• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.

Sugar Cookie

Veteran Member
Bold Member!
The scandal-scarred state entity that governs Roosevelt Island is demanding a group of beloved local cat sanctuaries begin paying rent for the first time ever or be evicted.

Rossana Ceruzzi, head of the nonprofit Wildlife Freedom Foundation, told The Post she was stunned when the Roosevelt Island Operating Corporation recently sent her a lease ordering her group to cough up $400 a month for the space the WFF uses in the isle’s Southpoint Park area for its cat sanctuaries and wildlife rehabilitation center.

“It came out of the blue,’’ Ceruzzi said of RIOC’s “shameless and outrageous’’ demand after 10 years of not requiring the group to pay rent.

“These are community cats. The WFF has been relentlessly working on the island to rescue, remove, relocate, control, etc., abandoned pets and wildlife at no cost to RIOC for innumerable years,’’ she said.

The lease came “with a threat spelled out: RIOC will shut down the cat sanctuaries and dismantle them if I do not sign it as is,” said Ceruzzi, whose organization is a state and federally licensed Wildlife Animal Rehabilitator and admired protector of cats and other animals and birds on the island.

Ceruzzi said Gretchen Robinson, vice president and chief counsel of RIOC, wrote in an e-mail to her and her lawyer that “since Ms. Ceruzzi is refusing to sign the agreement, we will move forward with the closure of the cat sanctuaries at all current locations (Southpoint Park, Octagon, Pony Field, and Lighthouse Park).

“Ms. Ceruzzi will have 30 days from the date of this email (October 24th) by which to dismantle any personal property belonging to WFF, including all wildlife and feral cats.

“If by that date Ms. Ceruzzi has not removed all personal property and relocated the animals from those locations, RIOC will cause the cat sanctuary locations to be closed; and will also cause the removal and relocation of the animals on its own,” Robinson added.

State Assemblywoman Rebecca Seawright, who represents Roosevelt Island, and her Republican opponent, Louis Puliafito, blasted RIOC over the issue.

“This is the time we should be suspending rent, not establishing it,’’ Seawright, who backs legislation to suspend or cancel the monthly-payment demand, wrote in a letter to RIOC.

“Our parks and amenities such as the cat sanctuary offer vital services that the people can take advantage of during the pandemic,’’ she said.

“While I understand that RIOC might be required to charge for use of such space under the State’s guidelines, a pandemic is not the time to be establishing such an agreement.”
1601291167911.webp
 
The head of the scandal-scarred state agency that runs Roosevelt Island has backed off an extraordinary threat to evict the operator of a beloved group of cat sanctuaries in a kitty conflict over rent.

The about-face comes after The Post reported that the Roosevelt Island Operating Corp. for the first time sent a lease to the Wildlife Freedom Foundation demanding it pay $400 monthly rent for use of its three cat havens on its property.

RIOC’s vice president and legal counsel Gretchen Robinson initially told WFF President Rosanna Ceruzzi in a recent email that if she didn’t agree to pay the rent “we will move forward with the closure of the cat sanctuaries at all current locations… and [RIOC] will also cause the removal and relocation of the animals on its own.”

But RIOC Acting President and CEO Shelton Haynes was purring a more friendly tune on Monday, a source familiar with the controversy said.

“The RIOC is in the process of re-evaluating the terms and conditions of the payment structure for the Wildlife Freedom Foundation as well as the timing by which payments begin,” Haynes said in a response letter to Assemblywoman Rebecca Seawright, who represents Roosevelt Island and the Upper East Side.

“RIOC will continue to work with WFF in the effort to reach an agreement as it pertains to the operation and use of RIOC state-owned land.”

Most important, Haynes said, “In the interim RIOC will take no action to close the WFF-operated sanctuaries.”
 
Back
Top