After street vendors crackdown, Corona Plaza market is a changed place

New York City sanitation police shut down the bustling street vendor market in Corona Plaza in late July, citing ongoing complaints about blocked sidewalks, “dirty conditions,” and “illegal vending” too close to storefronts.
Any vendors without one of the city’s limited and highly coveted permits and licenses were told to leave. Just a handful of stalls and long-time vendors remain, joined by a handful of newcomers, who arrived in the wake of the clear out.
The consequences of the crackdown continue to reverberate throughout the largely working-class immigrant neighborhood.
Reporter Arya Sundaram of WNYC's Race and Justice Unit has our story.