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5.20.14 Bronx Matters

20 May
hey are routinely underpaid and threatened while subjected to dangerous working conditions – See more at: http://www.motthavenherald.com/2014/05/19/linen-workers-complain-inhumane-conditions/#sthash.DJI1FxMI.dpufWorkers at a Port Morris cleaning service says they are “routinely underpaid and threatened while subjected to dangerous working conditions,”
they are routinely underpaid and threatened while subjected to dangerous working conditions – See more at: http://www.motthavenherald.com/2014/05/19/linen-workers-complain-inhumane-conditions/#sthash.DJI1FxMI.dpuf
hey are routinely underpaid and threatened while subjected to dangerous working conditions – See more at: http://www.motthavenherald.com/2014/05/19/linen-workers-complain-inhumane-conditions/#sthash.DJI1FxMI.dpuf

Workers at a Port Morris linen company say they are routinely underpaid and threatened while subjected to dangerous working conditions, according to the Mott Haven Herald.

In the Hunts Point Express, “Young Chefs Cook Up a Storm” at The Point.

Last night, BronxTalk focused on how Bronx nonprofits can collaborate on solving problems.

Following the New York Times report yesterday of eight murders in the Bronx’s 47th Precinct this year, the Daily News reported today that the City Council’s Black, Latino and Asian Caucus wants the mayor to hire 1,000 more cops.

Former city councilman Oliver Koppell, who is running for state senator, is more than a little disappointed in his long-term and recent Democratic pol pals who have endorsed incumbent Jeffrey Klein, leader of the Independent Democratic Conference, which has partnered with many state Senate Republican leaders. “I think their endorsement betrays the electorate that elected them,” Kopell told the Daily News.

Bronx art that reflects on urban planning.

Bronx News that Matters

19 May

Today, The New York Times reports on the heavy uptick in homicides in the Wakefield section of the 47th Precinct in the northeast Bronx. At this point last year there was one murder. This year, there has already been eight. Police Commissioner William Bratton is pushing a change in patrolling, having cops make contact with families “on every block in the precinct.”

Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz, a long-time partner of former assemblyman, councilman, state attorney and school board president Oliver Koppell, is not supporting him in his bid to unseat incumbent Jeffrey Klein. Instead Dinowitz endorsed Klein on Friday. This is a big Bronx race but it has statewide relevance as Klein’s small Independent Democratic Conference has pulled Senate control out of Democrats’ hands. As leader of the IDC group, he often partners with Republican leaders regarding legislation.

BronxTalk (channel 67 on Bronxnet) highlights the push for a Hudson River Greenway going up through Spuyten Duyvil and Riverdale.

On Saturday, the refurbished gym in Our Lady of Refuge Church was renamed for Daniel Barden, one of the 7-year-0lds who died in the Newtown mass shooting. His mother attended OLR in the Fordham-Bedford Neighborhood (196th Street and Grand Concourse).

To check out some Bronx events coming up, click here.

Get Involved; Become a Bronx Boss

19 May

More Bronx Voters. More Bronx Attention. That simple. Check out Citizen’s Toolbox.

Bronx Matters Returns!

19 May

This Bronx-focused blog is back-at-it! More details here.

Bronx Bureau Launches May 16 at Bronx Museum of the Arts

30 Apr

The City Limits Bronx Bureau (formerly Bronx News Network), is being officially launched on Thursday, May 16 at the Bronx Museum of the Arts from 6 to 9 p.m. The event will lead with a discussion of the city’s homeless policy and will be followed by a networking reception and free tour of the museum. Learn more and register at this link.

I am now the managing editor at City Limits. Hope you can make this event!

-Jordan Moss

P.S. If you have any questions, feel free to email me at jordan-at-citylimits.org. Thanks!

Told to Come for Gas, Residents Leave Armory With Nothing

4 Nov

Council Member Fernando Cabrera, who set up a help center at the Kingsbrige Armory talked to Chris Emdin and other frustrated residents right after police told them there would be no gasoline provided after they waited in line the entire day. (Photo: J. Moss)

Yesterday, at the end of a day of biking with a friend and our daughters, we decided to go check out the Kingsbridge Armory where I heard on Facebook that morning that Councilman Fernando Cabrera was setting up a service center for Bronx people in need.

We biked over there from my house a few blocks away and brought some non-perishable food I had in the house.

There was a line around the block, from Reservoir Ave. looped around to East 195th St. Almost every person on that line had with them one or more red plastic containers for gasoline. Early that morning they had heard that gas would be available at various locations in the city. It was announced by the governor and the info showed up on various web sites. People arrived as early as 8 a.m. (Though I somehow didn’t see it myself — maybe because I was focused on the people in line on the sidewalk — I’ve heard multiple reports that there were lines of cars headed into the Armory reaching back into Bedford Park.)

The massive Armory drill hall (where “Back to the Future” car scenes were filmed) was commandeered by Council Member Fernando Cabrera for distribution of food, water and other supplies. They already had piles of it, organized by enthusiastic religious volunteers like Gaby Santizo who works with the National Latino Evangelical Coalition. Cabrera himself is pastor of a local church and has many connections in the evangelical community.

Gaby Santizo of the National Latino Evangelical Coalition helped lead volunteers at the Armory yesterday. (Photo: J. Moss)

At around 4:30 when we arrived, several politicians were gathering on the drill hall floor with a large contingent of police who had asked them early that morning for space to distribute the gasoline. As it never showed up and people were beginning to get testy, the cops were planning to announce to those on line that there would be no gas.

Chris Emdin, one of many fed-up local residents on the line, told Councilman Cabrera that he was there since 10 a.m. because the government advertised the opportunity. He heard about it on the TV and on the borough president’s Facebook page, he said.

The pols, including State Senator Gustavo Rivera and Assemblyman Jose Rivera, stayed way past the announcement. They heard out the people, offered their help, told them they were as upset as them, etc. Cabrera gave Emdin his cell number. Deputy Inspector Jospeh Dowling of the 52nd Precinct, and other officers, also hung on for the back-and-forth with frustrated residents.

Cabrera said the governor and mayor should’ve predicted the gas problem before the storm and hired consultants to help them figure out a strategy of getting it out to people in worst-case scenarios.

As for other needs like providing food and batteries and generators, Cabrera said other states know better know better how to capitalize on the power of nonprofits and religious groups from the get-go, rather than wait for people like him to volunteer in the middle of the crisis. “Down south they know how utilize this,” he said. Here, he added, the city and state “failed to use the grassroots.”

Emdin is a professor of education at Columbia University’s Teachers’ College. In an e-mail yesterday evening he told me he does research at schools around the boroughs and needs gas for that and to help family and neighbors get good produce. He wrote a thorough post about his experience yesterday here. Here’s an excerpt:

As the crowd grew more thin, an officer from another NYPD van mentioned that the gas intended for the Bronx was directed to parts of the city who needed it more. As this message came across, the people seemed to understand. They had empathy for other parts of the city.

Unfortunately, what officials failed to recognize was that while others may have needed the gas more, residents of the Bronx needed to know they were considered. A borough of people who have had political decisions about their neighborhoods made without their input for decades needed to know that they weren’t being toyed with. They needed to feel that they weren’t disposable.

Many Bronxites can struggle for a few days without gas. In fact, many were content with not having gas until they were told that some was made available for them. They came to the armory not because they wanted a hand out, but because they were invited to. They showed up and organized themselves calmly because they were appreciative. Unfortunately, as is always the case with those who lack power, and all too often the case with residents of the Bronx, they were dispersed without concern, treated unkindly, and asked to just grin and bear it.

Today marks another chapter in the story of disregard for the residents of the Bronx. The Great Gas Hoax at the Kingsbridge Armory adds another chapter to the sad tale of poor education, mistreatment, and police brutality for the Bronx. At what point will we be valued?

Regardless of when the gas shows up, the site will continue to provide food, clothing and supplies for as long as its needed, primarily to local Bronx organizations able to distribute it.

One Sign of Storm in NW Bronx

30 Oct

Sandy didn’t cause nearly as much devastation in the northwest Bronx as in many other parts of the city but there were certainly some clear signals it had passed through. This tree came up from its roots and put a portion of Albany Crescent in Kingsbridge temporarily out of commission.

This tree ruined a car and blocked off the northwest section of Albany Crescent. Photo: J. Moss

For more on Sandy’s Bronx impact, check out reports here and here.

 

 

Bronx Politics Discussion on BronxTalk at 9 p.m.

27 Aug

From Gary Axelbank: Tonight “BronxTalk will welcome the editor and political writer of the Riverdale Press to talk about Bronx politics. Both have a lot to say about the state of our local political system, redistricting, the relative quality of candidates, etc. You can weigh-in, too, on the phone. Monday night at 9:00pm on Bronxnet’s channel 67 [on Cablevision] and Verizon Fios 33.”

We’re hearing Bob Kappstatter, who now edits and spills ink for, the Bronx Times, may call in, too.

If you don’t have Cablevision or Fios, I’ll put up a link to video of the show, which doesn’t get enough buzz. So buzz!