Next year recently elected Assemblyman Mark Gjonaj will be up for re-election. To run a successful campaign like he did last year Assemblyman Gjonaj has already started to raise funds for next years campaign as you see below. Just the right border is cut off to enlarge the print.
Sunday, July 21, 2013
FREE mammography screenings this Monday
This came in from Assemblyman Luis Sepulveda.
In the interest of helping to stir conversation and awareness concerning women's health, next week, there will be FREE mammography screenings for uninsured or under insured females 40 and over.
Date: Monday, July 22, 2013
Time: 9:00am-1:30pm
Location: E. 180th Street (Between E. Tremont and Van Nest Avenue)
Appointments necessary. Please call 718-931-2620 to reserve your spot now.
Friday, July 19, 2013
Bronx Democratic County Committee Dinner
Wednesday night July 17th was the annual Bronx Democratic County Dinner. Before you entered the driveway however were protesters (from the Freedom Party) who were complaining about political corruption. Public Advocate candidate Lettita James (endorsed by the BDCC) greeted you at the door. In the main ballroom there was not an open space to be had as tables and chairs were set up to the max. I was told that over 1,000 people were expected during the course of the night, and that being with the Bronx Democratic County organization already having endorsed candidates in what seems to be a large field in almost every race.
BDCC Chairman Carl Heastie had lots of help from 77th A.D. Male District Leader Venancio "BENNY" Catala, BDCC Executive Director Ischia Bravo, and all of those who participated in the preparation of the dinner. There were lots of politicians in the house as Bronx BP Ruben Diaz might say. Citywide only Democratic candidate for mayor Bill Thompson (endorsed by the BDCC) was on hand, as well as current Manhattan Borough President and candidate for City Comptroller (endorsed by the BDCC) Scott Stringer, and current Brooklyn Councilwoman and candidate for Public Advocate (endorsed by the BDCC) Lettita James.
Statewide Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, Attorney General Eric Schniderman, and Comptroller Tom Dinapoli were in attendance. Almost every Bronx current City Council member and State Assembly member also attended. I did not see however any of the four members of Congress in attendance, but did see reps of a couple. It was good to see Assemblyman Mark Gjonaj at this years dinner after being shut out of last year because he ran against a BDCC backed candidate. I won't go into what we both said, but we had a good laugh.
I almost forgot to mention the Honorees at the dinner. Mr. Mitchell Draizin of Longview Capital Partners, Ms. Sandra Erickson of Sandra Erickson Real Estate inc., SEIU BJ32 President Hector Figueroa, Mr. Kenneth Knuckles of the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone, Mr. Michael Mcguire of the Mason Tenders District Council, and Mr. George Miranda President of Teamsters Joint Council 16.
Left - Father Richard Gorman Chair of Community Board 12 gives the invocation as 77A.D. Male District Leader Venancio "BENNY" Catala and BDCC Executive Director Ischia Bravo stand with BDCC Chairman Heastie.
Right - BDCC Chairman Assemblyman Carl Heastie welcomes everyone.
Left - Could New York State Attorney General Eric Schniderman and Comptroller Tom Dinapoli be giving Manhattan Borough President and candidate for City Comptroller some advice in his race now against former Governor Elliot Spitzer, or just fixing Stringers tie.
Right - Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver addressing the audience.
Left - Bronx BP Ruben Diaz Jr. poses with Deputy BP Greene.
Right - Bronx BP Diaz with his good friend Mayoral candidate Bill Thompson.
DeBlasio Headquarters Opens in the Bronx
The Roselyn Johnson Democratic Club of the 87th A.D. located at 1512 Castle Hill Avenue has become the Bronx Headquarters for Mayoral candidate Bill DeBlasio. The official opening was Thursday July 18th, and due to to him being in Queens protesting the closing of a much needed hospital Bill DeBlasio's wife had to stand in for him at the grand opening of his Bronx office as you will see below.
87th A.D. Assemblyman Luis Sepulveda rallies his troops for the grand opening of the Bill DeBlasio for mayor Bronx headquarters in the Roselyn Johnson Democratic Club located at 1512 Castle Hill Avenue.
While he was protesting the closing of a much needed hospital in another borough, the wife of Bill DeBlasio stands in for her husband.
Foxy Family 2nd Annual Reunion at Orchard Beach - July 27
The Foxy Family Inc. Announces the
Foxy Family 2nd Annual Reunion at Orchard Beach
The Foxy Family Inc. organization
along with the South Bronx Network and Puerto Rico Sun Communications will hold
their 2nd Annual Reunion on Saturday, July 27, 2013 from 7am to 4pm.
The event will be held at Orchard Beach in Section 4. This is a
great opportunity to meet new friends and spend quality time with friends and
family.
During the event everyone can participate in volleyball, dominoes,
steal the bacon and other childhood games.
There will be music, dancing and special guests.
Admission is free. Everyone should bring a dish to share with
everyone.
It is a great opportunity for everyone to Network and meet new
friends.
The Foxy Family is a Non-Profit Organization that is rebuilding
families by uniting them during hard times.
BP Diaz to Celebrate Ramadan
Evening Honorees
Hamud Al-Silwi, Ph.D.
Director of Islamic American University, New York Branch
Ramatu Ahmed
Community Organizer & Activist
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Senators Klein, Carlucci and Assemblywoman Galef Announce Boat Safety Laws to Prevent Boating Tragedies; Urge Gov. Cuomo to Sign it in to Law
26-year-old Bryan Johnson drowned just
over a year ago in Long Island Sound off of City Island during a midnight swim
with friends off a motorboat.
Monday, less
than one year after that and several tragic boating-related deaths in New York’s
waterways, Senator Jeff Klein, Senator David Carlucci
and Assemblywoman Sandy Galef called
upon Governor Cuomo to sign legislation making boat safety training a crucial
part of the every young New Yorker’s annual motorboat licensing application.
The legislation, (A.3471-A/S.1639-A), was championed by all three
lawmakers in the recent legislative session. Joined by the mother and
grandmother of Bryan Johnson, a victim of a fatal boating incident off of City
Island, Senator Klein underlined his support for boating education
requirements, citing evidence showing that the Bronx has among the highest
rates of boating accidents in the state.
Senator Klein said: “It’s clear
that boating safety education is a critical part of reducing the number of
tragic incidents that happen every year on New York’s waterways. Here in the
Bronx, we have the third highest rate of boating accidents in the state. That’s
unacceptable, and it demonstrates why we have a duty to do more. That’s why I
supported legislation that will increase boating safety education, bring our
standards in line with neighboring states and, most importantly, save lives. I
urge Governor Cuomo to sign this common sense legislation into law for the
safety of all New Yorkers who enjoy spending time on the water.”
Senator
Carlucci was the prime sponsor in the Senate and Assemblywoman Galef was the
prime sponsor in the Assembly. The legislators were joined Vice-Commodore of
the City Island Yacht Club, David Schulman and Boating Education Officer Franz
Alvarez of the City Island Sail and Power Authority,
This legislation would
require everyone – beginning with those who are 18 years and younger – to pass
a certified boating safety course before operating motorboats.
The legislation
includes a variety of key safety provisions intended to prevent future accidents
from taking place:
·
Require that no person born on or after
May 1, 1996 may operate a mechanically propelled vessel on the navigable waters
of the state, unless they hold a boating safety certificate.
·
Boating safety certificates are to be
issued by the Commissioner of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, the
U.S. Power Squadrons or the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary. The Commissioner
also has existing authority, through regulation, to designate others who are
authorized to issue such certificates.
·
The bill preserves the existing law
ability of someone who is at least ten years old to operate a mechanically
propelled vessel unaccompanied, provided they hold a certificate.
·
A person who is younger than 18 years of
age may operate a mechanically propelled vessel without a boating safety
certificate, provided they are accompanied by at least one person at least 18
years of age who is either the holder of a boating safety certificate or is not
required to hold a boating safety certificate.
·
The bill provides a grace period of 120
days for people who purchase a vessel, and are otherwise required to hold a
boating safety certificate, to operate such a vessel without a certificate.
In
addition, specific exemptions exist from needing to obtain a boating safety
certificate for anyone born before April 30, 1996, including a host of
certified boating safety instructors, members of the U.S. Power Squadrons, U.S.
Coast Guard Auxiliary and holders of public vessel licenses. It also
pertains to law enforcement (police) officers, fire personnel and peace
officers.
The
new system will also provide that the Commissioner shall develop and implement
a method for approving internet-based boating safety courses, a new initiative
that makes it easier to gain access to these certificates.
Left - Senator David Carlucci Senate sponsor of this boating safety training law speaks about the dangers of boating especially to inexperienced young people who go out on the waters. Senator Klein and Assemblywoman Galef flank Senator Carlucci as Bryan Johnson's mother and grandmother stand behind him.
Right - The mother of Bryan Johnson who was a victim of a boating accident tells of the sorrow that she has gone through, and the need for this legislation that she helped fight for.
Items From Comptroller John Liu
LIU DECRIES NEW PROBLEMS AT 911
City Comptroller John C. Liu stated the following in response to published reports of 911 response errors and delays today.
“The truth is the 911 headquarters is understaffed and the operators are
overworked. The situation has only gotten worse since the City wasted
$1 billion on the dangerously flawed E911 system,” Comptroller John C.
Liu said. “The City cannot address problems
that are the results of mismanagement, waste, and fraud at 911 by
blaming the dispatchers.”
According to a report published in today’s Daily News, the lives of four
NYC firefighters were put at risk when they entered a home expecting to
find a woman with serious burns only to discover she was suffering from
bacterial meningitis.
In
another shocking development, it reportedly took a half hour for an
ambulance to arrive when an intern for City Councilwoman Diana Reyna
collapsed in Brooklyn.
These are the latest in a series of life-threatening incidents rooted in the City’s problem-plagued 911 call center.
Background:
Liu Statement on Mayor’s 911 Probe:
Liu: City Should Boycott HP:
Liu Audit: Management of 911 Call Center Project Was Ineffective:
Liu: Mismanagement of 911 Upgrade Picked Taxpayers’ Pockets:
http://www.comptroller.nyc.
LIU TO DOE: STOP CRIMINALIZ ING OUR KIDS
City Comptroller John C. Liu today warned that the Department of Education’s (DOE’s) short-sighted and damaging policy of suspending hundreds of middle-school students each week is promoting alienation and a higher dropout rate, not better behavior.
The
Comptroller released a report today, “The Suspension Spike: Changing
the Discipline Culture in NYC’s Middle Schools,” which offers a
blueprint
for replacing the DOE’s failed zero-tolerance policy with restorative
justice practices that help middle-school students stay in school and
remain on the path to college and career readiness.
“This
report demonstrates the sad reality that the stop-and-frisk atmosphere,
which presumes that men of color are guilty until proven innocent,
begins as early as age 11. Children ages 11 to 14 are still learning
how to manage their own feelings and behavior. The DOE’s policy of
removing them from their classrooms for even small infractions teaches
them nothing and may in fact worsen their conduct,”
Comptroller Liu said. “Researchers have found that such suspensions
often lead to higher dropout rates and other bad outcomes. We need to
stand by our kids and give them the guidance they need, not make them
feel like criminals.”
The
report found that New York City middle schools suspended an average of
100 students a school day in the 2011-2012 school year. Almost all
of those suspended were either black or Hispanic. It also found that
middle-school students received 68 percent more suspensions than
high-school students.
The
report warns that misuse of School Safety Agents, who currently report
to the New York City Police Department, has resulted in student
arrests for minor infractions such as writing on a desk. This
over-criminalization of school-based offenses risks putting students on
the path to future incarceration, also known as the school-to-prison
pipeline.
The
report urges that middle schools adopt a restorative justice approach
to discipline that combines added support with high expectations
and accountability. These approaches not only give students ways to
understand and make amends for negative behavior but also seek to reduce
the severity and frequency of future incidents, create a more positive
school climate, improve educational outcomes,
and help keep students on the path to high school graduation and
beyond.
The report recommends:
·
Training
educators in restorative justice – DOE should pilot an approach known
as “whole-school climate change” at the 30 schools with the greatest
number of suspensions.
·
Hiring
more middle-school counselors and social workers to reduce the
student-to-counselor ratio to 250:1 and the student-to-social worker
ratio to 400:1, as well as
provide targeted interventions for students with behavior issues.
·
Eliminating suspensions for minor infractions and those that last for more than 10 days.
·
Empowering
principals to oversee school discipline – including the School Safety
Agents now under the authority of the NYPD – in order to emphasize
education over incarceration.
“The
Suspension Spike: Changing the Discipline culture in NYC’s Middle
Schools” is the sixth comprehensive study in Comptroller Liu’s “Beyond
High School NYC” initiative, which seeks to increase the proportion of
New Yorkers with higher education to 60 percent by the year 2025 through
strategic investments in public education.
The full report can be downloaded at:
http://comptroller.nyc.gov/ bureaus/opm/reports/2013/NYC_ MiddleSchools_Report.pdf
The executive summary can be downloaded at:
http://comptroller.nyc.gov/ bureaus/opm/reports/2013/NYC_ MiddleSchools_Summary.pdf