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Claire: The Lady Makes Me Smile

By MICHAEL SCHENKLER

It has to be tough for Claire.

She has been at the center of the Queens universe (or Queens Unisphere for purists) for so long, it’s probably difficult for her to imagine the world from any other perspective.

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Claire’s daughter, Astronaut Ellen Baker and my son, Lee Katzman meet in the late 1980s at the NY Hall of Science.

You see, once you enter that shiny steel structure and your view is obscured by continents and blurred by rings, the world is never quite the same. Now no one, especially this writer, is suggesting Claire has anything but exceptional vision — she’s been a visionary for this borough, her borough, for a decade-and-a-half. She has ascended to a unispherical throne, earned through vision and service and accomplishment and she sits there by herself.

Sure she has visitors: staff, friends, collegues. They come and go through the portals of Queens’ mini-world. They stop by, consult, pay homage, help and even ask a favor or two. But for 15 years, Claire has lived encircled by the Unisphere rings, by herself.

And it’s one tough existence.

She has the weight of the Queens world on her shoulders.

That awesome responsibility and the loneliness at the top (or inside) can make a rewarding job less than rewarding at times. I might add — even in this special issue and this special column of homage to our beep — it can also occasionally cause otherwise near perfect people to occasionally act impervectly.

For those who see that line as a set up for me to tell negative tales about Claire, sorry. I know none. I do know, that we have inside that Queens Unisphere, a woman who 15 years ago, had a position thrust upon her in tragedy and has taken that position and served our borough and has done her very best.

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Claire Shulman with Michael, Lillian and Allison Schenkler at the Tribune Holiday Party this past December.Party this past December.
photo: Dee Richard

And her very best is a lot better than just about anyone else could do. I say without reservation that Claire Shulman has guided our borough with love, affection, vision and commitment for her four terms in office. She has nurtured, built and molded the most diverse county in the world into a multicultural masterpiece of progress.

She has preserved the old and celebrated our differences while constructing the new and uniting us all. She has been our architect – both physically and socially.

She has dedicated herself to health and education. She has worked with the morass of governmental hoohahs. She has subjected herself to the whims of an authoritarian mayor in order to get a larger piece of the city pie for our borough. She has fought for what she believes in. She has almost always taken the high road, because that is where Claire dwells.

Claire came into public service as a nurse and community board member. For 25 years she worked her way up the public service ladder. Throughout the entire time, Claire Shulman mastered the ways of community and learned the ways of government. She never became political. She was loyal; she was hard working; she was bright; she was skilled. But Claire Shulman, throughout her years in public service, was not sullied by politics.

When Donald Manes took his life in scandal, Claire quietly steered the borough through those tragic times. From that moment forth she chose not to be a political insider. She worked with, but maintained a healthy distance from, the democratic organization. She maintained her independence but lent her name to appropriate causes. She was driven by the issues not by the people. She was motivated by what was good for her borough, not her party.

She never was a political powerhouse. She never wanted to be.

She was a Queens powerhouse. That’s what she wanted.

And she used that power to build.

Now, like so many others Claire Shulman faces term limits.

We don’t expect to see her crying about it.

We don’t expect to see her trying to find a way around the will of the people.

We expect her to accept it and move on. Accepting the will of the people is where public servents and politicians can be clearly separated.

Claire Shulman has been a public servant for nearly 40 years. As a parent and parent association president, as a community board member, chairperson and borough coordinator, as deputy borough president and as borough president, Claire Shulman has been there for the people she serves — the people of Queens.

Although this Queens giant faces term limits, I am certain that it is not the end of her service to the people. Opportunities present themselves today and many new ones will before her term is up at year’s end.

More than Claire Shulman’s service to Queens, I shall remember Claire Shulman the person. I must take off my political columnist’s hat and put on the smile of a friend. Claire Shulman has been a friend of mine, of this paper, of the people of Queens.

On a personal level, I have only fond thoughts of our borough president. In the late 1980s, then Mayor David Dinkins held a reception at the NY Hall of Science for Astronaut Ellen Baker who had recently returned from outer space.

Ellen had traveled into space carrying among other things the image of the Queens Tribune placed on CD-rom. She had a special connection to Queens. Her mother was and is borough president. While Claire stared into the future for our borough, Ellen was traveling into the future for our country. Well Claire’s kid and my kid met that day. Lee who is now 22 was about seven back then. He still has the autographed photos Ellen had given him back then.

Allison, my 11-year-old, first encountered Claire in the Queens Zoo. Allison was probably four-years-old when I showed her the proud eagle named Claire and told her about my friend the borough president. Allsion has met Claire a number of times since then. But I recall one in particular. Claire came to pay a shiva call when my father passed away three years ago. Allison came running into the den to tell me Claire Shulman was in the living room and whispered, "she doesn’t look at all like the eagle."

No she doesn’t, Allison.

But she sure has the vision of one.

Thank you Claire.

Not 4 Publication Reprint:
July 13, 2000

TERM LIMITS: This item is really the background of the next item.

I am not an advocate of term limits. In principle, I oppose them. The people should be bright enough to exercise term limits at the ballot box whenever appropriate. But big money, the advantages of incumbency, paid-for mailings, special interest groups and the lack of real campaign reform has made it near impossible to beat an incumbent.

And so, although this writer opposes term limits in principle, I applaud them in practice. Strange, huh?

The flurry of new political activity brought about by New York City term limits is refreshing to watch. A whole new generation of people has a chance to serve on the City Council. And there will be three new citywide officials and changes with most Borough Presidents.

And those dirty little rumors that we might see another sneaky little quickie attempt to do away with term limits engineered by the City Council and Speaker Peter Vallone continue to reveal the true desperation on the part of people who may have to enter the real world to earn a living. If the rumors are true and there is another attempt or even a trial balloon to eliminate City Council term limits, not only will it meet with public outcry and rejection, it will cost Peter Vallone any possibility of future elective office

The worst thing about changing elected officials is the sorry look on the face of those who can’t accept the fact that the party is over.

CLAIRE SHULMAN: Now, in no way do I mean to suggest that when someone is term limited out of office, they should be done with public service. There are lots of opportunities for hard-working, bright public servants.

Borough President of Queens since 1986, Claire Shulman has been above politics, above special interests and driven by a commitment to her borough Queens and its people. Harder working than most people a third of her age, she has the intellect, energy and vitality to continue to serve the people.

Rumors have had her as a public advocate candidate — a less than exciting office with little more than a not-so bully pulpit — an inappropriate platform to wrap up a distinguished career of service.

Other rumors have Claire running for council — she’d blow away the field in the 19th district.

However, perhaps Claire is above the level of one of 50 odd (and many are) councilmembers.

Other rumors have her as either deputy mayor or chairperson of the City Planning Commission under Mayor Alan Hevesi. But they’re just rumors and require Alan to become mayor and make such an appointment.

We have a better idea.

Queens College is without a president. The crowning jewel of the CUNY system needs someone who can lead it in this new millennium.

The new president must find the funds to save and build the Salik Aids research center; continue to maintain and build the educational standards that set Queens apart from all but the best; develop paths of opportunity for Queens’ new immigrant population to receive quality higher education; establish the College as the cultural and educational catalyst to meet the needs of the ever-changing, ever-challenging population of the nation’s most diverse county.

The ability to raise money, maintain independence, negotiate with the public and private sectors and to give of oneself tirelessly in the interest of quality education are requisites for the new leader of Queens’ leading institution of higher learning.

Claire Shulman is not an educator by training; she is one by birth. She has the qualities, vision and respect to fill the difficult job as President of Queens College. And although I haven’t discussed this with her, I know she has the energy and enthusiasm and I’m sure – should the opportunity present itself – Claire has the desire.

So I say to [those involved in] the CUNY selection process, the answer to your search is just five minutes away from the college. Take a ride down to Queens Boulevard; stop in; talk to Claire. I think you’ll agree that she’s the one.

And, if she’s not interested, you can reach me at the Tribune.

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Not4Publication.com by Dom Nunziato

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Michael Schenkler can be reached at: MSchenkler@queenspress.com

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