About CIVITAS
Mission Statement
In 1981, when CIVITAS was founded, August Heckscher, its first chair, hearkened back to the Roman Republic to find a name that would express the spirit of the new community organization. The name chosen, “CIVITAS” referred to that quality of a citizen that made him deeply involved in the life and fate of his city. Such has been the guiding spirit for CIVITAS ever since.
The mission of CIVITAS is to foster, mobilize and coordinate civic concern in the community of Manhattan’s Upper East Side and East Harlem. To that end, CIVITAS seeks to promote, preserve and protect residential neighborhoods that are lively and livable. To focus its energies and maximize its impact, CIVITAS has identified the following issues as its principal areas of concern:
I. Urban Planning and Public Policy
- Real estate development within the larger context of well conceived urban planning and coherent zoning.
- Limits on overbearing residential towers.
- Pleasing public and private spaces; sidewalk landscaping (trees), street furniture, parks (big and small) and rear yards free of encroachment.
- Public access to the waterfront.
- Community facilities: a reasoned and balanced approach to their siting, size and permitted uses.
- Affordable housing, with good design that promotes street life.
II. Infrastructure
- A strong public transportation system; rapid transit underground, smooth riding clean-air buses on the streets and an infrastructure that promotes cycling.
- Traffic control in the interest of pedestrian safety; and end to lawlessness and danger to our streets.
- Efficient delivery of municipal services: police, fire and sanitation.
III. The Environment
- Preservation of light and air and prevention of excessive wind forces in new construction.
- Clean air and pure water.
IV. Related Issues
- Landmark preservation.
- Selected related issues affecting areas elsewhere in the city which may impact adversely on the Upper East Side and East Harlem.
The CIVITAS Model
(Excerpts from an essay by Professor James E. Hickey, Jr. published in the Harriman Review)
One of the pressing question facing urban governments is how to simultaneously accommodate urbanization, economic vitality, and quality of life. That accommodation requires, among other things, legal, political, and policy processes in which competing interests with a stake in urban environmental issues can participate in a meaningful way. The decision-making process should assure an opportunity for participation by public interests such as local, regional and national governments and the private interests such as businesses, consumers, and citizens living in neighborhood urban communities.
If neighborhood community interests are not meaningfully taken into account in the urban environment equation, the quality of life for residents may well deteriorate. In any event, the responsibility for the quality of life in urban communities does not rest with government alone. Urban communities and neighborhoods must shoulder some of the responsibility themselves. The question for urban communities is how best to carry out that responsibility.
CIVITAS provides a model for community-based participation in urban environment decision-making.
CIVITAS is a union of citizens who live in East Harlem and the Upper East Side of the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It was founded almost two decades ago as a voluntary community organization to work for improvement to the quality of life in East Harlem and the Upper East Side.
CIVITAS may serve as a model for urban communities if not for other reason that it has been successful. During the years of its existence it has had a substantial and significant impact on the quality of life of citizens in East Harlem and the Upper East Side. CIVITAS has over 2000 members. It functions through a board of directors, organization officers (President, Vice-President, Treasurer and Secretary) and an advisory board. The boards and officers are part-time volunteers and are not paid for their services. CIVITAS is funded by voluntary contributions received from individuals and private foundations.
The primary focus of CIVITAS is to seek urban planning and zoning that maintains affordable housing and the integrity of the neighborhood character on the Upper East Side and East Harlem.
Over the years CIVITAS has worked formally and informally with municipal government, politicians, other neighborhood groups and associations, and consultants to produce information and recommendations that affect urban planning and zoning matters in the community.
The primary vehicle used by CIVITAS to address these matters are surveys, reports, and studies.
One lesson of CIVITAS’ activities is that an urban neighborhood organization, to be effective, should focus narrowly on a particular subject matter for its work. This helps the organization avoid dissipating scares financial and human resources.
It also enables the organization to develop and expertise and a reputation in the larger community for that expertise. In turn, this helps the organization to raise money and to have its work taken seriously.
One vehicle for the active participation of urban communities in the quality of life of their neighborhood is for citizens in specific urban neighborhoods to form and support non-profit, volunteer, organizations like CIVITAS. The CIVITAS model used in New York City provides an effective way for urban residents to actively participate in the economic development and in the improvement of quality of life in their neighborhoods. CIVITAS’ example has helped to foster reliance on the democratic process, and to produce a more responsive municipal government in urban planning and zoning matters.
James E. Hickey, Jr. is a Professor of Law and director of International Programs, Hofstra University, School of Law, Hempstead, New York.
Officers & Directors
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Founder August Heckscher 1914-1997 Chairman Genie Rice President Joseph F. Walsh |
Vice Presidents Raymond Plumey T. Gorman Reilly Felipe Ventegeat Treasurer Frederic Withington Secretary Jo Ahern Bressler |
Board of Directors
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Mark S. Alexander Tess Ankis Lucienne S. Bloch William Q. Brothers Natasha Brown Adrienne Caplan Elisabeth R. Clark Ray Cornbill Janis Eltz Marcia T. Fowle Judith Fresco |
Jamie Gibbs Stuart Goldman Sally Goodgold Rita Hirsch Roberta Hodgson Willa Hutner Clifton Maloney Jeanne McAnaney Daniel Perez Peter Pettibone Diane P. Phillpotts |
Debbie Quinones Linda L. Rainey Agustin Rivera Roberta Schneiderman Sally Schubert Cora Shelton M. Sava B. Thomas James T. B. Tripp Matthew Washington John S. Winkleman |
Committees and Their Chairs
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Newsletter Sally Schubert - editor Benefit Jamie Gibbs Membership |
Streetscape Rita Hirsch Trees Janis Eltz Environment & Infrastructure Jo Bressler & Jim Tripp |
Zoning Raymond Plumey & Bill Brothers Transportation Roberta Schneiderman & Gorman Reilly Second Avenue Subway Task Force |