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  #881  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2009, 5:07 AM
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Originally Posted by Zerton View Post
on hold?
Been on hold since late last year I believe.
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  #882  
Old Posted Jul 6, 2009, 8:47 PM
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http://www.observer.com/2009/real-es...-wtc-stalemate

Silverstein Goes to the Mattresses! Takes Legal Action To End WTC Stalemate

By Eliot Brown
July 6, 2009


The private developer of three buildings at the World Trade Center, Larry Silverstein, is taking a legal action to break an impasse over the rebuilding of the site destroyed in 2001. The move is a significant change in course, as it comes after the top elected officials in the city and state attempted, and failed, to broker a revised deal amid the economic crisis.

In a letter sent Monday to other stakeholders involved with the project, Mr. Silverstein claims the Port Authority, which owns the site, is in default on numerous aspects of its development agreement. The letter starts the formalized arbitration process, which will ultimately put the matter before a three-person panel to rule on the issue.

It seems Mr. Silverstein is hoping that arbitration will provide a broad resolution for the project. The economic crisis has made it impossible to finance Mr. Silverstein’s three planned towers, and he has refused to start construction on two of his towers, a move that would further delay other portions of the site, including the PATH terminal and the museum.

In the recent set of talks—called by Mayor Bloomberg—and in the letter to officials, Mr. Silverstein has been driven by a contention that the delays under the Port Authority’s watch (of which there have been many) have made it impossible for him to get financing. Port Authority officials have denied this as, even before the delays were announced, the lending markets were clamped tightly, and the economic crisis that began last fall made it impossible to build any large speculative office space, delays or not.

“If not for the Port’s failures, the project clearly would be much, much further along – and we would have had the opportunity to finance in a much more positive economic climate,” Mr. Silverstein wrote in Monday's letter. “The agency has failed to make good on these promises, repeatedly dragging its heels in the negotiations. And despite the new schedule announced in October 2008, the Port Authority hasn’t accelerated its key projects at the site. The Port has no realistic schedule for its construction work and no integrated logistics plan.”

He said he has been left with “no choice but to utilize the agreed procedures” for a “swift” arbitration to set a new course. This would seem to imply that Mr. Silverstein wants substantial monetary damages from the Port Authority.

“We believe [arbitration] provides perhaps the last and best hope for providing a fair and equitable outcome that everyone can live with, and – most important - for finally getting the World Trade Center rebuilt.”

Below is the letter from Mr. Silverstein. He also sent a formal letter along with a May letter that he sent to the Port Authority accusing it of numerous breaches in its contract with his firm.

The question now becomes just how much can be resolved in arbitration. While Mr. Silverstein seems to be working under the impression that it can expeditiously deliver him what he wants, the Port Authority believes the scope of the arbitration is too limited to do so, according to a Port Authority official. If the Port Authority position proves right, the next step would likely be litigation, should Mr. Silverstein choose to go there.

Update: 3:05 p.m.

In a statement, Port Authority executive director Chris Ward sought to brush aside concerns that the arbitration would lead to any real resolution, saying the agency is "meeting all of its obligations, and we look forward to a quick arbitration decision."

He called for Silverstein to accept one of the Port Authority's solutions to the site, which generally involve the agency helping finance one tower, not two, as Mr. Silverstein has been seeking.

"We are certain that SPI understands that an arbitration decision under the MDA will not resolve when there will be a market for two private office towers on the site, and how this speculative private office space should be financed," Mr. Ward said in the statement. "A resolution to these issues can only be accomplished through good faith negotiations, not a legal fight."

Mayor Bloomberg also chimed in, lobbing some fighting words at the Port Authority by criticizing the agency's insistence that financing two of Mr. Silverstein's towers would decimate its regional transportation efforts. From a statement his office just e-mailed:

After the negotiations between the Port Authority and Silverstein broke down, we brought the parties back to the table to avoid a stalemate. Unfortunately, not everyone worked as hard as necessary to find a solution. No one disputes that the Port Authority is engaged in many projects important to our region, but pitting those projects against the development of the World Trade Center site creates a false choice.
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  #883  
Old Posted Jul 6, 2009, 9:06 PM
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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124690918689201891.html

WTC Developer Threatens to Go to Arbitration

Quote:
Larry Silverstein said he will go to the arbitrator if he and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey can't work out their differences in two weeks. On Monday, Mr. Silverstein filed a notice that triggers a two-week period of meetings aimed at resolving the dispute. If those talks fail, either party has the right to call for arbitration.

"Today's action is designed to inject a renewed sense of urgency to these discussions and, should those discussions fail, to take the matter to an impartial panel of experts as early as this month," Mr. Silverstein said. "One way or another, we must take any and all steps necessary to resolve, once and for all, the disputes that have arisen as a result of the Port Authority's continued and admitted delays."
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  #884  
Old Posted Jul 6, 2009, 9:14 PM
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  #885  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2009, 11:30 AM
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http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/07/ny...1&ref=nyregion

Port Authority Is Blamed for Trade Center Delays

By CHARLES V. BAGLI
July 6, 2009


It appears that Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s attempt to usher in an era of reconciliation and compromise at ground zero is over.

The developer Larry A. Silverstein, who is to build three towers at the World Trade Center site, opened up a new front Monday in his dispute with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, saying the authority has violated the development agreement at ground zero and is hopelessly behind schedule.

Mr. Silverstein said the authority’s delays and failures over the past seven years prevented him from obtaining financing for the three office towers at the trade center site “in a much more positive economic climate” than exists today.

Mr. Silverstein’s latest move seems designed to pressure the authority to acquiesce to his demand that it guarantee as much as $3.2 billion in financing of two of the three office towers he is to build at the site. It also highlights the failure of Mayor Bloomberg’s highly publicized effort to resolve the impasse between the two sides.

After more than two months of high-level meetings among Mr. Silverstein and city, state and Port Authority officials, Mr. Bloomberg released a statement Monday afternoon acknowledging that the two sides were farther apart than ever, although he blamed it on the Port Authority’s intransigence.

“Unfortunately, not everyone worked as hard as necessary to find a solution,” Mayor Bloomberg said in the statement. “We are one step closer to stalemate today, but a solution does exist — and we will not stop working until we get there.”

But Christopher O. Ward, executive director of the Port Authority, laid the blame on Mr. Silverstein for “walking away from the negotiating table simply because the public has been unwilling to sacrifice critical transportation projects to subsidize private speculative office space.”

Mayor Bloomberg held a meeting at Gracie Mansion in May in an attempt to prevent a logjam after the authority and Mr. Silverstein stopped talking. Recriminations, rather than resolution, followed when various proposals failed to satisfy one side or another.

In a letter to the Port Authority Monday, Mr. Silverstein formally started an arbitration process, claiming that the authority had violated a 2006 agreement governing development at the 16-acre site.

Mr. Silverstein is demanding that within the next two weeks, the authority detail how it will fix the problems at ground zero, where, he contends, the authority is years behind in completing the transit hub, a vehicle screening center for buses and trucks, and the underpinning of the subway line that bisects the site.

The developer says that he has paid more than $800 million in rent and has started building his first tower, but no longer knows when or if related elements of the project will be completed.


If the two sides fail to come to terms, the matter would then go to a panel of three arbitrators and Mr. Silverstein would seek damages.

The authority is already paying Mr. Silverstein $300,000 a day in penalties — more than $100 million since July 2008 — for failing to complete the predevelopment work on two of Mr. Silverstein’s three sites. Executives at the authority say they expect to finish by this fall.

“We are certain that Silverstein Properties understands that an arbitration decision under the development agreement will not resolve when there will be a market for two private office towers on the site, and how this speculative private office space should be financed,” Mr. Ward said.

The authority has insisted that it would have to slash its capital budget and postpone or eliminate projects in New York and New Jersey if it were to guarantee the financing.

Mr. Silverstein was to build the towers with a combination of insurance proceeds, tax-free bonds and private equity and financing. But lenders are reluctant to finance real estate projects today, and few, if any, tenants are willing to lease expensive new towers when rents are falling sharply at existing buildings.

Some real estate executives, civic groups and Port Authority officials say that the towers should be built over time, while Mr. Silverstein and Mayor Bloomberg want it done now.

After years of delay, Mr. Ward emphasized that work continues at the site, where the authority is building the Sept. 11 memorial, the transit hub and its own office tower. At the same time, Mr. Silverstein is erecting the first of his three towers along Church Street.

But many officials fear that the momentum at the trade center site will collapse if the dispute lingers.
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  #886  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2009, 2:11 PM
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finally, silverstein did the right move. the PA epitomizes the incompetence in persona.
     
     
  #887  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2009, 3:30 PM
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And some people still wonder why the public is skeptical about government involved in projects better handled by private enterprises??
     
     
  #888  
Old Posted Jul 8, 2009, 2:46 AM
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Yes, but silverstein ***wants*** government to be involved. He wants the government to help finance these towers. If he wants that, he needs to give up some control, share some of the potential profits or *gasp* lower the fees that his company is charging to oversee the rebuilding.

Just a thought. I agree that the port authority is not the swiftest organization and has really dragged its feet on site prep, but lets remember this is business and silverstein appears to want backing for his buildings for a firm handshake?
     
     
  #889  
Old Posted Jul 8, 2009, 3:35 AM
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We have a new HD cam up! It doesn't update every 15 mins like the old one, and doesn't catch as much of the WTC site, but it's way higher res.

http://archives.earthcam.com/archive...gzrobotic1.jpg

     
     
  #890  
Old Posted Jul 8, 2009, 3:44 AM
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Originally Posted by TAK View Post
Yes, but silverstein ***wants*** government to be involved. He wants the government to help finance these towers. If he wants that, he needs to give up some control, share some of the potential profits or *gasp* lower the fees that his company is charging to oversee the rebuilding.

Just a thought. I agree that the port authority is not the swiftest organization and has really dragged its feet on site prep, but lets remember this is business and silverstein appears to want backing for his buildings for a firm handshake?
Remember that while Silverstein is charging fees for late work, he is also paying the PA for the site itself, which is a lot.
If this was an issue between two private entities, then your point about the PA would be correct, however, the PA is a public corporation, meaning it has a larger responsibility to the city. To me, it seems that the Port Authority is only looking out for itself in the completion of 1WTC, and not looking at the larger picture, which is to rebuild downtown.
     
     
  #891  
Old Posted Jul 8, 2009, 3:16 PM
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I thought the PA was a quasi-government agency that is government funded and regulated. (Funded on top of revenue generated)

Can someone who knows the system, not "I think I know the system", please clarify?
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  #892  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2009, 12:50 AM
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And some people still wonder why the public is skeptical about government involved in projects better handled by private enterprises??
You ain't seen Nuttin' Yet!
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  #893  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2009, 4:28 AM
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Originally Posted by shakman View Post
I thought the PA was a quasi-government agency that is government funded and regulated. (Funded on top of revenue generated)
The PA doesn't get any state funding. It is controlled by the states, but it's revenue comes from its operations (which is why it is often referred to as a simi or quasi goverment agency). Money from the Port Authority is sometimes used to assists other state development agencies, such as the ESDC and the MTA. However, sometimes federal funding is given to the PA, as it is to all transportation agencies.
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  #894  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2009, 4:35 AM
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http://www.wtc.com/news/silverstein-...port-authority

Silverstein Properties Statement Regarding Notice of Dispute Letter Sent to Port Authority

July 7, 2009

Quote:
"I greatly appreciate the tremendous efforts of Mayor Bloomberg and Assembly Speaker Silver, as well as the Governors of New York and New Jersey over the past two months to keep the World Trade Center redevelopment moving forward," said World Trade Center developer Larry A. Silverstein. "I welcome their continued involvement in discussions aimed at resolving the impasse through good faith negotiations. Today's action is designed to inject a renewed sense of urgency to these discussions and, should those discussions fail, to take the matter to an impartial panel of experts as early as this month. One way or another, we must take any and all steps necessary to resolve, once and for all, the disputes that have arisen as a result of the Port Authority's continued and admitted delays."

Mr. Silverstein concluded, "I remain absolutely determined to see the World Trade Center fully rebuilt as the centerpiece of the dynamic mixed-use community that has emerged downtown - the greenest and most exciting place to live, work and visit in this incredible city. For New York City, this would create 10,000 union construction jobs when people in that industry - mainstays of New York's middle class - are struggling with a dramatic drop-off of work. As I have said many times, failure is not an option."
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  #895  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2009, 4:53 AM
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  #896  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2009, 2:50 PM
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Originally Posted by CoolCzech View Post
You ain't seen Nuttin' Yet!
You mean it get's better or worse (if that's even possible!)??
     
     
  #897  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2009, 4:10 PM
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The USA economy : 14500 billion in 2008 , more than 100 000 billion in the last 8 year. Why they can't build this 4 building is just 8-10 billion ... Who cares what P.A. or Silverstein doing , they just fight all day...This must be a way bigger thing. The USA government must take over the site , and build all 4 building - And America will proud again
     
     
  #898  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2009, 4:52 PM
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Originally Posted by CSABA8 View Post
The USA economy : 14500 billion in 2008 , more than 100 000 billion in the last 8 year. Why they can't build this 4 building is just 8-10 billion ... Who cares what P.A. or Silverstein doing , they just fight all day...This must be a way bigger thing. The USA government must take over the site , and build all 4 building - And America will proud again
I agree with you (even though I hate the gov't involved in much of anything commericial) but that should have happened in 2002-2003! The Feds should have stepped in and said, "this a national issue and we won't allow your petty self interests destroy this rebuilding"....but like Katrina the gov't, at the time, thought the "locals" could handle it and look where we're at now after 8 YEARS! The self defeating notion that we can't build great things in this country anymore would be countered if this project were topping out now!
     
     
  #899  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2009, 5:30 PM
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Looks to be used as a staging area for T4 or the PATH hub at this point.


http://www.flickr.com/photos/34471641@N07/3697489903/
     
     
  #900  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2009, 8:41 PM
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http://www.downtownexpress.com/de_22...aysjersey.html

Mayor says Jersey might solve World Trade Center stalemate

By Josh Rogers
July 10 - 16, 2009


It’s often darkest before the downpour, unless of course it’s right before the dawn.

Most signs this week pointed to the World Trade Center storms getting worse. W.T.C. developer Larry Silverstein moved Monday toward a complex arbitration proceeding, which could be the final nail in the mediation talks spearheaded by Mayor Mike Bloomberg and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver. The mayor and Silver both blamed the Port Authority for not budging in the negotiations over when to build Tower 2 and how to pay for it. And in the surest sign that talks were going nowhere, Silverstein and the Port loosened their resistance to making their cases directly to the public.

Perhaps the only indication that a compromise settlement was not impossible was Bloomberg’s statement to reporters Tuesday in which surprisingly, he said the New Jersey faction of the Port was being “very helpful” in trying to bridge the gap.

Bloomberg said he has spoken with New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine on the W.T.C. dispute several times and the governor “has been pushing [Port chairperson] Anthony Coscia, a very competent person who’s … Corzine’s representative. And Coscia’s as smart and as competent a person as you can find and Corzine assured me that he was pressuring Coscia to find a solution to the problem and from what I understand from [Dep. Mayor Robert] Lieber, in fact Coscia has been very helpful.”

The Port and city have been at odds many times over the years, and the New Jersey half of the board has naturally been less accommodating to the city’s interests than the New York half. (The most notable instance of the city and Port working well together was in 2006 when Bloomberg took the authority’s side during a similar dispute with Silverstein.) In this dispute, New York Gov. David Paterson appears to be staying close to the official Port position and to its executive director Chris Ward, whom Paterson hired.

The two governors, who each appoint half of the Port’s board, have not commented on the W.T.C. since Silverstein’s arbitration action Monday and their spokespersons did not comment for this article.

Speaker Silver told Downtown Express he has also spoken with Corzine about the dispute, although he was not as optimistic as Bloomberg.

“He said he would be cooperative to the extent that he could,” Silver said of Corzine.

Ward has pointed to important transportation projects in Midtown that would be sacrificed if the Port helped guarantee the loans Silverstein needs to build Tower 2.

Silver said certainly Corzine is not going to abandon New Jersey desires such as the proposed new commuter tunnel to Penn Station, but building the W.T.C. towers goes hand in hand with helping New Jersey residents commute.

“We’re doing a big PATH station,” Silver said of the Santiago Calatrava-designed train station being built at the W.T.C. “You’ve got to have a reason to bring people in from New Jersey.”


Silver said the biggest danger to going to arbitration is that it will lead to more delays. He said Silverstein has been patient with the Port and the developer’s move to file formal notice to go to arbitration was caused by the authority’s “intransigence.”

He and the mayor also said that the W.T.C. is not like any other project.

“No one disputes that the Port Authority is engaged in many projects important to our region, but pitting those projects against the development of the World Trade Center site creates a false choice,” Bloomberg said in a prepared statement. “The reality is the Port Authority owns and controls and is financially tied to 16 acres in Lower Manhattan, the development of which this city and the entire nation demand move forward. The Port can certainly proceed with other projects without abandoning its obligations Downtown.”

The Port’s Ward countered in his statement that Silverstein is “walking away from the negotiating table” and that arbitration “will not resolve when there will be a market for two private office towers on the site, and how this speculative private office space should be financed. A resolution to these issues can only be accomplished through good faith negotiations, not a legal fight.”

The Port, by all accounts, has agreed to help Silverstein complete Tower 4 under construction near the corner of Church and Liberty Sts., but is against putting more money into Tower 2 at the northeast corner of the site.

Instead of towers, the Port has suggested interim low-rise retail buildings until the market can support office buildings. The Bloomberg administration and others have been skeptical about whether it’s feasible to bring desirable retail into spaces destined to be underneath tower construction projects.

Ward said the Port has come up with other ways to “give Mr. Silverstein the ability to build a rational amount of office space while protecting scarce public resources for the public projects on the site,” in reference to the memorial and the pricey train station, whose costs have reportedly risen to over $4 billion.

Silverstein is accusing the Port of numerous violations to the W.T.C. schedules set in their 2006 Master Development Agreement and says these delays preparing the tower sites forced him to wait until the credit squeeze hit before he could try and get loans. He points to a Lower Manhattan Development Corp. report a few months after the agreement was signed that concluded that almost all of the W.T.C. timetables were hopelessly unrealistic. The Port did not come up with a new timetable until last fall — a year and a half after the L.M.D.C. warnings.

The new schedule is also unrealistic according to Silverstein who says the Port will have to delay many key infrastructure components including the Greenwich St. sidewalks that are supposed to form entrances to the office towers.

The Port maintains it will be able to meet the new schedule, and disputes that any of the delays have led to Silverstein’s money troubles.

“Where was the economic climate on Dec. 31, 2008,” one Port official asked, referring to the date it was supposed to turn over the Tower 2 site.

Silverstein, in a letter to the governors, the mayor and Silver, said he has offered a “significant amount of cash equity” in the project and would “give the Port Authority a substantial share of the equity in the buildings, so when there is a profit in the future, the agency will get a lot of the upside.”

He criticized the Port for being willing to wait 30 years to rebuild the site fully. He said even under the agency’s “unprecedented doomsday scenario” of a 14-year time period to lease the buildings, the Port would be risking $300- $400 million under his offer, but under any realistic estimates there would be no risk. Even if Silverstein Properties defaulted on the loans, the firm feels the Port would still make out well because it would take possession of valuable assets in the form of modern green office buildings.

Monday started a 10-day period where the two sides are required to meet twice before deciding whether either wants to go to arbitration. Silverstein proposed letting the mediating parties — the governors, mayor and the speaker — join in the pre-arbitration talks because there is little chance of progress without them.

Steve Sigmund, a Port spokesperson, said he didn’t understand the reason for involving the mediators in the arbitration talks because they will be about a different subject. The mediation is about how and when to finance the towers, and arbitration will be about whether the Port has violated the 2006 development agreement.

“This dispute notice is unrelated to the office towers,” Sigmund said in a telephone interview. The Port remains ready to go back to the mediation table, he added.

Sigmund said the Port continues to build the memorial, the train station and Tower 1, and that delays are not a problem.

“The entity that is making progress on the site every day … is the Port Authority,” he said.

He said he would make the same statement about Silverstein Properties’ work on Tower 4.

“They’re doing well on Tower 4,” Sigmund said. “We hope it continues. They could start building Tower 3 and 2 tomorrow if they had the financing.”

Sigmund said although the Port has not finished preparing the Tower 2 and 3 sites, Silverstein could begin initial work. The firm disputes the point, and says it is not even allowed to be on the sites.

At the end of last year, the Port claimed it had finished preparing the Tower 2 and 4 sites, but an arbitrator ruled that was not true since the agency left a 200-foot wall on the Tower 4 site. In January, Ward acknowledged in an interview with Downtown Express that officials may have been “overly aggressive” in asserting that Silverstein could work around the wall.

That dispute was straightforward and was resolved quickly. This one is likely to take longer since it involves a myriad of issues that cover three years of action and inaction on many of the different W.T.C. projects.

The dispute has left many Downtowners wondering what will happen next. Community Board 1 has not taken a position on the issue, although a few board members like Barry Skolnick remain skeptical of giving additional money to a private developer.

“I don’t believe in spending public money on speculative private interests,” he said.
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