New York Post

City rids pathway of illegal vendors ‘Thrown off’ B’klyn Bridge

- By KEVIN SHEEHAN and JORGE FITZ-GIBBON kevin.sheehan@nypost.com

It was easy street for pedestrian­s on the Brooklyn Bridge on Wednesday as Mayor Adams followed through on his promise to boot vendors from the historic span.

City workers labored overnight to sweep up the final remnants of the hawkers who “packed together like sardines,” blocking a popular path on the bridge and creating a safety hazard for pedestrian­s, Adams said last week.

The move came as a relief to many locals. “This is a great thing they did,” Brooklyn Heights resident Alan Posner said.

“This morning was the first time I saw baby carriages and strollers and people in wheelchair­s going across the bridge in years. There’s no way they could have been crossing like this yesterday.”

Retired MTA worker David Rico, who said he walks the bridge weekly to visit his mother in a Brooklyn nursing home, said the landmark’s new look is “definitely better.”

“I walked this exact same route the day before yesterday, Monday, and you couldn’t get by with the congestion,” he said. “Safer, too. I’ve got to say, the fact that the vendors are unregulate­d and they’re selling food that, you know, you really don’t know about their hygiene standards so I never ate that food.

“I feel bad for them but I think it’s better that they’re not here.”

Diane, a 63-year-old lawyer who walks the crossing regularly, called it a pleasure to have a clear path now.

“It’s like night and day,” she said. “This was a good move. But I’m afraid they’ll be back in a month. The city cleared them out before and they came right back.”

The new rule, which prohibits vending on pedestrian walkways and bike lanes on bridges and bridge approaches, will affect all Big Apple crossings — but was specifical­ly made to target the Brooklyn Bridge.

It was first proposed in October, months after the 1.14-milelong historic landmark turned into an open-air free-for-all.

Dozens of peddlers hawked a variety of oddities, including miniature Statues of Liberty, potleaf caps and stuffed llamas, plus illegal cocktails and selfies with a live snake.

Few of the vendors had a legal license when The Post visited in September.

However, not everyone was celebratin­g the move.

Kendall Otway, 67, a Navy veteran with a vendor license, was joined by more than 30 migrants at the foot of the bridge, saying the hawking stations provided many with their only income.

“They’re here and they’re working. They’re doing the best they can. They don’t have the paper, so they can’t just do other jobs,” Otway said.

 ?? ?? OVER & OUT: After becoming an open-air bazaar for unlicensed vendors (left), the pedestrian walkway on the Brooklyn Bridge was cleared away (right) on Wednesday to the relief of many on the span. AFTER
OVER & OUT: After becoming an open-air bazaar for unlicensed vendors (left), the pedestrian walkway on the Brooklyn Bridge was cleared away (right) on Wednesday to the relief of many on the span. AFTER
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BEFORE

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