Tuesday, August 30, 2022

KRVC - Concert in VCP Coming Up September 8th!

 

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We have so many exciting and fun events planned for our community this coming fall --


SEPTEMBER 8TH -- Bring a picnic and enjoy the beautiful grounds of the Van Cortlandt House Museum 

with the Wayne Escoffery Quartet

Also Join Us for More Events Coming Up Soon!



SEPTEMBER 15TH -- Erika Shallcross is a visual artist based in New York City. A photographer, painter, and collage technician, her pieces are both whimsical and evocative. Regularly experimenting with new techniques and touching on various themes, Shallcross believes these parameters simultaneously anchor, free, and guide her work.

Our Monday Fundays start on SEPTEMBER 12th, throughout the fall

from 3:00 - 5:00 pm

Our annual Halloween party continues on OCTOBER 31st!     

NOVEMBER 17TH -- "Beginning in the early 2000s, in addition to taking photos to record my travels with my wife Leah in the U.S. and abroad, I began to take pictures of nature, scenery and landscapes."

HerbKaplanPhotography.com

Look forward to seeing you!      KRVCDC.ORG/EVENTS

Attorney General James Acts to Protect Access to Reproductive Health Care at Major New York Pharmacies

 

AG James Reminds CVS and Walgreens that Denying New Yorkers
Access to Reproductive Healthcare Services is Illegal in New York

 New York Attorney General Letitia James took action to protect New Yorkers’ access to reproductive health care prescriptions and products at CVS and Walgreens pharmacies. Employees at CVS and Walgreens stores in other states have reportedly refused to provide customers with birth control, condoms, emergency contraceptives, and/or other medications related to reproductive health. Attorney General James sent letters to both CVS and Walgreens reminding the retail pharmacy giants that it is illegal in New York to deny customers prescribed or over-the-counter medications or products related to reproductive health care.

“Pharmacies have a responsibility to safeguard New Yorkers’ health, including by providing reproductive health care medications and products,” said Attorney General James. “The actions taken by some CVS and Walgreens employees in other states have sparked concerns nationwide and have raised serious questions that must be addressed. Let me be clear: I will not accept New Yorkers being denied access to essential health care products and services. I am proud to stand up for New Yorkers’ reproductive rights, and I will always fight to preserve access to birth control and other reproductive health medications and options.” 

New Yorkers seeking contraception or other reproductive health products at these two major chains have a right to receive those essential products. Reports from other states indicate that some employees at CVS and at Walgreens have refused to provide reproductive health products or services, and some Walgreens employees have even mistreated consumers by publicly harassing, embarrassing, and shaming them. In her letters, Attorney General James makes clear that similar behavior by CVS or Walgreens employees at any of their more than 1,000 locations throughout New York state is a violation of New York’s public health and civil rights laws.

Attorney General James requests that CVS and Walgreens provide more information about their refusal policies, which Walgreens has stated allows pharmacists to step away from filing a prescription for which they have a moral objection. It appears that the policy, in practice, may infringe upon New Yorkers’ rights. Attorney General James is also requesting that Walgreens and CVS provide more information about:

  •   The amount of time that CVS and Walgreens consider “timely” in fulfilling a prescription or completing a sales transaction where there has been a refusal.
  •   Companies’ training regarding refusals and related policies.
  •   All documents concerning whether CVS and Walgreens track refusals and/or whether such prescriptions and over-the-counter sales have been filled and/or completed in a “timely” manner.
  •   All complaints concerning CVS and Walgreens refusals at New York locations for the past six years.

Attorney General James has been a leader in the fight to protect abortion rights and reproductive health care access. In June, Attorney General James called on Google to correct search results that directed individuals seeking abortions to dangerous and misleading anti-abortion clinics in New York. This past week, the Attorney General lauded the fact that following her letter, Google fixed this problem and improved their search results. In May, Attorney General James supported state legislation to establish a state program to provide financial resources to abortion providers in New York and called for a New York state Constitutional Amendment ensuring the right to an abortion

Attorney General James recently launched a pro bono legal hotline to provide legal guidance and resources to patients, health care providers, and supporters seeking information about their legal rights to access and provide abortions. The hotline is free and available in the 12 most common languages spoken in New York. To access the hotline, dial (212) 899-5567. For more information, go to https://ag.ny.gov/reproductivehealth

Comptroller Brad Lander Proposes New Approach to Provide Resident Rights and Protections for NYC Basement Apartments

 

Modeled on NY’s Loft Law, this regulatory framework would require immediate basic safety interventions, protect tenants, & offer resources to building owners

Proposal is part of a longer-term path toward legalization

 Ahead of the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Ida, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander released a new report, Bringing Basement Apartments into the Light. The report outlines a path, to provide basic rights, responsibilities and protections for basement apartment residents and owners. Eleven New Yorkers drowned in their mostly-unregulated basement units on September 1, 2021, and many others were injured and lost their belongings.

Modeled on New York’s Loft Law, the “Basement Resident Protection Law” would recognize existing basement units, require owners to provide basic safety interventions like smoke detectors and backflow preventers and offer resources to install them, grant basic tenant protections, and establish a Basement Board to oversee these rights and responsibilities. This interim approach would work in tandem with existing legislative efforts to establish a pathway to improvements and legalization of many of the units, and with relocation of tenants from those that are most dangerous.

“Hurricane Ida tragically called attention to the precarity of tens of thousands of our neighbors living in basements, but one year later, we’ve done little to address it. Climate change means more flash floods are coming and fires remain an even more frequent deadly risk. Living without tenant protections means basement residents are constantly at risk of eviction without due process. We should act now to extend basement residents’ basic rights and responsibilities as well as require and aid owners to make lifesaving improvements – like smoke detectors and backflow preventers – while continuing to work on a pathway to legalization. This report, building on the example of New York’s Loft Law, shows how we can do it,” said Comptroller Brad Lander.

An Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) is a smaller, independent residential dwelling located on the same lot as another building, in which one of the units is the primary residence of the owner of the building. A cellar is a story in which 50% or more of the height from finished floor to ceiling is below the street grade and a basement is a story in which 50% or more of the height from finished floor to ceiling is above the street grade. New York State’s Multiple Dwelling Law (MDL), which is applicable to buildings with 3 or more units, prohibits any residential use in cellars but allows for residential use in basements as long as the unit complies with all other regulatory requirements.

The Comptroller’s report includes a geographic analysis to better understand the potential scope of flood risks facing one-, two-, and three-family homes with basements or cellars in New York City. The analysis indicates that about 10% of all physical basement and cellars (whether occupied or not) are currently facing some type of flooding risk. By the 2050s as storms intensify, a third of basements and cellars will be at a very high risk for coastal flooding and extreme rainfall. Due to data limitations, the analysis does not project how many of those units are currently occupied, but demonstrates the increasing risk posed to basement dwellers in the face of storms like Ida.

The report’s proposal is based on New York’s Loft Law, originally adopted in 1982, which was designed to address a similar crisis: an informal system that left loft tenants in previously manufacturing buildings without physical safety or legal protections. The Loft Law provided immediate protections and rights to tenants and established a comprehensive process for the long-term conversion of commercial and manufacturing buildings to legal, safe residences.

Like loft tenants of the 1980s, basement unit dwellers today (many of whom are low-income households of color) do not currently have any legal protections or rights to basic safety provisions. In the rare cases where the City does inspect because the units are illegal, the City has few options other than to issue a vacate order – which does not improve the residents’ situation and is infeasible at scale. Owners, many of whom are also immigrants and people of color renting out the units to earn additional income to keep a roof over their heads, often do not have the resources necessary to meet the regulatory burden to legalize the units.

Under the proposed Basement Resident Protection Law, all currently occupied basements and cellars would be recognized as existing and having basic legal status. Owners would be required to register their units. All occupants living in basement or cellar apartments – regardless of whether the owner registered the unit – would be recognized and receive certain rights. The Law would:

  • Establish basic rights and responsibilities for basement dwellers and owners, including the requirement to provide basic services and the legal right to collect rent.
  • Mandate and offer funding to owners for the installation of basic safety measures including carbon monoxide and smoke detectors, and backflow preventers to mitigate fire and flooding risks.
  • Immediately protect tenants in interim units from harassment, eviction, and the denial of essential services and create new pathways for proactive enforcement and better data systems for the implementation of early flood warning systems.
  • Provide a registration framework that supports and is coordinated with ongoing safety inspections and longer-term legalization efforts.
  • Require the City and State to provide affordable housing to New Yorkers living in units deemed to be so unfit for living that they must be vacated.
  • Fund language accessible outreach to both owners and occupants of basement units through community-based organizations.

The report is available here.

“With the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Ida, which resulted in the deaths of 11 New Yorkers and thousands more impacted, it is critical for our City to consider bold steps to prevent future tragedies caused by climate change. As a longtime supporter of legalizing basement apartments, I appreciate Comptroller Lander’s recommendations on steps to help make accessory dwelling units safer and provide services to tenants currently living in these spaces. Any new program established to legalize basement units and bring them up to code should be coupled with the necessary funding and regulatory change to adequately address outstanding barriers and concerns. The City should also simultaneously prioritize the improvement of storm sewer systems and additional green infrastructure to prevent dangerous flooding. This holistic approach is what New York City needs to save lives and address the housing crisis confronting residents. I look forward to working with my colleagues in government, community leaders, and all stakeholders to deliver impactful reforms that advance affordable housing and prevent tragedies during the next climate emergency,” said City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams.

“In the year since Tropical Storm Ida, Albany has yet to take any action to prevent more deaths among New York’s basement residents. The Comptroller’s proposal to require basic tenant rights and safeguards in basement units is an important step that state legislators can take on the path toward permanent basement legalization. We will not stop fighting until basement apartments are safe, legal, and affordable across New York City,” said the BASE (Basement Apartments Safe For Everyone) Coalition.

“Chhaya has been fighting on behalf of basement tenants and homeowners for 15 years. While we continue to organize for a citywide basement conversion program, we believe Comptroller Lander’s proposal would provide much-needed protections for tenants and would quickly increase safety in units that are homes to some of our most vulnerable neighbors,” said Annetta Seecharran, Executive Director of Chhaya CDC.

“Churches United for Fair Housing is proud to support the Comptroller’s recommendations for a new “Basement Board Law” to work alongside and in tandem with Assembly Member Harvey Epstein’s much needed long-term pathway to legalization for basement apartments,” said Whitney Hu, Director of Civic Engagement & Research for CUFFH. “Many of our members struggle to fight for basic rights and safety for their families living in basement apartments — but are unable to move due to the prohibitive costs of rent in New York City. The Comptroller’s straightforward and practical proposals will keep many of our members safe, with clear rights, and protections.”

“Tenants living in basements and cellar units urgently need protections against the deeply connected housing and climates crises,” said Cea Weaver, Campaign Coordinator at Housing Justice For All. “A full year after Hurricane Ida, it is long overdue to require property owners to install basic safety measures that would prevent further deaths in some of our most vulnerable and at-risk communities. Basement dwellers shouldn’t need to choose between staying quiet about unsafe conditions or risking a vacate order. The creation of a Basement Board is a critical step toward providing tenants with the right to basic services and immediate good cause protections.”

“For far too long, our clients and those who live in illegal basement and cellar apartment units have lacked basic rights and safety measures that put them at further risk of harassment, eviction, and potentially life-threatening climate events, such as flooding during hurricanes. We commend Comptroller Lander for presenting a comprehensive plan that proposes potentially life-saving interventions and also protects existing tenants from displacement and homelessness,” said Judith Goldiner, Attorney-in-Charge of the Civil Law Reform Unit at The Legal Aid Society.

Recent ADU and basement unit regulation background:

In 2016, the Basement Apartments Safe for Everyone (BASE) coalition won a pilot program to legalize basement and cellar units in the community rezoning of East New York, Brooklyn, which resulted in the passage of Local Law 49 in 2019 sponsored by then Council Member Brad Lander. Unfortunately, due to the extensive work needed to fully legalize the units, the steep challenge of compelling action among homeowners renting units illegally, and then-Mayor Bill de Blasio Administration’s near elimination of the program through severe COVID-19 budget cuts, only eight homeowners remain active in the program.

During this past session in Albany, Senator Pete Harckham and Assembly Member Harvey Epstein introduced A-4854/S-4547, legislation that would require localities across the state to amend zoning and building codes to ease the creation of legal ADUs, including basement and cellar units as well as garage units, backyard cottages, granny flats, and other types of ADUs that are common across the State but less so within New York City.

While the BASE Coalition and Mayor Eric Adams’ Administration support the legislation, it did not pass during the 2022 legislative session. Comptroller Lander strongly supports this legislation and is working with the BASE Coalition, State legislators, and the Adams Administration toward passage in 2023. The proposed Basement Resident Protection Law would work in tandem with this legislation. A legalization law would amend zoning and building codes to create a pathway to improvement and full legalization; the proposed Law would establish rights, responsibilities, and basic safety protection in the interim.

Governor Hochul Launches Statewide Campaign To Highlight Funding for Child Care Providers and Families

kids coloring

 Statewide Multi-Media Campaign Aimed at Raising Awareness of Increased Income Eligibility Threshold for Child Care Subsidies

Announces Expanded Eligibility for Second Round of Federally Funded Child Care Provider Stabilization Grants

Nearly 400,000 Children Are Newly Eligible for Assistance


 Governor Kathy Hochul today, with Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, launched a statewide multi-media campaign to help ensure eligible families access child care assistance. Administered by the state Office of Children and Family Services, eligibility for child care assistance was expanded this month to include families earning up to 300 percent of the federal poverty level, which is up from 200 percent, extending eligibility to an estimated 394,000 young children throughout New York. As of this month, a family of four earning up to $83,250 is now eligible for child care assistance when previously, the threshold was $55,500 or less. Governor Hochul also announced expanded eligibility for a second round of federally funded Child Care Provider Stabilization grants. As of today, all school-age child care programs and more than 900 providers that were licensed by January 1, 2022 can apply for these grants. 

"As New York's first Governor who is a mom, I know firsthand how important affordable child care can be for your future and your family," Governor Hochul said. "By increasing the income threshold for child care assistance, we can relieve a crushing burden for hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers and, especially, working mothers. My administration has made historic investments in child care, and this statewide multi-media campaign is the latest crucial step we are taking to help ensure families receive the assistance they need and deserve." 

"The shortage of affordable child care in our state is nothing short of a crisis," said Senator Gillibrand. "We have to do more to support our families and our child care workers. That's why I'm proud to have fought to pass the American Rescue Plan and the CARES Act, legislation that is now delivering millions in federal funding to New York's child care providers and making care more accessible and affordable for those who need it. This expanded funding will help parents across our state return to work with the knowledge that their children are in good hands while giving child care workers the resources they need to be successful. I'll keep working with Governor Hochul to ensure that all New York families have the support they need to thrive." 

The child care assistance campaign is focused on urging New Yorkers to access this benefit so they can receive help paying for high-quality child care, which is one of the largest expenses for families after the cost of housing. Starting today, OCFS will begin a billboard, radio and social media campaign to let families know they can receive help paying for child care. The campaign will feature content on digital screens in retail locations, highway billboards, bus side posters, laundromats, salons and barbershops in English and Spanish.   

Funded through the American Rescue Plan Act, the campaign will begin today in areas outside of New York City and then in October in areas within the five-borough region. Families can learn more by visiting OCFS.ny.gov/ccap.   

Office of Children and Family Services Commissioner Sheila Poole said, "The most significant message is that we can help more families than ever pay for child care. The funding is available if someone is going back to work, is already working, is receiving training or is going to school. Parents should go online or call their local department of social services to see if they're eligible. And we're thrilled that this funding will also support our hard-working child care providers for doing some of the most important work out there."   

Governor Hochul also announced that all school age child care programs and more than 900 providers that were licensed after January 1 can now apply for the second round of child care provider stabilization grants. As part of the FY 2023 budget, $343 million was allocated for the stabilization grants, with 75 percent of the funding dedicated to workforce supports. These grants can be used to provide wage increases, bonuses, tuition reimbursement and contributions to staff retirement plans and health insurance costs.    

The Governor previously announced that providers licensed before January 1 could apply for this funding. To date, more than $152 million in stabilization grants has been approved for 7,788 providers across the state in the second round of funding. This includes $108 million in bonuses or increases in wages; $8 million in contributions to staff retirement plans supplementing any employer contribution; $6.4 million in contributions towards staff health insurance costs; $4.2 million in mental health supports and services for staff; $9.7 million in supplemental educational advancement or tuition reimbursement; and $15.7 million for other eligible expenses. Last year, more than $900 million in funds was distributed to child care providers, representing a historic investment in early childhood care and education.   

Eligible providers can access more information here

The income threshold increase resulted from Governor Hochul's historic $2 billion investment to increase the number of families eligible for child care assistance and to ensure child care providers are adequately funded for their essential services. This investment includes $894 million in new funding for New York State Child Care Block Grants, which was adopted as part of the recent State Budget; more than $500 million in unspent funds previously allocated to local departments of social services; and more than $600 million in existing COVID-19 pandemic funding.  

These announcements are part of the historic investments made in the FY 2023 Budget which includes an unprecedented $7 billion investment over four years and expands access to high-quality child care to support children and families and help stimulate New York State's continued economic recovery. 

NYS Office of the Comptroller DiNapoli: Employment Services System for New Yorkers with Disabilities Is Underutilized

 

NYS Office of the Comptroller Banner

Many State Agencies Don’t Use the State-Created, Centralized Employment System

 New York state is failing to promote and increase use of a key system designed to assist people with disabilities find employment services, according to an audit released today by New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. The audit found that the state Office of Mental Health (OMH), which oversees the New York Employment Services System (NYESS), needs to do much more to make sure state agencies, and their contracted employment service providers, make use of the system – and better serve New Yorkers with disabilities.

“New York created the employment services system to improve competitive employment opportunities and outcomes for people with disabilities. It is disappointing that this system is underutilized by state agencies and employment service providers,” DiNapoli said. “Efforts to increase employment among individuals with a disability have fallen short. Better management and collaboration can help expand the system’s use and help people  overcome the inequities and barriers they face when they look for employment.”

There are approximately 1 million working-age adults with a disability in New York, according to the American Community Survey (ACS). Only 33%, however, are employed, compared to the 74% employment rate for working-age adults statewide. In addition to increased likelihood of unemployment, adults with disabilities are more likely to be living in poverty (28%) compared to working-age adults (12%). The COVID pandemic greatly impacted employment among all New Yorkers, but from April 2020 to March 2021, the unemployment rate for people with a disability averaged 16.2%, an increase of 8.9% over the prior year, according to Department of Labor data. This was significantly higher than unemployment in the general population, which averaged 11.3%, up 7.5%, during the first year of the pandemic.

In March 2015, New York’s Employment First Commission established goals to increase employment by 5% and decrease poverty by 5% among New Yorkers with disabilities. Insufficient progress has been made, however. According to ACS data, between 2013 and 2020, the employment rate of individuals with a disability increased less than 1% while the number of individuals with a disability living in poverty decreased by 3%.

Despite the promise of NYESS to improve competitive employment opportunities and outcomes for people with  disabilities, DiNapoli’s audit found it is badly underutilized. Just one of seven state agencies responsible for licensing or contracting with employment service providers – and only about a third (199) of those 621 providers­ – use NYESS.

NYESS is also an employment network under the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) Ticket to Work (TTW) program. TTW is a voluntary program funded by the SSA to help individuals receiving Supplemental Security Income and Social Security Disability Insurance reach their employment goals and reduce their reliance on benefits. Program providers earn revenue by providing services such as case management, job preparation, job assistance, and training to eligible individuals that meet earnings and employment milestones. Since 2016, SSA has paid more than $12.1 million to providers in NYESS’ TTW program and 11,833 customers have been enrolled. However, since 2019, the number of enrollees employed and generating revenue, as well as revenue received by providers, have declined.

OMH has not undertaken a strong proactive campaign to promote the benefits of both NYESS and TTW among State agencies and employment service providers. Better communication and outreach to these entities, as well as solicitation of feedback on how to improve the system based on users’ needs, could facilitate collaboration and increase utilization of NYESS and participation in TTW toward meeting the Commission’s goals.

Auditors also identified OMH’s lack of set policies to guide NYESS and the TTW program, which creates the risk of inconsistent, ineffective and inefficient management, and potentially impacts the delivery of supports and services.

Recommendations

Among its recommendations, DiNapoli’s audit called on OMH to:

  • Increase utilization of NYESS by informing state agencies of its capabilities and benefits so agency officials may educate their employment service providers about NYESS; and collaborating with agencies and employment service providers to assess their needs.
  • Ensure TTW provider affiliates are familiar with and able to use NYESS to monitor the TTW program.
  • Develop written policies and procedures related to NYESS and the monitoring and administration of the TTW program.
  • Monitor and verify data entered in NYESS to ensure its completeness, accuracy and validity.

Response

OMH was generally receptive to DiNapoli’s recommendations and expected that recent changes to NYESS, and enhanced benefits to participation, will help reinvigorate efforts to expand partnerships and enrollment.

Audit

Office of Mental Health: Maximizing Incentives for Individuals With Disabilities

Related Work

New York State Education Department (SED) – Adult Vocational Rehabilitation Supported Employment Program, March 2022

Pre-Pandemic Improvements in Employment Rates for People with Disabilities Have Been Derailed by COVID-19, June 2021

DiNapoli’s Executive Order on Inclusion of People with Disabilities

Executive Order

MAYOR ADAMS, TLC, MARBLEGATE ASSET MANAGEMENT, NYTWA ANNOUNCE HISTORIC TAXI MEDALLION DEBT RELIEF PROGRAM DEAL, PROVIDING HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN RELIEF TO NYC MEDALLION OWNERS

 

Agreement Clears Way for More Than 3,000 Medallion Owners to Access Meaningful Debt Relief

 

Medallion Owners Can Close on Restructured Loans Starting September 19th

 

City, NYTWA, Marblegate to Hold Events Promoting Immediate Restructurings in September


New York City Mayor Eric Adams and New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission (TLC) Chair and Commissioner David Do today announced a finalized agreement with Marblegate Asset Management — the largest taxi medallion lender in the city — and the New York Taxi Workers Alliance (NYTWA) on the operational terms of a program that will provide hundreds of millions of dollars in debt relief to more than 3,000 medallion owners under an enhanced version of the Medallion Relief Program announced last year, Medallion Relief Program + (MRP+). Today’s agreement allows medallion lenders and owners to move forward with renegotiated loan agreements that include a city-funded loan guarantee — providing essential debt relief and lower monthly payments to medallion owners at a critical time in the sector’s history. The city, TLC, Marblegate, and NYTWA reached the deal to implement MRP+ and restructure outstanding loans to a maximum principal balance of $200,000 despite recent economic uncertainty, significant inflation, and rising interest rates. Medallion owners can begin the loan restructuring process immediately and begin closing on restructured loans on September 19, 2022.

 

“Our taxi drivers are the lifeblood that keep New York City’s heart pumping. They were promised a path to a better life with these taxi medallions but quickly found themselves going down a pit of financial despair. The enhanced version of the Medallion Relief Program we are announcing today will deliver life-changing debt forgiveness to more than 3,000 drivers who deserve economic justice,” said Mayor Adams. “Our taxicab medallion owners and drivers have always kept New York City moving, and it is finally time we pay it forward with real debt relief for owners in need. We are likely putting tens of thousands of dollars back into the pockets of these owner-drivers and showing them what real relief looks like. I am proud that this administration was, once again, able to ‘Get Stuff Done’ for an industry that has given New Yorkers so much.”

 

“Today’s agreement provides much-needed debt relief for thousands of hard-working taxi drivers and individual medallion owners who have served New Yorkers and visitors for decades,” said Deputy Mayor for Operations Meera Joshi. “Whether after 9/11, during Hurricane Sandy, delivering meals during the pandemic, or providing transportation for passengers with disabilities, these professional drivers have always kept New York City moving.”

 

“Today, we finally have a concrete deal to get medallion owners the relief they desperately need,” said TLC Chair and Commissioner David Do. “I am incredibly proud of how hard the TLC and our partners — both lenders and medallion owners — have worked to get us to this point under very challenging economic circumstances, and I am looking forward to closing loans in the weeks to come.”

 

Rapidly changing economic conditions — including inflation and rising interest rates — required adjustments to the original proposed agreement. Under today’s finalized agreement, Marblegate will restructure outstanding loans of eligible taxi medallion owners to a maximum principal balance of $170,000, after the application of a $30,000 grant that will be used as a down payment on the restructured loans. The restructured loans will also be guaranteed by a loan loss reserve fund. Borrowers with lower loan balances are also eligible to participate in the program. The final terms for the restructured Marblegate loans will include an interest rate of 7.3 percent or less, fully amortized over no more than 25 years — capping monthly payments at $1,234. The TLC published rules that will codify these terms.

 

Medallion owners are encouraged to sign up for free legal representation and financial counseling through TLC’s Owner/Driver Resource Center. Other lenders who would like to learn more should also visit the resource center.


“We are finally at the starting line of a new life for thousands of drivers and our families,” said Bhairavi Desai, executive director, NYTWA. “The city-backed guarantee is a groundbreaking program that will save and change lives. We are thankful to City Hall, the TLC, the Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget, the Law Department, and Marblegate for burning the midnight oil to set up this historic program to address the crisis of debt across the industry. As we collectively work to end this crisis and hit restart, we look forward to working with all lenders. I congratulate all our union members who chose to organize, and not despair, and won back their lives. Against the darkness of a crushing debt, their courage remained the light, and today, the triumph is fully theirs.”

 

“The finalization of this program represents months of hard work by the TLC, multiple city agencies, representatives from NYTWA, and the Marblegate team,” said Andrew Milgram, managing partner and chief investment officer, Marblegate Asset Management. “While we are all proud of this program, it is critical that we move forward quickly to get drivers’ loans restructured. With a rapidly changing economy, it is vital drivers act in the month of September to realize meaningful debt forgiveness and a sizable reduction in their monthly loan payments. The more drivers that participate, the more this is a win for taxis — and a testament to the tenacity of NYTWA executive director Bhairavi Desai and the drivers who have succeeded in working with Mayor Adams, the TLC, and Senator Schumer to forever change the lives of these medallion owners.”

 

“Our medallion owners are an important part of our city, but many have struggled to stay afloat financially in this economic climate,” said Bronx Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson. “With this announcement, many of our overburdened medallion owners will finally receive the critical debt relief and support to remain operational and successful in today’s changing economy. I want to thank Mayor Eric Adams, New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission Chair and Commissioner David Do, Marblegate Asset Management, the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, and all of the driving advocates who pushed this important program forward and brought it into fruition. I look forward to working with them to ensure our medallion owners continue to receive the support they need and deserve.”


Monday, August 29, 2022

Pelham Parkway Neighborhood Association Backpack and School Supply Giveaway


Sunday was the Pelham Parkway Neighborhood Association Backpack and School Supply Giveaway at Destination Tomorrow located at the corner of Barnes and Lydig Avenues. Tables were set out for Backpacks and School Supplies donated by Councilwoman Marjorie Velazquez, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Catholic Charities of New York, Assemblywoman Nathalia Fernandez, Kreaky Products, and the Pelham Parkway Neighborhood Association. 


Children came and looked at the tables of backpacks, then chose the one they wanted. After that it was stopping at other tables to fill the backpack with whatever they may need in school from pencils, pens, glue sticks, paper, marble notebooks, and folders to name some of the school supplies for the children.  


Children came in and had three tables of backpacks to choose from. Here the Councilwoman Marjorie Velazquez table is filled with different color backpacks and two staffers eager to assist the children. 


The Catholic Charities table had colorful backpacks for little children, and bags of sanitizer  that were handed out to all.


This mom picks up a colorful backpack from the Catholic Charities table to see if her child wants it. 


The Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez table had backpacks, buttons, and information.


Then it was to the KREAKY Products table for some school supplies with KREAKY Products owner Chica Cruz and PPNA President Steve Glosser. 


Chica Cruz of KREAKY Products places some school supplies in this girls backpack.


The children were able to get marble notebooks, spiral notebooks, glue sticks, pencils, pencil sharpeners, filler paper, and folders provided by the PPNA.