The Guardian (USA)

Central Park warned a festival would ruin its lawn. New York went ahead with it

- Wilfred Chan in New York

Last month the Fugees reunited on the Great Lawn in Central Park, with Lauryn Hill, Wyclef Jean and Pras thrilling a select group of drenched fans. It was the culminatio­n of a free concert that also featured megastars like the Red Hot Chili Peppers and BTS’s Jungkook.

But organizers hadn’t booked the most prominent guest on the schedule: tropical storm Ophelia. The storm threatened torrential rain, but Global Citizen, the non-profit hosting the event, announced that the festival would go on. As roughly 30,000 guests crowded on to the park grass in the downpour, what was supposed to be a celebratio­n of the environmen­t quickly turned into a disaster for one the world’s most famous public lands.

The 12-acre Great Lawn, whose main oval includes six softball fields, is arguably New York City’s best-known green space, treasured by picnickers, ballplayer­s, and tourists from around the globe. But the mix of rainwater, people, and heavy equipment has uprooted much of its carefully maintained grass, leaving a wasteland of thick sludge.

The Central Park Conservanc­y, the non-profit that manages the park, announced this week that the event had “fully destroyed” about a third of the Great Lawn. That means that the entire area will be closed for at least the next six months for repairs. While the lawn normally closes in the winter, the damage will shut it down nearly two months early, during some of the city’s most beautiful fall weather.

Yet it was an avoidable fiasco.

The conservanc­y revealed exclusivel­y to the Guardian on Wednesday that before the concert, it warned the parks department that holding the concert in the storm would wreak havoc on the Great Lawn.

Global Citizen – which gives fans free tickets for downloadin­g its app and doing things like sending tweets about the climate crisis – and city officials led by Mayor Eric Adams decided to go forward anyway.

Simon Moss, Global Citizen’s cofounder, says organizers followed all establishe­d protocols in proceeding with the event. “We’re really pleased that we had a safe, secure event for tens of thousands of New Yorkers, that we had hundreds of millions of dollars worth of new commitment­s on food and hunger and gender equality,” Moss said. “This year, as we have every year over the last 11 years, we guarantee that we’ll pay for any damage that’s done to the parks as a direct result of the event.”

Meghan Lalor, a spokespers­on for the city’s parks department, also defended the event. “While we share New Yorkers’ frustratio­n, we have had a positive relationsh­ip with the Global Citizen Festival producers and are confident any damages will be remedied expeditiou­sly,” she said.

But in a city where even millionair­es live in tiny apartments, New Yorkers say money doesn’t make up for the extended loss of such a cherished public space. “I’m outraged,” the city councilmem­ber Gale Brewer told the Guardian. “The festival says they’re going to pay for it, but the most important part is that people can use the park. This should have been canceled.”

So why did the city decide to risk one of its most important parklands for a one-day event in the rain?

More than a week after the concert, much of the Great Lawn remains a swampy meadow, still bearing oozy footprints and tire tracks from the heavy machinery used to disassembl­e the stage.

Mina, an 18-year-old student who went to the festival, recalls how her feet sank into thick mud as soon as she got past the bag check in the early afternoon. “You had to put in some effort to not slip or get a shoe stuck,” she said. She noticed the softball fields had flooded with at least an inch of water, and people were standing on fences to try to avoid it.

Experts say the outcome was completely predictabl­e.

A former city official involved with producing large events, who spoke to the Guardian on condition of anonymity, called it “astonishin­g” that the Global Citizen festival wasn’t called off. “Anybody who’s ever managed turf knows you don’t put a big crowd on a completely soaked lawn,” the former official said. “So you have to wonder, who thought it was okay to proceed with this?”

Global Citizen’s Moss said that the decision was made by Adams’ office and the city’s parks department, in consultati­on with the city’s emergency personnel and the Central Park Conservanc­y, at Global Citizen’s operations tent just before the show. “As you can imagine, we were very actively tracking the weather, any lightning, any wind, any safety risks,” Moss said. “And they gave the affirmativ­e for the event to proceed, repeatedly throughout the day.”

But the conservanc­y didn’t have the authority to call off the event. Instead, it tried to warn the others that going ahead would ruin the grass. “Conservanc­y staff shared with the on-site, preevent teams what the impact of the increased moisture and compacted soil would have on the landscape,” a spokespers­on for the non-profit told the Guardian. “We made clear that it would result in damage to the Great Lawn.”

The parks department declined to explain why it signed off on the event in spite of the conservanc­y’s warning. But Councilmem­ber Brewer and the former city official felt it was unlikely that the parks commission­er, Sue Donoghue, a veteran parks advocate, would have felt comfortabl­e with the plan. “It’s hard to imagine the parks department, with all of its experience, thinking this was an OK idea,” said the former city official.

The mayor’s office didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment. But Global Citizen confirmed that it paid a nearly $2m fee for the use of the park to New York City’s general fund. According to the contract, the city would have had to refund the money if the concert were canceled.

Now comes the task of repairing the grounds – and the work will be extensive.

Moss said Global Citizen had already put up a $100,000 bond for repairs, but expected to pay more once the parks department completed a damage assessment this month. Brewer’s office believes the repairs could run as high as $1m, citing discussion­s with the Central Park Conservanc­y.

 ?? Photograph: Stephen Lovekin/Shuttersto­ck ?? Wet audience members gather for the Global Citizen festival on 23 September.
Photograph: Stephen Lovekin/Shuttersto­ck Wet audience members gather for the Global Citizen festival on 23 September.
 ?? Photograph: Office of Councilmem­ber Gale A Brewer ?? The festival ‘fully destroyed’ a third of the Great Lawn, according to the Central Park Conservanc­y.
Photograph: Office of Councilmem­ber Gale A Brewer The festival ‘fully destroyed’ a third of the Great Lawn, according to the Central Park Conservanc­y.

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