Tuesday, July 14, 2020

MAYOR’S FUND RAISES $54.5 MILLION FOR FRONTLINE WORKERS AND VULNERABLE NEW YORKERS THROUGH COVID-19 EMERGENCY RELIEF FUND


  Mayor Bill de Blasio and First Lady Chirlane McCray today announced that the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City has raised $48.8 million, including more than $5.7 million in in-kind donations, to support equitable relief and recovery efforts for the communities hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“COVID-19 has taken a devastating toll on immigrant communities and people of color,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “As our city continues to the weather this crisis, we will keep finding innovative ways to increase resources and assistance for our most vulnerable neighbors and frontline workers.”

“As our city unites to build a future that is fairer and more equitable, it is essential that New Yorkers in the hardest-hit neighborhoods can access the resources they need to support themselves and their families,” said First Lady Chirlane McCray. “Thank you to our generous partners who have answered the call to provide this critical relief for frontline workers and communities of color during this unprecedented crisis.”

The Mayor’s Fund launched the COVID-19 Emergency Relief Fund in early March to support priority areas including: healthcare workers and essential staff; local small businesses; displaced hourly workers, including immigrant workers; and families, youth, and other vulnerable New Yorkers.

The expansive fundraising efforts have included large-scale public-private partnerships, as well as a grassroots campaign that have together garnered 9,500 donors from all around the country.

Support for Frontline Workers
To ensure that New York City’s healthcare professionals and essential workers on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic stay nourished, supported, and protected, the Mayor’s Fund:
  • Partnered with the Debra and Leon Black Family, Aramark, Robin Hood, and the American Red Cross to launch NYC Healthcare Heroes. The program is providing more than 400,000 packages of shelf-stable food, fresh produce, and household cleaning and personal care products to staff at hospitals across the five boroughs. These deliveries alleviate the burden on workers who often do not have access to supplies or time to shop after working back-to-back shifts caring for COVID-19 patients in hospitals and facilities across the city.
  • Developed and launched Food for Heroes, which will deliver 169,400 nutritious meals to healthcare professionals and EMS, morgue, and sanitation and other essential workers across New York City to fuel them during their shifts.
  • Supported NYC Health + Hospitals with a $400,000 donation to purchase critical personal protective equipment. The donation was made possible through Peg’s Cure, an initiative created by Cedar Mills LLC in honor of Peg Broadbent, former CFO of Jeffries Group LLC who died due to complications from COVID-19.

Aid for Restaurants in Hardest-Hit Communities
To support the owners and employees of restaurants in neighborhoods that have suffered disproportionately during the pandemic, the Mayor’s Fund: 
  • Collaborated with One Fair Wage, NYC Opportunity, and the Human Resources Administration to launch the Restaurant Revitalization Program. The program is providing short-term payroll support to an initial 100 restaurants committed to paying full minimum wage with tips on top, in addition to providing hardest-hit communities with approximately 53,000 meals over 6-12 weeks.

Services for Immigrant Communities
To support New York City’s immigrant communities, many of whom are disproportionately impacted by COVID-19, the Mayor’s Fund:
  • Partnered with the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs and the Open Society Foundations to create the Immigrant Emergency Relief Program. The program works with community-based organizations to provide direct, one-time emergency relief payments to up to 20,000 immigrant New York City families who are hardest hit financially by the crisis, yet excluded from the reach of the federal relief program.
  • Launched the Immigrant COVID-19 Burial Assistance Program with funding support from SOMOS Community Care, Trinity Church Wall Street, Amalgamated Bank, and Robin Hood. The program provides up to $1,700 toward burial expenses for immigrant families—regardless of legal status—who are unable to pay for the funeral expenses of relatives who died during the pandemic.

Supporting Youth in Hardest-Hit Communities with Summer Opportunities
To ensure that youth and families are safe and supported, the Mayor’s Fund:
  • Raised $6.8 million in philanthropic support for SYEP Summer Bridge 2020, a public-private partnership that leverages an additional $40 million in public dollars to provide constructive engagement and enrichment activities to keep 35,000 New York City youth active and productive this summer.
  • Partnered with the Mayor’s Office to Domestic and Gender-Based Violence and Sanctuary for Families to launch a pilot program to deliver micro-grants to survivors. The first-of-its-kind initiative helps mitigate safety, economic, and housing challenges exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Mayor’s Fund continues to pursue additional funds to launch and support programs and initiatives that meet the ever-changing needs of New Yorkers as the city continues to recover from the pandemic. Anyone can contribute at nyc.gov/fund.

“These unprecedented times have required unprecedented actions. One of the most essential has been the generosity and enduring spirit of New Yorkers.  The Mayor’s fund has harnessed that spirit to identify the most pressing needs of those who need the most help and by championing our essential workers,” said Gabrielle Fialkoff, Senior Advisor to the Mayor for COVID-19 Relief.  “It has brought together the philanthropic community, business sector and thousands of New Yorkers in our fight against COVID-19 and its devastating effects. The power of partnership is proven once again and I am grateful for the leadership of our private sector partners.”

“From the start the pandemic, we've tapped into the generosity and ingenuity of the City’s business and philanthropic sectors to aid New York City's response. Working together, we have provided critical support to the most vulnerable New Yorkers and the front line workers caring for them,” said COVID-19 Public-Private Partnership Czar Peter Hatch. “I want to thank our many partners for their generous contributions during this crisis.”

“It has been an inspiration to see how New Yorkers have come together over the past few months to support our essential workers and others directly impacted by COVID-19,” said Rob Speyer, Chair of the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City Board of Advisors. “I am grateful for the work of our community-based partners, who have helped us harness that goodwill on behalf of those families, businesses and organizations most in need.”

“Through the power of partnership, a diverse cross-section of supporters reached into their pockets to support their neighbors, providing whatever they could to help our communities weather one of the most challenging periods this city has seen,” said Toya Williford, Executive Director of the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City. “We are thankful for the generosity not just of the philanthropic and business communities, but of the more than 9,000 individuals who, despite facing a national economic crisis, gave donations ranging from $5 to $5,000. Their support has put vital resources directly into the hands of the New Yorkers who need them most.”

“Covid-19 has revealed for all to see, the great disparities in our society. It has also revealed just how essential undocumented workers are to the functioning of our communities. And yet, the Federal Government chose not to include undocumented workers in federal relief. I commend the City of New York, under the leadership of Mayor Bill de Blasio, for standing by undocumented workers at this moment of extreme crisis. Unfortunately, the funding we have put forward does not come close to matching the need. It can only be described as the tip of the iceberg (a drop in the bucket). Far too many families will not be able to access this funding. We need additional donors to step up, and, ultimately, we need the Federal and State government to join the Mayor of New York in recognizing the essential role undocumented workers play in our communities and in our economies, and include them in Federal and State relief packages,” said Patrick Gaspard, president of the Open Society Foundations.

“The Mayor’s Fund is a necessary response to address the needs of those who have been impacted disproportionately by the pandemic. Ford was happy to contribute funds to ensure community-based organizations and mental health providers are working together on solutions and support for those in need. In this time of crisis, we must make a clear commitment to the mental health of low-income New Yorkers,” said Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation.

EDITOR'S NOTE:

Now if we could only find out where the 875 million dollars went.


What Is The Bronx Board of Elections Hiding



  The count of Absentee Ballots in the Bronx began on Monday July 6th. There are eleven Assembly Districts in the Bronx. One week later, only one Assembly District the 83rd has been completed. There were no state primaries for any of the elected or party positions in the 83rd A.D., so only Presidential and the 16th Congressional District ballots had to be counted. The number of Absentee ballots returned in the 83rd A.D. was 3,884, not counting any ballots that may have been ruled void for one reason or another.  

  One has to wonder why the Bronx Board of Elections has not started with the 77th Assembly District, and ending with the 87th Assembly District. The Bronx Board of Elections did the 83rd A.D. first, followed by the 81st, 82nd, 80th, and 84th A.D.'s, which are still being counted. The 85th and 86th A.D.'s have been added for Tuesday July 14th. That leaves the 77th, 78th, 79th, and 87th A.D.'s to be counted, with the 77th, 79th, and 87th being part of the 15th Congressional District. 

There were problems in the 79th and 87th A.D.'s where candidates appeared on the official and absentee ballots when they were ruled off the ballot on an appeal by the Board of Elections of a judges decision to put those candidates back on the ballot after the Board of Elections ruled them initially off the ballot. I was told by a high ranking Board of Elections administrator that the ballots were printed before the final judges decision came down, due to time restraints in the printing of the ballots. I was also told that the Board of Elections printed the ballots, because they felt their appeal would not win. There have been lawsuits filed against the primary election, and more should come since candidates may have been denied votes because names of people who should not have been on the ballot were there. The Bronx is a Voter's Rights Borough, and it is possible that the federal government could step in for a new primary in the Bronx or just some assembly districts.
  

An area in the Bronx Board of Elections where each ballot is shown to poll watchers.

Monday, July 13, 2020

President Of Law Enforcement Union Charged With Defrauding Union’s Annuity Fund


Union Treasurer, a Police Officer, Also Charged With Obstruction of Justice and False Statements

  Audrey Strauss, Acting United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, William F. Sweeny Jr., Assistant Director-in-Charge, New York Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), and Andriana Vamvakas, Northeastern Regional Director, U.S. Department of Labor Office of Labor-Management Standards (“DOL-OLMS”), announced the arrest of KENNETH WYNDER Jr., a former New York State Trooper and the president of the Law Enforcement Employees Benevolent Association (“LEEBA”), a labor union for law enforcement officers employed by the City of New York (the “City”), for defrauding union members by misappropriating money from LEEBA’s Annuity Fund.  STEVEN WHITTICK, LEEBA’s treasurer and a police officer for New York City’s Department of Environmental Protection (“DEP”), was charged separately with obstructing the investigation into fraud in connection with LEEBA and the Annuity Fund and making false statements to federal agents.  Both defendants are expected to appear before U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert W. Lehrburger in Manhattan federal court this afternoon.

Acting U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss said:  “Today we have charged two leaders of a union that represents local law enforcement officers for engaging in criminal conduct, something they and their membership are sworn to combat.  As alleged, Kenneth Wynder abused his position as the union’s president and its annuity fund’s administrator and trustee to raid his members’ retirement accounts.  As further alleged, Steven Whittick, the union’s treasurer, took repeated steps to obstruct a federal investigation aimed at uncovering those financial improprieties.”
FBI Assistant Director William F. Sweeny Jr. said:  “As alleged, both law enforcement and civilian members of multiple city agencies had their retirement savings compromised by two individuals who prioritized their own financial well-being over that of the hardworking men and women who dedicated their livelihood to serving the public. Most people only get one chance to put aside enough money to last them into retirement. To think the money these individuals worked so hard for could allegedly be swindled by the very people who play a role in managing it is disturbing beyond belief. Today’s arrests bring us one step closer to making sure justice is served in this case.”
DOL-OLMS Northeastern Regional Director Andriana Vamvakas said:  “Union officials are required to use the union’s funds only for legitimate purposes, not their own personal gain. Financial misappropriation by union officials not only breaks the law, it betrays the trust placed in them by their membership.  OLMS was proud to work with its partners at the Office of the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York and the Federal Bureau of Investigation in investigating this case.”
According to the allegations contained in the two Complaints unsealed in Manhattan federal court, publicly available information, and prior court filings:[1]
Law Enforcement Employees Benevolent Association and the Annuity Fund
LEEBA is a labor union that has acted as the collective bargaining representative principally for law enforce­ment personnel at various City agencies, and has entered into agreements on behalf of those law enforcement employees, including agreements for insurance and retirement benefits.  The City agencies whose employees LEEBA represented included, at various times, the Department of Environmental Protection (“DEP”), the Department of Sanitation (“Sanitation”), and the Department of Transporta­tion (“Transportation”).           
The Annuity Fund is a LEEBA fund that received monthly contributions from the City for the benefit of LEEBA’s members, and maintained separate accounts for each fund member.  These accounts were functionally similar to employer-sponsored 401(k) retirement accounts.  Both WYNDER and WHITTICK were Trustees of the Annuity Fund and signatories to agreements that governed the fund.  Under the relevant agreements and plans, the money in the Annuity Fund could be used for no purpose other than funding individual members’ retirement accounts and defraying reasonable administra­tive expenses of the Annuity Fund itself.
WYNDER
WYNDER, a former New York State Trooper, is the President of LEEBA and a member of LEEBA’s board of directors.  WYNDER has also served as the Fund Administrator of the Annuity Fund and as a member of the board of trustees of the Annuity Fund, pursuant to which he owed a fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of the Annuity Fund and its account holders.  WYNDER also was on the board of trustees of the LEEBA Welfare Fund (the “Welfare Fund,” and collectively with the Annuity Fund, the “LEEBA Funds”), which provided supplemental insurance benefits to its members.  While occupying those positions, WYNDER centralized and controlled major decision-making authority for LEEBA and the LEEBA Funds, often acting without the proper approval of their respective boards of directors or trustees.  WYNDER’s de facto dominance of LEEBA and the LEEBA Funds enabled him to make decisions in his own self-interest and contrary to the interests of the Annuity Fund and individual members.
WHITTICK
WHITTICK, a DEP police officer, is the Treasurer of LEEBA, and a member of the board of directors of LEEBA and the boards of trustees of the LEEBA Annuity Fund and the LEEBA Welfare Fund.  As LEEBA’s Treasurer, WHITTICK had responsibi­lity for LEEBA’s financial matters and accounts, arranging for LEEBA to pay its payroll through an outside payroll processing firm starting in 2016, as well as having signatory authority over LEEBA’s main operating bank account. 
            WYNDER’s Alleged Fraud Scheme
            From at least in or about 2012 up to and including the date of this Complaint, WYNDER participated in a scheme to steal, embezzle, and misappropriate money from the Annuity Fund and individual members’ retirement accounts.  Specifically, WYNDER made hundreds of thousands of dollars of fraudulent transfers from the Annuity Fund to LEEBA’s operating account, which he controlled, and regularly used the funds, once transferred from the Annuity Fund, to enrich himself at union members’ expense, including through unauthorized and excessive checks to himself and cash withdrawals for his own benefit.  In addition, WYNDER caused the union to pay for various personal expenses such as a second residence, clothing, travel expenses, and the purchase of a personal automobile, all paid for by the union, and none of which were contemporaneously reported to the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), as required.
To accomplish this fraudulent scheme, WYNDER, acting in his capacity as the Annuity Fund’s Plan Administrator, repeatedly made false and misleading statements to a third-party retirement plan manager that served as the custodian for the Annuity Fund and the retirement accounts of individual union members, including through emails and faxes that WYNDER used to withdraw increasingly large sums of money from the Annuity Fund, effectively causing such withdrawals to be made from the retirement accounts of individual members.  From in or about 2014 through in or about 2019, WYNDER caused the withdrawal of more than $500,000 from the individual retirement accounts that constitute the Annuity Fund, thereby wiping out the entire balance of certain members’ accounts.  Without these improper withdrawals from the Annuity Fund, the LEEBA operating account would have been insolvent, and would have had insufficient funds to pay for WYNDER’s excessive checks to himself and cash withdrawals and the personal expenses he caused to be charged to that account.
In addition, throughout the duration of this scheme, WYNDER repeatedly made and approved false and misleading statements to LEEBA’s members and prospective members about how he was purportedly using and protecting their retirement accounts and the LEEBA Annuity Fund.  WYNDER further concealed his scheme by causing LEEBA to fail to timely file mandatory reports and financial disclosures with the City and public reports to the Annuity Fund’s members, and by making false statements to the Annuity Fund’s auditors and accountants.
WHITTICK’s Alleged Obstruction of Justice
From at least in or about 2017 through in or about August 2019, while serving as LEEBA’s Treasurer, and after learning of the federal investigation into LEEBA’s finances including the embezzlement scheme described above, WHITTICK repeatedly lied to federal agents in an effort to obstruct that investigation.  WHITTICK did so despite personal involvement in some of the financial improprieties with which WYNDER is charged.  For example, as alleged, on at least two occasions, on or about February 1, 2018, and March 30, 2018, WHITTICK withdrew $16,000 in cash from a LEEBA bank account, and on each occasion deposited $15,000 cash into WYNDER’s personal bank account and $1,000 cash into WHITTICK’s own personal bank account. 
After the FBI had executed a search warrant of LEEBA’s offices in September 2019, WHITTICK attempted to obstruct and to influence the ongoing federal investigation by making, in two different interviews with law enforcement agents, false statements about, among other subjects, cash withdrawals he made from LEEBA’s bank accounts, unauthorized withdrawals from LEEBA’s Annuity Fund and from members’ individual accounts, and LEEBA’s payment for certain travel and entertainment expenses for union officers, including WHITTICK and WYNDER.
WYNDER, 56, of Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, is charged with one count of wire fraud, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.
WHITTICK, 50, of Kingston, New York, is separately charged with one count of obstruction of justice, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, and two counts of false statements to federal investigators, each of which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison.
The maximum potential sentences in these cases are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendants will be determined by a judge.
Ms. Strauss praised the outstanding work of the FBI and the Department of Labor OLMS.  Ms. Strauss also thanked IRS-Criminal Investigations, the New York City Comptroller’s Office, and the New York City Department of Investigation for their assistance.
The charges contained in the Complaints 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 Complaints, and the description of the Complaints set forth herein, constitute only allegations, and every fact described therein should be treated as an allegation.

Mayor de Blasio Announces New Face Covering Guidance and Public Awareness Campaign to Reach Younger New Yorkers


New Yorkers looking to get tested should text COVID TEST to 855-48 or visit NYC.gov/COVIDTEST

  Mayor de Blasio today announced that all New Yorkers should wear a face covering indoors when they are around other people in a setting that is not their home. With cases rising among New Yorkers between the ages of 20-29, the City will launch a public outreach campaign geared towards younger New Yorkers, including additional mobile testing sites. Through partnerships with Federally Qualified Health Centers, the City will also open additional testing sites, building on the commitment to make COVID-19 testing as fast and convenient as possible across the five boroughs.

"We have come so far in our fight against the virus—but we cannot let our guard down just yet,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “Younger New Yorkers are not invincible to COVID-19. My plea is simple: please get tested, practice social distancing, wear your face coverings, and take all the necessary precautions to keep each other safe.”
Guidance for Younger New Yorkers
With cases rising among New Yorkers under the age of 40—especially for the 20-29 age demographic—the City will launch a comprehensive public outreach campaign targeting younger New Yorkers. Through a “Night of Action” the City will conduct outreach through popular bars, outdoors restaurants, and waterfront locations, offering nearby mobile van testing and mask giveaways. The City will also partner with digital influencers to reach younger New Yorkers across social platforms and share guidance on how to prevent COVID-19.

Face Coverings
As the city continues to reopen and more people return to work outside the home, New Yorkers should wear a face covering as much as possible when around other people in an indoor setting that is not their home.

New Testing Partnerships
Ramon Velez Health Center (Currently Open)
754 E. 151st Street, Bronx
Monday - Friday 9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Appointment required

Clay Avenue Health Center 1 (Currently Open)
776 Clay Avenue, Bronx
Monday - Friday 9:00AM-4:00 PM
Appointment required

Casa Maria Health Center (Currently Open)
324 E. 149th Street, Bronx
Monday - Friday 9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Appointment required

Claremont Health Center (Currently Open)
262 E. 174th Street, Bronx
Monday - Friday 9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Appointment required

Thomas and Marie White Health Center (Currently Open)
116-30 Sutphin Boulevard, Queens
Monday - Friday 9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Appointment required

Hope Gardens (Opens tomorrow, July 14th)
120 Menahan Street, Brooklyn
Monday - Friday 10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Appointment required

The City will also operate additional testing sites through Union Community Health Center:
Union Community Health Center: (Currently Open)
260 East 188th Street, Bronx
Monday - Friday 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Rapid Care hours: Monday-Friday 3:00 PM -9:00 PM. Saturday-Sunday 10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Appointment required

Grand Concourse
2021 Grand Concourse, Bronx
Monday - Friday 9:00 AM- 5:00 PM  
Appointment required

The following sites will open through a partnership with the Institute for Family Health:
Stevenson Family Health Center (PCR Testing Only; Opens August 3rd)
731 White Plains Road, Bronx

Governor Cuomo Announces Appointments to The Appellate Division of The Supreme Court


Appointments Fill Vacancies in Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, First Department of New York State

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced four appointments to fill vacancies in the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, in the First Department of New York State. The justices selected today reflect the diversity, talent and experience present throughout New York's judicial system.

"New York State's courts have enormous impact on the laws that shape citizens' day-to-day lives, and their judges should display strong commitments to justice and fairness," Governor Cuomo said. "I am proud to appoint four individuals whose exemplary service qualifies them to serve in the Appellate Division of New York's Supreme Court and wish them well in their work for New Yorkers in Manhattan and the Bronx."

Appellate Division-First Department Appointees:
The Governor appointed Supreme Court Justices Saliann Scarpulla, Manuel Jacobo Mendez Olivero, Martin Shulman, and Tanya R. Kennedy to fill vacancies on the Appellate Division-First Department. The First Department covers Manhattan and the Bronx.

Honorable Saliann Scarpulla
After graduating law school Justice Scarpulla clerked for the Hon. Alvin F. Klein in Supreme Court, New York County. When her clerkship concluded, Justice Scarpulla joined Proskauer Rose Goetz & Mendelsohn as a litigation associate.  Justice Scarpulla later moved to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as Senior Counsel.  From the FDIC Justice Scarpulla became Senior Vice President and Bank Counsel to Hudson United Bank. Justice Scarpulla returned to the New York State court system as Principal Court Attorney to the Hon. Eileen Bransten. She was then elected to the New York City Civil Court in 2001, appointed to the New York State Supreme Court in 2009, and elected to the Supreme Court in 2012.  Since February 2014, Justice Scarpulla has been sitting in the Supreme Court, New York County Commercial Division.  In 2019 Justice Scarpulla was also appointed to handle all international commercial arbitration matters pending in the New York State Supreme Court. Justice Scarpulla is active in several New York City and statewide bar associations and is a Business Court Representative to the American Bar Association. Justice Scarpulla earned a J.D. from Brooklyn Law School, cum laude.

Honorable Manuel Jacobo Mendez Olivero
Justice Mendez has been a Justice of the Supreme Court, New York State, since his election in 2012 and has been since 2018 the coordinating judge of the New York City Asbestos Litigation (NYCAL).  Prior to his election, Justice Mendez was elected Judge of the Civil Court, New York County in 2003, and had served as a Judge in the Civil Court from 2004 to January 2010.  He presided by Designation in Bronx Criminal Court from 2008 to January 2010, and as an Acting Justice of the Supreme Court, Bronx County from January 2010 to January 2011, and then New York County until his election to Supreme Court in 2012.  Before his election to the Civil Court, Justice Mendez was engaged in the private practice of law as a solo practitioner (Law Office of Manuel J. Mendez, P.C.), from 1999 through 2003, and as a partner in the firm of Kwasink & Mendez, P.C. from 1993 through 1998. He worked as a Senior Staff Attorney at the Legal Aid Society Criminal Defense Division in the Bronx from September 1990 to October 1993. Justice Mendez earned a J.D. from the Universidad Central Del Este School of law in the Dominican Republic.

Honorable Martin Shulman
Justice Shulman was first elected to the New York County Supreme Court in the First Judicial Department in 2005 with his term ending in 2019, and in 2019, was re-elected to the New York County Supreme Court for another 14-year term. At the First Judicial Department, he served as the Presiding Justice in the Appellate Term, a position Chief Administrative Judge Lawrence K. Marks appointed him to in 2018. Justice Shulman first became a Justice of the Appellate Term when Chief Administrative Judge Ann Pfau appointed him in 2009. From 1999 to 2004, he served as an Acting Justice after being appointed by then Chief Administrative Judge Jonathan Lippman. In addition to his time with the New York County Supreme Court, Justice Shulman was also a Judge at New York County's Civil Court from 1995 to 2014. Judge Lippman also appointed Justice Shulman as the Supervising Judge of the New York County Civil Court. Before becoming a Judge, Justice Shulman was an Associate, then Partner, at the real estate litigation firm of Shaw & Binder. Prior to Shaw & Binder, Justice Shulman held numerous positions at the New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal (Formerly New York City Conciliation and Appeals Board), including Deputy Chief of the Administrative Review Bureau, a Supervising Attorney and a Staff Attorney from 1982 to 1987. He was also a Court Attorney for the Hon. Eugene L. Nardelli from 1981 to 1982. Justice Shulman earned a J.D. from Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law.

Honorable Tanya R. Kennedy
Justice Kennedy has served as a Justice of the Supreme Court, New York County, since January 2016, after election in November 2015. She was elected to Civil Court in November 2005 and thereafter served in Criminal Court (January 2006-September 2008), Civil Court (September 2008-December 2009), Family Court (January 2010-December 2010), as Acting Supreme Court Justice (January 2011-December 2012) and as Supervising Judge of Civil Court (January 20l4-December 2015). As an Acting Supreme Court Justice, Justice Kennedy presided over an integrated guardianship and landlord-tenant calendar and conducted bench hearings on a daily basis from January 2012 to December 2013. Before her election to Civil Court, Justice Kennedy was principal law clerk to Hon. Barry A. Cozier both while he was an Associate Justice of the Appellate Division, Second Department (March 2001-December 2005) and while he was a Justice in the Commercial Division, New York County (May 1999-March 2001). Before her clerkship with Justice Cozier, Justice Kennedy served in the Office of the Corporation Counsel, New York City Law Department, as an Assistant Corporation Counsel in the Bronx Family Court Division (August 1992-August 1994) and in the Bronx Tort Division (August 1994-August 1997), where she was promoted to Assistant Deputy Chief. Justice Kennedy earned a J.D. from Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law.

The Judicial Screening Committee for the First Department, Appellate Division reviewed the applications and conducted interviews of dozens of applicants. Only those applicants deemed "highly qualified" by the Committees were submitted to the Governor for his consideration. To be found "highly qualified," candidates must display integrity, independence, leadership, intellect, legal ability, judgment, temperament, and experience.

The Governor's Office will continue to review candidates that successfully advance through the screening process to fill vacancies in the Appellate Divisions of the Supreme Court.

Under the New York State Constitution and Judiciary Law, the Governor has the authority to appoint Justices to each Appellate Division from among those who have been elected as Justices of the Supreme Court. These appointments are not subject to Senate confirmation.

Governor Cuomo Announces New Data-Driven Guidance for Reopening Schools


 Schools in Regions in Phase IV Can Reopen if Daily Infection Rate Remains Below 5 Percent Using a 14-Day Average

Schools Will Close if Regional Infection Rate Rises Over 9 Percent After August 1

Finalized DOH and Reimagine Education Advisory Council Guidance and Guiding Principles Available Here

1.08 Percent of Yesterday's COVID-19 Tests were Positive

10 COVID-19 Deaths in New York State Yesterday

Confirms 557 Additional Coronavirus Cases in New York State - Bringing Statewide Total to 402,263; New Cases in 38 Counties

  Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced new, data-driven guidance for reopening schools in New York State. Schools in a region can reopen if that region is in Phase IV of reopening and if its daily infection rate remains below 5 percent or lower using a 14-day average since unPAUSE was lifted. Schools will close if the regional infection rate rises above 9 percent, using a 7-day average, after August 1. New York State will make the formula determination during the week of August 1 to 7. New York State, the Reimagine Education Advisory Council and the Department of Health released finalized guidance and guiding principles for reopening schools today, which are available here. The DOH and Governor's Reimagine Council are working closely with the Department of Education as it releases education guidance. Plans to reopen schools are due on July 31.

Topics addressed by state guidance include:

  • Masks/PPE
  • Social Distancing
  • Cohort Structures
  • Restructuring Space to Maximize In-Class Instruction
  • Transportation
  • Food Service
  • Aftercare and Extracurriculars
  • Screening
  • Tracing
  • Cleaning and Disinfecting

Governor Cuomo also updated New Yorkers on the state's progress during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The number of new cases, percentage of tests that were positive and many other helpful data points are always available at forward.ny.gov.

"Everybody wants to reopen schools, but you only reopen if it's safe to reopen, and that's determined by the data. You don't hold your finger up and feel the wind, you don't have an inspiration, you don't have a dream, you don't have an emotion--look at the data," Governor Cuomo said. "We test more and we have more data than any state. If you have the virus under control, reopen. If you don't have the virus under control, then you can't reopen. We're not going to use our children as the litmus test and we're not going to going to put our children in a place where their health is endangered. It's that simple. Common sense and intelligence can still determine what we do, even in this crazy environment. We're not going to use our children as guinea pigs. What I say to the experts is very simple. I'm making the determination as to whether or not I would send my daughter to school. If it's safe, I'll send her. If it's not safe, I'm not going to send her. And you can determine that by science."

Today's data is summarized briefly below:

  • Patient Hospitalization - 792 (-9)
  • Patients Newly Admitted - 60 (-15)
  • Hospital Counties - 31
  • Number ICU - 175 (+1)
  • Number ICU with Intubation - 103 (+1)
  • Total Discharges - 71,643 (+78)
  • Deaths - 10
  • Total Deaths - 24,989

WILLIAMS RESPONDS TO GUN VIOLENCE SPIKES IN NEW YORK CITY


  Public Advocate Jumaane D. Williams issued the following statement after another spike in gun violence in New York City this weekend, including the killing of a one year old child in Brooklyn.

"The violence and loss that our city has seen in the last several weeks, in the last several hours, is devastating, and can leave us at a loss ourselves for how to respond and advance peace. I pray for the victims of this epidemic of gun violence, and for the families facing unimaginable pain in this moment, but I know that prayers alone are not sufficient without action.

"We cannot grow numb to the headlines on our screens or the violence in our streets. This cannot be considered normal, in our city or anywhere. It must shock us, and shock us into action that stems both the supply of guns into our communities and the many factors that lead to violence. To the people who say law enforcement is the only solution - you are wrong. To the people who say law enforcement has no role - you are wrong. We need to come together with increased commitment to the community-driven strategies we know can work and are essential to ending this senseless violence and heartbreaking loss." 

NYC Council Candidate Jessica Haller Raises over $55,000




NYC Council Candidate Jessica Haller Raises over $55,000 from over 425 donors, securing a $220,000+ budget for June 2021 Democratic Primary
 

BRONX, NY (July 13, 2020) – Jessica Haller, a Democratic candidate for the City’s 11th Council District in the Bronx, announced that her campaign has raised more than $55,000 from over 425 donors in her first filing period. With anticipated matching funds, will have over $220,000 for the June 2021 Democratic Primary. 
 “I am honored to have the support of so many people, specifically in the district, in the midst of unprecedented public-health, economic, and social-justice crises,” said Haller. “With the pandemic hitting shortly after our campaign was launched, I am proud that we were able to quickly devise an online strategy that mobilized hundreds of donors and volunteers committed to a sustainable, resilient, and equitable New York. We also spent our time talking to people one on one. Our campaign now has the financial resources and grassroots support to share our message and engage with voters over the next 11 months. We accomplished this without parties or events.”
Haller’s NYC Campaign Finance Board filing, due on July 15, 2020, will report an estimated:  
  • Actual funds raised  $55,827
  • Anticipated matching funds of $168,888
  • 428 individual contributors
  • Over 189 in-district contributions 
Haller is the only female candidate to enter the District 11 Council race and is an active member of 21 in ’21, which was launched in response to the alarmingly low number of women serving on the New York City Council. Today, only 12 out of 51 Council members are women, down from 18 in 2009.
“As someone who strongly believes in equality I find it more than troubling that in 2020 none of my New York City elected representatives — from the Mayor to the Public Advocate to the Comptroller to my City Council member — is a woman,” said Haller. “I believe that a diverse Council will do a better job bringing people of all backgrounds together to address the serious inequities, economic challenges and life-threatening crises facing New Yorkers.”
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About Jessica
Jessica Haller, a climate activist, tech entrepreneur, and working mother of four, is a candidate to represent the 11th District in the New York City Council, which includes the Bronx neighborhoods of Bedford Park, Kingsbridge, Norwood, Riverdale, Van Cortlandt Village, Wakefield, and Woodlawn. Jessica has spent her life living along the 1 train and is raising her children in the Bronx, where she has lived for more than two decades. She has been shattering glass ceilings throughout her career and left a corporate career to pursue her passion for the environment and to understand how to create a thriving future for all people. As a life-long New Yorker, Jessica will use her environmental experience, justice centered service, and technical know-how to build sustainable neighborhoods in the Bronx. She will work to modernize public transit, make our buildings energy efficient and resilient, bring 21st century skills to our public-school children, strengthen community for seniors, and promote economic opportunity for all. Learn more about Jessica’s campaign at https://www.jessicahaller.com.