Metr

Cuomo backs off putting COVID memorial in Battery Park following backlash

By Carl Campanile and Bernadette Hogan

July 2, 2021 | 3:59pm | Updated July 2, 2021 | 4:59pm

Following outcry from Battery Park City residents, Gov. Andrew Cuomo has backed off a plan to take green space from a beloved local park to make way for a concrete coronavirus memorial to essential workers.

Battery Park City Authority chairman George Tsunis, a Cuomo appointee who doesn’t reside in the community, told residents the governor agreed to relocate the “Circle of Heroes” COVID workers memorial out of Rockefeller Park in BPC, a giant lawn where neighborhood kids play.

“This site is going to change. It’s going to be a new site. It’s off the table. Ok,” Tsunis during a discussion with BPC residents in Rockefeller Park on Thursday, which was posted on Instagram.

The residents around him applauded.

Workers carry off construction equipment intended for a COVID memorial at Rockefeller Park in Battery Park City on June 29, 2021.
Workers carry off construction equipment intended for a COVID memorial at Rockefeller Park in Battery Park City.
Robert Mecea

Tsunis said state officials thought Rockefeller Park was a good location — until they heard a backlash from residents. The task force the governor created to study sites for a workers memorial was comprised solely of union leaders, not Battery Park residents.

“When additional facts were brought to [our] attention it’s good to analyze those and pivot, which is what we did,” Tsunis said..

He later added, “You have my apologies.”

Local residents protested Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s proposed COVID memorial for removing too much green space.
Local residents protested Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s proposed COVID memorial for removing too much green space.
Robert Mecea

Tsunis said he and Cuomo agreed that green space should not be taken from residents.

“We share, we share that goal … We are one mind, and everyone else is of one mind. Not only do I understand. I overstand,” he said.

“We will not come in the middle of the night and we’re not trying to pull a fast one.”

Tsunis said the governor is “pushing me” to find another location for the memorial to be erected by Labor Day weekend.

He said Cuomo told him, “Look, as long as we can find a more suitable location…we’re not going to please everyone.”

Andrew Cuomo
Andrew Cuomo has backed off a plan to take green space from a beloved park to make way for a concrete coronavirus memorial to essential workers.

Tsunis said the new location will be in a more “commercial area” and “nowhere near where kids play.” He did not rule out that the Essential Workers Memorial will be located elsewhere in Battery Park City, which is state-owned property.

A Cuomo spokesman said the memorial will be located elsewhere in Battery Park City.

Tsunis clearly was cleaning up a mess.

Outraged BPC residents said earlier this week they were blindsided and steamrolled by Cuomo, who made the initial announcement last week to erect the “Circle of Heroes” memorial for COVID workers in Rockefeller Park — without input from the community.

The new memorial will feature an eternal flame along with 19 red maple trees, symbolizing the 19 types of essential workers who kept the city afloat during the darkest days of the pandemic.

Construction workers had already placed machinery in the park to begin work on the memorial before irate residents rebelled.

COVID-19 has killed more than 50,000 New Yorkers, including many essential workers.

A child draws banners demanding Rockefeller park’s space be left untouched by Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s COVID memorial proposal.
A child draws banners demanding Rockefeller park’s space be left untouched by Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s COVID memorial proposal.
James Messerschmidt