[This speech was delivered at the November 15th, 2005 scoping hearing
on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Columbia expansion
proposal]
Tonight, we, the people of Harlem, are making history in our total
opposition to Columbia University's 17-acre land grab in West Harlem
for a $5 billion expansion that would double the size of its current
campus in a city today where there are 1.6 million New Yorkers mired in
poverty and over fifty percent of black men jobless. So much for the
priorities of the so-called liberal institutions whose real priority is
that of a multi-national corporation--enriching its coffers on the
dispossession of the poor, the working class, and small businesses.
Columbia University's conduct and decorum to date throughout the entire
scoping process has been one of typical racial arrogance, duplicity,
lies, disinformation and misinformation. The University was forced to
admit it held secret meetings with the Empire State Development
Corporation, to jump start its application to seize private property
under the State's eminent domain law, and for assistance in acquiring
property below street with the intention of building facilities five to
seven stories below ground.
For the record, the proposed expansion site is not a blighted area,
although the assemblage of sites and warehousing of space by Columbia
may give the appearance of blight. Therefore, it is crucial that the
EIS include an analysis of Columbia's proposed Manhattanville campus
development without eminent domain as an alternative.
We must look at an alternative that will have in-field development
focused on preserving existing residential buildings, businesses that
want to stay, and buildings that are proposed for historic
preservation. Secondly, the Draft Scope must include proposed
methodologies to determine the appropriateness of takings by ESDC.
Thirdly, Community Board #9's 197-a Plan must be analyzed as a
comprehensive alternative to Columbia University.
Just let me say something about mitigating factors, primary and
secondary displacement. We have an example here of 3333 Broadway.
People have been displaced. If you didn't get the enhanced voucher, you
are now paying triple and double rents. Look -- try to imagine what is
going to happen thirty years from now. Do you think that this
neighborhood is going to look like this? No, it won't. Because Columbia
University is determined that the Upper West Side will be an Upper East
Side.
We must resist. We must mount a campaign of resistance and fight back
because if we don't, we will not be here, our children will not be here
and we will not recognize this place. We have no other alternative but
to fight back and we must do it together. And we must hear the voices
of the people of color. You can't sit back. You have to speak out, even
if it's to utter one sentence. Get up. Speak in your own language. Get
up. Rise up, in the tradition of the [Inaudible]. Get up and speak out
because only you can give authenticity to your own voice. Let us tell
them, Columbia University, that we, the people [INAUDIBLE] in 1968, we
will defeat them again this year and next year and the next five years
and the next ten years. We will defeat them because we have no other
place to go. We have no other place to go. You can't go to the Bronx,
you can't go to Brooklyn, because you are being priced out. You['ve]
got to take your stand here. It is our last stand and this is our
Waterloo.
Harlem Tenants Council
21 West 130th Street
New York, N.Y. 10037
1-800-546-1133
info@harlemtenantscouncil.org