Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. and Healthfirst are hosting their 7th Annual Sweetheart Luncheon on February 13, 2014.
If you’re a couple that resides in the Bronx, have been married for 50+
years and would like to participate in the event, please contact
Larcenia Walton, Director of Senior Services, at 718-590-6248 for further information.
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Indicted NY Senator Wants Trial Delayed to Seek Re-election
Yes - that was the headline of a New York Post story about current State Senator Malcolm Smith, and his impending trial
The first sentence of Post story reads - "You can’t campaign from behind bars."
The answer from Smith's point of view is to have his upcoming federal fraud and bribery trial trial postponed until after the Democratic primary so he can seek re-election. Smith’s lawyer Gerry Shargel is quoted as saying that since his client Senator Smith is presumed innocent of the charges the Democratic primary should come before the trial, not the trial before the election.
The trial involves the alleged scheme to get Smith the Republican line for mayor in 2013. Former Bronx Republican Leader Jay Savino was charged with taking a $15,000.00 bribe to allow Smith to run. A former Queens Republican Councilman fighting the charges that he was the mastermind of the scheme, and the charges against Senator Smith.
The entire New York Post article can be found Here.
State Comptroller Dinapoli Warns of Excess Overtime
State Agency Overtime Hits Record $611 Million
Overtime earnings at state agencies rose to a record $611 million in
2013, a nearly 16 percent increase compared to 2012, according to a report released by State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. Overtime increased in 2013 for the third straight year.
“State employees logged 14.8 million overtime hours last year,
costing taxpayers a record $611 million. New York’s overtime bill is
increasing and needs to be reined in,”DiNapoli said. “State agencies
should take a hard look at how they are using overtime and for what. To
hold the line on state spending, state agencies should double their
efforts to reduce this expensive habit.”
DiNapoli’s report found
for the seven-year period ending in 2013, overtime earnings were up by
27.3 percent. Overtime represented 3.9 percent of total payroll in 2013,
the highest share in the years analyzed for the report.
Three agencies that operate institutional facilities - the Office of
Mental Health (OMH), the Department of Corrections and Community
Supervision (DOCCS) and the Office for People with Developmental
Disabilities - accounted for 63.5 percent of the overtime hours in 2013.
Total overtime hours dropped slightly at all three, compared with
2012. Other agencies paid high hourly rates for overtime, such as the
State Police, which spent an average of $74.35 per hour of overtime at a
cost of $35 million. DOCCS paid the next highest average of $51.18 per
hour of overtime for a total of $160 million.
Meanwhile,
DiNapoli’s report found the state’s agency workforce has declined 10.9
percent, from 180,564 in 2007 to 160,829 last year, excluding the State
University of New York and City University of New York.
See the full report at: http://www.osc.state.ny.us/reports/overtime/State_Agency_OT_Report2014.pdf
Metro North and LIRR Lax in Monitoring Overtime Paid For With Federal Stimulus Funds
Separate audits of Metro-North Railroad and the Long Island Rail Road
(LIRR) found they failed to properly manage overtime paid by funds from
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), allowing abuses such
as allowing some conductors to charge overtime for tasks such as
washing up for work, New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli
announced today.
“There’s significant room for improvement in how Metro-North and
LIRR monitor the hours their employees work,”DiNapoli said. “Federal
money came to New York state to help improve our transportation network
and we must be good stewards of those funds. The MTA should take a
harder look at wasteful spending and work to tighten up its operations.”
The Metro-North audit
examined whether $72.3 million in ARRA funds were used efficiently and
for authorized purposes at four locations from April 30, 2009 through
June 30, 2012. Auditors examined whether employees were paid for only
the time they worked, whether overtime was pre-approved and justified
and whether the reasons for some of the overtime were sound.
DiNapoli’s auditors found that one of the timekeeping systems in
place at Metro North, Crew Management System, did not have a requirement
for conductors to sign out manually, so there was not an accurate
record of when conductors actually left the facility. In a review of the
10 highest overtime earners who worked a total of 183 hours of overtime
over 54 instances during the third quarter ended September 30, 2010,
there were no overtime requests to support pre-approval and
justification of 136 hours of overtime.
Auditors also questioned whether government funds were wasted by
paying conductors 2 hours and 40 minutes of overtime every day for tasks
such as changing clothes, traveling to and from project sites and
washing up for work. In addition, an unannounced floor check at the
Tarrytown Station found a conductor not at his station when a passenger
train came through.
DiNapoli recommended that Metro-North:
- Require conductors to electronically sign in and out;
- Monitor time and attendance records;
- Establish agency-wide policies and procedures that govern the use, pre-approval and justification for overtime;
- Monitor conductors to make sure they are on site and working at their assigned posts; and
- Ensure that the most efficient practices are being followed.
The LIRR audit
reviewed whether $102.8 million spent on two ARRA projects during the
same time period as the Metro-North audit were properly monitored.
Auditors found that the LIRR did not efficiently manage the funds and as
a result, employees might have been paid for unnecessary overtime or
time that wasn’t worked.
Auditors found no pre-approval was given for the 110 instances of
overtime totaling 998 hours in September 2010. For certain employees,
LIRR did not have a system in place to verify time or attendance.
A review of three sampled track workers also found excessive
overtime. For example, on Sept. 12, 2010, a track foreman claimed 24
consecutive overtime hours, an assistant track supervisor claimed 20.5
consecutive overtime hours while another track foreman claimed 18.5
consecutive hours on the same day. This was repeated two weeks later
with 22.5, 18 and 19.5 hours of overtime claimed by the same employees.
LIRR officials noted the overtime was consistent with provisions of
existing collective bargaining agreements.
DiNapoli recommended that LIRR:
- Establish a process for approving and justifying overtime for certain workers:
- Monitor employees to ensure they are being paid for hours worked;
- Monitor hours worked consecutively without an off-duty rest period to ensure efficient and safe work practices and customer safety; and
- Implement a time keeping system to accurately record attendance and improve communications between sectors to ensure that changes in assignments are noted properly.
Metro-North and LIRR’s responses to the audits are included in the final audit.
For a copy of the MTA report visit: http://osc.state.ny.us/audits/allaudits/093014/12s104.pdf
For a copy of the LIRR report visit: http://osc.state.ny.us/audits/allaudits/093014/10s2.pd
Friday, January 31, 2014
3 Things We've Learned About Bill de Blasio
This comes from our friend Mr. John Kenny at NYTrue.com.
As Mayor Bill de Blasio completes his first month in office, here are three things that we've learned about him.
1. He Runs Late.
He's been quite tardy to many appearances, particularly press conferences. It's attracted attention, with reporters kvetching and tweeting each other as they sit idle awaiting the mayor, and also produced some mainstream press stories and mentions. The reasons for his late arrival are rarely explained so it's hard to assess whether there are legitimate reasons or whether he simply runs late. (If it's the latter - I feel your pain, friend.) Is it more than a distraction and really a problem that voters and the public care about? Not so far, but there is a risk for him. If the narrative around his administration becomes one of delay or inability to execute, his personal tardiness will feed that narrative.
2. He Moves Fast.
At least on his big issues, if not his daily schedule. Despite his personal tardiness de Blasio has moved expeditiously on his biggest campaign issues of universal pre-K/afterschool programs and stop & frisk. On pre-K, he clearly recognizes the time pressures on his initiative. To have a significant program for tens of thousands of students in place for September 2014 requires rapid planning and execution, and de Blasio's related signature income tax surcharge requires quick state legislative action as the state's April 1st budget deadline looms. On the program planning and execution, de Blasio quickly formed a separate organization,UPKNYC, to develop a detailed plan demonstrating the ability to put students in seats by September. Using UPKNYC, he has also mounted a highly visible campaign enlisting business leaders, labor leaders, educators and celebrities as supporters of his program and income tax surcharge.
He's moved quickly on other issues as well. As mayor-elect de Blasio jumped into the race for city council speaker, lobbying council members and pushing his preferred choice of Melissa Mark-Viveritoto an anticipated victory well before the scheduled city council vote. Barely two weeks in office, he pushed for asignificant expansion of the City's recently enacted paid sick leave law.
3. He Meant What He Said.
"Pivot to the center", a phrase often used in describing newly-elected or re-elected public officials, does not appear to apply to Mayor de Blasio. He's plunged ahead on the ideas that he espoused while campaigning, seemingly energized by the opportunity to implement them rather than seeking ways to ease away from them. Like his ideas or not, there are few substantive surprises so far. His campaign theme of income inequality, and a City government role in reducing it, effectively frames his actions to date and can reasonably be assumed to frame the future.
On pre-K, Governor Cuomo is attempting to co-opt the mayor's plans with a less extensive, less expensive and income tax surcharge-free plan. The governor's stated plan gives the mayor a classic opportunity to "declare victory and go home" with a quick, but partial success. The mayor has politely refused and continues seeking to implement his plan with major public campaign and legislative efforts underway. On the expansion of paid sick leave, the city council bill passed late last year over Mayor Bloomberg's veto has not even taken effect and Mayor de Blasio could reasonably wait to see its effects before expanding it. That's not his preference, however, as he quickly agreed with the city council to a marked expansion. On stop & frisk, the mayor has agreed with the plaintiffs in the ongoing federal lawsuit to the installation of a monitor for the NYPDand, assuming that an expected plan is approved by the federal district court, to drop the City's ongoing appeal of the district court's ruling against the city.
Seemingly unfazed by the few bumps he's hit so far, including snow removal dissatisfaction and a "secret" speech, de Blasio can count significant progress toward several of his campaign issues. Whether he achieves each of those goals, and whether they are best for our city, remains unanswered. He's clear on where he's headed, however, and notwithstanding his somewhat mild and even-keeled persona he appears prepared to act rapidly on the issues that he cares about.
Finally, if you need a soothing de Blasio moment, here's his reading of Where the Wild Things Are. "Let the wild rumpus start ..."
Please visit us regularly at NYTrue.com and follow me on Twitter (@jjk607). For insight into New York’s biggest issues, what counts is not just being true, but being New York True.
John Kenny
Mayor de Blasio Announces Agreement in Landmark Stop-And-Frisk Case
City to fully embrace stop-and-frisk reform, pledges respect for every New Yorker’s constitutional rights
Mayor Bill de Blasio today announced a historic agreement in the Floyd vs. City of New York case,
taking steps to end the years-long legal battle that found the overuse
of stop-and-frisk unconstitutional. Standing with plaintiffs, Police
Commissioner Bill Bratton and incoming Corporation Counsel Zach Carter
in Brownsville, Brooklyn, the mayor pledged to reunite police with
communities across the city and to respect the constitutional rights of
every New Yorker.
“This is a defining
moment in our history. It’s a defining moment for millions of our
families, especially those with young men of color. And it will lay the
foundation for not only keeping us the safest big city in America, but
making us safer still. This will be one city, where everyone’s rights
are respected, and where police and community stand together to confront
violence,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.
“We will not break the
law to enforce the law. That’s my solemn promise to every New Yorker,
regardless of where they were born, where they live, or what they look
like. Those values aren’t at odds with keeping New Yorkers safe—they are
essential to long-term public safety. We are committed to fulfilling
our obligations under this agreement as we protect and serve this great
city,” said Police Commissioner Bill Bratton.
Under the agreement with
plaintiffs announced today, a court-appointed monitor will serve for
three years, overseeing the NYPD’s reform of its stop-and-frisk policy.
The monitor is empowered to report to federal court on the city’s
progress meeting its obligation to abide by the United States
Constitution. The city will also take part in a joint process with
community stakeholders to ensure people affected by stop-and-frisk play
an active role in shaping reform.
UNION COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER JOINS FORCES WITH BRONX LGBTQ CENTER TO OFFER SUPPORT AND LEGAL ASSISTANCE
LGBTQ
residents of the Bronx now have available a support group and free
legal clinic as a result of a partnership between Union Community
Health Center (UCHC) and the Bronx
LGBTQ Center.
An
LGBTQ
Youth Group is meeting every Friday from 4pm-5pm at
Union
Community Health Center, 260 East 188th
Street, the Bronx. During these group sessions, topics are selected
for discussion by the group, including bullying, healthy
relationships, domestic violence, education and parent & teen
communication. The Youth Group is a safe zone for lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgender and questioning youth and their straight allies
aged 12-20. For more information, contact 718-618-8569.
“Union’s
Teen Health Center has been a safe and welcoming place for Bronx
youth for several years, and we are very excited to open our doors,
share our experience, and extend our services to LGBTQ youth,” said
Dr. Uri Belkind, Director of Adolescent Medicine at Union Community
Health Center. “Here, LGBTQ youth will find a haven in which they
can relate with other youth in an open and healthy environment, as
well as take part in all the other activities and services that
Union’s Teen Health Center offers. We look forward to helping
all our youth build strong, healthy relationships with their peers.”
Additionally,
every first and third Tuesday of the month from 6pm-8pm, Union
Community Health Center hosts the Bronx LGBTQ Legal Clinic. During
these clinic sessions, volunteer lawyers offer consultations at no
cost to the public. The attorneys provide general guidance on
individual’s specific issues, make legal referrals and offer
helpful legal resources. No appointment is necessary, although those
interested are encouraged to arrive between 6pm-6:30pm to register.
For more information about the Legal Clinic, email Bronx@le-gal.org
or call 212-353-9118.
The
LGBTQ Legal Clinic is the result of a partnership between The LGBT
Bar Association of Greater New York (LeGaL), The
Bronx LGBTQ Center and
Union Community Health Center.
Thursday, January 30, 2014
State of the Borough Address
The Honorable Ruben Diaz Jr.
President, Borough of the Bronx
Cordially invites you to
The State of the Borough Address
Thursday, February 20, 2014
11:30 a.m.
Eugenio MarĂa de Hostos
Community College
450 Grand Concourse
The Bronx
R.S.V.P.
Dinowitz Proposes Legislation to Classify Nicotine Filled E-Cigarette Cartridges as Tobacco Products
Common sense proposal would amend tax and public health laws to make e-cig cartridges a taxable tobacco product
Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz has announced that he is sponsoring new legislation in the Assembly, A.8594, which would classify e-cigarette cartridges, which are filled with nicotine and other unknown chemicals, as tobacco products under New York state law and tax them accordingly. The bill has been referred to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee.
“It’s
about time we start acknowledging the reality of these nicotine filled
products and the unregulated nature of this potentially hazardous
industry,” said Assemblyman Dinowitz.
In
recent years New York lawmakers have begun tackling the litany of
health issues associated with electronic cigarettes, which have grown in
popularity as an alternative to regular cigarettes, by prohibiting
their sale to minors and banning them from public indoor use in New York
City. Legislation calling for a similar ban of indoor use statewide is
also being pursued.
Although
New York is taking a proactive approach to regulating e-cigarette
products, a national standard for their regulation has yet to be
determined. In December 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit issued a decision stating e-cigarettes and other products “made
or derived from tobacco” should be regulated as tobacco products by the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) under the Tobacco Control Act. In
spite of the court’s decision, the FDA has yet to rule on the regulation
of these products on a national level. If passed, New York will join
Minnesota in classifying cartridges that contain nicotine and other
harmful chemicals as tobacco products.
“E-cigarettes
aren’t the safe alternative the industry makes them out to be,”
Dinowitz said. “It’s a product that contains nicotine as well as other
unknown chemicals and therefore should fall into the same category as
other tobacco products, including being taxed as a tobacco product.
These devices are marketed as smoking cessation tools, when in actuality
they are anything but. New York has always been a leader among states
and this is no exception. We will not wait around for the federal
government to act.”
Tobacco
control organizations are also concerned about the noticeable
similarities between e-cigarettes and regular cigarettes, especially as
it pertains to their shared appearance. E-cigarettes are designed to
look just like regular cigarettes, creating the potential to lure young
teens in with the false promise that they can smoke without the normally
associated health risks. Acting as something of a nicotine gateway,
these e-cigarettes may lead to an increase in nicotine addiction among
younger users, which could in turn also result in an increase in regular
cigarette smoking.