Saturday sees the return of Pale Male and friends to the top of A1 of the New York Timesand a hint of hope for the newly homeless hawks. The NYT article lays blame for the nest-removal debacle at the foot of 927 Fifth Avenue's co-op board, which didn't bring the issue of nest removal to a full shareholder vote:
The nest, board members said, had to go. There would be no vote among shareholders. Several people familiar with the discussions said it was [Richard] Cohen who had headed the effort, even though his wife [Paula Zahn] had once proclaimed her affection for the birds on television.Among the 10 or so people present at the October co-op board meeting were several from the 927 Fifth Avenue residents roster posted in this space on Thursday: Robert A. Belfer, who, we learn is a former director of Enron, plus Dr. Robert Schwager and Mary Tyler Moore's husband, Dr. Robert Levine, who objected at the meeting on his wife's behalf.The building's management company, Brown Harris Stevens Property Management, had warned of a public backlash. "We told Richard it would be extremely controversial," said Noreen McKenna, a Brown Harris Stevens agent who serves as secretary to the board.
A hint of hope: the Daily News reports that building residents, feeling the heat from protesters, are considering a compromise, a rooftop tower for Palemale, Lola, and cohorts.
· No Fighting the Co-op Board, Even With Talons [NYTimes]
· Wing and a Prayer [NYDailyNews]
· Who's Who at 927 Fifth Avenue [Curbed]
· Hawk Nest Down at 927 Fifth [Curbed]
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