New York Daily News

Mayoral hopeful Garcia: I will streamline permits

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

Mayoral hopeful Kathryn Garcia appealed to pandemic-weary New York City small business owners Friday with a plan that aims to drasticall­y streamline the city’s permitting processes and expand the city’s outdoor offerings.

Garcia, who served as sanitation commission­er under Mayor de Blasio, wants to create a single “City Permit” for businesses with fewer than 100 employees to cut down on the “bureaucrat­ic nonsense” she said they now face when trying to launch and maintain themselves.

“Today, to open a restaurant in New York, you need to get permits, file applicatio­ns, undergo reviews, get inspection­s and receive licenses from up to eight different agencies before you can sell a bowl of soup,” Garcia said. “To restart New York City’s local economy, we have to change and we have to change fast.”

Under Garcia’s plan, business owners would be able to apply for a single permit on their smartphone­s, and businesses that are renewing the permit would receive a response within one month of submitting an applicatio­n.

Garcia, who spoke Thursday morning to the Associatio­n for a Better New York, also wants to grant local businesses an acrossthe-board waiver of fees and fines during her first year in office if she’s elected.

Over the past three months, she has focused much of her energy on appealing to outer-borough voters and has pitched herself to them as a competent manager who’s spent her career in public service.

Garcia doubled down on that Friday, sketching a picture of herself as someone who’d bring a blue-collar ethos to City Hall by working long hours and getting “sh-t done.”

“You can’t govern New York City with tweets, you can’t manage 335,000 city employees with a slogan. You don’t learn government at a corporate retreat, and you can’t show up to work two or three hours late, or not at all,” she said in an apparent dig at her chronicall­y late former boss. “Being mayor is showing up to work early every day, treating New Yorkers like customers, and knowing that political platitudes don’t solve problems — hard work does.”

Her permitting proposal could provide considerab­le relief to middle-class business owners frustrated with the red tape associated with running a mom-andpop store.

But her appeal has a much broader reach, according to Charlie O’Donnell, a partner with the Brooklyn Bridge Ventures, a venture capital firm, who said out-of-towners will no longer want to move to the Big Apple if so many businesses remain shuttered.

“Why would they do it today if nothing’s open?” he said. “That’s what makes the city fun and interestin­g and a great experience.”

Garcia has so far trailed in the polls — garnering just 2% of support in the most recent survey.

She also has not yet qualified for public matching funds, which would help jump-start her campaign. The next deadline to qualify matching funds is in mid-March.

 ??  ?? Kathryn Garcia, who is running for mayor, says she’d speed the city’s permitting process.
Kathryn Garcia, who is running for mayor, says she’d speed the city’s permitting process.

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