Interesting item on the 99 year least on the World Trade Center - oh
pardon, the Twin Towers........the public as usual getting the shaft in
the long run.

Larry Silverstein had plans on the table for rebuilding a day or two
after the explosion - four buildings he said, were old plans.

Recently he left Israel in a rage and the deal he wanted to pull over
there was not quite "kosher" either.    Noted on this one the sale of
this World Trade Center is contrary to law - so this explained the 99
year lease - more sleaze on sleaze.

Is there a Contract on America?

Saba

Larry Silverstein for some reason got the auction bid for the
"lease".....one company had stepped aside.



Week of March 7 - 13, 2001
Towers & Tenements
by J.A. Lobbia
World Trade Center Lease Deal Could Slash Housing Revenue
Trust Fund Trussed?

Previous Columns
3/6/01 It's Not Just the Poison Gas . . .

When the titans of real estate waged a bidding war last month for
control of the World Trade Center, the average citizen was, of course,
nowhere in the picture.

And why should common folk be part of a multibillion-dollar contest
among giants like Mort Zuckerman, the Vornado Realty Trust, and
developer Larry Silverstein?
(Silverstein eventually got the lease - Saba Note 99 years )

Sure, the building in question is owned by a public agency, the Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey. But its status as an authority
makes it one of the most independent, least accountable taxing bodies in
government, the type of entity favored by empire builder Robert Moses.
What is surprising is that, for a moment, average New Yorkers had in
fact been in on the deal. Almost. That's because ever since Governor
George Pataki announced in 1995 that he wanted to put the World Trade
Center into private hands, a few politicians have proposed using the tax
proceeds of that privatization to fund affordable housing. But now, a
host of political feuds and corporate favors threaten to ditch that
plan�and any other that would have relied on the $100-million-a-year
tax purse that the 13 million square-foot office complex was expected to
generate.

If that pot of revenue disappears, sources say, there are no others like
it in the offing.
City Council speaker and mayoral candidate Peter Vallone was the main
proponent of using Twin Towers' taxes to establish an affordable housing
trust.

"Part of the reason Vallone focused on the World Trade Center taxes was
that it had the advantage of being new money," says one source. "That
made it very attractive.

You wouldn't have to rob Peter to pay Paul. If those taxes don't come
in, it will make it much harder to take the housing money out of the
budget."

Taxes generated by a privatized World Trade Center were expected to be
about three times the tax bill paid by the Port Authority, which, as a
government agency, got a break on its tax bill; most recently it was
about $29 million a year.

When the authority auctioned off a 99-year lease for the WTC on February
23 (it is forbidden from selling the mega-office complex outright), it
assured the winning bidder, Steve Roth's Vornado Realty Trust, that it
would have to pay no more taxes than the authority itself had.

While the deal is not final�the authority and Vornado, which offered
$3.25 billion for the lease, have until March 14 to work out
details�the city may wind up with no windfall. Because the Authority
is so autonomous, it argues that it has wide berth to offer Vornado tax
breaks, even if that stiffs the city.

Further mucking up the deal is the ongoing political battle between
Mayor Rudy Giuliani and the Port Authority. In 1995, Giuliani, long a
critic of the authority, sought arbitration on whether the authority has
skimped on nearly $1 billion in rent due to the city. He is now trying
to take over the authority's leases on Kennedy and LaGuardia airports
when they expire in 2015.

Last week, Port Authority chair Lew Eisenberg said he was "willing to
discuss with the City in good faith the resolution of all matters
between the City and the Port Authority," suggesting that he would link
the issue of WTC taxes to the airport leases.

In the meantime, the city's commissioner of finance Andrew Eristoff
wrote to Vornado's Roth and informed him that the company would be
responsible for the full tax bill. The city plans to sue over the issue,
probably invoking a state law that makes a 99-year lease the legal
equivalent of a sale and therefore subject to full taxation.

Vallone first announced his housing plan for the WTC tax proceeds in his
1999 State of the City address. He proposed using the tax cache to start
an affordable housing trust fund that would begin building 20,000 units
of middle- to moderate-income housing within five years by providing
long-term, low-interest loans to developers. Experts agree that the city
needs about 250,000 additional apartments to adequately house its
residents

In his State of the City speech this year, Vallone adjusted the expected
taxes down to $80 million, but said it could be "leveraged into a
revenue stream worth $1 billion." Last week, Vallone wrote to Eisenberg
to complain about the WTC deal.

     "I firmly believe that any effort to privatize the World Trade
Center must include returning the complex to full City tax status. . . .
Failing to do so will only impair the City's ability to invest in major
and critical improvements,"

he wrote, describing his housing plan.

Besides Vallone, mayoral candidate and public advocate Mark Green
mentioned the WTC taxes as a possible source of housing money in a
candidates' forum last year, although it is not a central component of
his housing plan.

Even if the full tax bill on the WTC was paid, it is unclear that
Vallone's plan could succeed; some tenant advocates say it is merely a
pie-in-the-sky scheme the candidate is proffering to overcome his
landlord-friendly past.

But it has at least elevated the need for affordable housing to a more
visible role in the upcoming mayoral race. In fact, the first public
debate among the Democratic mayoral candidates took place in Harlem last
fall and focused exclusively on housing. Even the outgoing mayor is
getting into the act, announcing a day-late and dollar-short housing
plan in his final State of the City speech.

If plans for housing funded with WTC tax revenues go south, it won't be
the first time that officials pinned their hopes for easing the housing
crisis on the Twin Towers.

In the 1960s, earth excavated to build the trade center was used as
landfill on the Hudson River, where the luxury development of Battery
Park City would eventually rise. Money from the development was to be
used to build 60,000 units of low- and moderate-income housing across
the city.

Instead, according to a recent investigation by New York Times reporter
Eric Lipton, those dollars have been diverted.

 Even the most generous count puts the number of affordable apartments
brought on line with Battery Park City proceeds at a paltry 4350.

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