Monday, February 3, 2014

Sex offenders move into Rockaway hotel

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Debbie Egan-Chin/New York Daily News



Danny Ruscillo, president of the 100th Precinct Community Council, was enraged to learn sex offenders had moved into an SRO on Beach 116th Street in Rockaway. Ruscillo said the owner had promised he would upgrade the site.




ROCKAWAY civic leaders are livid that sex offenders have moved into a troubled SRO on Beach 116th St. after the owner promised to upgrade the property.


Danny Ruscillo, the president of the 100 Precinct Commnity Council, said he spotted notifications that two registered sex offenders recently moved into the building, which served as a halfway house before it was damaged by Hurricane Sandy in 2012.


The community successfully blocked efforts by a tenant of the building owner, Jay Deutchman, to turn it into a homeless shelter last year.


RELATED: BEACH 116TH ST IS HOPING FOR BETTER DAYS IN ROCKAWAY


Ruscillo said Deutchman pledged in meetings he would put something there to benefit the community, so long as it paid his mortgage.


“Once again our community was misled,” said Ruscillo. “It will adversely affect the Beach 116th St. corridor and make it potentially an unsafe condition for the residents, especially the children, businesses and shoppers.”


Deutchman, however, said he had no idea that sex offenders were living in the building. One of the individuals was classified as a potential high risk to the community.


RELATED: ROCKAWAY: LET’S STOP NARCO FREEDOM FROM REOPENING


“It doesn’t necessarily please me, but I don’t have children (living) in the building,” he said. “It’s just an SRO and we are only renting to working people.”


Deutchman noted that he renovated the dilapidated front of the former hotel. He said he would like to overhaul the site, and has only been allowing short-term leases.


“We’ve been in talks with politicians and we’re open to be a part of any development that goes on over there,” he said.


RELATED: WHAT DO YOU WANT ON BEACH 116TH ST.?


The city has leveraged public and private dollars to spruce up storefronts along the aging commercial strip, which serves as a gateway to Rockaway Beach from the A train and buses.


Beachy boutiques and gourmet eateries have popped up in recent years, but shoppers and merchants have long complained about harassment from SRO and halfway house residents who wander the streets.


Assemblyman Phil Goldfeder said he has been in contact with Deutchman to find a solution.


“I’m exploring options to alleviate the street of troubled tenants,” he said.


On Monday, he unveiled a plan to toughen current laws by restricting convicted sex offenders from residing within 500 feet or less from any public park with a playground.


lcolangelo@nydailynews.com





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