Posted on 01/07/2018 5:53:18 PM PST by Coleus
New York City is using eminent domain to take an East Harlem businessman to the cleaners. Damon Bae, whose family success story embodies the American Dream, is about to lose the shirt off his back after a 12-year battle with the city for control of his dry cleaning enterprise.
Fancy Cleaners, a 6,000-square-foot facility at the corner of 126th St. and Third Ave., was supposed to be the cornerstone of a family empire built by a Korean couple who came to the U.S. in 1981, bringing their tailoring skills with them along with two young children and endless ambition. But an eminent domain claim filed by the city in 2008 and enforced after years of legal challenges in March 2017 means Baes family no longer owns its premier property.
Now Fancy Cleaners has nowhere to go, and the whole enterprise will likely shutter, said Bae, 42, who runs the business created through decades of hard work by his immigrant parents. The city has offered my family about 30 cents on the dollar on the market value for what our three lots are worth thats not enough to buy anything comparable in East Harlem today, Bae said. The citys working so hard to meet the developers timeline; meanwhile, were trying to stay in business.
The city said it would pay the Bae family $3.5 million for the lot holding Fancy Cleaners when it took the property title through eminent domain in the spring, Bae said. The asking price for a similar 5,000-square-foot lot about five blocks south of Fancy Cleaners current location is $11 million, Bae said.Its like you own a Mercedes-Benz, and someone offers to reimburse you for the price of a Hyundai Sonata, the frustrated co-owner said.
The city has also fought having to pay Bae for the fixtures in the Fancy plant and its machinery, too valued at well over $2 million, he said. The Law Department did eventually offer Bae $615,000 for the fixtures but nothing for the machinery, he said. Yet even as the city put the $615,000 on the table, its lawyers also asserted they had the right to try to reclaim the money at a future date, according to Bae. On top of that, Bae got hit with a staggering rent bill: $30,000 a month, for every month since April that Fancy Cleaners has stayed in the building the family once owned.
The city stood in front of a judge (and) said they would pay us $615,000 for the fixtures. Once out of court, were suddenly told they are taking $320,000 for back rent, Bae said. Even if the family could find an affordable lot to buy, the business cant move overnight, Bae said. It would take months to set up the right water lines and get permits for his heavy, chemical-laden machines.
At the same time, Bae has to keep the East Harlem facility running to make money. We cant just shut down to move how will we keep the business afloat and serve our customers? he asked. The logistics have forced Bae to confront a grim reality: The family company may be no more. We are being run out of business. The city is just squeezing us dry. Its like dealing with the Mafia . . . and we are so tired of fighting, he said.
Baes family saga began in 2003, when his parents bought three vacant lots along a bleak stretch of undeveloped East Harlem land. The parcels stood in a 150-block urban renewal zone approved in 1968 but the privately owned lots were carved out of the footprint, records show. The titles came back clear, Bae noted. The city owned most of the other lots and did nothing to develop them. The Bae family tried to buy several more, but the city rejected their offers and let them sit empty and derelict, Bae said.
The Bae family used their corner lot as a processing facility for Fancy Cleaners, owned by Bae and his father. Ideally situated near a network of highways and the FDR Drive, and two blocks from the subway, it functions as home base for Fancy Cleaners network of fast and affordable dry cleaning storefronts around Manhattan. All the clothes travel to East Harlem for treatment even hand stitching by 78-year-old tailor Juan Medina and can be returned to clients that same day.
We had a lot of grand ideas and plans when we came here. We hoped to turn the plant into a dry cleaning academy to teach people from the neighborhood the skills needed to work in the trade, Bae said. All that remains now of that dream is a forlorn sign on Fancys awning that says Dry Cleaning Academy. In 2005, the Bloomberg administration signaled its intent to snatch up all the lots inside a two-block spread from 125th to 127th Sts. between Third and Second Aves. including those held by private owners.
The city argued the area was blighted and should be condemned so a big developer could use the 6 acres to build the $700 million East Harlem Media Entertainment and Cultural Center. Bae, along with the other half-dozen small-business owners in the zone, chafed at the blighted description, noting that their companies were all viable.
The only blight was in the vacant lots the city allowed to sit empty, Bae and the others argued in court as they challenged the land grab. In 2011, a reluctant Appeals Court panel agreed with the city. Justice James Catterson wrote that the citys description of the lots as blighted was nothing but a canard to aid in the transfer of private property to a city developer. Yet the Appeals Court was unable to oppose the land grab, Catterson noted, due to recent rulings restricting its oversight of eminent domain cases.
Even as the courts failed Bae and the other business owners, there appeared to be salvation in the 2008 economic recession: The developer went bust, and the project stalled. We had hope the city would consider taking us out of the renewal zone, Bae said. They could have easily built around us. That didnt happen and when Mayor de Blasio took office, the push to develop the East Harlem area took off again.
By then, the Bae family was already feeling the financial strains of their precarious position. For one thing, they struggled to pay their taxes on the two vacant lots, which underwent steep increases as they fought the citys eminent domain claim. From 2003, when each lot was taxed at approximately $2,400 a year, the taxes rose to over $18,000 each in 2011. Every year after that, the taxes jumped again, until by 2014 Bae was shelling out roughly $70,000 for each lot, and by 2015, nearly $80,000 each. It was insane the taxes on our vacant lots were far more than the taxes for the lot where we had an actual business, he said.
But to not pay would mean the city could take the properties through a tax lien and the family wasnt ready to give up. Already shelling out thousands in legal fees the family has spent around $500,000 over 12 years to try to hold on to its property Bae was forced to hire another lawyer to challenge the citys tax assessments.
That lawyer noting in a letter to the city that Baes taxes increased 3,160% between 2006 and 2016 got a tax reduction and clawed back some money, but kept a cut. The next year, the tax assessment was sky-high again meaning Bae had to repeat the process. And it was all coming out of the family pocketbook.
We couldnt get any money to develop the vacant lots, because who is going to give you a loan when the property is likely to be taken away? And we couldnt sell for the same reason, or expand the business we did have, Bae said. At the height of their success, the family had 10 Fancy Cleaners.
After a decade of fighting to escape the shadow of eminent domain, the family is down to three, he said. Bae held out some hope that de Blasio or former City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito (D-Manhattan) would help him save the family enterprise even as the final court battles wound down in 2017 and his family lost its deeds in March.
Bae said he reached out to de Blasio, the city controllers office and Mark-Viverito. Nobody ever got back to me, he said. Citing ongoing legislation, a spokesman for the city Economic Development Corp. declined to comment on the amounts offered to Bae for the family land and the Fancy Cleaners production facility, where about 15 people are employed.
Bae has decided to launch one last legal challenge. Hes taking on the citys payment offers for his properties alleging the amounts are not fair market value. The city had an assessment done and said, Here you go, 30 cents on the dollar, and if you want the other 70 cents, take us to court and try to get it, Bae said. It will take years. When completed, the E125 project, as it is now known, will include 1,000 units of housing, including at least 800 deemed affordable, as well as commercial and community space.
While the original project predates this administration, were proud to have added even more affordable housing and to be delivering good jobs for the East Harlem community, said EDC spokesman Anthony Hogrebe. The EDC said it also hired a broker to help Bae find alternative sites for his business. It was that broker, said Bae, who showed him the comparable property available for $11 million.
George W. Bush did this to get a stadium for the Texas Rangers.
George W. Bush did this to get a stadium for the Texas Rangers. >>
politicians love to ignore the bill of rights, they think they have a right to break them.
Liberals love eminent domain until Bush or Trump do it. Harlem? Korean was of the wrong race
Eminent Domain has become a government-mafia-like business.
Guess he won’t be “movin’ on up to the East side to a deeluxe apartment in the sky.”
Guess he wont be movin on up to the East side to a deeluxe apartment in the sky. >>
lol, that’s for sure...
Beat me to it.
George Jefferson actually was a Republican.
George Jefferson is one of the most conservative TV characters of all time. He came from dirt poor poverty, worked hard and made a better life for himself. Didn’t want a handout and had no time for those who wouldn’t earn on their own. Built up a successful small business empire and always looked our for his employees. A good family man who put his wife and son first, and took care of his elderly mother. Also a Navy vet.
Damon Bae, you didn’t build that. -Obama
A lady lost her property here in WA over the same thing. The city then did nothing with the property and sold it to a car dealership.
New York City is in the process of ethnically cleansing non-whites out of Harlem.
No Longer Majority Black, Harlem Is in Transition
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/06/nyregion/06harlem.html
“ The 1990 census counted only 672 whites in central Harlem. By 2000, there were 2,200. The latest count, in 2008, recorded nearly 13,800.”
It is well known that Korean merchants are the victims of racism and violence from the Negro communties which they serve. They are the only merchants tough enough to endure living in a war zone.
If NYC is going to take this man's livelihood, then he should be paid market value for his property.
....George Jefferson?
You just know some DeBlasio crony is going to get rich off this and that there will be kickbacks to his campaign. Its how the Democrat world goes round when they are fighting for the little people.
While Trump used eminent domain on one or more properties in Atlantic City, there is no comparison to be made to the scale and size and investment of this business to the rooming house that resisted Trump, even though he offered several times more than the property was worth. That property recently sold for about a quarter of what Trump had offered. Their big headline-grabbing play to soak the rich didn’t work and Trump just built around them. He won; they lost.
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