Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Keep Moving on Moynihan Station and Hudson Yards

Two of the city’s greatest public-private projects on Manhattan’s West Side have suffered setbacks in recent weeks. First, various government entities have hinting that Moynihan Station—a $900 million project that ballooned into a $14 billion mega-development—will never see the light of day. Then, a deal between the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and a real estate developer to create office towers, apartment buildings and parks over the rail yards on the far West Side collapsed.  read more »

A Look Back: Amtrak, the Postal Service, and the Hatching of Moynihan Station

The Farley Post Office-turned-rail station envisioned
ESDC
The Farley Post Office-turned-rail station envisioned


An addendum to our article earlier this week on the never-ending Moynihan Station saga: The concept of converting the Farley Post Office into a rail station is widely viewed as belonging to the late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, its most persistent advocate from the early 1990s until his death in 2003. But the history goes back a bit further, and started as a partnership between the U.S. Postal Service and Amtrak, both of which stood to gain from a redevelopment of Farley.

Two of the major forces behind the plan's genesis: Donald Pross, who served as Amtrak’s director of real estate and development until 1995, and Dennis Wamsley, who ran the Postal Service’s asset management division.

Amtrak, eager to have a more presentable flagship station, was looking at options of how to improve Penn Station in the late 1980s and early 1990s, according to Mr. Pross.

Around the same time, a postal service executive was heading up a program known as asset management for the agency, finding ways to take existing properties, add other uses, and bring in some new money.  read more »

How Daniel Moynihan’s Dream Became a Hangover

Daniel Patrick Moynihan before a press conference in 2002 outside the Farley Post Office building. In the background is former Empire State Development Chairman Charles Gargano.
Getty Images
Daniel Patrick Moynihan before a press conference in 2002 outside the Farley Post Office building. In the background is former Empire State Development Chairman Charles Gargano.

Sometime around late 1991, Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan caught wind of a plan being studied by Amtrak and the U.S. Postal Service to expand Pennsylvania Station into the neighboring Farley Post Office. The two agencies envisioned an expanded rail station with a sense of grandeur, as Penn Station’s train platforms ran under the column-lined post office.

New York’s senior senator, a Manhattan native, was sold on the concept almost immediately; he placed the estimated $315 million project at the top of his agenda. From then until his death, in 2003, he became the project’s biggest advocate as he pieced together the support of local politicians, fought for funding in Congress, and brought in President Clinton for the push. Now, still just a concept, the plan bears his name.  read more »

On Facebook, Bloomberg Advisor Sheekey Leaves N.Y. for D.C.

If there was an award for loudest cheerleader encouraging Michael Bloomberg to run for president, it would unquestionably go to Kevin Sheekey, one of his political advisers, who keeps finding both big and small ways to suggest that the mayor will enter the race.

The latest: a subtle change to Sheekey’s profile on Facebook.

A reader who Sheekey 'friended" on Facebook pointed out that Sheekey recently left the “New York” network and joined the one for “Washington D.C.” Technically, Sheekey hasn’t worked in the capitol since his days with Pat Moynihan.

The changes he made to his profile after the jump.

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Maura Moynihan in the Middle on Dad’s Penn Station Dream

Maura Moynihan sees Moynihan Station as ‘a transportation project first and foremost.’
Joe Fornabaio
Maura Moynihan sees Moynihan Station as ‘a transportation project first and foremost.’

The late senator’s daughter finds herself caught between developers and preservationists on massive Moynihan Station project.  read more »

Pataki Says Less is More

Gov. Pataki had a few choice words for Shelly Silver this afternoon, opening his statement on the Moynihan rejection with a quote from the real Moynihan: "The single most exciting thing you encounter in government is competence, because it's so rare."

He also, for the first time, brings up the burning question that has lurked behind this project since trouble started brewing earlier this year: Would going ahead with the partial Moynihan plan now have put the state and city government in a better negotiating position vis-a-vis tax breaks for Madison Square Garden and the contribution for a redeveloped Pennsylvania Station--than it would be if it were to wait until everything came together before breaking ground?

Pataki says yes: "New Yorkers and visitors from around the world should not be held hostage to an effort to finance a new Madison Square Garden on the backs of taxpayers."

Full statement after the jump.  read more »

-Matthew Schuerman

Ex-Schumer Rumor, Governor; New One, President Chuck!

Chuck Schumer
Getty Images
Chuck Schumer

We should have known it: It turns out that Senator Charles Schumer was never really interested in th  read more »

Rudy vs. Bush

You know that line-item veto that President Bush is pushing at the moment?

Here's what Rudy's press office had to say back in 1998:

Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani today congratulated Senators Alfonse D'Amato and Daniel Patrick Moynihan on the crucial roles they played in protecting $2.6 billion in Medicaid funding for New York City and State. On June 25, the U.S. Supreme Court, by a 6-3 margin, struck down as unconstitutional the Line Item Veto Act adopted by Congress in 1996. The decision protects New York City hospitals against a loss of federal Medicaid funds that could have been as great as $2.6 billion.
The Sun's editorial board has more.

His Holinesses

We hear the Dalai Lama will stop by the Farley Post Office this Sunday to pay tribute to his late friend, Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, for whom the post office will be renamed—once it turns into a train station. Turns out the two went way back, and the Senator’s daughter, Maura, agitated for Tibetan rights before she began agitating for the train station. No time set but His Holiness’s official schedule shows him to be across the street at Madison Square Garden at 3 p.m.
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Bolton's Nomination Defies G.O.P History

There is an unspoken but long-understood historical tradition among both the Republican and Democrat  read more »

A Million-Dollar Senator: Schumer Gets Into Big Ring

New York's senior Senator, Charles Schumer, recently had a nightmare-well, not exactly a nightmare,  read more »

Ex-Schumer Rumor, Governor, New One, President Chuck!

We should have known it: It turns out that Senator Charles Schumer was never really interested in th  read more »

Gay-Marriage Opponents Distort Moynihan's Views

Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan's widow, Elizabeth, was puzzledto learn that her husband's name had  read more »

Mike's Brain: Moynihan Guy Playing Rove

Kevin Sheekey, the Democrat behind the Republican National Convention, stood in the shade of a trail  read more »

New York's Moynihan: A Museum's Tribute

Growing up in Buffalo, Tim Russert knew nothing about one of the city's landmarks, the Prudential bu  read more »

Is Everybody Aboard For Penn Station?

Over an Irish coffee at O'Neill's pub on Third Avenue, where she and proprietor Ciaran Staunton exch  read more »

Sandy Weill, Eliot Spitzer And The New York Stock Exchange

We have a high regard for Eliot Spitzer, our State Attorney General, but the recent flap over Sandy  read more »

Is Penn Station Being Stalled? Moynihan Back

On April 1, while in his offices at the Woodrow Wilson Center inWashington, D.C., former Senator Dan  read more »

Moynihan Plays Patsy for Bush's Pension Plan

most exactly five years ago, a senior member of the UnitedStates Senate took the floor to deliver an  read more »

Even in Retirement, Moynihan Stirs Debate

The leader of the Democratic Party in the U.S.  read more »

Outdated New York Review : Radical Chic Forever

Almost everyone knows a sad sack who can't move on.  read more »

The Irreplaceable Pat Moynihan

So now we know who will be taking Daniel Patrick Moynihan's place in January. Depressed yet?  read more »

What Does She Know? Cool Mrs. Clinton Skates to a Finish

Hillary Rodham Clinton is a brilliant candidate.It took this reporter one year, three months and two  read more »

Lazio's Cheap Stunt

Why do spontaneous gestures during political debates always seem so well-rehearsed?  read more »

A September Deadlock on Governors Island Between City, State

It's been five years since President Clinton, flying aboard a helicopter over Governors Island, made  read more »

The Post-Liberal Lion: Moynihan's Roaring Life

The Gentleman from New York: Daniel Patrick Moynihan , by Godfrey Hodgson, Houghton Mifflin, 452 pag  read more »

Moynihan's Valedictory: Saving Social Security Is the Only Priority

"It is the goddamnest thing that nobody wants to talk about those things."Speaking was the man who w  read more »

Lazio's Role Model? Hold Onto Your Hats: It's Senator D'Amato

Rick Lazio, surrounded by a tight ring of cameras, crouched down on a rooftop playground at a child  read more »

Ironists Can't Bear Bradley's Truth-Telling

The contempt heaped upon Bill Bradley in recent weeks is a sure sign that he is a decent human being  read more »

Hillary's Got a Fella-Pat Moynihan

Maybe it's just because he had major back surgery last spring, but Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan h  read more »

New Trouble in Paradise: Giuliani-Pataki Storm Hits Governors Island

Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan brokered the real estate deal of the century while he was soaring in  read more »

You Talkin' To Me? Now's Not the Time for Senator Hillary

At a certain level, the proposed Senate candidacy of Hillary Rodham Clinton makes a great deal of se  read more »