Bloomberg, Paterson Seek To Chart Unified Course

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Breaking from past tradition, Mayor Bloomberg and Governor Paterson, along with staff members, will hold monthly meetings to talk about the World Trade Center site, progress on the Moynihan Station project, and the city’s plans for a waste transfer station on the West Side, among other topics.

The first monthly meeting was held yesterday afternoon at the governor’s Manhattan office. Mr. Bloomberg, who spoke to reporters after the sit-down, said it went well and credited the governor for making sure there is a good line of communication between the city and Albany.

“We worked well with the Pataki administration and with the Spitzer administration, but David Paterson seems particularly open to it,” he said, according to a transcript of comments he made after the meeting, which was provided by an aide to the mayor.

Mr. Bloomberg did not hold regular, monthly meetings with governors Spitzer or Pataki. He said he has a formal meeting with the City Council speaker, Christine Quinn, once a week.

The meetings with the governor may be part of an effort to promote a unified relationship. Last month, the two leaders sought to distance themselves from a report that said the governor, in a private conversation, called Mr. Bloomberg an untrustworthy, angry man who is out of touch with regular New Yorkers.

Adding further pressure to the relationship are polls showing that the mayor would be a popular gubernatorial candidate, even though he has said he will not run for the office.


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