SI Ferry businesses plagued by a lack of security

All aboard the Staten Island Scary.

Ferry terminal businesses on both sides of the route linking Lower Manhattan and Staten Island are plagued by a lack of security, with shoplifters and the homeless targeting their stores and employees, a new lawsuit charges.

โ€œJust last night, they grab so many of our (lottery) tickets and left,โ€ said Niel Contractor, manager of the WaterEdge Cafe, as a shirtless homeless man in a winter coat walked Friday through the St. George Ferry Terminal on Staten Island.

โ€œItโ€™s every day,โ€ said Contractor, who recounted regular beer ripoffs, an April assault on an employee and break-ins at the locked ice cream cases. โ€œItโ€™s crazy.โ€

The 23-page court Thursday filing also charged the New York City Economic Development Corp. was refusing to adjust rents for the nine plaintiff businesses and threatening evictions following a decline in post-pandemic ridership.

โ€œDefendant has failed, and continues to fail, to hire sufficient security and personnel,โ€ said the Manhattan Supreme Court suit. โ€œDefendant has permitted, and continues to permit, vagrants to interfere with plaintiffs … thieves and shoplifters (to) harass and rob employees.โ€

In addition, unauthorized hawkers and other individuals are allowed to illegally peddle competing goods and solicit business from ferry riders, the lawsuit charged.

โ€œSometimes we have people stealing, theyโ€™re homeless or junkies,โ€ said worker Jesus Perez of Liberty News and Gifts in the Whitehall Ferry Terminal at the tip of Manhattan.

โ€œItโ€™s increasing a lot,โ€ said Perez, adding the situation worsened in recent years. โ€œAfter the pandemic, it was crazy.โ€

Six of the plaintiffs operate in the terminal on Staten Island, with the other three based in Manhattan.

The businesses run the gamut from restaurants to a newsstand to a pretzel operation, with one lease dating back to January 2006 and a second to November 2008.

The Staten Island Ferry seen devoid of people during the Coronavirus pandemic outbreak on March 22, 2020 in Manhattan, New York.

A spokesman for the NYC Law Department said the city would review the case…

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