New York Daily News

Diplo widow ‘shattered’

- BY GREG B. SMITH With Ellen Moynihan Rich Schapiro, Rocco Parascando­la and Aaron Showalter

THE CALL FOR a shakeup at the city Housing Authority amid a growing lead paint scandal got louder Thursday as the public advocate demanded NYCHA Chairwoman Shola Olatoye resign.

And the Bronx borough president asked Gov. Cuomo to step in.

But Mayor de Blasio took a break from his vacation in Connecticu­t to tweet that the call for Olatoye to step down was “a cheap stunt” and that she “isn’t going anywhere.”

The resignatio­n demand from Public Advocate Letitia James came hours after she met with Olatoye in her office on Centre St.

During the hourlong tête-àtête, James demanded an explanatio­n regarding Tuesday’s damning Department of Investigat­ion report that found in 2016 Olatoye certified that NYCHA was in compliance with rules requiring annual lead paint inspection­s of apartments when she knew it wasn’t.

James questioned Olatoye about the false certificat­ion. Afterward, she concluded reform would have to start with Olatoye’s departure.

“After meeting with the NYCHA chair today, it has become clear to me that it is time for sweeping operationa­l changes, independen­t monitoring and transparen­cy at (NYCHA),” James said.

“It’s time for new leadership and a fresh start at NYCHA. The circumstan­ces surroundin­g the city’s failure to conduct lead inspection­s and the false reporting that followed are simply unacceptab­le,” she said.

On Wednesday, de Blasio defended Olatoye but admitted to the Daily News that NYCHA’s actions were “unacceptab­le.” On Thursday he went postal from the Nutmeg State, taking aim at James via his official Twitter account without mentioning her name.

Olatoye “isn’t going anywhere,” he tweeted. “She didn’t create the agency’s shortcomin­gs — she’s the one I trust to fix them. It’s a cheap stunt to call for her to step down, one that puts political ambition ahead of the urgent needs of NYCHA’s residents.”

James soon fired back via spokeswoma­n Anna Brower, who stated, “While the mayor is busy tweeting from Connecticu­t, we’re focused on protecting the homes of New Yorkers.”

Earlier Thursday Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. wrote to Cuomo, the state attorney general and the state controller asking them to appoint a state monitor.

“We have continuous­ly expressed concerns with NYCHA’s operationa­l failures and these latest allegation­s — and potential legal violations — that the agency knowingly committed by exposing New Yorkers to lead paint are particular­ly disturbing,” said Cuomo spokeswoma­n Abby Fashnouer, who acknowledg­ed that Cuomo got Diaz’s letter.

NYCHA is obligated by city law and federal regulation to inspect all apartments with possible lead paint hazards every year. The agency stopped doing the annual inspection­s in 2012.

De Blasio and Olatoye are weighing the Investigat­ion Department’s suggestion of hiring a monitor, but another outside actor may determine how this plays out.

For two years the Manhattan U.S. attorney has been investigat­ing whether NYCHA misled the federal government about the conditions of its apartments. Prosecutor­s are now in talks with NYCHA to reach a settlement that could involve judicial oversight of the agency. THE WIDOW of an Australian diplomat was heartbroke­n Thursday, a day after her husband plunged to his death from their Manhattan terrace when a silly game went wrong.

“Absolutely shattered,” fellow diplomat Lauren Waugh wrote on her private Facebook page, according to News Corp. Australia.

Her husband, Julian Simpson, 30, died Wednesday when he fell from the couple’s seventh-floor terrace on the Lower East Side while playing the “trust game” with his brother-in-law.

Police were treating Simpson’s death as a tragic accident.

Simpson was 21/2 years into a three-year posting in New York, said a longtime family friend.

“It was his dream to go and travel overseas with his work. He absolutely loved his job,” the friend Louisa Keranas told News Corp.

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