Sunday, February 8, 2015

STATEMENT OF NEW YORK CITY COMPTROLLER SCOTT M. STRINGER ON MAYOR BILL DE BLASIO’S STATE OF THE CITY ADDRESS


 
    Mayor Bill de Blasio was right to focus on the critical issue of affordable housing today. New Yorkers from all walks of life need to be able to put down roots in our city, and that is becoming increasingly difficult as rents rise and wages stay flat for too many working families.

I look forward to learning more specifics of the Mayor’s plan, including issues related to affordability thresholds, subsidies like 421a, and infrastructure investments that will have to be made to support the planned growth. The success of the Mayor’s blueprint will depend on leveraging each of these tools to build up new communities and strengthen existing ones.

Many of the Mayor’s proposals are initiatives I have long supported, such as raising the minimum wage and expanding Bus Rapid Transit and ferry service throughout the boroughs. I also strongly support the Mayor’s push to end homelessness for military veterans in our City and look forward to working with the Administration to advance a policy agenda that attacks the City’s homelessness crisis.

In the coming days, I will be reviewing the details of the Mayor’s proposals as presented in the Preliminary FY16 budget.

Saturday, February 7, 2015

Statement Of Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara On The Convictions Of Malcolm Smith And Vincent Tabone


  “As the jury unanimously found, the give-and-take of the political process should not be the giving and taking of bribes, which is what Malcolm Smith and Vincent Tabone tried to make it. Smith gave, and Tabone took, a $25,000 cash bribe to permit Smith to run for New York City Mayor as a Republican. Smith and Tabone were not alone in this scheme – Smith also bribed Daniel Halloran, another Republican Party official. And sadly, this was just one of many pockets of corruption this Office has uncovered in New York, which has become the ‘show me the money’ state. It should not be asking too much to expect public officials at least to obey the law. This Office will continue the vigorous prosecution of political corruption until every public official understands that violating the public trust will likely land you in prison.”


New Assembly Speaker Heastie Appoints Four Member Ethics Search Committee


    In a move to listen to those assembly members and others who have called for ethics reform new Speaker Carl Heastie has named a four member assembly search committee to find names to head an Assembly Ethics Committee 

    The four assembly members named to the search committee are Assembly members Democrats Todd Kaminsky of Long Island (also a former assistant U,S, Attorney), Shelley Mayer of Yonkers, Michele Titus of Queens, and  Republican Janey Duprey from Plattsburg. 

   The charge of the search committee is to come up with six candidates to be an executive director to head a new office of ethics and compliance. The final choice will be up to Speaker Heastie, who has also pledged to seek ways of caping outside income and changing the way per diems are disbursed.


NYC Comptroller supportive of City legislation that would provide attorneys to New Yorkers facing eviction or foreclosures

 

    On Wednesday, New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer toured the Bronx County Housing Court and held a press availability with members of Community Action for Safe Apartments (CASA) at which he announced that he was supportive of City legislation that would provide attorneys to New Yorkers facing eviction or foreclosures.

“When a tenant walks into this building they’re already at a tremendous disadvantage. If it weren’t for CASA and other groups, they would have absolutely no opportunity to get the justice and the representation they deserve. This must change,” Comptroller Stringer said.

There were more housing cases filed in the Bronx Housing Court than in any other borough in 2013. According to the New York City Civil Courtsthere are nearly 300,000 cases filed in housing court every year. Statistics show that nearly 30,000 families were evicted in 2013, highlighting the need for more information and services for tenants across the five boroughs.

Following his tour, Comptroller Stringer also commented on the impediments placed before those who come to the court, including the lack of signage at the facility. 

“One of the things that I saw on the tour today was pretty depressing. In a city and in a borough where the Latino population continues to grow, there was not one bilingual sign in the whole place. I couldn’t find one. You walk in, there’s a big picture of lady justice, but there’s no big picture of the rules of housing court to tell people what their rights are and what they should look out for,” Stringer said.


State Senator Gustavo Rivera - Black History Month Celebration





Guests include - 

Assemblyman Michael Blake, Assemblywoman Latoya Joiner, Councilwoman Vanessa Gibson, and more. 


Friday, February 6, 2015

CRESPO TO HEAD ASSEMBLY LATINO TASK FORCE



  Assemblyman Marcos Crespo to Lead
Puerto Rican/Hispanic Task Force

Assemblyman Marcos A. Crespo releases the following statement on his selection,
by Assembly Speaker Carl E. Heastie, to Chair the Assembly Puerto Rican/Hispanic Task Force

   Assemblyman Marcos A. Crespo, the Chair of the Assembly Puerto Rican/Hispanic Task Force, today released the following statement on his new leadership appointment.

“Today, I am most grateful to Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie for the trust he has placed in me through my appointment to lead the Assembly Puerto Rican/Hispanic Task Force.  Through a period that covers my entire life, New York has moved slowly toward policies that both respect the contributions of our newest residents and ease their transition into a new society.  However, much work remains unfinished and new problems need the immediate attention of policymakers at all levels of our government.

I am the son of Puerto Rican and Peruvian parents; one an American citizen by birth the other through immigration and naturalization.  Their hardships and hard work has given me the opportunity to serve our State and nation as an elected official.  The values they instilled in me are the cornerstone of my work as a public official for the people of New York State.

It is with humbleness and eagerness that I accept my post as Chairman of the Assembly Puerto Rican/Hispanic Task Force. 

Our nation is in the midst of long overdue immigration reform; Latino children are now the largest group of children living in poverty in the nation; and economic hardships continue to plague our communities.  As the state with the third largest Latino population, New York can ill afford to ignore these issues.

The past decade has witnessed thousands of families torn apart, wholesale civil rights violations, and systematic attempts to stigmatize entire communities.  The past decade has also left many Latino families behind as the collapse of the housing market wiped out billions of dollars of combined wealth from households, increased unemployment and underemployment to staggering numbers, while stagnant wages erode their ability to pay for their basic needs such as housing, proper nutrition, access to health care, and financing of their children’s college education.

The tremendous growth of Latino communities in New York has brought with it substantial economic gains for our State but considerable challenges as well.  The members of the Assembly Puerto Rican/Hispanic Task Force are committed to tackling these problems.  I am confident that we have the talent and determination to achieve the greater good for all our communities and look forward to our collaborative efforts on all these fronts.

Working with all our colleagues in the New York State Legislature and under the leadership of Speaker Heastie, I am overwhelmingly optimistic that the road ahead will create great opportunities for all the families, children and communities that call the Empire State their home.


Editor's Note:

Could this mean that Assemblyman Crespo will be the new Bronx Democratic County Leader, or is this being given to Assemblyman Crespo because he is not going to be named the new county leader. 


Scientists in 18-Month Project Gather DNA Throughout Transit System to Identify Germs, Study Urban Microbiology



  This is from today's Wall Street Journal about an 18 month study of gathering information on the  germs throughout the NYC subway system. 


   A swab was rubbed back and forth on a hand rail of a number 6 train to collect any DNA on the hand rail, and to determine what type of bacteria what was found may be.  In 18 months of scouring the entire system germs that can cause bubonic plague uptown, meningitis in midtown, stomach trouble in the financial district and antibiotic-resistant infections throughout the boroughs were found.   This could be a mirror of the people themselves who ride the subway system.

  DNA was gathered from turnstiles, ticket kiosks, railings and benches in a transit system shared by 5.5 million riders every day. More than 10 billion fragments of biochemical code—and sorted it by supercomputer were found at 446 subway stations. 15,152 types of life-forms. were found to be in the subway system. 

  For the entire Wall Street Journal article including an interactive map many Manhattan subway stations click here. 




KLEIN INVESTIGATION UNCOVERS SEX OFFENDERS LIVING IN SAME SHELTERS THAT HOUSE FAMILIES WITH SMALL CHILDREN



  Report reveals that nearly a dozen sex offenders are currently housed in family shelters throughout the five boroughs

Elected officials, community leaders and concerned residents call on the State Assembly to pass companion legislation to protect children
State Senator Jeff Klein (D-Bronx/Westchester) today unveiled an alarming investigative report, “Uncovering Sex Offenders in the New York City Family Shelter System,” that found that nearly a dozen sexual predators currently residing in 10 family shelters across New York City which house young children.

Senator Klein, together with Senator Leroy Comrie (Queens), stood in front of the Lincoln Atlantic, a family homeless shelter at 90-35 Van Wyck Expressway, where a sex offender resides, and urged their Assembly colleagues to pass the companion bill to Klein’s legislation that would ban this from happening.
Klein’s latest investigation details the inability of the NYC Department of Homeless Services to significantly address the problem of housing sex offenders in family shelters for more than seven years. After first becoming aware of the issue in 2007, Klein released his first report citing which family shelters were housing sex offenders throughout New York City. Since that time, a total of 35 sex offenders have resided in 20 different NYC family shelters.

“The city’s most vulnerable families shouldn’t have to worry that their next door neighbor is a sexual predator. These known sex offenders who have been convicted of preying on children – some as young as five and seven-years-old – must be housed elsewhere to protect these families who are trying to get back on their feet. If the city’s Department of Homeless Services refuses to protect these youngsters we will do so through state law,” said Senator Klein.

"Clearly these miscreants who have harmed children, should never be allowed into family shelters. The city must protect our most vulnerable by ensuring shelters are safe and not create more horrifying and stressful situations when families are trying to reshape their lives,” said Senator Leroy Comrie.  “The Department of Homeless Services must make certain that sex offenders cannot be housed in places where they pose a threat to innocent people, especially children. I will work with my colleagues in state government to help ensure that families already suffering with the burden of homelessness, are more aptly protected."

“I am proud to have voted in favor of this legislation which would prevent dangerous sex offenders from being housed in the same shelters as children and families. It is common sense that these criminals should be confined to adult population facilities only, minimizing their ability to prey on vulnerable youngsters in our community,” said Senator James Sanders Jr. (D-Queens). “It is shocking and completely unacceptable that nearly a dozen sexual predators were found living in ten family shelters across New York City. I applaud my colleague in government, Senator Jeff Klein, for taking the initiative to put an end to this problem.”

"It is absolutely disgraceful that rather than ensure that sex offenders not be placed in family shelters, as per Senator Klein's legislation, the City allows this outrageous practice to continue,” said Senator Tony Avella (Queens). “Moving sex offenders from one facility to another is an obvious effort to hide what must be changed. We must put the safety of our children and vulnerable populations first."

Last month, Klein revealed that two sex offenders had been moved into the Crystal Family Residence on the Hutchinson River Parkway, located in the 34th Senate District, which he serves. They are: James Bolden, a Level 3 sex offender convicted of raping two women on two separate occasions, and James Bryant, a Level 2 sex offender convicted for sexual assault of a 7-year-old.

After DHS was notified, the agency informed Klein’s office that it had removed both men from the family facility. However, based on subsequent news reports and additional investigation by Klein’s office it was discovered that Bryant was relocated into another family shelter in Queens,  the Westway Motel, on Astoria Boulevard. Bryant is one of four known sexual predators who lists a Queens family shelter address on the sex offender registry.

"I applaud Senator Klein's common sense legislation that would ban sex offenders from living in shelters where children are present," said Senator Jose Peralta (D-Queens). "Shelters should be a safe space for families, and especially for the children who live in them. It is critical that the organizations overseeing shelters have in place the proper safeguards to protect the very families that they exist to serve in order to ensure that what happened at the Westway hotel in my district never happens again."

Four other registered sex offenders are listed as residing in three family shelters in Brooklyn. Three more registered sex offenders are list Bronx family shelters as their home.
Homeless Shelter
Address
Offender
Age of Victim
Henwood Family Residence
115 Henwood Place Bronx, NY 10453
Robert Brasier
13 years old
Cleveland Family Residence
1277 Morris Avenue Bronx, NY 10456
Henry Wren
Unknown
Seneca Houses
1215 Seneca Avenue Bronx, NY 10474
Jay Taylor
20 years old and 24 years old
Help 1
515 Blake Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11207
Eddie Kendle,
Eusebio Taylor
12 and 13 years old
Junnis Street Family Residences
1738 East New York Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11212
Randolph Leach
10 years old
Tilden Hall Family Residences
2520 Tilden Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11226
Darryl Jones
15 years old
Park Family Residences
154-00 Rockaway Blvd Jamaica, NY 11434
Warren Wilder
29 years old
Belt Park Family Center
153-90 Rockaway Blvd Jamaica, NY 11434
Steven Geraghty
13 years old
Lincoln Atlantic

90-35 Van Wyck Expressway Jamaica, NY 11435

Joe Doveran
7 and 5 years old
Westway Motel
72-05 Astoria Boulevard
East Elmhurst, NY 11370
James Bryant
7 years old
Last week, the State Senate overwhelmingly (55-0) passed Senator Klein’s legislation (S.851-2015) that prohibits Level 2 and 3 sex offenders from being housed in family shelters and requires by law that they be placed in adult-only shelters or shelters without children.  This legislation amends current Social Services Law and brings the shelter system up to speed with current law concerning public housing, where sex offenders are already prohibited from residing.

The companion bill (A.3706) is sponsored by Assemblyman Matt Titone in the Assembly.  

“The issue of high-level sex offenders taking up residence in emergency shelters intended for homeless families remains a concern since first coming to our attention in 2007. Federal law prohibits public housing admission to Level 2 and 3 sex offenders – and we are seeking to extend that protection to our most vulnerable children and families,” Assemblyman Titone said.

“Today 80% of New York’s homeless are women and children; every day that the current law remains in place, each of New York’s 25,000 homeless children remains in avoidable risk,” Titone added.