Community Corner

Who's On Your West Village Community Board? New Members Are Named

Curious which of your West Village neighbors are serving on your community board? Patch has the exclusive on this year's new appointments.

An image of buildings in Greenwich Village.
An image of buildings in Greenwich Village. (Shutterstock / Ryan DeBerardinis)

WEST VILLAGE, NY — Curious who's voting on land-use actions, liquor license applications and other issues in the West Village and Greenwich Village? The new appointments to Manhattan's 12 community boards have been revealed — and some of your neighbors may be on the list.

The appointments were made Friday by Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine's office and shared exclusively with Patch. Half of each board was up for reappointment this year, with each board's 50 members serving staggered two-year terms.

(Scroll down to see the full membership list for the West Village board.)

Find out what's happening in West Villagewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

A total of 885 people applied to Manhattan community boards this year — the second-highest on record — for just 319 positions. This year's appointees include 91 first-time members, according to Levine's office.

Also, new this year, Levine's office asked applicants to say whether they owned cars — the first time that question has been asked. The result: 79 percent of first-time members say they don't have a car, which Levine's office says aligns more closely with Manhattan's demographics.

Find out what's happening in West Villagewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

In a reflection of added outreach to underrepresented groups, 70 percent of first-time appointees identify as BIPOC, including an increased percentage of African American, Hispanic/Latinx, and Asian American/Pacific Islander appointees.

Nearly 18 percent identify as LGBTQ, and 40 percent are renters, compared to 30 percent who say they have an ownership stake in their residence.

Community Board 2, West Village board members

Community Board 2 also includes Greenwich Village, SoHo, NoHo, Hudson Square, Little Italy, Chinatown, and the Gansevoort Market.

  • Akeela Azcuy
  • Ritu Chattree
  • Valerie De La Rosa
  • Susan Kent
  • Ryder Kessler
  • Jeanine Kiely
  • Michael Levine
  • Edward Ma
  • Mostafa Osman
  • Brian Pape
  • Frederica Sigel
  • Chenault Spence
  • Eugene Yoo
  • Anita Brandt
  • Amy Brenna
  • Cheryl Wu
  • Shirley Smith
  • Antony Wong
  • Keen Berger
  • William Benesh
  • Mar Fitzgerald
  • Cormac Flynn
  • Patricia Laraia
  • Daniel Miller
  • Shirley Secunda
  • Stella Fitzgerald
  • Natasha Avanessians
  • Carter Booth
  • Donna Raftery
  • Susan Gammie
  • David Gruber
  • Wayne Kawadler
  • Janet Liff
  • Lois Rakoff
  • Rocio Sanz
  • Georgia Silvera Seamans
  • Kristen Shea
  • Susan Wittenberg
  • Ivy Kwan Arce
  • Matthew Metzger
  • Bo Riccobono
  • Zachary Roberts
  • Adam Zeldin
  • Chris Dignes
  • Susanna Aaron
  • Katy Bordonaro
  • Richard Caccappolo
  • John DeVerna
  • Bob Ely
  • Robin Rothstein

"We need to ensure our community boards are composed of diverse local leaders so that we can recover from this pandemic equitably and stronger than we were before," Levine said in a statement, noting that he had served on a community board himself before entering politics himself.

"This new class of appointments is the culmination of our efforts to begin to transform Manhattan's Community Boards into a more fair and representative body that includes all the wonderful voices that together make Manhattan the most well-known community in the world."

Other statistics of note: 48 percent of first-time appointees identify as women, compared to 42 percent as men and 1 percent as gender nonconforming.

About 26 percent are under the age of 30, including six who are under the age of 20 — a "significant increase," according to Levine's office.


Patch reporter Nick Garber contributed to this report.


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