Neil A. Carousso produces and co-hosts WCBS Newsradio 880’s Small Business Spotlight series with Joe Connolly. Click here to watch the weekly video segments featuring advice for business owners on survival, recovery and growth opportunities.

    Interview

  • What to do about the vacant offices that are slowing NYC’s economic recovery

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    By Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — Traffic volume into Manhattan soared after Labor Day as many companies began requiring employees to be in the office at least three days a week and Wall Street firms, including JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs, nixed remote work altogether. Still, many office buildings remain mostly empty.

    Office occupancy in New York City was just 38 percent last week, according to Kastle Systems, which tracks building swipes. That’s a 3.5 percent increase from the last week of August when many white collar workers ditch their business suits for bathing suits down the Shore or out East in the Hamptons.

    “This could be a 10 to 20 year painful process where we have vacant buildings that were once assets to our communities, now, will be liabilities unless we put policies in place that streamline the approval process to convert these buildings and provide economic incentives to help facilitate that,” said Scott Rechler, chairman and chief executive officer of RXR, on the WCBS Small Business Spotlight, sponsored by Dime Community Bank.

    Rechler, who sits on the boards of the New York Federal Reserve and the MTA, points to New York’s recovery from 9/11 when rezoning enabled many office buildings in Lower Manhattan to be converted to apartments.

    “If we can do that, we could take that, you know, 10 to 20 year period and bring it down to a five to 10 year period.”

    The real estate developer said those conversions will allow buildings to be competitive in a post-pandemic environment.

    “Buildings that can provide the highest level of experience and engagement and what we call ‘third spaces’ where people can collaborate and bond and become parts of broader communities will actually thrive. But, buildings that are more commodity-like – class B buildings, class C buildings that aren’t close to public transit – frankly are going to become obsolete,” said Rechler.

    RXR is looking at converting some of their Manhattan office buildings into mixed-use buildings where New Yorkers can work and live, which Rechler calls part of the “post-pandemic playbook” to attract more workers to the city.

    “If you look at our multi-family portfolio – and we have 10,000 units of multi-family – we’re 99 percent occupied,” he said. “I’m optimistic because the people is (sic) the fuel that drives the long-term vitality of this economy and they’ve come back.”

    He told WCBS 880 the next step is for real estate developers, like himself, to create affordable housing to attract more talent to the five boroughs. A lack of housing inventory has led to an increase in home prices and rents. Rents in RXR buildings, Rechler said, are 10-20 percent higher than they were before the pandemic.

    New office buildings now include amenities such as health and wellness spaces to incentivize employees to work in-person.

    The firm is also noticing companies headquartered in Manhattan are opening satellite offices in their buildings on Long Island and New Jersey.

    “Companies want to have spots that are closer to where people live both for affordability and convenience,” Rechler said. “So you see a number of banks, for example, have opened up offices in New Jersey or some of the pharmaceutical companies and the same thing we’re seeing in Nassau County.”

    “That will enable people to live closer to home and have a shorter commute for part of the week or the whole week, depending where they are, but still be able to convene in New York City with all their peers where you can focus on culture building, ideation, collaboration, that you can’t get if everyone’s working independently.”

    Rechler sees the city is transitioning from a Manhattan-centric economy to what he calls a “superstar region,” which he believes will be more sustainable post-pandemic.

    See more on the future of the office on the Small Business Spotlight video above.

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  • Mets Greats Piazza, Alfonzo Talk Possible 2000 World Series Rematch with Yankees

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    Executive Produced by Carousso Enterprises, LLC.

    Flushing, NY — The Mets and Yankees have been among Major League Baseball’s best this season. Some New York baseball fans have been eager for a 2000 World Series rematch in October.

    Mets legends Mike Piazza and Edgardo Alfonzo, who played for the ’00 team, see a possible collision course with the Yankees taking shape as the Amazins make a postseason run.

    “I think it would be great for the city,” Piazza told NY2C’s Rachel Luscher at Mets Old Timers’ Day. “They’re going to have to go through some very difficult ball clubs, but it would be fun to see. I would look forward to it.”

    See Luscher’s full report above.

    NY2C’s On The Call is executive produced by Carousso Enterprises, LLC.

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  • Kickstarter Pilots 4-Day Workweek, Keeps Employees Remote

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    By Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — Kickstarter is experimenting with a four-day, 32-hour workweek, which has gained momentum in parts of Europe as the pandemic shined a light on the need for work-life balance.

    The six-month pilot program began in April. Early results are promising, according to the Brooklyn-based crowdsourcing company. It has seen improved efficiencies company-wide.

    “The four-day workweek for us has been an exercise that’s allowed us to really improve all of those sort of dynamics in our business so that employees are more engaged,” said Kickstarter chief strategy officer Jon Leland on the WCBS Small Business Spotlight, sponsored by Dime Community Bank.

    “When they come to work, they are rested and more focused, they’re all more motivated to get their work done faster,” he said.

    Leland said Kickstarter’s operations have already improved after cutting some of the major time sucks.

    “Meetings are the number one killer of time,” he said. “There’s a lot of aspects of sort of documentation or just dumb processes that have gotten built up over time that people just continue to do that they know doesn’t really matter and isn’t useful.”

    The CSO told WCBS 880 the company has “empowered” middle managers to eliminate redundancies and streamline workflow.

    The four-day workweek comes without any reduction in salaries or benefits. The company has also decided to keep its employees remote because of productivity and to save on rent.

    “From a real estate perspective, because we had to look at this as well, it’s just very expensive to own or lease and run an office setting if you’re not using it five days a week,” said Leland. “It just didn’t make financial sense.”

    Kickstarter will measure the program’s success by revenue and money raised for startups on the platform.

    It has recently seen a bump in new investments in e-commerce and gaming businesses.

    “Tabletop games has (sic) become just a massive part of the Kickstarter ecosystem because I think people want to spend time with each other, also doing things in real life together, and tabletop board games are a great way of doing that. So, we’ve seen that emerge as just a really massive part of our business.”

    Leland said the biggest backing Kickstarter ever hosted on its platform was earlier this year when author Brandon Sanderson raised $41.7 million to publish books he wrote during the pandemic.

    See more on the WCBS Small Business Spotlight video above.

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  • Mets Under Steve Cohen Embrace Amazin’ History

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    Executive Produced by Carousso Enterprises, LLC.

    Flushing, NY — Steve Cohen received a hero’s welcome from the Flushing faithful on Mets Old Timers’ Day. It was the first Old Timers’ Day since 1994, which the lifelong Mets fan brought back after buying the team.

    “I think the fans just want to know you care and want to know that ownership is listening and that’s all I’m trying to do,” Cohen told Carousso Enterprises and NY2C before the old timers ran out on the Citi Field diamond.

    See more with the Mets owner on the video above.

    NY2C’s On The Call is executive produced by Carousso Enterprises, LLC.

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  • Mets Celebrate 60-Year History with Old Timers’ Day

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    Executive Produced by Carousso Enterprises, LLC.

    Flushing, NY — The New York Mets celebrated their first Old Timers’ Day in 28 years on Saturday by paying homage to their 60-year history with players and coaches representing each decade of the franchise.

    Rachel Luscher talked to Mets legends Mike Piazza, Doc Gooden, Mookie Wilson, Darryl Strawberry, owner Steve Cohen and more at Old Timers’ Day at Citi Field. Watch her story above.

    NY2C’s On The Call is executive produced by Carousso Enterprises, LLC.

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