Queens economy shows resiliency after Sept. 11
Times Ledger; September 5, 2002;
By Dustin Brown
If
America is the land of possibilities, then Queens is where they
happen.
The fable goes that when
immigrants step off the tarmac at JFK or LaGuardia, they settle down
before reaching the county borders. Thus the borough that is home to
the city’s major airports is also its most diverse, a description
that applies as much to the economy as to the people.
But
when Sept. 11 hit, the attack seen around the world also jarred that
lifeblood of the borough’s economy, forcing the shutdown of both
John F. Kennedy International and LaGuardia airports and the
eventual layoffs of thousands. Manufacturers and businesses in
Queens with close ties to Lower Manhattan struggled alongside the
companies based near Ground Zero.
Yet the borough has also
shown a remarkable resiliency, with retailers reporting strong sales
and development projects progressing apace despite the setbacks of
Sept. 11 and a faltering economy. Meanwhile, the borough’s
immigrants have tied Queens into a global economy that has provided
added stability.
The Queens County Overall Economic
Development Corporation has estimated that Queens lost 20,000 jobs
as a result of the terrorist attacks, said Marie Nahikian, the
executive director of the nonprofit group.
Of the
unemployment claims the state Labor Department considers to be
directly related to the terrorist attacks, 24 percent were filed by
Queens residents.
A year later airlines are still cutting
back and the effect flows directly into Queens. The air passenger
and freight transportation industry directly employed 41,500 people
in Queens before Sept. 11, accounting for 8.6 percent of the
borough’s total employment, according to QCOEDC
statistics.
“The airports were the big hit,” said Seth
Bornstein, the director of economic development in the Queens
borough president’s office.
The QCOEDC reported that 8,500
air transport jobs were lost in Queens between Sept. 11 and the
spring, while an estimated 4,000 additional jobs evaporated in
related industries such as airport parking, food services and
hotels. Not only do airport employees often live in Queens, but many
local businesses cater to the airports and suffered alongside the
airlines.
The borough also has a strong base of manufacturers
in areas such as Long Island City and College Point, many of which
suffered because of their ties to Manhattan and the overall
standstill after Sept. 11.
Queens ranked second only to
Manhattan in the number of businesses that received federal
assistance from the U.S. Small Business Administration, which
distributed 409 disaster loans totaling $24,408,700.
But
Sept. 11 also struck at a time when the borough stood on the brink
of a new era of development in its downtown areas, a future that has
in some ways been advanced by the terrorist attacks.
“We like
to think that there’s been a lot of people refocused and relooking
at areas of Queens — Long Island City, Jamaica, Flushing — as areas
for development as businesses tend to maybe diversify their
options,” Bornstein said. “While it’s important that downtown is
rebuilt, it’s important that businesses know there are alternatives
for decentralization.”
But those effects are long-term in
scope. Although the borough president’s office compiled a list of
available spaces in the days after Sept. 11, Queens did not have a
sufficient base of Class-A office space to accommodate companies
displaced from Lower Manhattan.
Meanwhile, the market for
office space has cooled over the past year, and the immediate need
for companies to burst beyond Manhattan’s borders has died
down.
But Queens remains poised to capture that market when
it revives, especially after MetLife moved to Queens Plaza in
November and broke ground on an expansion, helping to tear down the
psychological barriers for companies considering a move to Queens.
“As the economy cycles through, people will eventually be
looking for reasonably priced office space, and we will have it,”
said Dan Miner, the director of business services at the Long Island
City Business Development Corporation.
The opening of MoMA
QNS on Queens Boulevard in June gave the borough the added cachet of
a world-renowned art museum, and the Queens West project advanced
with the opening of a new riverfront apartment tower in
April.
Retailers, meanwhile, are performing well despite
problems in other parts of the economy.
Although the Queens
Center Mall felt a “slight downturn in business and traffic”
immediately after Sept. 11, senior manager Curt Fickeisen said
business has been faring extremely well in recent
months.
“Business has been coming back since that time and
we’re basically seeing very good business right now,” he said. “All
of our spaces are occupied, we have no vacancy and the stores report
good business. I’d say we’re in pretty good shape.”
The mall
is also moving ahead on a major expansion that will double its size,
Bornstein said, joining a long list of projects across the borough
that have remained on track.
In southeast Queens, Jamaica
Center opened in May with a multiplex movie theater and several
national retailers, including the Gap and Old Navy, spurring what
many hope to be the start of an economic revitalization that is
expected to continue when the AirTrain directly links Jamaica to JFK
in 2003.
The Flushing Mall, which opened in December, is
still struggling to attract national retailers, a problem that
afflicted the neighborhood long before Sept. 11. The blow to
business in Chinatown affected Flushing after some residents lost
their jobs, but neighborhood projects are still moving forward, such
as the Flushing Expo, a mall slated for a fall
opening.
Although the borough’s reliance on the airports has
in many ways harmed its economy over the past year, their presence
also provided stability in the form of immigrants who infuse new
life and new money into the economy.
“All over the borough
every neighborhood’s been impacted by a new infusion of capital by
new Americans,” Bornstein said. “Years ago people came here with
nothing but the shirt on their back. Now they come with capital,
they have resources.”
Reach reporter Dustin Brown by e-mail at Timesledger@aol.com or
call 229-0300, Ext. 154.
©Times-Ledger 2002