New York City – NY Times: A Look Back at the Dinkins Administration, Not As Grim as Giuliani Suggested

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    If you elect the Democratic mayoral candidate, Mr. Giuliani, the former Republican mayor, warned a mostly Orthodox Jewish audience in Brooklyn, New York could well return to a time when a feckless liberal Democrat let services decay and crime and homelessness run rampant.New York City – Do you really want to go back to the bad old days of Mayor David N. Dinkins?

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    Rudolph W. Giuliani, as he had done before, indelicately broached this rhetorical question while campaigning a week ago for Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. If you elect the Democratic mayoral candidate, Mr. Giuliani, the former Republican mayor, warned a mostly Orthodox Jewish audience in Brooklyn, New York could well return to a time when a feckless liberal Democrat let services decay and crime and homelessness run rampant.

    This narrative, in which more than a few heard a racial undertone last week, has dominated the city’s politics for 16 years. But as a critique, it is ripe for a revisionist second look. Taking office in 1990, just as a Wall Street and real estate collapse pitched the city into deep recession, Mayor Dinkins, the city’s first African-American mayor, stumbled more than once. But he also registered more successes than most New Yorkers realize, and so he laid part of the foundation for today’s New York.

    “Dinkins faced a very sharp economic downturn, and he was in the very difficult position of coming in with high expectations from many constituencies,” said John H. Mollenkopf, a political science professor at the City University Graduate Center. “Yet he expanded the police force and rebuilt neighborhoods; he deserves more credit than he gets for managing that time.”

    Mr. Dinkins’s most lasting achievement might have been in the very area where he now fares worst in popular memory. He obtained the State Legislature’s permission to dedicate a tax to hire thousands of police officers, and he fought to preserve a portion of that anticrime money to keep schools open into the evening, an award-winning initiative that kept tens of thousands of teenagers off the street. Later he hired Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, and in the mayor’s final years in office, homicide began its now record-breaking decline.

    His officials played a key role in negotiating the cleanup and revitalization of Times Square, persuading the Walt Disney Corporation to rehabilitate an old 42nd Street theater.

    And as the tax receipts fell and the city budget bled red, the mayor continued a Koch-era program and poured billions of dollars into rehabilitating dilapidated housing. Tens of thousands of units of housing in northern Harlem, the South Bronx and Brooklyn stood pockmarked and vacant in 1989; today that housing owes much of its handsomely restored face to work begun during the Dinkins era. Over all, Mr. Dinkins rebuilt more housing in a single term than Mr. Giuliani did in two terms.

    Mr. Dinkins also negotiated a stadium deal that still draws applause. His administration gave the United States Tennis Association a 99-year lease on city parkland; in exchange, the tennis association built a stadium and tennis complex in Flushing Meadows, Queens, and shares the courts with the public.

    The tennis deal, Mayor Bloomberg proclaimed several years ago, was “the only good athletic sports stadium deal, not just in New York but in the country.”

    Such questions are not merely the stuff of historical debate, as historians and political scientists quibble over the grading and ranking of mayors. The social turmoil of the late 1980s and early 1990s, and the perceived failures of the Dinkins administration, have cast a shadow over every Democratic mayoral candidate since 1993, in particular for a black candidate like Comptroller William C. Thompson Jr.

    Mr. Dinkins took office only to face recession and the three horsemen of social decline: soaring AIDS infection rates, homelessness and a crack-fueled crime wave. Homicide annually claimed the lives of 2,000 New Yorkers, compared with about 500 today.

    Mr. Dinkins’s response was sometimes faltering. He handed out union raises, and announced layoffs days later. He raised taxes and cut services. And he rarely insisted that his administration, glued together from various constituencies, speak with a single voice. (Mr. Giuliani and Mr. Bloomberg insisted on managerial discipline, and reaped its benefits.)

    Mr. Dinkins also hesitated to face down racial and ethnic antagonism. “A lot of different voices in his administration were often competing rather than rowing together,” Mr. Mollenkopf said.

    But through it all, his administration made advances unmatched by succeeding administrations. He joined with Gov. Mario M. Cuomo and poured money into assisted housing for the mentally ill homeless.

    As a result, the city’s shelter population fell to its lowest point in the last 20 years. The shelter population in 1991 stood at less than 20,000; today it stands near 38,000.

    And through the years of recession, as the city lost hundreds of thousands of jobs, the mayor spoke of his successes and failures, often with brutal candor. His successors have pruned the statistical reports of some negative indicators and tend to place a relentless emphasis on the positive.

    The city, Mr. Giuliani argued the other day, “could very easily be taken back to the way it was.” Such a voyage might not be as grim as Mr. Giuliani suggests.

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    19 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    16 years ago

    interestingly, this writer deliberately refuses to mention the crown heights riots by name.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    16 years ago

    Chas veshalom the Times should ever say anything bad about a democrat, and especially not a black, or that would make the paper racist.

    Staunch Republican
    Staunch Republican
    16 years ago

    I’m a big fan of Giuliani (I worked on his campaigns for Mayor) but this is reminiscent of Orwell’s scare tactics in his novel Animal Farm…”Do you really want Jones back?”

    Bill Thompson & Dinkins are vastly different people. What Giuliani is basically saying is if you elect a Black, this is what you’ll get.

    Shame on him.

    Charlie Hall
    Charlie Hall
    16 years ago

    The urban decay was largely a result of deliberate policies to shortchange poor neighborhoods in the allocation of public services. These policies started with Robert Moses’ influence during the La Guardia administration and became particularly eggregious by the time of the Lindsay administration. With La Guardia it was parks and rec centers but with Lindsay it was police and fire! Dinkins reversed this. Dinkins deserves criticism for not responding sufficiently quickly to the Crown Heights riots, but in other respects his administration was basically a success considering the bad economic times.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    16 years ago

    A white wash! Dinkins was the DIrector of the Mariage Bureay before he ran for Mayor. Koch lost because of Howard Beach and his own hubris which lead to Dinkins and the disaster of Crown Heights. Once he came in, all the militant type Blacks thought they could get away with anything- and they did. A boycott, with violence, of a Korean owned grocery store for months because of some slight supposedly extended to a Black and, of course, the riots in Crown Heights where Dinkins was afraid to have cops restore peace, afraid to bring in the Natl Guard and afraid to antagonize his militant Black friends and be called an Uncle Tom. THat is the height of racism.

    Trustee in Govt
    Trustee in Govt
    16 years ago

    keep it safe and keep it clean….that’s all he had to do…he didnt

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    16 years ago

    finally!! someone saying the truth I was wandering for years how such blatant facts gets disturted. its a simple fact and open record that crime started to drop mid dinkins term. and guliani was busy claiming all this years its only him to credit. but for the record crime dropped in that era in the whole country not only in nyc and it had nothing to do with guliani or for that matter dinkins. one thing is for sure dinkins lacked terrible judgement in leadership at the crown hights riots no one who knows him can says he is a antisemith he was beloved by all jews

    joe shmoe
    joe shmoe
    16 years ago

    yell out loud, ny ers are fools, with short memory span! everybody forgot the unsafe streets at night, mafia, the mafia infested nypd, the crown heights riots in which he told the nypd to let those animals vent their rage and by doing so was an acomplice to the murder of yankle rosenbaum hy”d. had a whole neighborhood living in fear for a couple of days.

    Fact: he wasn’t bad, he was much worse than that. time heals his emotional feelings but won’t revive r’yankel. GO TO HELL NY TIMES.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    16 years ago

    The very proclamations of Dinkins’ successes are actually stories of his incompetence. He never answered to a Higher Power, only lower powers. His tenure as mayor was a disgrace to the office, and all who lived in NYC recall that. I could do a line by line veto of the praises cited, but have little interest in debating details. He will wallow in the embarrassment of mishandling the Crown Heights riots, and there is no defending his approach to it. It smelled of the racism he seemed to feel was being avenged, which we all know was nothing beyond a tragic accident. No, we will never allow a repeat of Dinkins, no matter what the color of the package.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    16 years ago

    Everyone loves to jump the racial bandwagin, but realy what Guliani meant was that Dinkins wasn’t bad, just was not capable. And the same thing is with Thompson, as you can see even his campaign is in disarray, as reported by the Times themselves.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    16 years ago

    Sell me the Brooklyn bridge, however, thompson has nothing with Dinkins. I would suggest that Bloombergs will take us to a russian or chinese style of leadership.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    16 years ago

    Not the first time ny times practiced revisionist history…

    Challanges
    Challanges
    16 years ago

    Dinkins faced trying economic times. BooHoo!!!
    Guiliani faced 9/11 challenges
    Bloomberg faced a collapsing financial system. The worst economic times tsince the great depression.

    Both dwarf whatever hardships Dinkins adminstration faced.

    YoilyBP
    YoilyBP
    16 years ago

    Either way Dinkins and Billy T. are totally differnt people. As Dov says Bill is an Oiehev Klall Yisooroel, Dinkins was DEFINITELY not!!!

    Green Tea
    Green Tea
    16 years ago

    A long article but no mention of Crown Heights.

    Im getting tired of these one sided articles.

    And this passes for journalism??