Novogratz’s Galaxy Gives is working with the Robin Hood Foundation, the Ford Foundation and other philanthropic groups to form NYC Speaks, a $2 million effort to solicit input from residents about what policies and initiatives Adams should prioritize when he takes office.
Over seven months, the initiative will conduct a citywide survey and a series of community discussions and planning workshops that will help inform Adams’s early policy moves and the city’s next budget, which is due next June. The public engagement effort is philanthropic in nature and separate from campaign financing or transition funding, which are subject to city rules on campaign spending.
‘Close Your Eyes’
“We got involved because we want to have more impact,” Novogratz said at a victory party at the Zero Bond members-only club in Manhattan on election night. “If you think about it, we haven’t had a mayor in a long time whose mission was so aligned with the Robin Hood mission. You literally close your eyes and think you’re talking to a Robin Hood leader.”
Novogratz, the chief executive officer of Galaxy Digital Holdings, is among the finance titans on the board of Robin Hood, a charity founded by hedge fund billionaire Paul Tudor Jones. Jones is one of the billionaires who donated to Adams’s mayoral campaign. After years of being iced out by term-limited Mayor Bill de Blasio, the city’s business leaders have embraced Adams as they look for a sympathetic ear.
Adams has leaned into that messaging, declaring that New York City would no longer be anti-business and pledging to reduce unemployment and bring workers back to offices. He’s received particular support from leaders in the crypto industry, including Novogratz and billionaire Brock Pierce. Adams has pledged to turn the city into a technology hub and take his first three paychecks in Bitcoin.
Still, Adams’s victory in the hard-fought Democratic primary came in large part thanks to lower- and middle-income voters from the city’s outer boroughs who were drawn by his promises to clamp down on crime, increase affordable housing and bring better social programs to the city.
Jose Serrano-McClain, co-executive director of NYC Speaks and a principal at HR&A Advisors, a consulting firm that helped organize the initiative, said he’s been charged to help Adams do just that.
“I’m excited to elevate the voices of community leaders and organizers across New York City so their priorities shape the future of our city, especially as we emerge from a pandemic that deepened inequality,” Serrano-McClain said in a statement.
Transition Plans
The initiative comes ahead of Adams’s key announcements on who will lead the public school system, health department and police. He also has yet to unveil a road map for his early days in office. Adams has pledged to make some announcements in early December, after he returns from a family trip to Ghana.
His spokesperson Evan Thies said in a statement that as Adams sets priorities for the next four years, “he is seeking the input of all New Yorkers who want to help improve our city.”
Public engagement initiatives are separate from the formal transition effort and do not provide the campaign with any financial support. Instead, the efforts can be used to identify important ideas and priorities for a new administration.
Ahead of de Blasio’s inauguration in 2013, a coalition of foundations led by George Soros’s Open Society Foundations created a similar group called Talking Transition and held a series of events at Manhattan’s Trinity Church to hear from residents on issues like property taxes, the city budget and wages for low-income workers.
Still, mixing nonprofit work with political business can raise questions. In 2019, three developers were fined for potentially violating lobbying laws after donating to a now-defunct nonprofit with ties to de Blasio, the Campaign for One New York. De Blasio denied any wrongdoing.
During Adams’s tenure as Brooklyn borough president, his nonprofit, the One Brooklyn Fund, faced scrutiny from the city’s Department of Investigation over its fundraising. Two probes concluded that the fund failed to comply with campaign finance rules.
Adams has refuted any claims of wrongdoing and told the New York Times in May that, “no campaign of mine has ever been charged with a serious fund-raising violation, and no contribution has ever affected my decision-making as a public official.”
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Chief Executive Officer David Solomon had a word of warning for New York, telling the city’s leadership to be mindful of the business environment or risk more companies sending workers elsewhere.
“New York has to be aware that there are good choices, and it’s got to keep itself attractive,” Solomon said in comments released Tuesday from a Financial Times conference. “Incentives matter, taxes matter, cost of living matters.”
New York was the epicenter of the Covid-19 outbreak in the U.S. last year, resulting in an extended shutdown that persuaded some the city’s wealthiest residents to decamp to other destinations. More recently, a push to raise taxes on the rich has been a source of consternation for those whose incomes get a boost off the city’s standing as a premier global financial hub.
Solomon’s comments come as the city prepares for Eric Adams to take over as mayor at the start of January. Adams ran a campaign that included promises to make the city more business friendly, and said in a tweet earlier this month that New York would become “the center of the cryptocurrency industry.”
Solomon, 59, has been championing a more dispersed model for his workforce, expanding in satellite cities away from central hubs around the world. That’s resulted in the New York-based firm boosting its presence in more tax-friendly states, including Texas and Florida.
Solomon said New York City in no danger of dying off, but he said it can’t take its standing for granted, pointing to the decline of Detroit in the last 50 years.