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King-of-New-York OP t1_j580mfb wrote

“Electchester technically comprises just 38 buildings — squat brick towers tucked neatly between the Long Island Expressway and NYCHA’s Pomonok Houses. But residents of the co-op complex know it’s really about what winds among the actual apartments: two shopping centers, a bowling alley, a public school, a library. A nearly century-old Jewish club that meets in an imposing office building with its original mid-century phone booths. The “rumpus rooms” in residential basements, where a Cub Scout pack gathers and children’s birthday parties are held. On any given night, a handful of clubs — the Motorcycle Club, the Electrical Welfare Club — might assemble. There’s no real need to ever leave Electchester except to commute into Manhattan for work, the same way it’s always been — a slice of 1950s middle-class utopia smack in the middle of Queens.”

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ArmArtArnie t1_j58ftd4 wrote

This is really interesting. Is it still only for electricians, or was that just when it was originally built?

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King-of-New-York OP t1_j59bzah wrote

“Send a letter to 65-46 160th Street, Flushing, New York, 11365 requesting an application. Electchester management denies it, but some residents think Local No. 3 affiliates are still better off in the housing process, so definitely include mention of any union ties in your letter and application. “It’s my impression that those Local No. 3 connections live on a little,” says Andrew Fischer, who, in the late ’90s, got an apartment in a few months despite what he remembers as something like a one-to-two-year waiting list at the time.”

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charcoalist t1_j5abtzr wrote

I know several people who live there who are not electricians. Two sons and their parents, 3 separate apartments. They've been there for decades. I'm not sure exactly how they got in, but I believe the father had connections.

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glazor t1_j5eo98y wrote

Half and half. Half is regular Mitchell-Llama, the other half under purview of Local 3, IBEW.

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bigbrunettehair t1_j5galc4 wrote

I don’t think that’s true. The entire development is Mitchell Lama.

Source: lived here all my life, as did my parents, and my grandparents were original tenants.

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glazor t1_j5gg4fi wrote

Entire development IS Mitchell-Llama, but part of it is managed by LOCAL 3. Which also handles applications and limits them to members.

Source: Local 3 electrician.

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hbp_burnerphone t1_j5fayjj wrote

America's agricultural industry, Ford, AT&T, IBM and all the unions that built our cities have surprisingly cooperative origin stories -- and government essentially forced Rockefellers and Carnegies to develop American "noblesse oblige."

The govt didn't position itself against huge private interests for a long time during and after the Cold War, the "freedom" to get rich being our main ideological weapon.

But so many places where you see deeply rooted communities, there were working people who chose to lift each other up. If you're talking about our history, the current individualism is unusual.

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