New York Daily News

FDNY OFFICIALS EYED INSPECTION PRIORITIES

Emails during early days of Adams era indicate debate over fast-tracking safety checks at buildings of politicall­y connected real estate companies

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Senior FDNY officials worried during the early days of Mayor Adams’ administra­tion about how the agency was being asked to fast-track building safety inspection­s for politicall­y connected real estate firms over developers of projects like schools and housing complexes, according to emails reviewed by the Daily News.

The emails, which date to mid-January 2022 and were obtained by The News through sources, revolve around the socalled “DMO List,” named after the office of the Deputy Mayor of Operations, where the document was establishe­d in 2021 under former Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administra­tion, a lawsuit filed by several former and current FDNY chiefs alleges. The suit claims the list was created at the behest of the Real Estate Board of New York, which the influentia­l industry group has strongly denied.

Adams says City Hall has not maintained a DMO List on his watch, though the emails obtained by The News suggest that such a list was used at least in the early days of his administra­tion, largely overseen by the FDNY. Adams has said he strives to help property owners that are “having the challenge of navigating an entity.”

The emails outline how fire officials used — and debated — the list.

On Jan. 26, 2022, about four weeks after Adams took office, then-FDNY Chief of Fire Prevention Joseph Jardin messaged several colleagues saying he was concerned about the direction the DMO document was heading. In the email, Jardin wrote that top FDNY leaders had instructed him to “arbitraril­y expedite” six projects listed on the DMO roster.

“We can’t readily permit this to be the opening of a Pandora’s box and start of bad trend!” Jardin wrote in the email after referring to the list simply as “DMO.”

Within 15 minutes, Assistant FDNY Chief Anthony Saccavino wrote back to Jardin: “I agree.”

That was followed by Kevin Brennan, another assistant chief, also chiming in: “A lot of times these clients ‘claim’ they are waiting on us, but in fact we have sent the contractor back requests for changes and are waiting on the contractor they hired to get back to us.”

It’s not clear from that exchange which six projects Jardin was concerned about.

The DMO List first landed in the headlines last month after it emerged that the FBI, as part of its investigat­ion into Adams’ 2021 campaign and ties to the Turkish government, has obtained a copy of it.

The feds’ interest in the list comes amid reports that, prior to his election as mayor, Adams asked then-FDNY Commission­er Daniel Nigro in September 2021 to look into inspection issues that were threatenin­g to delay the opening of the Turkish Consulate in Manhattan. The consulate opened soon after. FBI investigat­ors have interviewe­d several former and current FDNY officials, including Jardin, about the DMO List, according to a source directly familiar with the matter.

The emails obtained by The News do not mention the Turkish Consulate matter, but shine a light on other projects.

‘Finalize’ Old Farley

On Feb. 4, 2022, Julie Greenberg, a lobbyist with the government relations firm Kasirer, emailed then-Buildings Commission­er Melanie La Rocca and others, asking that they “finalize” inspection­s of the old Farley Building at 421 Eighth Ave. in Manhattan that used to house the city’s main post office branch, a copy of the correspond­ence obtained by The News shows.

The property at the time was waiting to open after being developed into a 740,000-square-foot office space by Vornado Realty Trust, the city’s second-largest commercial landlord, which had hired Kasirer to lobby the Adams administra­tion on “real estate issues,” according to disclosure­s.

La Rocca forwarded Greenberg’s email to FDNY Commission­er Laura Kavanagh, who was at the time the department’s first deputy commission­er.

“This needs to be top priority,” Kavanagh wrote in an email forwarding La Rocca’s message to members of her executive staff. They, in turn, passed it along to Jardin and other FDNY chiefs.

With Jardin and the others looped in, FDNY Capt. Brian Cordasco wrote in response:

“They are looking to add this to the top of the DMO LIST … which I guess tops the newest high priority (Amazon HQ) in

Manhattan that they sent just an hour ago.”

Writing back to Cordasco, Jardin voiced concern about the way the list was being used and argued it wasn’t jibing with its original purpose.

“Maybe we should raise the issue of the scope/purpose of the CRT meetings and the notion that aiding small business was the focus of the effort,” Jardin wrote of the DMO List, using an acronym for “cutting red tape.” It’s unclear whether the email was subsequent­ly shared with Kavanagh.

Jardin, who left the FDNY earlier this year and is among a number of chiefs suing Kavanagh and the department over alleged age discrimina­tion, did not get his way, other emails show.

On April 5, 2022, Luis Martinez, a special adviser to Kavanagh — who by then had been appointed FDNY commission­er by Adams — sent an email to department officials informing them they had created a new “Top 7” list for expedited building inspection­s. The subject line on the email was “DMO-Priorities list update.”

New ‘Top 7’ List

The top item on the new list was 50 Hudson Yards, a 77-story office tower on Manhattan’s West Side developed by Related Cos., one of the city’s largest real estate firms, the email from Martinez shows.

Ritz-Carlton on Broadway, Vornado’s Farley Building project and Amazon’s new headquarte­rs on Fifth Ave. were also on the new priority list in slots two, three and four. On the fifth, sixth and seventh slot of the “Top 7” list was a new therapeuti­c unit at Bellevue Hospital, the Cornbread restaurant on Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn and a St. Francis College building on Remsen St., also in Brooklyn.

Kavanagh was especially interested in getting immediate updates on the “top two” projects, 50 Hudson Yards and the Farley Building, Deputy FDNY Chief Kevin Murphy wrote in a subsequent email on April 6. Getting a quick inspection for the 50 Hudson Yards project, in particular, was “a top priority for City Hall” and would require “cancelled inspection­s” at other properties, Murphy added.

Canceling Other Inspection­s

The emails obtained by The News show that a total of 13 inspection­s had to be canceled to accommodat­e the 50 Hudson Yards project. Among them was an inspection at Brooklyn Independen­t, a middle school in Fort Greene, several small residentia­l buildings in Brooklyn and Manhattan, as well as a Target on Bay Parkway in Brooklyn.

Despite the cancellati­ons, 50 Hudson Yards, which is one of the city’s largest commercial office buildings, required more inspection­s in May, emails show.

“The group has asked for HY to be expedited again, despite the recent history,” Murphy wrote in a May 11, 2022, email to Cordasco and other officials forwarding a message from Madelyn Adams, the FDNY’s intergover­nmental coordinato­r, asking for the project to get another fast-tracked inspection. The “recent history” referenced by Murphy was the inspection­s that had to be canceled in April.

“Can I assume there will be some pushback on moving HY up due to last inspection results?” Murphy asked in a separate email to Cordasco.

Forwarding the chain to Rocco Bonavita, the FDNY’s executive director, Cordasco wrote: “I already wrote back to Chief Murphy to agree there is definitely concern. I recommend we do not drop everything like last time, cancel a bunch of jobs, and try to do this week.”

After its inspection­s, 50 Hudson Yards opened in October 2022. Mayor Adams attended a ribbon-cutting ceremony at the building, calling its opening a “major milestone in New York City’s continued economic recovery.”

Spokesmen for Vornado and Related did not return requests for comment this weekend.

A spokesman for Adams declined to comment Friday when asked about the emails uncovered by The News. The FDNY did not return a request for comment.

As previously reported by The News, beyond Vornado and Related, real estate giants like the Durst Organizati­on and SL Green have landed on the DMO List. Between them, those firms own millions of square feet of property across the five boroughs and are considered among the most politicall­y influentia­l businesses in the city.

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 ?? ?? Lobbyist email on “finalizing” inspection­s of old Farley building was forwarded to then-FDNY First Deputy Commission­er Laura Kavanagh (above). Main, Mayor Adams at ribbon-cutting for 50 Hudson Yards, which had been on expedited inspection­s list.
Lobbyist email on “finalizing” inspection­s of old Farley building was forwarded to then-FDNY First Deputy Commission­er Laura Kavanagh (above). Main, Mayor Adams at ribbon-cutting for 50 Hudson Yards, which had been on expedited inspection­s list.

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