
[…serving] at GFI Development Company on community outreach
on two hotel projects in Manhattan and an affordable housing related project in
Brooklyn. Corey currently works part-time in LGBT marketing at the Sydell
Group.
The “affordable housing related project” Johnson refers to
is 470 Vanderbilt Avenue, in Fort Greene.
The building, a former tire factory which was at one point supposed to
house tech companies, stood in disuse before GFI bought it in 2008 with plans
to rehab the building as mixed-use residential and commercial space, ideally
capturing a major City agency as a long-term tenant.
As part of the deal to allow GFI to build out the structure
and sign the Human Resources Agency to a 20-year lease, the company agreed to
build a 350-unit residential building on the site of the building’s parking
lot. The company, after negotiations
with local Council Member Letitia James, agreed to include 90 affordable units,
more than the usual 20% allowance in such projects.
Corey Johnson worked for the GFI development team at 470 Vanderbilt,
and at a West Village community forum on June 19, he made a strong case for the
good work he and GFI did in increasing the stock of affordable housing in
Brooklyn. Video was taken of his speech, and we have transcribed his comments:
One more thing, to be fully transparent: the same company that built that hotel on 29th
and Broadway, they were going to do a residential building in Fort Greene in
Brooklyn, on a former manufacturing lot.
They asked me to come in and work with the local community board in Fort
Greene, and the local Council Member, to make sure there was an affordable
housing component to that building. When
we started off, before I came in, they were going to do 20% affordable
housing. When the rezoning was over, I
got them up to 26% affordable housing, and maximized the number of
two-bedrooms, for people in the community that needed affordable housing.
Sounds great! Between this impassioned and detailed
description of all the affordable two-bedroom apartments Corey Johnson fought
to build, and his discussion of the project on his website, who can deny that Corey
Johnson and GFI are a force for good? As
he says, he single-handedly pushed GFI to increase the amount of affordable
housing they were going to build.
The only problem is that none of the housing was ever built. 470 Vanderbilt is an office building. Nobody lives there, and nobody can live
there, because the entire lot, including the part where the residential units
were to be built, was zoned as commercial real estate by GFI in 2011, while
Johnson was still employed by the company.
Corey Johnson hedged the impact of his work on 470 Vanderbilt when, on his campaign website, he speaks of an
“affordable housing related project.”
But when he spoke at the community forum he lost control of what
he was saying: he takes full credit for plans that were never realized. The two-bedrooms that he is bragging about
having built “for people in the community” do not exist.
We spoke to Council Member James
about what happened to the affordable housing component of the 470 Vanderbilt
project. She commented about the problem
of getting developers to commit to actually building what they promise to
build, and noted that this problem is endemic to the land use process in New
York City generally.
Regarding 470 Vanderbilt, CM
James said, “I pushed very hard to get affordable housing established in that
project. Corey was part of the development team, and he may have negotiated
behind the scenes. I don’t know the
extent of his work on the project.
However, unfortunately, the lot is still a parking lot.”
So, according to the council
member with whom Corey Johnson claims to have worked to build more affordable
housing, his involvement was vague at best, and James has no specific recollection of his participation.
We thought that Corey Johnson
was slightly deceptive when he tried to deflect attention from his professional
association with a real estate developer, but many candidates for office
massage their bios, and it isn’t necessarily a major sin. However, we now see Johnson making public
speeches where he overstates and distorts his role in land use negotiations,
and furthermore, brags passionately about fantasy residential developments that
were never built, as though people are actually living in them!
Corey Johnson builds castles in
air and is irate when his good faith is challenged. We have heard a lot of grandiose
megalomaniacal politicians talk wildly about their achievements, but they usually take credit for things that actually exist. Johnson appears to
be an utter fabulist, an egoist with scant regard for reality, pointing at a barren lot and waving at all the happy people he has housed there.