Saturday, June 24, 2023

State Senator Gustavo Rivera on the End of the 2023 Legislative Session

 

GOVERNMENT HEADER


“The Senate Majority passed courageous legislation that will empower our communities to thrive, not just survive, despite an unusual legislative year. We secured significant victories this session, including passing Coverage for All, implementing overdue increases for Medicaid reimbursement rates, expanding our State’s lead poisoning prevention measures, championing historic policies to protect our environment and health, and investing in accessible childcare and resources to support New York families. We’re focusing on making investments that benefit working-class communities and addressing systemic injustices, critical to our progress as a State.”


“As Chair of the Senate Health Committee, I am proud to have passed my Coverage For All bill in the Senate. However, I am incredibly disappointed that we could not seal the deal in the Assembly and give undocumented New Yorkers the opportunity to access proper healthcare. Another missed opportunity, which has been an unfortunate pattern this year. Despite this setback, I will continue to champion the New York Health Act to overhaul our broken healthcare system, my Safer Consumption Services Act, which will allow New York to authorize and regulate Overdose Prevention Centers in places that need them, and the last bill in my legislative package to end medical debt. We must continue elevating our community’s voices to ensure we are building a more equitable and fairer New York. The work continues,” said State Senator Gustavo Rivera.


Highlights of Senator Rivera’s Legislative Accomplishments that Passed both Houses: 


  •    Passing the Fair Medical Debt Reporting Act, part of my #EndMedicalDebt legislative package. (S.4907A)
  •    Passing the Lead Pipe Rights to Know Act, which will make information about the number and location of lead pipelines easily accessible to New Yorkers in an effort to get lead out of New York's drinking water. (S.5512
  •    Establishing a demonstration program to address the staffing challenges associated with the pandemic has driven an increase in the use of temporary agency staff throughout the healthcare sector, including in nursing homes. (S.6897)
  •    Establishing at least four maternal-infant care centers for infants suffering from withdrawal. (S.266A)
  •    Expanding eligibility for the Elderly Pharmaceutical Insurance coverage program (S.966 Budget)
  •    Establishing a community-based paramedicine demonstration program (S.6749B)

Highlights of this session’s most critical legislative measures championed by the Senate Majority. They include:


  •    Passing the Clean Slate Act. 
  •    Passing the Challenging Wrongful Convictions Act.
  •    Creating a Reparations Commission tasked with studying the after-effects of slavery in New York and making non-binding recommendations.
  •    Passing the Build Public Renewables Act and Climate Superfund Act.
  •    Passing the NY HEAT Act.
  •    Passing legislation to require the Limited Liability Companies (LLC) to identify the owners.
  •    Passing the Equal Rights Amendment for the second time, codifying reproductive care and gender equality in New York State.
  •    $5.1 million to increasing funding for Human Services Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) from 2.5 percent to 4 percent.
  •    Stop SUNY and CUNY Tuition increases for New Yorkers.
  •    Creating a NYC pilot for one free bus route in every borough.
  •    Allocating $1.3 billion for asylum seeker support. 
  •   Prohibiting price gouging of medicine.
  •    Increasing the minimum wage to $17 per hour over the next three years before tying it to    inflation. (Budget) 
  •    Expanding eligibility for the Empire State Child Tax Credit, so that hundreds of thousands of families will now qualify (Budget) 
  •    Expanding eligibility for free or reduced-price child care to more families. (Budget) 
  •    $1.2 billion for Universal Pre-Kindergarten (Budget)
  •    $40 million for the Homeowner Protection Program (Budget)
  •    $25 million for a First-Time Homeowners Program (Budget)
  •    $391 million to cover Covid-era rent arrears for NYCHA and Section 8 tenants (Budget)


Join Assembly Member Karines Reyes and me at our Post-Session Virtual Town Hall where we will discuss legislation considered in this session with experts in Health, Environmental Justice, Criminal Justice, and Housing as well as answer questions from the community.


WHEN: Thursday, June 29, 2023, 6 PM to 7:30 PM

WHERE: Zoom Webinar 

REGISTER HERE: https://bit.ly/3Jk25Dz

Spanish Interpretation will be available.


Plasterers Recruit Apprentices

 

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Northeast District Council of the OPCMIA apprenticeship fund, will conduct a recruitment from July 24, 2023 through August 4, 2023 for one Plasterer apprentice, the New York State Department of Labor announced today.

Applications must be completed on site at the OPCMIA apprenticeship fund office, 1406 Blondell Avenue, NY 10461, from 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, during the recruitment period. All applications must be filled out on the premises. This is a limited-application recruitment. Only 100 applications will be distributed, on a first-come, first-serve basis. The recruitment will be offered for 10 business days or until 100 applications have been issued, whichever comes first.

The Committee requires that applicants:

  • Must be at least 18 years old. Proof will be required after selection and prior to enrollment in apprenticeship.
  • Must have a high school diploma or a high school equivalency diploma (such as TASC or GED).
  • Must pass a physical agility test by scoring at least 28 out of 35 possible points. The test includes:
    • Lifting two “legs” (4x4x8 Lumber, 52lbs), placing them on a shoulder, carrying them for approx. 75 feet and placing them neatly back on floor.
    • Lifting two ribs (3x4x14 Lumber, 70lbs), placing them on a shoulder, carrying them for approx. 75 feet and placing them neatly back on floor.
    • Lifting two #8 bars (One inch in diameter steel rods, 85lbs) placing it on a shoulder, carrying it approx. 75 feet and placing it neatly back on floor.
    • Lifting one bag of Portland cement (94lbs), placing it on a shoulder, carrying it approx. 75 feet and placing it neatly back on floor.
    • Lifting one rubber concrete pump hose (60lbs), placing it on a shoulder, carrying it approx. 75 feet and placing it neatly back on floor.
    • Lifting one steel concrete pipe (80lbs), placing it on a shoulder, carrying it approx. 75 feet and placing it neatly back on floor.
    • Filling a 16-cubic foot wheelbarrow with ¾’ gravel, walking with it approx. 50 feet and dumping it neatly back into the original pile.
  • Must have reliable transportation to and from job sites and required classes at the approved school.
  • Must pass a drug screening, at the expense of the sponsor, after selection and prior to enrollment in apprenticeship.
  • Must provide DD Form 214, Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty, if applicable, after selection and prior to enrollment in apprenticeship program.

For further information, applicants should contact OPCMIA apprenticeship fund at (718) 357-3750. Additional job search assistance can be obtained at your local New York State Department of Labor Career Center (see: dol.ny.gov/career-centers).

Apprentice programs registered with the Department of Labor must meet standards established by the Commissioner. Under state law, sponsors of programs cannot discriminate against applicants because of race, creed, color, national origin, age, sex, disability, or marital status. Women and minorities are encouraged to submit applications for apprenticeship programs. Sponsors of programs are required to adopt affirmative action plans for the recruitment of women and minorities.

KRVC - This Sunday's Concert is Rescheduled

 

Our concert this Sunday at

Van Cortlandt House Museum

is rescheduled due to weather


Sunday, July 23rd, 5-7pm


SAVE THE DATE


with

Morrisania Band Project


Morrisania Band Project is an award-winning R&B soul collective founded in September 2016. Their mission is to add vibrancy to the South Bronx through music, community engagement, and social initiatives. With creative energy and loads of talent, MBP delivers the sounds of iconic soul, pop, and funk artists, while promoting awareness for issues like gun violence and adult literacy.

MorrisaniaBand.com



The Bronx Tourism Council - Hello Summer

 

Join us as we kick off the Summer with The Bronx Fireworks Extravaganza!!

Intro. 844-A Will Establish Nation’s First Office of Health Care Accountability

 

New York City Mayor Eric Adams signed Intro. 844-A to increase health care and hospital price transparency by allowing New Yorkers to compare costs charged by New York City hospitals for the same service. Intro. 844-A — passed unanimously by the New York City Council — also establishes the nation’s first Office of Health Care Accountability to examine health care and hospital pricing practices and make it easier for New Yorkers to know how much health care costs.

 

“Health care is a human right, not a privilege, and this includes ensuring that there is cost transparency in our health care system,” said Mayor Adams. “New Yorkers shouldn’t have to break the bank to get the health care they need, and Intro. 844-A will help ensure that New Yorkers have all the information they need to stay healthy and get the care they deserve.”

 

“Public health can only succeed when we have the trust of the people we serve,” said New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene Commissioner Dr. Ashwin Vasan. “Transparency — especially about costs and financial impacts to New Yorkers — is necessary to build trust. This initiative will make our system more accountable, more transparent, and more trustworthy, and it will make our city more healthy.”

 “The Healthcare Accountability and Consumer Protection Act will revolutionize healthcare in New York City by bringing transparency to prices and empowering New Yorkers with the information they deserve and make New York City the first city in the nation to have such an office” said New York City Councilmember Julie Menin. “With this legislation, we will establish an Office of Healthcare Accountability to finally uncover the hidden costs and expose the price gouging that has plagued our health care system for far too long. We cannot allow exorbitant health care costs to burden our families, businesses, and city government any longer. We have seen the positive impact of price transparency measures in other states, and it is time for New York City to curb excessive healthcare prices which currently cost the city $11 billion or ten percent of our city budget. Thank you to Mayor Eric Adams for signing this vital legislation into law and to the incredible labor coalition comprising 32BJ, DC 37 and others supporting this bill which will set a precedent across the nation that price transparency in the health care sector can be realized.”

“Creating the county’s first ever municipal office specifically dedicated to a data-driven approach to delivering health care accountability and affordability is truly a remarkable achievement,” said Manny Pastreich, president, 32BJ SEIU. “New York City is setting a national example to ensure that workers, businesses, and even city government itself has the information needed to make health care more accessible and affordable for all. Thanks to the leadership of Mayor Eric Adams and the work of Julie Menin and the City Council, this office can be a real game-changer for all those New Yorkers struggling to keep up with the escalating costs of quality health care.”

“Today is a signal to hospital executives that they can no longer get away with outrageous billing practices while our members, many of whom get paid little to work for the very hospital systems this bill targets, take on the undue pressure of skyrocketing healthcare costs,” said Henry Garrido, executive director, District Council 37. “This is a great step toward tackling systemic disparities in pricing for medical services and making long-term changes to lessen the burden on working families. Thank you to Councilmember Menin for your leadership in sponsoring the Healthcare Accountability and Consumer Protection Act and to Mayor Adams for signing it into law."

Intro 844-A — sponsored by Councilmember Menin — establishes the Office of Health Care Accountability to provide recommendations related to health care and hospital costs, analyze expenditures on health care costs for city employees, provide information relating to the costs of hospital procedures on its website, convene stakeholders to examine health care costs, and collect and make available hospital financial documents.

U.S. Attorney Announces Fentanyl Trafficking, Precursor Importation, And Money Laundering Charges Against Chinese Chemical Company And Executives

 

Company’s Principal Executive and Marketing Manager Arrested and Transported to the United States After Shipping More Than 200 Kilograms of Precursors for Fentanyl and Fentanyl Analogues from China to the United States

 Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Merrick B. Garland, the Attorney General of the United States, Lisa O. Monaco, the Deputy Attorney General of the United States, and Anne Milgram, the Administrator of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”), announced the unsealing of an Indictment charging the Chinese chemical company HUBEI AMARVEL BIOTECH CO., LTD., a/k/a “AmarvelBio,” (“AMARVEL BIOTECH”) as well as its executives and employees QINGZHOU WANG, a/k/a “Bruce” (“WANG”), YIYI CHEN, a/k/a “Chiron” (“CHEN”), and FNU LNU, a/k/a “Er Yang,” a/k/a “Anita” (“YANG”), with fentanyl trafficking, precursor chemical importation, and money laundering offenses.  WANG and CHEN, both nationals of China, were expelled from Fiji on June 8, 2023, arrested by the DEA, and presented before U.S. Magistrate Judge Wes Reber Porter in Honolulu federal court on June 9, 2023.  WANG and CHEN were ordered detained in Honolulu and will appear in Manhattan federal court following their arrival in the Southern District of New York.  YANG, also a national of China, is at large.  The case has been assigned to U.S. District Judge Paul G. Gardephe.

Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said: When I announced in April that the Justice Department had taken significant enforcement actions against the Sinaloa Cartel, I promised that the Justice Department would never forget the victims of the fentanyl epidemic.  I also promised that we would never stop working to hold accountable those who bear responsibility for it.  That includes not only going after the leaders of the Cartels, their drug and gun traffickers, their money launderers, security forces, and clandestine lab operators.  It also includes stopping the Chinese chemical companies that are supplying the cartels with the building blocks they need to manufacture deadly fentanyl.”

Deputy Attorney General Lisa O. Monaco said: “This announcement is a down payment on our pledge to use every tool in the government’s arsenal, in every corner of the globe, to protect American communities.  The Justice Department will not rest or relent in investigating and prosecuting every link of the fentanyl supply chain, including the PRC companies and executives who produce and export vast quantities of the precursor chemicals the drug cartels need to peddle their poison.  There can be no safe haven.”

DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said: “This announcement is a considerable step forward in our unrelenting fight against fentanyl, targeting the threat where it starts.  These companies and individuals are alleged to have knowingly supplied drug traffickers, in the United States and Mexico, with the ingredients and scientific know-how needed to make fentanyl – a drug that continues to devastate families and communities across the United States, killing Americans from all walks of life.  The fentanyl supply chain begins in China, but tragically, it ends here.  Targeting entire criminal drug networks, from the source of supply to the last mile of distribution, is critical to saving American lives.  DEA will not stop until this crisis ends.”

According to the allegations contained in the Indictment and other court filings:[1]

AMARVEL BIOTECH is a chemical manufacturer based in the city of Wuhan in Hubei Province, China, that has exported vast quantities of the precursor chemicals used to manufacture fentanyl and its analogues.  A synthetic opioid that is 50 times more potent than heroin, fentanyl is now the leading cause of death for Americans ages 18 to 49.  Fentanyl analogues, similar in chemical makeup and effect to fentanyl, can be even more potent and lethal than fentanyl.  Fentanyl and its analogues have devastated communities across the United States and are fueling the ongoing opioid epidemic, which killed at least 105,263 Americans between February 2022 and January 2023 alone. 

AMARVEL BIOTECH has openly advertised online its shipment of fentanyl precursor chemicals to the United States and to Mexico, where drug cartels operate clandestine laboratories, synthesize finished fentanyl at scale, and distribute the deadly fentanyl into and throughout the United States.  Through its website and a host of other storefront sites, AMARVEL BIOTECH has targeted precursor chemical customers in Mexico, including by advertising fentanyl precursors as a “Mexico hot sale”; guaranteeing “100% stealth shipping” abroad; and posting to its websites documentation of AMARVEL BIOTECH shipping chemicals to Culiacan, the home city of the Sinaloa Cartel, one of the dominant drug trafficking organizations in the Western Hemisphere and which is largely responsible for the massive influx of fentanyl into the United States in recent years.

AMARVEL BIOTECH has also endeavored to thwart law enforcement interdiction of its precursor chemical shipments.  AMARVEL BIOTECH has advertised, for example, the company’s ability to use deceptive packaging — such as packaging indicating the contents are dog food, nuts, or motor oil — to ensure “safe” delivery to the United States and Mexico. 

Over the past eight months, during the course of an undercover investigation by the DEA, AMARVEL BIOTECH and its principal executive, WANG, its marketing manager, CHEN, and its sales representative, YANG, shipped more than 200 kilograms from China to the United States of precursor chemicals used to make fentanyl and its analogues.  AMARVEL BIOTECH, WANG, CHEN, and YANG shipped the precursors to the United States intending that the chemicals would be used to produce fentanyl and its analogues in New York, and they agreed to continue supplying multi-ton shipments of fentanyl precursors despite being told that Americans had died after consuming fentanyl made from the chemicals that the defendants had sold. 

For example, on or about November 17, 2022, a DEA confidential source (“CS-1”) wrote to YANG using an encrypted messaging application, “You know I making fentanyl,” and “Is not safe.”  YANG replied, “i know.”  On or about December 1, 2022, YANG wrote to CS-1, promising that CS-1 would be “happy with our product” and noting that CS-1 would “be able to synthesize fentanyl.”  In exchange for payment in cryptocurrency, AMARVEL BIOTECH thereafter shipped from China to New York approximately 999.7 grams of the fentanyl precursor 1-boc-4-AP, approximately 1,002.6 grams of the fentanyl precursor 1-boc-4-piperidone, and approximately 893.6 grams of the methamphetamine precursor methylamine. 

In or about March 2023, WANG and CHEN met in person with an individual whom CS-1 represented was CS-1’s boss but was in fact another DEA confidential source (“CS-2”).  During the meeting, WANG and CHEN discussed AMARVEL BIOTECH’s ability to supply ton-quantities of fentanyl precursors to New York for CS-1 and CS-2’s fentanyl manufacturing operation.  After CS-2 stated that CS-2 wanted a different formula for manufacturing fentanyl and that several of CS-2’s American customers had purportedly died, WANG and CHEN advised they had “a lot of customers in America and Mexico” who could provide technical assistance with fentanyl production. 

After the March 2023 meeting, AMARVEL BIOTECH, WANG, CHEN, and YANG agreed to sell CS-1 and CS-2 approximately 210 kilograms of fentanyl precursors in exchange for payment in cryptocurrency.  During an April 10, 2023, video call with WANG and CHEN, CS-2 stated that the approximately 210 kilograms of fentanyl precursors would be used to manufacture approximately 50 to 55 kilograms of fentanyl — an amount that could contain approximately 25 million deadly doses.    

In or about May 2023, AMARVEL BIOTECH, WANG, CHEN, and YANG sent to the United States the shipment ordered by CS-1 and CS-2.  On or about May 5, 2023, the DEA retrieved the precursor shipment from a warehouse near Los Angeles, California.  Lab testing confirmed the presence of a precursor chemical for a fentanyl analogue.  In an encrypted messaging group chat with CS-1, CS-2, WANG, and CHEN, YANG explained that “New York, the United States, has been strict in checking the precursors of the ‘final product’ some time ago, so for the sake of safety, this time it is sent to California.”

In or about June 2023, WANG and CHEN met again with CS-2.  During the meeting, WANG and CHEN discussed with CS-2 a multi-ton order of fentanyl precursor chemicals.  WANG and CHEN also discussed the need to take additional measures to protect themselves from detection and interdiction of their shipments “because recently American government . . . seized some Mexican group and they followed the routes to China,” where the U.S. Government found “our competitor in China” — an apparent reference to fentanyl-related charges filed in the Southern District of New York and announced in April 2023 against, among others, leadership of the Sinaloa Cartel and certain China-based precursor chemical company executives.[2] 

A table containing the charges and minimum and maximum potential penalties for AMARVEL BIOTECH, a company in China; WANG, 35, of China; CHEN, 31, of China; and YANG, of China, is set forth below.  The minimum and maximum potential penalties are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendants will be determined by a judge.

Count

Defendants

Minimum and Maximum Penalties

Count One: Fentanyl Trafficking Conspiracy

AMARVEL BIOTECH, WANG, CHEN, and YANG

Mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison; maximum sentence of life in prison

Fine of the greatest of $50 million for organizations or $10 million for individuals, twice the gross pecuniary gain from the offense, or twice the gross pecuniary loss to others from the offense

Count Two: Conspiracy to Import Fentanyl Precursor Chemical with Intent to Manufacture Fentanyl

AMARVEL BIOTECH, WANG, CHEN, and YANG

Maximum sentence of 20 years in prison

Fine of the greatest of $500,000 for organizations or $250,000 for individuals, twice the gross pecuniary gain from the offense, or twice the gross pecuniary loss to others from the offense

Count Three: Importation of Fentanyl Precursor Chemical with Intent to Manufacture Fentanyl

AMARVEL BIOTECH, WANG, and YANG

Maximum sentence of 20 years in prison

Fine of the greatest of $500,000 for organizations or $250,000 for individuals, twice the gross pecuniary gain from the offense, or twice the gross pecuniary loss to others from the offense

Count Four: Importation of Methamphetamine Precursor Chemical

AMARVEL BIOTECH, WANG, and YANG

Maximum sentence of 10 years in prison

Fine of the greatest of $500,000 for organizations or $250,000 for individuals, twice the gross pecuniary gain from the offense, or twice the gross pecuniary loss to others from the offense

Count Five: Conspiracy to Commit Money Laundering

AMARVEL BIOTECH, WANG, CHEN, and YANG

Maximum sentence of 20 years in prison

Fine of the greatest of $500,000 or twice the value of the monetary instrument or funds involved in the laundering

Mr. Williams praised the outstanding efforts of the DEA’s Special Operations Division Bilateral Investigations Unit.  Mr. Williams also thanked the DEA Bangkok Country Office, DEA Wellington Country Office, DEA Beijing Country Office, DEA Honolulu District Office, DEA New York Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (“OCDETF”) Strike Force, DEA Riverside District Office, DEA Special Testing Laboratory, the Office of International Affairs of the Department of Justice’s Criminal Division, the Royal Thai Police Narcotics Suppression Bureau, the Fiji Police Force Narcotic Bureau, the Fiji Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Hawaii for their assistance.

This case is being handled by the Office’s National Security and International Narcotics Unit.  Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kevin Sullivan and Alexander Li are in charge of the prosecution.

The charges in the Indictment are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

[1] As the introductory phrase signifies, the entirety of the text of the Indictment and the description of the Indictment and other court filings set forth herein constitute only allegations, and every fact described should be treated as an allegation.

[2] United States v. Ivan Archivaldo Guzman Salazar, et al., No. 23 Cr. 180 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 4, 2023). 

FORMER NYC DOC OFFICER, INMATE AND CIVILIAN INDICTED FOR SMUGGLING iPHONE INTO RIKERS ISLAND

 

CO Allegedly Took $2,500 Bribe For Sneaking Phone to Inmate

 Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark and New York City Department of Investigation Commissioner Jocelyn E. Strauber today announced that a former NYC Department of Correction Officer, an inmate and a civilian have been indicted for smuggling a cellphone to the inmate in a Rikers Island jail.

 District Attorney Clark said, “The defendant, a Correction Officer at the time, allegedly took a $2,500 bribe for sneaking in an iPhone to an inmate. Contraband can lead to violence, and this officer tarnished his badge and put his fellow officers and inmates in danger. My Office will not tolerate criminal activity by anyone who threatens safety in the jail.”

 Commissioner Strauber said, “This former City Correction officer, as alleged, smuggled a cell phone to a person in custody on Rikers Island in exchange for cash. Contraband cellphones in City jails pose risks to both officers and inmates, and this officer, as charged, violated his duty to his fellow officers and to the public for a payout. I thank the Department of Correction and the Bronx District Attorney for their commitment to pursue officer misconduct that jeopardizes the safety of the jails to the full extent of the law.”

 District Attorney Clark said Bennie Green, 36, of Yonkers, a former Correction Officer, was indicted on third-degree Bribe Receiving, first-degree Promoting Prison Contraband, seconddegree Promoting Criminal Contraband and Official Misconduct. Barry Wells, 35, a Rikers Island inmate, was indicted on third-degree Bribery, first-degree Promoting Prison Contraband, and second-degree Promoting Prison Contraband; Starquiasha Singletary, 32, of the Bronx, a civilian, was indicted on first-degree Promoting Prison Contraband, and second-degree Promoting Prison Contraband. Green and Singletary were arraigned today before Bronx Supreme Court Justice George Villegas and are due back in court on September 14, 2023.Wells will be arraigned at a later date.

 According to the investigation, Wells allegedly instructed Singletary to buy him an iPhone. Through a series of calls between July 30, 2021, and August 5, 2021, Wells and Singletary made arrangements for the cell phone to be picked up from Singletary on August 4, 2021. Phone records revealed that Green called the cell phone multiple times on August 4, 2021. On the following day, August 5, 2021, surveillance videos show Green entering Wells’ cell in the Anna M. Kross Center. A few hours later, an associate of Wells sent three separate Zelle payments to Green, totaling $2,500.

 District Attorney Clark thanked the Department of Investigation’s Office of the Inspector General for DOC, specifically Deputy Inspector General Richard Askin, under the supervision of Inspector General Whitney Ferguson and Deputy Commissioner/Chief of Investigations Dominick Zarrella.

An indictment is an accusatory instrument and not proof of a defendant’s guilt.

Council Member Marjorie Velázquez - This Week in District 13

 

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Dear Neighbor,


Caribbean Heritage Month is in full swing, and next week,

I have the honor of co-hosting this year’s event at City Hall.

Join us as we experience the rich, vibrant culture of the

Caribbean with friends and family. If you are interested in

attending or would like additional information, scroll to 

‘What’s Happening in District 13.’ 


I’m happy to share that The New York Academy of Medicine

is still accepting responses to their online survey,

Aging Well in The Bronx. This is a great way for NYAM

and the Office of Bronx Borough President Vanessa L.

Gibson to learn more about the needs of the Bronx

community to support older adults and people of all ages.

If you’d like to participate, scroll to ‘Health Hub.’


In this week’s email, you will find information about

The Social Good PRoject, which is a service grant

that provides eligible nonprofit organizations and certified

B-Corp small businesses with operational support. This

is a great opportunity for our local community-based

organizations to elevate their operations and amplify their

reach within our community. For more information

about this grant, scroll to ‘Community Resources.’


To contact our office for additional information or concerns,

please call us at  (718) 931-1721 or email us at

District13@council.nyc.gov.


Wishing you all a safe and joyous weekend.


Sincerely,

Council Member Marjorie Velázquez

Celebrate Caribbean Heritage Month!

On Wednesday, June 28 at 5:30 PM, I have the pleasure of co-hosting this year’s Caribbean Heritage Month Celebration at City Hall. Join us as we indulge in the vibrant culture, music, and flavors of the Caribbean!

Utility Work Advisory


Con Edison will be performing Electric Upgrade work in City Island (City Island Avenue and City Island Road) from July 5 to August 2, 2023, Monday to Friday from 9 AM to 4 PM. Please be advised there will be limited street parking, temporary lane closures, and noise during working hours.


Transportation Advisory


MTA Service Updates

Due to station improvements, the MTA has announced a 24/7 bypass of the Westchester Square/E Tremont Avenue station on Pelham Bay Park-bound 6 trains through mid-July. Customers are advised to use the nearby Zerega Avenue or Middletown Road stations.


Travel Alternatives

  • For service to Westchester Square/E Tremont Avenue station, take the 6 to Middletown Road and transfer to a Manhattan-bound 6.

  • For service from Westchester Square/E Tremont Avenue station, take the 6 to Zerega Avenue and transfer to a Pelham Bay Park-bound 6.

Construction & Repair Advisories


Closure of Entrance Ramp

The New York State Department of Transportation has announced an entrance ramp closure from eastbound Pelham Parkway to northbound Bruckner Expressway (I-95) until Thursday, June 29 at 5 PM. Motorists wanting access to the northbound Bruckner Expressway are advised to follow the posted detour signs on Pelham Parkway. This closure is necessary to facilitate work to enhance safety and mobility on the northbound Bruckner Expressway and northbound Hutchinson River Parkway in the Bronx.


Shore Road Bridge

The NYC Department of Transportation Division of Bridges will continue routine maintenance of the Shore Road Bridge over the Hutchinson River. As a result, single-lane closures will continue until Friday, June 30 according to the below schedule: 

Single Lane Closures

  • Northbound - 7 AM to 9 AM

  • Northbound and Southbound - 9 AM to 1 PM

  • Northbound and Southbound - 10 PM to 7 AM

No Parking

The NYC Department of Design and Construction has announced a ‘No Parking’ advisory on Pelham Parkway North Service Road between Eastchester Road and Bronx Park East and Pelham Bay Parkway Westbound Main Road between White Plains Road and Stillwell Avenue, from now through June 30 from 7 AM to 4 PM. This restriction is necessary to facilitate ‘end of construction’ work. 

Night-Time Lane Closures

The NYC Department of Design and Construction has announced a ‘Night-Time Lane Closure’ advisory on Pelham Parkway Eastbound Main Road between White Plains Road and Stillwell Avenue from now through Friday, June 30, from 9 PM to 5 AM. This restriction is necessary to facilitate roadway reconstruction.

Odane Whilby Band


On Friday, June 30 at 6 PM at Pelham Bay Park (Middletown Road and Stadium Avenue), join us for some fantastic 50s-80s oldies and artist such as Bobby Darin, The Temptations, Steve Wonder, Diana Ross, and more. Enjoy an unforgettable musical experience in the park!

Bringing the MTA to You!


You asked, and we listened! The MTA Mobile Sales Van will be at 3033 Middletown Road from 1 PM to 3 PM on the fourth Friday of each month. This is a great opportunity to ask questions about your MetroCard, apply for a reduced fare rate, replace an expired or damaged card, and more.


Prostate Cancer Mobile Testing Van

On Thursday, June 29 at 11 AM, R.A.I.N. Middletown Road and Harlem Congregations for Community Improvement (HCCI) will be providing prostate cancer mobile testing for eligible older adults. If you or someone you know is interested in scheduling an appointment, please call 718-822-0486 weekdays from 9 AM to 4 PM.

Aging Well in the Bronx Survey

The New York Academy of Medicine is working with the Bronx Borough President’s Office and Council Members Eric Dinowitz and Marjorie Velázquez to survey adults age 65+ who live in The Bronx. We want to hear from you about how well the borough meets your needs and suggest ways that The Bronx can better support older adults and people of all ages. All surveys are anonymous, and the collected data  will be shared directly with the Bronx Borough President’s Office, along with concrete recommendations on how to make The Bronx the best borough for people to age-in-place. You can complete this survey in English, Spanish, Bengali, Chinese, Italian or Russian online or contact Council Member Velázquez’s office to complete it in person.