Wednesday, April 9, 2014
NYC COMPTROLLER SCOTT M. STRINGER CALLS FOR GREATER SUPPLIER DIVERSITY AT 20 OF NYC PENSION FUNDS' LARGEST HOLDINGS
New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer, on behalf of the New York City Pension Funds, sent
letters this week
to twenty of the Funds’largest
holdings, including Apple, Pfizer, Oracle, and American Express, asking
them to disclose performance figures on their supplier diversity
programs. Ninety percent of S&P 100 companies
have supplier diversity programs but less than half of that group
discloses data on program performance. Supplier diversity is generally
defined as programs that seek to purchase competitively priced goods and
services from businesses owned by minorities,
women, veterans and disabled individuals, among others.
“Supplier diversity is the next
frontier for companies seeking to manage risk and create sustainable
shareowner value,” Comptroller Stringer said. “A broader pool of diverse
suppliers provides tangible benefits to corporations
in terms of price and quality, but also enhances brand value,
reputation and goodwill. These 20 companies talk the talk but, absent
disclosure, it’s impossible to measure the impact of their efforts.”
The letter requests that companies
disclose qualitative and quantitative performance data that sheds light
on program effectiveness either on the company web site or in a
sustainability report by September 30, 2014, for disclosure
of 2013 data, with annual reporting thereafter. Specifically, companies were asked to:
- Disclose their annual spend with diverse suppliers in both real terms and as a percentage of their total supplier spend, preferably by category;
- Establish and disclose quantitative performance goals for their supplier diversity program and annual progress toward achieving these goals; and
- Describe the ways in which supplier diversity goals are reinforced throughout the organization, including for example, through (a) oversight by senior management and the board of directors and (b) specific compensation incentives for employees, managers and senior executives
“We want companies to go beyond simply
reporting dollars and cents spent on supplier diversity programs. We’re
asking them to describe how the programs fit into their overall
approach to diversity and to their business strategy
more broadly. Some of the most successful companies in the world
provide this information, now we are asking these corporations to follow
suit,” Comptroller Stringer said.
The need for quantitative disclosure
has become more urgent in light of the Dodd-Frank Act, which requires
six federal regulators, including the Securities and Exchange
Commission, to assess the diversity policies and practices
of regulated entities. In a February comment letter
on proposed standards, Comptroller
Stringer urged the SEC to encourage corporate disclosure of spending
dedicated to diverse suppliers, both on an absolute basis and as a
percentage of total spending.
The 20 companies that received letters
this week represent less than 1 percent of the nearly 3,500 domestic
public companies in the Funds’portfolios, but the combined investment in
these 20 companies is valued at roughly $5.8
billion, more than 9 percent of the Funds’ total investment in domestic
public equity.
The companies which received the letter, along with approximate share values as of mid-March are:
- Apple Inc. 2.2 million shares valued at approximately $1.2 billion
-
Caterpillar
1.5 million shares value at approximately $147.7 million -
Pfizer, Inc.
16.2 million shares valued at approximately $519.6 million - Oracle Corporation 8.7 million shares valued at approximately $338.3 million
- Qualcomm 4.5 million shares valued at approximately $347.2 million
- Cisco Systems, Inc. 13.4 million shares valued at approximately $290.1 million
- Home Depot, Inc. 3.6 million shares valued at approximately $286.7 million
- United Technologies Corp. 2.3 million shares valued at approximately $262 million
-
Amgen, Inc.
1.8 million shares valued at approximately $235.5 million - Boeing Company 1.8 million shares valued at approximately $223 million
- American Express Company 2.2 million shares valued at approximately $199 million
- MasterCard, Inc. 2.8 million shares valued at approximately $223 million
- Bristol-Myers Squibb 3.8 million shares valued at approximately $210.7 million
-
3M Company
1.7 million shares valued at approximately $224.4 million - Conoco Phillips 3.1 million shares valued at approximately $208.6 million
- United Health Group 2.6 million shares valued at approximately $199.5 million
- Honeywell International 1.8 million shares valued at approximately $173.5 million
-
US Bancorp
4.2 million shares valued at approximately $178.4 million -
Altria Group
4.6 million shares valued at approximately $167.2 million -
Nike, Inc.
1.8 million shares valued at approximately $145.1 million
Comptroller Stringer serves as the
investment advisor to, and custodian and a trustee of, the New York City
Pension Funds. The New York City Pension Funds are composed of the New
York City Employees’ Retirement System, Teachers’
Retirement System, New York City Police Pension Fund, New York City
Fire Department Pension Fund and the Board of Education Retirement
System.
In addition to Comptroller Stringer, the New York City Pension Funds’ trustees are: New York City Employees’ Retirement System: Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Representative, Carolyn Wolpert (Chair); New York City Public Advocate Letitia James; Borough Presidents: Gale Brewer (Manhattan), Melinda Katz (Queens), Eric Adams (Brooklyn), James Oddo (Staten Island), and Ruben Diaz, Jr. (Bronx); Lillian Roberts, Executive Director, District Council 37, AFSCME; John Samuelsen, President Transport Workers Union Local 100; Gregory Floyd, President, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 237.
Teachers’ Retirement System: Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Appointee, Carolyn Wolpert; Deputy Chancellor Kathleen Grimm, New York City Department of Education; and Sandra March, Melvyn Aaronson (Chair) and Mona Romain, all of the United Federation of Teachers.
New York City Police Pension Fund: Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Representative, Carolyn Wolpert; New York City Finance Commissioner Beth Goldman; New York City Police Commissioner William Bratton (Chair); Patrick Lynch, Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association; Michael Palladino, Detectives Endowment Association; Edward D. Mullins, Sergeants Benevolent Association; Louis Turco, Lieutenants Benevolent Association; and, Roy T. Richter, Captains Endowment Association.
New York City Fire Department Pension Fund: Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Representative, Carolyn Wolpert; New York City Fire Commissioner Salvatore Cassano (Chair); New York City Finance Commissioner Beth Goldman; Stephen Cassidy, President, James Slevin, Vice President, Robert Straub, Treasurer, and John Kelly, Brooklyn Representative and Chair, Uniformed Firefighters Association of Greater New York; John Farina, Captains’ Rep.; James Lemonda, Chiefs’ Rep., and James J. McGowan, Lieutenants’ Rep., Uniformed Fire Officers Association; and, Sean O’Connor, Marine Engineers Association.
Board of Education Retirement System: Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña; Mayoral: Milady Baez, Ezre T. Cleveland, Norm Fruchter, Vanessa Leung, Lori Podvesker, Robert Reffkin, Miguelina Zorilla-Aristy; Laura Zingmond (Manhattan BP), Fred Baptiste (Brooklyn BP), Debra Dillingham (Queens BP), Robert Powell (Bronx BP) and Kamillah Payne-Hanks (Staten Island BP); and employee members Joseph D’Amico of the IUOE Local 891 and Milagros Rodriguez of District Council 37, Local 372.
In addition to Comptroller Stringer, the New York City Pension Funds’ trustees are: New York City Employees’ Retirement System: Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Representative, Carolyn Wolpert (Chair); New York City Public Advocate Letitia James; Borough Presidents: Gale Brewer (Manhattan), Melinda Katz (Queens), Eric Adams (Brooklyn), James Oddo (Staten Island), and Ruben Diaz, Jr. (Bronx); Lillian Roberts, Executive Director, District Council 37, AFSCME; John Samuelsen, President Transport Workers Union Local 100; Gregory Floyd, President, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 237.
Teachers’ Retirement System: Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Appointee, Carolyn Wolpert; Deputy Chancellor Kathleen Grimm, New York City Department of Education; and Sandra March, Melvyn Aaronson (Chair) and Mona Romain, all of the United Federation of Teachers.
New York City Police Pension Fund: Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Representative, Carolyn Wolpert; New York City Finance Commissioner Beth Goldman; New York City Police Commissioner William Bratton (Chair); Patrick Lynch, Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association; Michael Palladino, Detectives Endowment Association; Edward D. Mullins, Sergeants Benevolent Association; Louis Turco, Lieutenants Benevolent Association; and, Roy T. Richter, Captains Endowment Association.
New York City Fire Department Pension Fund: Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Representative, Carolyn Wolpert; New York City Fire Commissioner Salvatore Cassano (Chair); New York City Finance Commissioner Beth Goldman; Stephen Cassidy, President, James Slevin, Vice President, Robert Straub, Treasurer, and John Kelly, Brooklyn Representative and Chair, Uniformed Firefighters Association of Greater New York; John Farina, Captains’ Rep.; James Lemonda, Chiefs’ Rep., and James J. McGowan, Lieutenants’ Rep., Uniformed Fire Officers Association; and, Sean O’Connor, Marine Engineers Association.
Board of Education Retirement System: Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña; Mayoral: Milady Baez, Ezre T. Cleveland, Norm Fruchter, Vanessa Leung, Lori Podvesker, Robert Reffkin, Miguelina Zorilla-Aristy; Laura Zingmond (Manhattan BP), Fred Baptiste (Brooklyn BP), Debra Dillingham (Queens BP), Robert Powell (Bronx BP) and Kamillah Payne-Hanks (Staten Island BP); and employee members Joseph D’Amico of the IUOE Local 891 and Milagros Rodriguez of District Council 37, Local 372.
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
13TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT DEBATE: THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
The first of what could be many debates of the 2014 election season will be happening in the 13th Congressional District on Thursday April 10th at the Abyssinian
Baptist Church 132 Odell Clark Pl starting at 7 PM.
Monday, April 7, 2014
Cardinal Timothy Dolan to Break Bread with Evangelical Hispanic Ministers
Cardinal Timothy Dolan to Break Bread with Evangelical Hispanic Ministers
The New York
Hispanic Clergy Organization will be celebrating its 26th Annual
Banquet this coming Saturday, April 12, 2014 starting at 12:00 PM at Maestro’s
Restaurant, located at 1703 Bronxdale Avenue in Bronx County.
Among the dignitaries who have confirmed their participation is His Eminence, Timothy Cardinal Dolan, the leader of millions of Catholics in New York City.
You should know that Cardinal Dolan’s visit to the Evangelical Hispanic Ministers’ Banquet is another indication of the spirit of humility, unification, and brotherhood that exists among the religious leaders in New York City.
Among the other dignitaries that have confirmed their participation are: New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli; Bronx Borough President Rubén Díaz, Jr.; Westchester County Executive Robert Astorino; Bronx Democratic County Chairperson Carl Heastie; Assemblywoman Carmen Arroyo; Assemblyman Marcos Crespo; Assemblyman Luis Sepúlveda; Assemblyman Mark Gjonaj; New York City Councilwoman Maria del Carmen Arroyo; New York City Councilman Fernando Cabrera; New York City Councilwoman Vanessa Gibson; and State Republican Party Chairman Edward Cox.
The New York Hispanic Clergy Organization was created in 1988 and since then it conducts a weekly meeting every Thursday, and has a membership of close to 150 Evangelical pastors and ministers in the City of New York.
You should also know that among the functions of the New York Hispanic Clergy Organization is to help different countries in Latin, Central and South America when there are natural disasters such as hurricanes, earthquakes and other storms.
Puerto Rico, Honduras, Ecuador, Chile and the Dominican Republic are some of the countries that the New York Hispanic Clergy Organization has assisted, sending help such as medical equipment, buses, trucks, fire-fighting equipment and financial assistance.
The 26th Annual New York Hispanic Clergy Organization Ministers’ Banquet will be dedicated to six members of the clergy that have distinguished themselves for their commitment, devotion, help and dedication to the work of our Savior Jesus Christ’s church.
The honorees will be: Reverend Amaurys Mella, Pastor of Christ Being Known Evangelical Church, Reverend Danilo Lachapel, President of Feeding the Needy Ministry; Reverend Byron Castillo, Pastor and leader of El Calvario International Ministry; Reverend Rosa Cadiz, Pastor of Rehoboth Pentecostal Synagogue; Sister Carmen Virginia Sanabria, International Gospel Singer; and Mr. Hector Castillo, Community Leader.
With this banquet, where close to 1,000 people will gather, the New York Hispanic Clergy Organization closes another year of victories and struggles in the work of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Among the dignitaries who have confirmed their participation is His Eminence, Timothy Cardinal Dolan, the leader of millions of Catholics in New York City.
You should know that Cardinal Dolan’s visit to the Evangelical Hispanic Ministers’ Banquet is another indication of the spirit of humility, unification, and brotherhood that exists among the religious leaders in New York City.
Among the other dignitaries that have confirmed their participation are: New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli; Bronx Borough President Rubén Díaz, Jr.; Westchester County Executive Robert Astorino; Bronx Democratic County Chairperson Carl Heastie; Assemblywoman Carmen Arroyo; Assemblyman Marcos Crespo; Assemblyman Luis Sepúlveda; Assemblyman Mark Gjonaj; New York City Councilwoman Maria del Carmen Arroyo; New York City Councilman Fernando Cabrera; New York City Councilwoman Vanessa Gibson; and State Republican Party Chairman Edward Cox.
The New York Hispanic Clergy Organization was created in 1988 and since then it conducts a weekly meeting every Thursday, and has a membership of close to 150 Evangelical pastors and ministers in the City of New York.
You should also know that among the functions of the New York Hispanic Clergy Organization is to help different countries in Latin, Central and South America when there are natural disasters such as hurricanes, earthquakes and other storms.
Puerto Rico, Honduras, Ecuador, Chile and the Dominican Republic are some of the countries that the New York Hispanic Clergy Organization has assisted, sending help such as medical equipment, buses, trucks, fire-fighting equipment and financial assistance.
The 26th Annual New York Hispanic Clergy Organization Ministers’ Banquet will be dedicated to six members of the clergy that have distinguished themselves for their commitment, devotion, help and dedication to the work of our Savior Jesus Christ’s church.
The honorees will be: Reverend Amaurys Mella, Pastor of Christ Being Known Evangelical Church, Reverend Danilo Lachapel, President of Feeding the Needy Ministry; Reverend Byron Castillo, Pastor and leader of El Calvario International Ministry; Reverend Rosa Cadiz, Pastor of Rehoboth Pentecostal Synagogue; Sister Carmen Virginia Sanabria, International Gospel Singer; and Mr. Hector Castillo, Community Leader.
With this banquet, where close to 1,000 people will gather, the New York Hispanic Clergy Organization closes another year of victories and struggles in the work of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Sunday, April 6, 2014
Assemblyman Dinowitz Celebrates 20 Years in Office
It was in early in 1994 when the special election was called to replace former assemblyman now Attorney General Oliver Koppell. The 81st County Committee met to nominate the candidate of the Democratic Party, and the choice was District Leader Jeffrey Dinowitz. Dinowitz received the endorsement of Congressman Eliot Engel, then New York Attorney General Oliver Koppell whose assembly seat was going to be filled, and then Bronx Borough President Freddy Ferrer.
There were however two other candidates in that special election Mark Friedlander and Herb Mckay. Mr. Friedlander since he could not get the Democratic Party line chose to run on the Liberal line which helped elect Rudy Giuliani mayor in1993. Mr. Ray Harding head of the Liberal Party at the time also was able to get Mayor Giuliani, and former Mayor Ed Koch to endorse candidate Friedlander. The Bronx Democratic County Leader Mr. George Friedman also endorsed Mark Friedlander even though the 81st Democratic County Committee voted for Jeffrey Dinowitz as its candidate.
Even though he had the Democratic Party line Dinowitz was not the favorite in that special election. It was expected that candidate Friedlander being an Orthodox Jew would be the candidate of the Conservative Party. In a special election such as this the Conservative Party could bring out 1,000 or more voters to the candidate of the party. Since Friedlander chose to run on the Liberal Party line Conservative Party Chairman Bill Newmark was furious, and found a candidate to run on the Conservative Party line. Mr. Herb Mckay a former fire Chief of the Riverdale fire house, and resident of the highly Conservative Woodlawn area was the candidate of the Conservative Party in the special election.
The results of the special election were as follows
Democrat Party candidate - Jeffrey Dinowitz - 2,685 votes 42%
Liberal Party candidate - Mark Friedlander - 2,495 votes 39%
Conservative Party candidate Herb McKay - 1,229 votes 19%
Jeffrey Dinowitz won by 190 votes.
With his son Eric Dinowitz as the MC the 20 years in office party of Jeffrey Dinowitz was celebrated by over 200 friends, and other elected officials all who had only kind words for the hard, honest, and humble work that has and is being done by Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz. Dinowitz's answer was "It is easy when you are having fun at what you do". Photos of the event should be self explanatory. You can click on any photo to make it larger.
Left - Leslie Swanson sings the national anthem.
Right - Councilman Andrew Cohen with his campaign manager his daughter Sarah.
Left - Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. and City Controller Scott Stringer. Both are former members of the state assembly with Dinowitz.
Right - Dinowitz is next to current Bronx Democratic County Leader Assemblyman Carl Heastie, City Comptroller Stringer, and Community Board 8 member David Kornblauh.
Congressman Eliot Engel heaps on the praise for his good friend Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz.
Left - During his speech BP Diaz mentions Assemblyman Dinowitz is number one with him.
Right - Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz says that you have to have fun at what your doing, and remarks "Is it 20 years already".Saturday, April 5, 2014
Pre-K Sign Up Blitz
City Launches Media and Organizing Drive to Sign up Children in Every Community for Full-Day, High Quality Pre-K
Subway and bus ads, PSAs and materials in nine languages urge parents to apply
Parents can apply for new options at schools.nyc.gov/prek
Joining
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver at a public school’s pre-K program, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced a major media and community
organizing push urging New Yorkers to sign their children up for pre-K.
The outreach campaign follows the announcement this week that the city
has secured the funding necessary to expand pre-K to 53,000 children
this September.
The outreach includes
$300,000 of ads on bus shelters, buses and subways urging parents to
register their children for pre-K, as well as public service
announcements, promotions in taxicabs, robocalls to families in public
housing, and a multilingual canvassing effort in partnership with
community groups.
“This is about reaching parents where they live,” said Mayor de Blasio.
“It’s going to take a mix of new media and old-fashioned community
organizing to reach every family. From our Taxi and Limousine Commission
to community groups in immigrant neighborhoods, we’re working with
every partner we can find to get the word out about new pre-K options
opening up. But the most important pieces of this equation are everyday
New Yorkers. Talk to your family. Talk to your neighbors. Help us get
the word out.”
“I and the Assembly
Majority have long maintained that pre-K is the critical jumpstart our
children need to be successful. I am so pleased that we have a powerful
partner in Mayor Bill de Blasio, who knows that this program can be
truly transformational and will provide new hope for working families
and their children. It is critical that we spread the word as quickly as
possible, and I look forward to working with Mayor de Blasio and his
team to make this program a huge success,” said Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver.
The application deadline for public school options is April 23,
and the Department of Education will notify families about public
school placements in June. Families will also have an opportunity to
apply for slots at community-based organizations later this spring.
The Department of
Education is printing 70,000 Pre-K Expansion Guides that detail the new
public school pre-K options. The guides are being mailed to 5,000 NYCHA
families with eligible 4-year-olds and distributed through libraries,
community partners and elementary schools. The Pre-K Expansion Guide
will be translated in nine languages and available online.
For more information and updates on the pre-K application process, visit:schools.nyc.gov/prek or text “prek” to 877877.
DiNapoli: Preschool Special Education Contractor Overcharged Taxpayers $875,000
This comes from New York State Comptroller Tom Dinapoli's office.
TheraCare Preschool Services Inc, a downstate provider of preschool
special education services, overcharged state taxpayers by more than
$875,000 for improper staff bonuses and executive compensation over a
three-year period, according to an audit released today by State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli.
“Audits by my office have found a continuing pattern of abuse in
the state’s preschool special education sector,”DiNapoli said. “Many
providers are continuing to take advantage of lax oversight to give
themselves excessive salaries and unearned bonuses. Taxpayer dollars
meant for children with special needs are being wasted. This has to
stop.”
TheraCare, headquartered in New York City, is a for-profit
organization that provides special education services to children
between the ages of three and five who reside in New York City as well
as Westchester, Nassau and Suffolk counties. TheraCare served 651
students during the 2010-11 school year and reported program-related
costs for reimbursement of about $50.1 million for the three fiscal
years ended June 30, 2011.
State Education Department (SED) guidelines state that the
compensation paid to specific leadership positions, and charged to an
SED program, may not exceed the “regional median compensation”for these
positions. On that basis, DiNapoli’s auditors disallowed $316,539 in
compensation paid to the executive director ($73,820), CFO ($111,796),
and assistant executive director ($130,923) for the three-year period
ended June 30, 2011.
Bonus payments to employees are reimbursable by SED only if they
are based on merit as measured and supported by employee performance
evaluations. Auditors found that TheraCare claimed $253,205 in expenses
for bonuses predicated on the organization achieving its budget, not
employee performance.
In addition, auditors found that TheraCare often awarded its
teaching staff a sign-on bonus with the agreement that they will remain
in TheraCare’s employ for at least one year. These payments are not
performance based and thus do not meet the eligibility requirements for
reimbursement by the state. TheraCare inappropriately charged SED
$220,875 for these improper bonuses.
DiNapoli’s auditors also identified $76,766 in unnecessary and
inappropriate South American recruitment-related costs and $9,513 in
other non-personal service expenses that were either unsupported or not
program-appropriate.
DiNapoli recommended:
- ED review the disallowances resulting from the audit, make the appropriate adjustments to costs reported and to TheraCare’s tuition reimbursement rates, and recover the overpayments as appropriate;
- SED work with TheraCare officials to help ensure that only eligible costs are claimed; and
- TheraCare ensure that its requests for SED reimbursement include only those expenses that are allowed.
SED agreed with the audit’s recommendations and has already made
certain adjustments to future TheraCare reimbursement rates to recover
some of the excess compensation. SED has also instituted a soon to be
mandatory training course for providers. TheraCare disputed the audit’s
findings. For a copy of the full report, including responses from SED
and TheraCare, visit: http://www.osc.state.ny.us/audits/allaudits/093014/12s21.pdf
DiNapoli has identified fraud and improper use of funds in a recent
series of audits of special education providers. His office has
completed 22 audits of preschool special education providers, finding
nearly $22 million in unsupported or inappropriate charges. There are
currently ten additional audits of preschool special education providers
in progress.
In December, Governor Cuomo signed into law legislation mandating
audits of every preschool special education services program provider in
the state by the Comptroller’s Office. The new law, a program bill of
the Office of the State Comptroller, also tightens weaknesses in the
program, including how students are evaluated and placed in programs,
and how reimbursement is calculated.
Friday, April 4, 2014
Klein Dinowitz Hold Town Hall Meeting to Explain New Provision in State Budget to Halt 11 Story Medical Center in Riverdale.
Under New Mandate, New York State, Alongside Klein and Dinowitz, Will Launch “Bronx
Community Forum” so that Size, Scale, and Location Must be Weighed in
Health Facility Approval Process for All Current and Future Health
Developments in the Bronx.
At the Riverdale Y last night State Senator Jeff Klein and Assemblyman Jeff Dinowitz explained the provision in the state budget limiting health facilities proposed for the Bronx. This legislation is intended to stop one particular project, that being the proposed 11 story medical facility being built in Riverdale by Simone Developers for Montefiore Hospital. After vocal community opposition by those living around the proposed site, what has been said a lack of community concerns by Montefiore, and complete opposition from Senator Klein's possible primary challenger former Riverdale Councilman Oliver Koppell on the issue this provision was put into legislation as part of the state budget adoption.
This provision, contained in this year’s New York State budget, will apply to Montefiore’s
controversial proposed development on Oxford Avenue in Riverdale.
Specifically, the provision will empower local communities to weigh-in,
via public forums, and to make formal recommendations to the Department
of Health regarding the suitability of the facility’s proposed location
as well as the facility’s potential impact on the surrounding community.
Klein and Dinowitz believe as a result of the new community review process, Montefiore will be unable to construct any new facility at the proposed Riverdale site for at least 24 months.
Senator Klein said:
“This project will never get built under my watch. I have been fighting
this project from day one because everything about it, from its size to
its location, is wrong for Riverdale. For months, Montefiore has been ignoring the concerns of our community. Today, all of that changes. Today, Montefiore must
start changing its project based on the concerns of our community, or
else this project—and every future project—will never see the light of
day. This is a major victory for the Bronx and with this new mandate,
health providers like Montefiore will never again be allowed to run amok in our borough.”
Assemblyman Dinowitz: “Montefiore put
forth a proposal for a huge facility in our community without the
slightest consultation with community residents or its elected
representatives. Month after month, local residents turned out in record
numbers to express their strong opposition. Unfortunately Montefiore has not listened. This new approval process is now part of the new state budget. Senator Klein proposed
this language and led the way for the Senate to include it in its
budget resolution. I was successful in securing the support of the
Assembly, ensuring that it was part of the final budget. When our
community is impacted by a proposal for a large facility such as this,
it is crucial that there be community input. We will not be left out of
the discussion. We will have our say before any final decision is made.”
Under
this new approval process, any free-standing health facility would be
subject to a mandated community forum that the health commissioner,
local community board and proposed health clinic, facility or center,
would hold at a mutually agreed upon time and date. The New York State
health commissioner would oversee the proceedings at the community
forum, in addition to making any and all evidence for why such a
facility should be built at a given size, scale and location available
to the public via the department’s website. The commissioner would also
be responsible for reviewing all relevant input from the local community
before making a decision to approve, modify or deny the facility plans.
Editor's Note: This provision is for only Bronx County, and facilities higher than three stories and/or an area of 30,000 square feet or larger.
Montefiore currently has plans for another 11 story medical facility for the Coop-City area that will affected by this legislation.