Monday, June 6, 2022

Bronx Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson - News, Resources, and Updates

 

Dear Neighbors,
 
I want to wish all of you a Happy Pride and Caribbean Heritage Month!
 
To celebrate the start of Pride Month, we hosted our Pride Flag Raising and Awards Ceremony where we honored five LGBTQIA+ community leaders for their work and service to the Bronx.
 
As June is also Gun Violence Awareness Month, we also joined our community activists, cure violence organizations and elected officials to call for stronger gun control legislation. We remain committed to ending gun violence in our borough and this morning we saw tangible action taken to address this gun violence epidemic.

Governor Kathy Hochul today signed a new, landmark ten-bill legislative package to strengthen gun laws in New York State. We have seen too much gun violence across our nation and we need leaders at all levels of government that are committed to keeping our communities safe. You can read more about the landmark package here.
 
If you have any questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact our office at 718-590-3500 or email us at webmail@bronxbp.nyc.gov


In partnership,
Bronx Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson

LEGISLATIVE UPDATE
IN THE COMMUNITY
BP Gibson attended The Bronx Borough-Wide Science Fair to support our youth and teachers.

BP Gibson met with Department of Sanitation Commissioner, Jessica Tisch, to discuss quality of life issues here in our borough.

BP Gibson rallied with community activists, cure violence organizations and other elected officials to combat gun violence in our community.

BP Gibson toured the Kingsbridge Armory alongside other elected officials and the NYC EDC.

BP Gibson hosted her first-ever Gospel Concert in Co-Op City.

BP Gibson attended the Bronx Community College graduation ceremony and robing breakfast.

🏳️‍🌈On Thursday, we hosted our long-awaited Pride Flag Raising Ceremony here at Borough hall!

🏳️‍🌈We honored LGBTQIA+ community leaders for their work and service to our community and their resilience:

🏳️‍🌈Carlos Cortes Executive Director of the ChocoBar Cortes brand

🏳️‍🌈Lailani Muniz Chief Operations Officer for the New York Transgender Bodybuilding Federation, the only Transgender Pro Sport in the World, also the Trauma Informed Care Specialist at the Damian Family Care Center

🏳️‍🌈Mx. B Hawk Snipes Entrepreneur, social activist, entertainer and model

🏳️‍🌈Jaisen Garcia-Castillo Prevention Services and Outreach Specialist at Destination Tomorrow

🏳️‍🌈Jomil Luna Pharmacy Sales Representative and AIDS advocate at AIDS Healthcare Foundation

🏳️‍🌈Dirk McCall our John Wade Memorial Award honoree Executive Director of the Sunnyside Shines BID

🏳️‍🌈Happy Pride!

UPCOMING EVENTS
HEALTH

  • As of today, officials have confirmed 22 cases of Legionnaires in the Bronx and we urge anyone in the zip codes 10452 and 10456 who are experiencing flu-like symptoms to seek medical attention.
  • In response to the rise in COVID-19 cases in our city, we urge all of you to take care of yourselves: get tested, get vaccinated, and get boosted. You can find more information on COVID-19 resources for New York City residents on the NYC Covid-19 City-wide Information Portal.
COMMUNITY EVENTS


State Senator Gustavo Rivera on the End of the 2022 Legislative Session

GOVERNMENT HEADER
“The Senate Majority continued to build on last year’s historic legislative successes. Despite a challenging budget process, we secured significant victories throughout the entire legislative session, including expanding Medicaid coverage for new mothers and senior undocumented immigrant New Yorkers, making childcare more accessible for New York families, strengthening fire safety regulations, critical gun safety reforms, making prescription drugs more affordable, and more. These measures are necessary investments into our communities that will enable and empower New Yorkers to thrive.”

“I am proud to have fought for critical legislation and successfully passed 51 bills through the Senate, 35 of which passed through both houses of the legislature. Our work is far from over and we must continue addressing the most pressing issues affecting New Yorkers, like staggering rent and cost increases and challenging public safety concerns. Whether we are talking about overhauling our broken healthcare system with the New York Health Act or opening overdose prevention centers in places that need them, or more local measures, such as ensuring small business owners in New York City have commercial leases, we must continue elevating our community’s voices to ensure we are building a more equitable and fairer New York,” said State Senator Gustavo Rivera. 

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

  •    Enacting Dakota's Law, a prevention system to address childhood lead exposure and poisoning. (S.5024D)
  •    Providing access to rescue inhalers to treat severe asthmatic attacks in every setting where children are cared for. (S.4935)

  •    Regulating the billing of facilities fees by healthcare providers, part of my End Medical Debt package. (S.2521C)

  •    Protecting New Yorkers from having liens placed on their homes or their wages garnished to collect medical debt, part of my End Medical Debt package. (S.6522A)

  •    Enacted the New York State Living Donor Support Act to financially support New Yorkers willing to become a living donor. (S.1594)

  •    More than half a million dollars for organizations serving Senate District 33 to provide legal assistance, educational and family programs, and public safety services.

  •    Reappropriated $100.5 million dollars for development of the Kingsbridge Armory.

  •    Ensuring home health aides are trained in working with patients of diverse sexual orientations and gender identities or expressions (S.2534A)

  •    Requires insurance companies to apply price reduction instruments, like coupons or discounts, towards a New Yorkers out-of-pocket expenses when calculating an insured individual's contribution requirements to lower the cost of prescription drugs (S5299A)

  •    Providing due process protections for individuals against overpayment collections for Medicaid and public assistance benefits, and prohibiting these collections if government error was the cause of the overpayment. (S.4540A)

  •    Promoting access to school-based health services by maintaining enhanced reimbursement. (S.8447)

  •    Ensuring continuity of Medicaid services for justice-involved youth. (S.8978)

  •    Expanding Medicaid to undocumented seniors 65 years old and older as part of the budget.

  •    $800 million to replenish the ERAP program to prevent evictions. 

  •    $30 million for gun violence prevention and intervention programs.

  •    $350 million for the New York City Housing Authority.

  •    $35 million for the Homeowner Protection Program (HOPP), which provides legal services to homeowners facing foreclosure.

  •    Extending Medicaid coverage eligibility to new mothers for a full year after giving birth, including undocumented immigrants as part of the budget. (S.1411B
Highlights of Senator Rivera’s Legislative Accomplishments that Passed the Senate: 

  •    Capping insulin copays from $100 to $30 per month. (S.1413)
  •    Increasing fines for building and fire code violations in New York City while requiring penalties to be imposed through the state within 14 days of failing to address such violations. This bill was part of the Senate Majorities Fire Safety package in an effort to prevent tragedies like the one at Twin Parks North West. (S.8795A)

  •    Expanding eligibility for the Elderly Pharmaceutical Insurance Coverage (EPIC) program to allow more senior New Yorkers to access affordable coverage for their medications. (S.2535A)
Highlights of this session’s most critical legislative measures championed by the Senate Majority: 

  •    Our Gun Safety Reform Package is leading the nation with the most strict laws preventing gun violence, including several bills to make it a hassle to purchase an assault rifle.
  •    Permit to Purchase a Semi-Automatic Rifle (S.9458
  •    Establishing New Crimes of Mass Harm (S.89B)
  •    Act to Microstamp Ammunition (S.4116A)
  •    Strengthening Background Checks (S.4970A)
  •    Bolstering Extreme Risk Protection Orders (S.9113A)
  •    Penalizing Large Capacity Ammo and Feeding Devices (S.9229A)
  •    Act to Regulate Body Armor (S.9407B)
  •    Improving the Definition of Firearm (S.9456)
  •    Reporting Hateful Social Media (S.4511A)
  •    Task Force on Social Media and Violent Extremism (S.9465)

  •    Our traffic safety bill (S.5602B) will give New York City control over speed cameras and will enable them to operate 24/7. This will help reduce speeding & traffic injuries.

  •    The Build Public Renewables Act (S.6453C) passed the Senate and will empower our state to develop and own renewable energy projects, phase out its fossil fuel power plants, and provide renewable energy and energy efficiency services to state and municipal buildings and residential customers to ensure we meet the goals of the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA). 

  •    The state’s Gas Tax Holiday is in effect to address staggering prices at the pump.

  •    The Clean Slate Act (S.1553D) ends perpetual punishment for New Yorkers who have served their time that ensures individuals who have completed their sentence for certain convictions can return to their community and participate in society without being permanently branded as an offender.

  •    The NYCHA Preservation Trust (S.9409) creates a public entity that depends on tenant representation and choice to select the best path forward for their development and more efficiently utilize funding to address capital repairs.Without federal investment in our public housing stock, the state is taking charge. 

  •    Provide public housing tenants equitable access to Emergency Rental Assistance Funding (S8850).

  •    A suite of legislation protecting the right to reproductive health and gender-affirming care enshrined a women’s right to choose in New York while it is under attack in other states and by the Supreme Court. 

  •    Freedom from Interference with Reproductive Health Advocacy and Travel Exercise (S.9039A)
  •    Extradition and Discovery Non-Cooperation (S.9077A)
  •    Prohibiting Medical Misconduct Charges for Performing Reproductive Health Care: (S.9079B)
  •    Protection of Malpractice Coverage (S.9080B)
  •    Address Confidentiality Program (S.9384A)
  •    Study of the Impact of Limited Service Pregnancy Centers (S.470)

  •    The Voter Rights Package features a bill to ensure that New Yorkers who speak other languages or who are part of a protected class are free to participate in our democracy without facing racial discrimination and honors the late Representative John Lewis, who said that to preserve democracy, 'each generation must do its part.' The package included: 

  •    The Rep. John Lewis Voting Rights Act of New York (S.1046E)
  •    Act to Penalize Voter Deception and Suppression (S.1032)
  •    Establishing the New York Voting and Elections Database (S.8202)
  •    Preventing Electronic Interference (S.118)

Governor Hochul Signs Landmark Legislative Package to Strengthen Gun Laws and Protect New Yorkers

 Governor Hochul signs legislative package strengthening gun laws

Comprehensive Ten-Bill Package Closes Critical Gun Law Loopholes Exposed in Tragic Shootings in Buffalo and Uvalde 

Legislation S.9458/A.10503 Bars Purchase of Semiautomatic Rifles by Anyone Under Age 21 by Requiring a License  

Legislation S.9407-B/A.10497 Prohibits Purchase of Body Armor with Exception of Those in Specified Professions  

Legislation S.9113-A./A.10502 Expands List of People Who Can File Extreme Risk Protection Orders and Requires Law Enforcement to File ERPOs Under Specified Set of Circumstances  

Package Also Strengthens Crime Reporting; Closes "Other Gun" Loophole; Requires Microstamping of New Semiautomatic Pistols; Eliminates Grandfathering of High-Capacity Feeding Devices; Requires Social Media Companies to Improve Response to and Reporting of Hateful Content  


 Governor Kathy Hochul today signed a landmark legislative package to immediately strengthen the state's gun laws, close critical loopholes exposed by shooters in Buffalo and Uvalde and protect New Yorkers from the scourge of gun violence that continues to infect our nation and endanger our communities. Governor Hochul signed the bills at the Northeast Bronx YMCA flanked by Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, Speaker Carl Heastie, partners in the legislature, Attorney General Letitia James and victims and survivors of gun violence.  

"Gun violence is an epidemic that is tearing our country apart. Thoughts and prayers won't fix this, but taking strong action will," Governor Hochul said. "In New York, we're taking bold steps to protect the people of our state. I am proud to sign a comprehensive bill package that prohibits the sale of semiautomatic weapons to people under 21, bans body armor sales outside of people in select professions, closes critical gun law loopholes and strengthens our Red Flag Law to keep guns away from dangerous people—new measures that I believe will save lives. I am thankful to Majority Leader Stewart-Cousins, Speaker Heastie, and all our legislative partners for acting with the urgency and thoughtfulness that this issue demands. While we are taking expedient action to enhance New York State's nation-leading gun laws, we recognize that gun violence is a nationwide problem. I once again urge Congress to follow our lead and take immediate action to pass meaningful gun violence prevention measures. Lives depend on it."  

Raising the Age to Purchase Semiautomatic Rifles  

Legislation S.9458/A.10503 requires individuals to obtain a license prior to purchasing a semiautomatic rifle. Under preexisting New York State law, individuals must be 21 years or older to acquire a gun license.  

Banning Body Armor  

Legislation S.9407-B/A.10497 makes it illegal to purchase and sell body vests for anyone who is not engaged in an eligible profession. Eligible professions include law enforcement officers and other professions, which will be designated by the Department of State in consultation with other agencies. It also requires that all body vest sales are completed in-person.  

Strengthening the Red Flag Law 

Legislation S.9113-A/A.10502 expands who may file an Extreme Risk Protection Order (ERPO) petition to include health care practitioners who have examined an individual within the last six months.  

It amends the firearm licensing statute to ensure that mental health practitioners' reports on potentially harmful individuals are considered closely when determining whether to issue a firearm license.  

It also requires police and district attorneys to file ERPO petitions when they have acquired credible information that an individual is likely to engage in conduct that would result in serious harm—either to themselves or others.  

It requires State Police and the Municipal Police Training Council to create and disseminate policies and procedures to identify when an ERPO petition may be warranted.  

Microstamping  

Legislation S.4116-A/A.7926-A requires the Division of Criminal Justice Services to certify or decline to certify that microstamping-enabled pistols are technologically viable and if certified as viable, to establish programs and processes for the implementation of such technology; and establishes the crime of the unlawful sale of a non-microstamping-enabled firearm.  

Microstamping is an innovative ammunition-marking technique that marks bullets and cartridge cases with a unique fingerprint each time a firearm is discharged. This allows investigators to link bullets and casings recovered at crime scenes to a specific gun and potentially other crimes. 

Closing Loopholes  

Legislation S.9456/A.10504 expands the definition of a "firearm" to include any weapon not defined in the Penal Law that is designed or may readily be converted to expel a projectile by action of an explosive.  This is intended to capture firearms that have been modified to be shot from an arm brace, which are evading our current definitions of firearms and rifles. 

Legislation S.9229-A/A.10428-A eliminates the grandfathering of large capacity ammunition feeding devices that were lawfully possessed prior to the enactment of the Safe Act or manufactured prior to 1994. 

Legislation S.89-B/A.6716-A creates the crimes of making a threat of mass harm and aggravated making a threat of mass harm. 

Enhancing Information Sharing  

Legislation S.4970-A/A.1023-A requires enhanced reporting by law enforcement to the state and federal gun databases. Agencies must report seized or recovered guns to the criminal gun clearinghouse; participate in the ATF's collective data sharing program; and enter the make, model, caliber, and serial number of the gun into the national crime information center.  

The law also requires gun dealers to enact uniform security and reporting standards. It prohibits those under 18 and not accompanied by a parent from entering certain locations of a gun dealer's premises and requires training for all employees on conducting firearm, rifle, and shotgun transfers, including identification of and response to illegal purchases. It also requires State Police to conduct inspections of gun dealers every three years. 

Improving Response and Reporting of Hateful and Threatening Social Media Content  

Legislation S.4511-A/A.7865-A requires social media networks in New York to provide a clear and concise policy regarding how they would respond to incidents of hateful conduct on their platform and maintain easily accessible mechanisms for reporting hateful conduct on those platforms 

Legislation S.9465/A.10501 creates a new Task Force on Social Media and Violent Extremism. Housed in the Office of the Attorney General, the Task Force will study and investigate the role of social media companies in promoting and facilitating violent extremism and domestic terrorism online. 

This robust set of new laws, designed to provide immediate enhanced protections and developed and approved in partnership with Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Speaker Carl Heastie, builds on two Executive Orders issued in the immediate wake of the Buffalo shooting.  

The first Executive Order is designed to fight the troubling surge in domestic terrorism and violent extremism frequently inspired by, planned on and posted about on social media platforms and internet forums. The Executive Order calls on the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services to establish a new unit, dedicated solely to the prevention of domestic terrorism, within the Division's Office of Counter Terrorism. This new unit will focus on threat assessment management, disbursing funding to localities to create and operate their own threat assessment management teams and utilizing social media to intervene in the radicalization process. It will also educate law enforcement members, mental health professionals and school officials on the recent uptick in domestic and homegrown violent extremism and radicalization, as well as create best practices for identifying and intervening in the radicalization process. 

The Executive Order also calls on New York State Police to establish a dedicated unit within the New York State Intelligence Center (NYSIC) to track domestic violent extremism through social media. The unit will develop investigative leads through social media analysis, with a specific focus on identifying possible threats and individuals motivated by radicalization and violent extremism. Finally, the Executive Order calls on every county to perform an exhaustive review of its current strategies, policies and procedures for confronting threats of domestic terrorism. 

The second Executive Order will require State Police to file for an Extreme Risk Protection Order (ERPO) under New York State's Red Flag Law whenever they have probable cause to believe that an individual is a threat to themselves or others. 

Governor Hochul also issued a referral to the Office of the Attorney General under Executive Law Section 63(8) to investigate and study the social media platforms that were utilized by the Buffalo shooting suspect to broadcast, promote, and facilitate violence, espouse hate, and legitimize replacement theory. Findings from the investigation will be used to enhance and build on New York State's strategy for combatting hate and violent extremism.