New York Daily News

Too much to take! N.Y.ers scraping by disgusted by superrich piling up zeroes

P gp

- BY BRITTANY KRIEGSTEIN AND CLAYTON GUSE

As a gang of billionair­es continue to squeeze a waterfall of money from the pandemic, New Yorkers across the five boroughs are busting their butts to make a living.

Carmen Bautista, 62, an immigrant from the Dominican Republic who lives in Harlem, struggled to wrap her head around the figures detailed in the Daily News front page story, which showed how the country’s top 20 billionair­es watched their fortunes boom since COVID-19 put millions of people out of work.

“I’m poor and I’m not working,” said Bautista. “I’m on disability, and from the small amount they give me on Social Security, I give back — but not them.”

“What this man makes, he could support an entire country, a poor Central American country,” Baustista added, pointing to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who is now worth more than $100 billion, roughly double what he had in mid-March.

Norman Koonce, 62, a security guard at a Manhattan residentia­l building, also bemoaned the skyhigh wealth of the nation’s elite that has only grown since the pandemic hit.

“W h y would one person have $92 billion?” said Koonce, referencin­g the wealth of Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, whose personal fortune has nearly quintupled since midMarch. “I have a friend I work with. He’s struggling to pay $1,100 a month for an apartment.”

Koonce — who toils from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. on weekends — said he’s used to being on the wrong side of tales of two cities. After all, former Mayor Bloomberg was worth billions when he held office from 2002 to 2013.

“You could have gave the city $1 billion — and I would have said, ‘Whoa, we got a great mayor,’ said Koonce. “I think I would always be broke if I had this kind of money. I would give it away.”

But instead of giving away their spoils from the pandemic, big wigs like Amazon boss Jeff Bezos have consolidat­ed their empires into a new wave of monopolies as brickand-mortar businesses have been unable to stay afloat.

Small business have no way to compete with Bezos, said Pratap Dey, 46, who works Sundays at a newsstand outside the Columbus Circle subway station.

Bezos’ net worth skyrockete­d from $113 billion in mid-March to $192 billion last week as a surge of people turned to online shopping.

Dey said sales at his stand are down by 80% from before the pandemic — and pointed out that some of Amazon’s prices have risen by up to 50%.

“It’s not fair,” Dey said. “They have a business, they make a lot of money — but people are suffering.”

Ehi Okhiulu, 36, a film producer from Williamsbu­rg, Brooklyn, said Bezos is “evil” for allowing sellers to gouge prices early in the pandemic while also slow-walking protection­s for warehouse workers.

“We’re seeing a lot of businesses really struggle right now, a lot of businesses that would have been in a better position if they didn’t have to compete with Amazon’s super aggressive pricing,” Okhiulu said.

A Manhattan fast-food worker who declined to provide her name said American billionair­es were sick in the head for profiteeri­ng off a disease that’s sickened more than 8 million people in the U.S. and killed more than 219,000.

“They just think about themselves, about their own benefits,” she said. “There are people sleeping on the streets. and that’s not fair, because some of them work every day.”

“These kinds of people should put their hands on their hearts more, to think more about others, not just what they see with dollar signs,” she added.

Some New Yorkers like Andrew Sangkala, 59, think tech giants like Bezos, Zuckerberg and Musk aren’t to blame for their own wealth.

“There are fortunes made through every crisis,” said Sangkala, who brokers deals for personal protective equipment, a hot commodity during the pandemic. “Look at the past fortunes that were made. Prohibitio­n drugs.”

“This guy’s making cars,” Sangkala said pointing at the Daily News. “He’s getting stuff delivered to people in their houses, and Facebook is Facebook. ... Everybody could give a little more, I guess. But some people don’t have to give.”

But Italo Garabe, 64, an Ecuadoran immigrant who sells leather wallets and wares on the sidewalk at W. 144th St. and Broadway, said he’s found no way to profit from the pandemic like the billionair­es.

“I used to actually make something. ... Now it’s just enough to eat and pay rent,” said Garabe. “It’s bad because they don’t share anything with the people who need it.”

 ??  ?? Pratap Dey (main) says business at his Columbus Circle newsstand is off 80%. Italo Garabe (r.), selling leather goods at 144th St. and Broadway, says he can barely pay rent. Guard Bianca Thomas (below) is also far from striking it rich.
Pratap Dey (main) says business at his Columbus Circle newsstand is off 80%. Italo Garabe (r.), selling leather goods at 144th St. and Broadway, says he can barely pay rent. Guard Bianca Thomas (below) is also far from striking it rich.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States