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When Something Needs Doing on the UWS, We Get It Done

December 13, 2025 | 8:36 AM
in COLUMNS
15
Photos by Yvonne Vavra

Story was updated Saturday, December 13 at 11:15 a.m.

By Yvonne Vávra

You know how sometimes you fix one thing and accidentally break another? Take the city’s new garbage rules: trash now goes in containers instead of bags on the curb, which is excellent news for anyone who doesn’t enjoy watching rats get the zoomies over their nightly prix fixe. But in the shuffle toward cleanliness, the city also banned anyone outside the Department of Sanitation from bagging trash unless they follow specific guidelines, among which include owning approved containers.

Which is how, in part, one beloved Upper West Side volunteer group found itself sidelined from the very streets it was keeping clean, according to its founder Ann Cutbill Lenane.

One Block was founded in 2020 to tackle the trash piling up on the Upper West Side during the pandemic. Since then, hundreds of Upper West Siders have been cleaning block after block, filling more than 250,000 garbage bags. Yet under the new rules, it suddenly became more difficult to find a place to leave those trash bags.

A spokesperson from the Department of Sanitation told West Side Rag that the new trash bagging rules still offer a variety of options, including the approved bins, on-street containers, bringing the trash to a DSNY garage, or storing it in a truck or facility. The city also committed $5 million in funding to help Business Improvement Districts across the five boroughs to help purchase the new bins.

Either way, it was the end of the road for One Block, but they leave behind a classic Upper West Side story: when something needs doing, someone here rolls up a sleeve and does it.

Upper West Siders have a long history of taking matters into their own hands. Even back in the 19th century — when swimming in the Hudson was both a beloved pastime and a terrible idea — volunteers formed a rescue group to get the growing number of drownings under control. One of them was Arthur Finn, who, according to the Landmark West! organization, lived on Columbus Avenue between West 89th and 90th streets. On a summer night in 1897, he jumped into the Hudson at West 82nd Street to save a man who was losing his battle with the river’s current.

Decades later, it was the whole neighborhood that seemed to be losing its battle – this time with decline. And again, Upper West Siders stepped up. The renaissance of the Upper West Side in the late ’60s was in no small part their doing. After decades of decay – crime, corruption, abandoned buildings, and a government that mostly looked the other way – something finally shifted, and optimism moved back in. Boutiques, bookstores, florists, antique shops, and restaurants began filling the shopfronts again. Zabar’s considered tripling its size, and business owners returned because, at last, there was business to be done here again.

The city’s Housing and Development Administrator, who toured the neighborhood with investors in 1969, put it this way: “These men are really very important, very conservative cats,” he told New York magazine. “They were stunned by what’s happening on the West Side. They felt it was the most striking piece of city revival they had seen. I can tell you they were impressed.”

And who did the magazine credit with sparking that revival? Upper West Siders themselves. The long period of blight, it wrote, had ”created the most skeptical, municipally wise, politically organized, reform-conscious community in the city. West Siders became the nightmare of city bureaucrats. Citizen groups were formed, and soon there was very little about building codes, city officials, law enforcement, health regulations, education, welfare, relocation, the legislature, youth activities, real-estate assessments, political patronage, corruption and judgeships that they did not know.”

A community movement had taken shape that knew exactly how to get its needs met. As Joseph Lyford wrote in his book “The Airtight Cage: A Study of New York’s West Side”: “They were sometimes so terrifying to bureaucrats that once a group called about the need for fixing some bathroom plumbing, and the next day the city sent down 20 toilet seats.”

Of course, with the benefit of hindsight, we know that renaissance wasn’t quite a happily-ever-after. The neighborhood still had some rough years ahead. But if the problems didn’t disappear, neither did the determination of the people who lived here. A perfect example: the volunteers who took on the challenge of pulling Manhattan Valley north of West 96th Street out of its decay.

The Manhattan Valley Development Corporation was a community-run group, founded in 1968, that realized the city wasn’t going to invest a dime in the area’s revival. So they launched their own rehabilitation projects, renovating abandoned and vandalized buildings with an all-volunteer staff. Eventually, the group became the first community-operated organization to be officially recognized and funded for its work by the Housing and Development Administration.

There will always be more things to fix, and many more things that will break. But it seems fair to assume we’ll forever have each other’s backs. That community-minded spirit already shows up in countless ways: feeding the hungry, helping injured birds, tutoring students, beautifying blocks, and spending time with older neighbors. And now, with One Block no longer picking up after us, there’s one more way to volunteer—by not littering in the first place.

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AWS
AWS
8 hours ago

And we owe so much to Gale Brewer.

8
Reply
Ian Alterman
Ian Alterman
6 hours ago
Reply to  AWS

Like most politicians, Gale is a mixed bag: on the right some of some issues; on the wrong side of others. But her constituent services team is among the most knowledgeable and responsive I have encountered in my 60+ years on the UWS.

0
Reply
72RSD
72RSD
6 hours ago
Reply to  AWS

After decades on the UWS I actually disagree

0
Reply
Betty Samuels
Betty Samuels
8 hours ago
Reply to  AWS

Yes Gail Brewer and many others.

3
Reply
Adam Smith
Adam Smith
7 hours ago

Well, they may have *started* as “terrifying to bureaucrats”, but now they’re the sort of people who intentionally re-elect clueless, bureaucratic minions like Gale Brewer.

(hilariously, the only other comment on this, as of right now, is one praising Gale. I can only hope that it’s satire.)

Last edited 7 hours ago by Adam Smith
1
Reply
Terry
Terry
7 hours ago

Thanks for this story. A welcome reminder of what individuals and communities can do.

3
Reply
Lisi
Lisi
7 hours ago

One Block was a bittersweet highlight of the dark and lonely Covid pandemic. Not only did it beautify the neighborhood and provide worthy people with employment, it also demonstrated how one person’s optimism and energy can make a lasting contribution to a world that seems to be spinning in the wrong direction. Thank you Anne Cutbill Lenane for showing us that goodness was still possible at a time when we needed the reminder.

4
Reply
Bill Williams
Bill Williams
7 hours ago

The affluent UWS saw decline post depression and then an influx of immigrants post WW2 and a1939 city law allowing apartments to be subdivided into single-room occupancy (SRO) units and rooming houses to address housing shortages led to further decline. This attracted transients and low-income renters, leading to deteriorating buildings, rising crime, and business closures.

Massive federal funds and the Lincoln Center zone and the WSURA urban renewal projects along with rezoning that led to investment.

Of course over 20,000 Puerto Rican and many Black families were displaced from the neighborhood.

So government caused the problems and then stepped back in.

0
Reply
Jeff French Segall
Jeff French Segall
7 hours ago

“And who did the magazine credit with sparking that revival? Upper West Siders themselves….” My family moved from the Madison Square Park area to the UWS in 1958. Soon after we arrived, my parents joined the FDR Woodrow Wilson Reform Democrats club (96th Street, just west of Columbus Avenue), the Upper West Side’s answer to the corrupt political powers at the time. Their efforts succeeded on so many fronts. My mother, Evaline French Segall, headed the Vote JFK center. Names so important to that time are Jerrold Nadler, Hedi Piel, Al Blumenthal, William (Bill) Fitz Ryan, Manfred (Fred) Ohrenstein, Ted Weiss, Jane Mills, a wonderful character who called himself “Nostradamus,”, and so many more. Week after week, they provided assistance to people looking for housing, and many other services. They joined with Percy Sutton, (the Manhattan Borough President, 1966-77) and as a powerful team developed the Upper West Side Urban Renewal area which brought in the Mitchell-Lama buildings, whose residents would help in large part in the revitalization of the the UWS. My parents spent more time at “the Club” than they did at home. But their work, in concert with so many other like-minded people, brought about the successful rescue and rebuilding of what would become the new Upper West Side.

12
Reply
Paul
Paul
3 hours ago

A heartening story. But odd that there is no mention of the role that the building of Lincoln Center played in reviving the UWS. Interesting that the Housing Administrators tour happened in 1969, the very year that Lincoln Center (Juilliard building) was completed. It was hailed as a major boost to the area for decades. Unfortunately, now it is considered to have been “bad gentrification” because the people who lived in the area were forced to move out. As those original walkup buildings were substandard, I would expect that they moved to better public housing. Give Lincoln Center and its planners (Rockefellers and the Eisenhower administration) the credit they deserve.

1
Reply
Jeff French Segall
Jeff French Segall
1 hour ago
Reply to  Paul

Thank you for your first sentence, Paul. My comment was restricted to my personal recollections of what my parents and their associates accomplished back in those days. Here’s another: When Jerry Nadler first made his successful run for District Leader, my mom was his campaign manager. These were personal recollections of myself as a young college student, not nearly as involved in community building as my parents and their wonderful cohorts. I leave more comprehensive analyses of community building to others. Thank you for yours.

0
Reply
Pedestrian
Pedestrian
1 hour ago
Reply to  Paul

The Lincoln Center “revival” or displacement was supposed to provide housing for the displaced neighborhood but it never did. In a burst of generosity and contrition we hear they are go to revamp a park! O gosh golly! Sorry, it was bad gentrification.

1
Reply
caly
caly
2 hours ago
Reply to  Paul

Maybe you’d be interested in seeing this. It’s been extended to 2/27/26

https://centropr.hunter.cuny.edu/tools/afterlives-of-san-juan-hill/

0
Reply
Eric
Eric
2 hours ago
Reply to  Paul

“Substandard” by whose standards? Likely not by most of the residents who were uprooted from their longstanding, close-knit community.

1
Reply
Marcus Bengali
Marcus Bengali
2 hours ago

These are the kind of bucolic articles that UWSers love to tout and are supposed to give you all certain feels because you have so much, avoiding the neglect we all have towards the unhoused, unemployed, less fortunate, etc.

0
Reply

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