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C.B. 3 chairperson: ‘Another direction’ on S.L.A. Committee means give others a chance to lead

BY LINCOLN ANDERSON | What exactly does “another direction” mean in terms of the policy of Community Board 3 on bars and restaurants?

Anti-bar watchdogs have been desperate to know the answer to that question ever since, over the Christmas holiday, Alexandra Militano was summarily stripped of her position as chairperson of the Community Board 3 State Liquor Authority and Department of Consumer Affairs Licensing Committee.

In demoting Militano, who had chaired the key committee for 19 years, board Chairperson Alysha Lewis-Coleman reportedly told her the East Village/Lower East Side board needed to move in “another direction.”

To many locals, those words raised alarms that the new direction would mean something they vehemently oppose and fear — namely, the Lower East Side Business Improvement District taking a greater hand in vetting liquor-license applications and setting stipulations for nightlife operators’ businesses in the already oversaturated district.

Many residents who attended the Zoom virtual committee meeting used images like this to “fill their boxes.” (Photo by The Village Sun)

At the committee’s meeting this Monday night, the end of the Zoom session was left open for locals to weigh in on the contentious move. Residents had two minutes each to make a statement.

Laura Sewell, executive director of the East Village Community Coalition, said, “I have never received the volume of concerned e-mails and phone calls that I have about this change. You do need to know it has caused great concern and outrage among many residents. Especially during the pandemic, about how they’re being treated like a nuisance by some operators. It’s been a rough couple of weeks [since Militano’s demotion and talk of ‘another direction’]. People are very anxious.”

A member of the Suffolk St. Block Association who only gave her name as Nora said, “I think there are a lot of concerns that the ‘new direction’ is removing the public [from the review process]. If we keep approving more liquor licenses, other businesses won’t come in. I am sick of every business being a restaurant and bar! You know, we’re not stupid! I’m really upset.”

Not exactly “Hollywood Squares”: Local residents made it clear that they wanted to know what C.B. 3 Chairperson Alysha Lewis-Coleman meant when she said, in a private conversation, that the board needed to take “another direction” on its committee that reviews liquor licenses.

Hope Beach, a member of the Orchard St. Block Association, said, “We do not want the BID to have anything to do with the licensing. And we’re just interested in knowing, what does ‘change of direction’ mean?”

Beach noted that when she moved onto Orchard St. 15 years ago, there were not any liquor-licensed business on the stretch between Delancey and Canal Sts.

“And look at it now,” she said, “it’s like a feeding frenzy.”

Stuart Zamsky, an officer of the E. Fifth St. Block Association, said, “We want to know what that [new] direction is. We want to know why Alexandra Militano was not qualified to pursue that direction. And we want to know why Michelle Kuppersmith was qualified to pursue that direction.”

In addition, Zamsky said, “If the committee is overwhelmed with work, then form a second committee. We don’t need a BID to do our government work.”

In fact, Community Board 2, on the West Side, has two S.L.A. committees that meet on separate days of the month.

Zamsky complained that the opportunity to comment on Militano’s losing her chairpersonship had not been mentioned on the meeting’s online agenda, which would have alerted more people to it.

Similarly, Diem Boyd, the leader of the LES Dwellers, said more discussion was needed beyond the brief session tacked on at the meeting’s end.

“I’m hoping that there is going to be a bigger public forum than tonight,” she said.

However, as Diem started to say that Susan Stetzer, the board’s district manager, had been “unfair,” the audio abruptly went silent.

“I was muted by her,” Boyd announced a few moments later.

Boyd was later given 30 seconds to speak again, making up for when she was cut off. The committee’s ground rules are that speakers not directly criticize others.

Under the format set by the committee’s new chairperson, Michelle Kuppersmith, committee members did not respond to each of the residents’ comments. However, at one point, Lewis-Coleman gave a statement of her own — though also keeping it to two minutes.

This image was also posted in numerous residents’ boxes on the screen during the C.B. 3 committee’s Zoom virtual meeting. (Photo by The Village Sun)

Last week, Lewis-Coleman, due to a death in the family, was reportedly unavailable to comment to The Village Sun about the S.L.A. committee controversy. On Monday evening, however, she made her first public comment on the issue.

“I never mentioned anything about the BID to Alex when I had the private conversation,” she said. “And as far as the ‘new direction,’ it was the direction of leadership. Someone has to have the opportunity of leadership.”

In short, Lewis-Coleman said that Militano had held the committee chairpersonship for 19 years and it was time for a change. Also, as approved by New York City voters in a ballot referendum, community board members now are term-limited; Coleman-Lewis said that was also a factor in her move — that C.B. 3 must be prepared for how term limits will affect the board’s makeup.

“Term limits are going to hit us all, and we have to move on,” she said.

Some residents, though, said it was not right for Lewis-Coleman to characterize her conversation with Militano when Militano was not there to speak for herself.

It was not immediately clear why, but Militano did not attend Monday night’s meeting. She did not immediately respond to a phone call for comment. Herman Hewitt, a longtime former vice chairperson of C.B. 3, did not respond to an e-mail requesting comment on Militano’s demotion and also asking if he knew why she did not attend Monday night’s meeting.

Hewitt and four other members of the committee recently wrote an open letter to local elected officials, fellow C.B. 3 members and local block associations voicing their concern about how Militano’s demotion was handled.

In addition, supporters of Militano charge that she was axed from the post because she did not vote for Lewis-Coleman for board chairperson. In addition, Carolyn Ratcliffe, chairperson of the board’s Arts Committee, was also recently stripped of her leadership position. Ratcliffe also reportedly did not vote for Lewis-Coleman for chairperson.

Lewis-Coleman could not immediately be reached for comment.

Despite their distress over the purge of Militano, residents credited Kuppersmith with running a good first meeting.

5 Comments

  1. Ramona Ramona January 14, 2021

    CB3 is always surrounded by controversy and corruption. The board does not represent our community one iota. Until a new Boro Prez and City Council is elected and Susan Stetzer is finally removed, this community board will remain a big fat joke (that harms the community, by the way).

    Right now MBP Gale Brewer (had hope for her but turned out more of the same machine politics), CM Margaret Chin (expected to be and always has been disappointing) and CM Carlina Rivera (hope in her was dashed as soon as she supported the Tech Hub and wrapped herself in Corey Johnson. She needs to be primaried next time — too bad, not this time) all get a proxy in Susan Stetzer, who will do what they need and she gets to act badly because they protect her.

    There is a reason the board is pretty much the same old white people! The same politicians keep reappointing them and anyone new or good is run off by them, leaving only the bootlickers. Maybe CBs should not exist at all. They do not really work.

    Just put the SLA Committee chairperson back and let her train a new chairperson. What an easy solution!

  2. Carol Carol January 13, 2021

    We all knew from an SLA Community Board meeting two (?) years ago on East 5th Street, when Susan Stetzer (who left the meeting early) and Alysha Coleman introduced a representative from BID, what was in the wind. It was underhanded that this “change in direction” (a thinly veiled plan to include the BID in the process of granting liquor licenses and to get rid of a strong SLA Committee chairperson) was all put in place during the Covid crisis and over the holidays. What about public input? Alexandra Militano always had the residents’ best interests in mind with her recommendations. And under the new rules on term limits (that Alysha noted as a reason to remove Alex), she would have 6+ years more to watch over our neighborhood.
    Term limits? How long has Susan Stetzer been district manager?

  3. Lisa Lisa January 13, 2021

    New S.L.A. Committee Chairperson Michelle Kuppersmith is the new Gigi Li. Stetzer found a new patsy to do her dirty work. Buckle up, residents. Known Susan for a long time and she is giddy with power right now. She finally got rid of Alex, who didn’t take her crap. The BID is already working behind the scenes with her and her toadies, like Michelle, Alysha, Crane and Berg. All of them are the reason why nobody stays on the community board. Lots of shady people on CB3. Until they go, nothing gets better on CB3.

  4. Marianna Marianna January 13, 2021

    Can we have new leadership at the District Manager level then? She is a permanent dictator almost there.

  5. Stuart Stuart January 12, 2021

    So Alysha Coleman simply will not speak to The Village Sun? Or anyone else about the specifics of the removal of Militano as chairperson? She did forget to mention that the term limits that she so heavily relied on as a reason is not retroactive. Militano is legally permitted to continue in that position for years! The leadership’s longstanding preoccupation with adding the BID to the process naturally makes residents concerned about the SLA Committee becoming the old boys club it was some years ago under David McWater’s tenure. If CB3 would publicly recommit to the SLA guidelines posted on their own web site it would be reassuring to skeptical residents.

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