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About SAC
       

Our mission is to actively engage residents and business establishments in efforts to maintain and enhance the quality of life in enhance the quality of life in Sutton Area Community

           



Our Past

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In 1976 a small group of residents got together, with the desire to preserve the Sutton neighborhood's character, and incorporated two years later as a non-profit (501c3) organization using volunteers to serve as a catalyst for change. 

SAC's volunteers continue to help preserve a high quality of life for those residing and working in the area between 52nd to 59th streets, Second Avenue to the East.....




Our Present

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Our mission at SAC is to actively engage residents and business establishments in efforts to maintain and enhance the quality of life in the Sutton Area Community. 

Acting as watchdog and advocate, SAC is a voice for the community: SAC monitors city services such as police, sanitation, fire and transportation; watches over zoning and development; looks after parks and sidewalks; supports local merchants, fosters historic preservation; and, through its website, mailings, and First Avenue bulletin board, informs the community about what is happening in the neighborhood.

Traffic concerns continue to be paramount. SAC is closely monitoring the New York State Department of Transportation's five-year project to reconstruct the FDR Drive from 54th to 63rd Streets. We are committed to keeping the community informed about its past, present, and future.

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We publish Bulletins periodically which are distributed to members as well as government agencies and elected officials, to keep them abreast of our positions and concerns. ? Ever-mindful of the importance of the areas rich history, SAC has always been interested in collecting and sharing archival information and artifacts through publications, exhibitions, and walking tours.












Dear-SAC-Members2

Dear SAC Members,

It is my pleasure to inform you that Dr. Charles Coutinho, SAC's President has been informed that he is to be honored by Our Town Newspaper on the 10th of March for his work with and for SAC and the Sutton Place area. The OTTY Awards ('Out Town Thanks You') are based on nominations by Our Town readers. Past awardees have included Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Congressman Jerrold Nadler. among others. I am sure that you will join me in congratulating Dr. Coutinho. The awards ceremony and his interview with Our Town Newspaper will be a wonderful occasion to bring to the attention of the rest of City all the good work that SAC has been doing to improve the Sutton Place area.

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Please see below: On behalf of Our Town, the Upper East Side’s neighborhood news source, and our President Jeanne Straus, we would like to present you with an OTTY Award at an exclusive awards ceremony on Tuesday, March 10th OTTY (Our Town Thanks You) Award recipients are nominated by our readers and presented to key individuals working to improve our neighborhood—and the city as a whole. Past awardees include Cardinal Dolan, Kathryn Wylde, and Congress Member Jerry Nadler.

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Sincerely,  

Selene B. Varnel 

Office Manager

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OTTY Honoree 2020 Charles Coutinho: A Voice for Sutton Place



As president of SAC, Charles Coutinho is concerned about maintaining the character of the neighborhood


EMILY HIGGINBOTHAM / 
UPPER EAST SIDE / 
28 FEB 2020 I 10:36 



To Charles Coutinho, Sutton Place offers an air and demeanor of an older New York. The quiet coziness of the Upper East Side enclave suits Coutinho’s own sensibility as a former academic and current businessman. And it’s the desire to preserve the neighborhood’s old world charm that drives him in his role as president of Sutton Area Community.

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Long before getting involved in community affairs, Coutinho earned a doctorate from New York University, writing his dissertation in diplomatic history and Anglo-American relations in the 1950s. He taught at St. Francis College in Brooklyn Heights, but found the industry was not very sustainable.

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“Genteel poverty is not something that you can stand very long, particularly as you get a little bit older,” said Coutinho. “If I had been willing to live in places like Kansas or Wyoming or Nebraska, I could have continued, but I had made a determination very early on that I didn't really want to leave New York.”

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Coutinho took over an existing family reality business that had been operating out of Westchester, repositioning it to purchase buildings in Manhattan. He’s been managing the business now for 22 years.

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For about 10 years, Coutinho and his wife have called Sutton Place home. He became a member of Sutton Area Community (SAC) - a group that aims to “actively engage residents and business establishments in efforts to maintain and enhance the quality of life” in Sutton Place - in 2012. By 2016, he was recruited to the board by the group’s former president, Bernard Dworkin.

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“They said they were looking for younger members, and I think only for certain perspectives can I be described as young,” joked the 56-year-old.

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By January 2017, the board elected Coutinho to be their next president.

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Currently, there are two main issues Coutinho and the board have eyed as risks to maintaining the character of Sutton Place: the 847-foot Sutton Tower being constructed at 430 East 58th Street and plans for a bridge that would cut through Clara Coffey Park on 54th Street.

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SAC has not taken the lead in fighting either issue, Coutinho said, but he said the group is playing a supportive role. The East River 50s Alliance has been the main organization fighting the developers of the tower on 58th Street, which neighbors feel is much taller than the existing buildings in the neighborhood.

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At Clara Coffey Park, which is mostly frequented by an older population, the city plans to install a bridge that will connect the East River esplanade to 54th Street, and a ramp to the bridge will cut through a corner of the park. Residents are worried about the cycling traffic that will bring through the typically sedate park. Cannon Point Preservation Corporation has sued the city to shut the project down.

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It's the only park that for elderly people, and Sutton Place has an older demographic than the average city neighborhood, said Coutinho. It's the only part that they don't have to climb any steps. And that's very important for the neighborhood for our members.

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Contesting the project at the park has been one of SAC’s biggest challenges, Coutinho said, adding that he has been surprised at how challenging it’s been to get elected officials to take an interest in the neighborhood’s concerns about the park.

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I would say it has been very frustrating and a little bit depressing that in an instance where the community is so vociferously opposed to such a project, it doesn't really count,” said Coutinho.

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The community expects a ruling on Cannon Point’s latest challenge in March.

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One thing Coutinho thinks could help strengthen SAC as a voice in the city in the future is the addition of younger members to its ranks.

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It’s difficult ... to deal with the change in how younger people  under the age of 40  relate to these types of groups,said Coutinho.

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He thought the lack of participation among the younger generation to some extent could be explained by their use of social media and technology. A December tree lighting and egg hunt in the spring has engaged younger families, but they’re still working toward ways to recruit them as members.

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I think it will be the case that we will resolve it, but it’s still a work in progress.

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"It has been very frustrating and a little bit depressing that in an instance where the community is so vociferously opposed to such project [the Clara Coffey Park bridge], it doesn't really count.”

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© Sutton Area Community Inc. The Sutton Area Community Inc. is a nonprofit 501(c)3 Tax-exempt organization.