New York Post

LAND OF THE FLEE

Fleet of moving trucks on UWS as NYers escape

- By KEVIN SHEEHAN, LAURA ITALIANO and KATE SHEEHY ksheehy@nypost.com

It’s the great escape as Manhattani­tes overwhelm moving businesses in a desperate rush to get out of town. These trucks were all over the Upper West Side on the weekend.

Rich Manhattani­tes are fleeing the city so fast because of the pandemic and deteriorat­ing quality of life in the Big Apple that moving companies can barely keep up with them.

“It’s nuts!’’ Perry Chance of Show Up Movers told The Post on Sunday. “We have four of our own trucks — but we have so many books that we had to start using U-Haul trucks.

“The volume has increased by at least 70 percent” in the past few months, he said.

“[Clients] are mostly moving out of luxury buildings. [People] say the rich are leaving New York. Well, they are!’’

Chance said 25 percent of the company’s customers are heading from the city to states such as Connecticu­t and Pennsylvan­ia. Another 5 percent are moving somewhere else in the Apple.

The rest, 70 percent, are moving elsewhere in the Empire State — mainly Long Island, he said.

Guardian Angels founder and current mayoral hopeful Curtis Sliwa said he has seen a huge wave of people moving from his neighborho­od around West 87th Street.

“The mass evacuation of Upper West Siders from New York City is in full effect,” Sliwa said.

“The moment I walked out on my block near Central Park West, there was a moving truck,” he said Saturday. “I asked, ‘Where you going?’ and they said, ‘Virginia.’

“They told me, ‘Curtis, first the pandemic hit us and now the quality of life is so bad.’ The woman was almost crying.”

And it’s not only the wealthy who are trading big-city life for the suburbs.

Some people have lost their jobs thanks to the coronaviru­s-stricken economy, so they want cheaper pastures. Others figure that if they’re going to be stuck working from home because of health concerns over the virus, they might as well have more space.

And then there’s the skyrocketi­ng gun violence in the Apple, as well as the dumping of the homeless in hotels in family neighborho­ods.

“When you have an office on Park Avenue and you don’t see anyone but the less fortunate, the homeless, no more day-to-day workers, the high rent makes no sense,’’ said a small-business owner at the U-Haul truck-rental center on West 23rd Street in Chelsea, as he prepared for a move to Long Island.

“I have 10 people who just moved out [of the city],” the Manhattan businessma­n said. “Two of my business partners and eight employees.’’

Last month, there was a 44 percent jump in home sales in New York City’s suburbs — including a 112 percent hike in Westcheste­r County — compared to the same month last year, according to The New York Times.

Meanwhile, Manhattan property sales dropped 56 percent.

Stephen Bisogno, a 41-year-old insurance underwrite­r, said he is moving with his wife and 2-year-old daughter from Murray Hill in Manhattan to upstate Poughkeeps­ie.

“In the ’burbs, it feels more normal — put a mask on, and do what you have to do,’’ Bisogno told The Post.

“Here, all the stress and posturing by the de Blasio administra­tion, it just adds to the stress on us.”

John Romero, 28, a furloughed house trombone player for the Metropolit­an Opera, said he is moving from the Upper West Side to Texas.

“There is not much work here for musicians,” he said. “I’m from Texas, and I have friends and family there.

“Plus, teaching is part of my business, and people there will be more willing, less scared, to go out, go for lessons now.”

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Curtis Sliwa
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 ??  ?? ‘SICK’ LEAVE: Stephen Bisogno (right) waits in line at a packed Manhattan U-Haul on Sunday as people rush to leave the city.
‘SICK’ LEAVE: Stephen Bisogno (right) waits in line at a packed Manhattan U-Haul on Sunday as people rush to leave the city.

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