Saturday, April 9, 2016

SENATOR JEFF KLEIN HONORS LOCAL CHEERLEADERS FOR NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP WIN



State Senator Jeff Klein honored the Junior Varsity cheerleading squad of St. Catherine Academy today. The students ranked first in the non-tumbling division, making history at the 2016 Universal Cheerleading Association National High School Cheerleading championship. Senator Klein presented the team with a proclamation honoring their achievement and dedication, and the cheerleaders all received congratulatory certificates.
“Today we recognize the hard work and perseverance of St. Catherine Academy’s Junior Varsity cheerleaders. Their sportsmanship, coupled with the outstanding academic program at St. Catherine's, will keep our national champions on a path for success,” said Senator Jeff Klein.  “Congratulations to our talented students!”
“St. Catherine Academy is so proud of our cheerleaders and coaches for their hard work and dedication keeping with the tradition of our school for excellence.  We are thrilled that Senator Klein  came to visit our school as soon as I contacted him.  Having our state senator present is now a reality bestowed on us,” said Sister Patricia Wolf, president of St. Catherine Academy.

The school proudly displayed the Universal Cheerleading Association first place banner and the cheerleaders wore the prestigious white jackets and gold medals. Members of the JV Cheerleading team include: Abbygayle Clark, Angelena Cancel, Kasandra Padua, Cindy Mejia, Alexis Daniels, Kristin Markgraf, Amanda Turner, Alene Ortiz, Grace Rios, Serna Colon, Briana Colon, Brianna Franco, and Keyana Brown.
“This championship is proof of how far hard work, dedication, and commitment can take you,” said JV coaches Danielle Pennacchia and Janeen Dorsey. “Nine months ago, they were a new, inexperienced team, mostly freshmen. Today, they call themselves National Champions.  Speaking for all of the coaches, we couldn’t be more proud of them, not just for the win, but for the climb they took to become the national champions.”
St. Catherine Academy also achieved a seventh place rank at the national competition in Small Varsity, Division II. The Varsity and JV teams are the only nationally ranked cheerleading teams in the Bronx.


Above - Senator Klein congratulates the cheerleaders from St. Catherine Academy on their great feat.
Below - The banner for being the 2016 National Champs.

Above - The trophy that the cheerleaders received, and the trophy behind was for another victory in the competition.
Below - Senator Klein with the winning team, as usual.
group pic.jpg

Friday, April 8, 2016

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Announces $1.2 Billion Settlement Of Its Claims Against Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., For Improper Mortgage Lending Practices



 

Wells Fargo Bank Admits That It Certified That Loans Were Eligible for FHA Mortgage Insurance When They Were Not, and That It Did Not Report Thousands of Faulty Mortgage Loans to HUD

Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Julián  Castro, Secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”), Benjamin C. Mizer, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Civil Division, Brian J. Stretch, United States Attorney for the Northern District of California, and David A. Montoya, Inspector General of HUD (“HUD-OIG”), announced today that the United States has settled civil mortgage fraud claims against WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. (“WELLS FARGO” or the “Bank”), and WELLS FARGO executive KURT LOFRANO (“LOFRANO”), stemming from WELLS FARGO’s participation in the Federal Housing Administration (“FHA”) Direct Endorsement Lender Program.  In the settlement, WELLS FARGO agreed to pay $1.2 billion and admitted, acknowledged, and accepted responsibility for, among other things, certifying to HUD, during the period from May 2001 through December 2008, that certain residential home mortgage loans were eligible for FHA insurance when in fact they were not, resulting in the Government having to pay FHA insurance claims when certain of those loans defaulted.  The agreement resolves the United States’ civil claims in its lawsuit in the Southern District of New York, as well as an investigation conducted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York regarding WELLS FARGO’s FHA origination and underwriting practices subsequent to the claims in its lawsuit, and an investigation conducted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of California into whether American Mortgage Network, LLC (“AMNET”), a mortgage lender acquired by WELLS FARGO in 2009, falsely certified and submitted ineligible residential mortgage loans for FHA insurance.
The settlement was approved today by U.S. District Judge Jesse M. Furman.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said: “Today, Wells Fargo, one of the biggest mortgage lenders in the world, has been held responsible for years of reckless underwriting, while relying on government insurance to deal with the damage.  Wells Fargo has long taken advantage of the FHA mortgage insurance program, designed to help millions of Americans realize the dream of home ownership, to write thousands and thousands of faulty loans.  Driven to maximize profits, Wells Fargo employed shoddy underwriting practices to drive up loan volume, at the expense of loan quality.  Even though Wells Fargo identified through internal quality assurance reviews thousands of problematic loans, the Bank decided not to report them to HUD.  As a result, while Wells Fargo enjoyed huge profits from its FHA loan business, the government was left holding the bag when the bad loans went bust.  With today’s settlement, Wells Fargo has finally resolved the years-long litigation, adding to the list of large financial institutions against which this Office has successfully pursued civil fraud prosecutions.” 
HUD Secretary Julián Castro said: “This Administration remains committed to holding lenders accountable for their lending practices.  The $1.2 billion settlement with Wells Fargo is the largest recovery for loan origination violations in FHA’s history.  Yet, this monetary figure can never truly make up for the countless families that lost homes as a result of poor lending practices.” 
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Benjamin C. Mizer said: “This settlement is another step in the Department of Justice’s continuing efforts to hold accountable FHA approved lenders that unlawfully submitted false claims at the expense of American homeowners and taxpayers.  In addition to today’s resolution with Wells Fargo, the department has pursued similar misconduct by numerous other lenders, returning more than $4 billion to the FHA fund and the Treasury and filing suit where appropriate.  We remain committed to protecting the public fisc from all who seek to abuse it, whether they do business on Wall Street or Main Street.”
Northern District of California U.S. Attorney Brian Stretch said: “Misconduct in the mortgage industry helped lead to a destructive financial crisis that spanned the globe.  American Mortgage Network’s origination of FHA-insured loans that did not comply with Government requirements also caused major losses to the public fisc.  Today’s settlement demonstrates the Department of Justice’s resolve to pursue remedies against those who engaged in this type of misconduct.”                     
HUD Inspector General David A. Montoya said:  “This matter is not just a failure by Wells Fargo to comply with federal requirements in FHA’s Direct Endorsement Lender program – it’s a failure by one of our trusted participants in the FHA program to demonstrate a commitment to integrity and to ordinary Americans who are trying to fulfill their dreams of homeownership.”
According to the Second Amended Complaint filed in Manhattan federal court:
WELLS FARGO has been a participant in the Direct Endorsement Lender program, a federal program administered by FHA.As a Direct Endorsement Lender, WELLS FARGO has the authority to originate, underwrite, and certify mortgages for FHA insurance.If a Direct Endorsement Lender approves a mortgage loan for FHA insurance and the loan later defaults, the holder or servicer of the loan may submit an insurance claim to HUD for the outstanding balance of the defaulted loan, along with any associated costs, which HUD must then pay.Under the Direct Endorsement Lender program, neither FHA nor HUD reviews a loan for compliance with FHA requirements before it is endorsed for FHA insurance.Direct Endorsement Lenders are therefore required to follow program rules designed to ensure that they are properly underwriting and certifying mortgages for FHA insurance and maintaining a quality control program that can prevent and correct any deficiencies in their underwriting.The quality control program requirements include conducting a full review of all loans that go 60 days into default within the first six payments, known as “early payment defaults”; taking prompt and adequate corrective action upon discovery of fraud or serious underwriting problems; and disclosing to HUD in writing all loans containing evidence of fraud or other serious underwriting deficiencies.WELLS FARGO failed to comply with these basic requirements.
First, between at least May 2001 and October 2005, WELLS FARGO, the largest HUD-approved residential mortgage lender, engaged in a practice of reckless underwriting of its retail FHA loans, all the while knowing that it would not be responsible when the defective loans went into default.To maximize its loan volume (and profits), WELLS FARGO elected to hire temporary staff to churn out and approve an ever increasing quantity of FHA loans, but neglected to provide this inexperienced staff with proper training.At the same time, WELLS FARGO’s management applied pressure on its underwriters to approve more and more FHA loans.The Bank also imposed short turnaround times for deciding whether to approve the loans, employed lax underwriting standards and controls, and paid bonuses to underwriters and other staff based on the number of loans approved.Predictably, as a result, WELLS FARGO’s loan volume and profits soared, but the quality of its loans declined significantly. Yet, when WELLS FARGO’s senior management was repeatedly advised by its own quality assurance reviews of serious problems with the quality of the retail FHA loans that the Bank was originating, management failed to implement proper and effective corrective measures, leaving HUD to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in claims for defaulted loans.
Second, WELLS FARGO failed to self-report to HUD the bad loans that it was originating, in violation of FHA program reporting requirements.During the period 2002 through 2010, HUD required Direct Endorsement Lenders to perform post-closing reviews of the loans that they originated and to report to HUD in writing loans that contained fraud or other serious deficiencies.This requirement provided HUD with an opportunity to investigate the defective loans and request reimbursement for any claim that HUD had paid or request indemnification for any future claim, as appropriate.During this nine-year period, WELLS FARGO, through its post-closing reviews, internally identified thousands of defective FHA loans that it was required to self-report to HUD, including a substantial number of loans that had gone into “early payment default.”However, instead of reporting these loans to HUD as required, WELLS FARGO engaged in virtually no self-reporting during the four-year period from 2002 through 2005, and only minimal self-reporting after 2005.
In his capacity as Vice President of Credit-Risk – Quality Assurance at WELLS FARGO, LOFRANO executed on WELLS FARGO’s behalf the annual certifications required by HUD for the Bank’s participation in the Direct Endorsement Lender program for certain years.  LOFRANO also organized and participated in the working group responsible for creating and implementing WELLS FARGO’s self-reporting policies and procedures.  In contravention of HUD’s requirements, that group failed to report to HUD loans that WELLS FARGO had internally identified as containing material underwriting findings.  Moreover, LOFRANO received WELLS FARGO quality assurance reports identifying thousands of FHA loans with material findings – very few of which WELLS FARGO reported to HUD.

As part of the settlement, WELLS FARGO has admitted, acknowledged, and accepted responsibility for, among other things, the following conduct:During the period from May 2001 through on or about December 31, 2008, WELLS FARGO submitted to HUD certifications stating that certain residential home mortgage loans were eligible for FHA insurance when in fact they were not, resulting in the Government having to pay FHA insurance claims when certain of those loans defaulted.From May 2001 through January 2003, WELLS FARGO’s quality assurance group conducted monthly internal reviews of random samples of the retail FHA mortgage loans that the Bank had already originated, underwritten, and closed which identified for most of the months that in excess of 25 percent of the loans, and in several consecutive months, more than 40 percent of the loans, had a material finding.For a number of the months during the period from February 2003 through September 2004, the material finding rate was in excess of 20 percent.  A “material” finding was defined by WELLS FARGO generally as a loan file that did not conform to internal parameters and/or specific FHA parameters, contained significant risk factors affecting the underwriting decision, and/or evidenced misrepresentation.
WELLS FARGO also admitted, acknowledged, and accepted responsibility for the following additional conduct:Between 2002 and October 2005, WELLS FARGO made only one self-report to HUD, involving multiple loans.During that same period, the Bank identified through its internal quality assurance reviews approximately 3,000 FHA loans with material findings.Further, during the period between October 2005 and December 2010, WELLS FARGO only self-reported approximately 300 loans to HUD.During that same period, WELLS FARGO’s internal quality assurance reviews identified more than 2,900 additional FHA loans containing material findings.The Government was required to pay FHA insurance claims when certain of these loans that WELLS FARGO identified with material findings defaulted.
LOFRANO admitted, acknowledged, accepted responsibility for, among other things, the following matters in which he participated:From January 1, 2002, until December 31, 2010, he held the position of Vice President of Credit Risk – Quality Assurance at WELLS FARGO; in that capacity, he supervised the Decision Quality Management group; in 2004, he was asked to organize a working sub-group to address reporting to HUD; in or about October 2005, he organized a working group that drafted WELLS FARGO’s new self-reporting policy and procedures; and during the period October 2005 through December 31, 2010, based on application of the Bank’s new self-reporting policy and by committee decision, WELLS FARGO did not report to HUD the majority of the FHA loans that the Bank’s internal quality assurance reviews had identified as having material findings.

Mr. Bharara and Mr. Stretch thanked HUD’s Office of General Counsel, HUD-OIG, and the Commercial Litigation Branch of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Division for their extraordinary assistance with the prosecution and settlement of this case.
This case against WELLS FARGO is the latest in a string of civil fraud lawsuits brought by this Office since May 2011 alleging fraudulent lending practices by residential mortgage lenders.  In addition to WELLS FARGO, this Office has pursued claims against Citi Mortgage (a subsidiary of Citibank), Flagstar Bank, Deutsche Bank (and a number of its subsidiaries), Countrywide, Bank Of America (“BOA”), former BOA executive Rebecca Mairone, Golden First Mortgage Corp. (“Golden First”), former Golden First owner David Movtady, Allied Home Mortgage Corp. (“Allied”), and former Allied executives Jim Hodge and Jeanne Stell.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jeffrey S. Oestericher, Christopher B. Harwood, Rebecca S. Tinio, Caleb Hayes-Deats, and Dominika Tarczynska are in charge of the case.

Former Manhattan Restaurant Owner Arrested For Running A $12 Million Ponzi Scheme



   Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Diego Rodriguez, Assistant Director-in-Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), and William J. Bratton, Commissioner of the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”), announced today that HAMLET PERALTA, the former owner of a restaurant in Manhattan, was charged in Manhattan federal court with committing wire fraud through a scheme in which he obtained more than $12 million from investors on false pretenses and used that money to repay other investors and for personal expenses.  PERALTA was arrested by FBI agents in Macon, Georgia, yesterday and will be presented before U.S. Magistrate Judge Charles Weigle in Macon this afternoon.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said:  “As alleged, Hamlet Peralta solicited investors for his fictitious wholesale liquor business by peddling wholesale lies.  Peralta’s Ponzi scheme allegedly fleeced his victims out of more than $12 million, virtually all of which he spent on himself or to repay other investors.  Thanks to the work of the FBI and NYPD in this investigation, Peralta will not be able to victimize any other investors.”
FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Diego Rodriquez said:  “Fraud cases remain a priority for the FBI as we continue to identify and investigate those who commit financial crimes against unwitting victims. Peralta, who allegedly engaged in a multimillion-dollar enrichment scheme, will ultimately be brought to justice for his actions.  We are appreciative of the support and cooperation we continue to receive from our law enforcement partners in this and so many cases.”
NYPD Commissioner William J. Bratton said: “As alleged, Hamlet Peralta violated the trust that investors placed in his fictitious wholesale liquor business venture by spending millions of his victim’s investments on clothes, food, and to continue the scheme.  Thanks to the NYPD investigators and our federal law enforcement partners, Peralta will be held accountable for his actions.”
According to the allegations in the Complaint unsealed today in Manhattan federal court[1]:
From at least in or about July 2013, up to and including at least in or about 2014, PERALTA solicited more than $12 million from various investors by falsely representing that the investors’ money would be used to engage in wholesale liquor distribution for a profit.  PERALTA promised investors high rates of return in the form of regular interest payments on their investments, which he represented were based on the profits to be generated by what he claimed would be his successful wholesale liquor business.
In truth and in fact, however, PERALTA misappropriated the millions of dollars in investments he received, and used those funds to repay other investors or for his own purposes.  Of the more than $12 million provided to him by investors based on the representation that their money would be used to purchase wholesale liquor for resale, PERALTA in fact purchased no more than $700,000 in wholesale liquor.  He used nearly all of the remaining money – more than $11 million – to repay other investors, wire money to himself, take out large cash withdrawals, and pay for personal expenses other than liquor.
As one example, in or about 2013, PERALTA told a prospective investor (“Investor-1”) who was a frequent customer at PERALTA’s restaurant and who had become friendly with PERALTA that he (PERALTA) owned a separate business called West 125th Street Liquors and that he had been approved as an exclusive wine distributor to a major national restaurant supply company (the “Restaurant Supply Company”) that was beginning a wholesale wine business.  PERALTA told the investor that he would receive four percent interest on his investments, based on profits from the wholesale liquor distribution business.  In truth and in fact, however, PERALTA did not own West 125th Street Liquors, and he had not been approved to be a distributor for the Restaurant Supply Company. 
Over the course of the next year, based on PERALTA’s representations, the investor provided PERALTA with more than $3.5 million.  Of that amount, none, or at most only a minimal amount, was spent on wholesale liquor purchases.  Rather, Investor-1’s money was used to pay back other investors; was used to pay for expenses such as restaurant bills and high-end clothing purchases; and was wired to PERALTA’s personal accounts and/or withdrawn in cash.  In or about June 2014, PERALTA provided Investor-1 with a document that purported to be on the letterhead of the Restaurant Supply Company indicating that the Restaurant Supply Company would be electronically transferring PERALTA $1,826,350 within seven days.  In truth and in fact, however, neither PERALTA nor West 125th Street Liquors has ever been a supplier to the Restaurant Supply Company.   

PERALTA, 36, of the Bronx, New York, has been charged with one count of wire fraud, which carries a maximum term of 20 years in prison.  The maximum potential sentence is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the judge.
Mr. Bharara praised the investigative work of the FBI and the NYPD Internal Affairs Bureau, and noted that the investigation is continuing.  
This case is being handled by the Office’s Public Corruption Unit.  Assistant United States Attorneys Martin Bell, Russell Capone, and Kan M. Nawaday are in charge of the prosecution.
The charges contained in the Complaint are merely accusations and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

[1] As the introductory phrase signifies, the entirety of the text of the Complaint and the description of the Complaint set forth herein constitute only allegations, and every fact described should be treated as an allegation.

A.G. Schneiderman Obtains $90k Agreement With Contractor Who Underpaid Workers On Taxpayer-Funded Affordable Housing Units



J.A.M. Construction Corp. Shortchanged Workers On A Chelsea Affordable Housing Project
   Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman today announced a settlement with J.A.M. Construction Corp. (“JAM”), a subcontractor that performed carpentry work at a Manhattan affordable housing project.  JAM, based in Rockville Centre, failed to pay required prevailing wages to eight workers at the Selis Manor Affordable Housing complex located at 135 West 23rd Street in Manhattan.  In an Assurance of Discontinuance with the Attorney General’s Office, JAM agreed to pay over $80,000 in underpayments, as well as a penalty of $10,000. 
“We will not allow employers to get away with ripping off their workers,” said Attorney General Schneiderman. “We will remain vigilant in protecting the rights of New York’s working men and women, and will continue to use monitors where appropriate to ensure ongoing compliance with the law.”
Between December 1, 2014 and August 31, 2015, JAM paid far less than the required prevailing wage for carpentry work on the Selis Manor project, and failed to pay supplemental benefits required by law.  Federal and state prevailing wage laws seek to ensure that government contractors pay wages and benefits that are comparable to the local norms for a given trade, typically well above the state and federal minimum wage.  The project included in the settlement with JAM was federally funded by Housing and Urban Development and was subject to prevailing wage requirements.
The Attorney General’s Office learned of the violations by JAM through an independent monitor imposed upon a general contractor as part of a prior Assurance of Discontinuance.  In March 2013, public-works General Contractor Procida Construction Corp. settled a prevailing wage case with the Attorney General’s Office.  In addition to paying $980,000, Procida was required to submit to independent monitoring of its own labor practices and those of its subcontractors, with unannounced on-site inspections by the monitor.  The monitor discovered the prevailing wage violations by JAM and reported them to the Attorney General’s Office for further action.
The case was handled by Section Chief Richard Balletta, led by Labor Bureau Chief Terri Gerstein and Executive Deputy Attorney General for Social Justice Alvin Bragg.

COMPTROLLER STRINGER: KEY BUILDING AND MAINTENANCE CONDITIONS AT NYCHA CONTINUE TO WORSEN



Musty and moldy smells are a daily hazard in 12,600 NYCHA households 
Analysis of 2014 Housing Vacancy Survey data shows peeling paint, mice, heating breakdowns at NYCHA vastly outpace all other types of housing



  Physical conditions in New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) buildings and apartments — including cracked walls, holes in floors, and peeling paint — have continued to worsen over the past several years, according to a new housing brief analyzing 2014 Housing Vacancy Survey (HVS) data released today by New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer.
“Housing conditions at NYCHA remain a tenant’s nightmare, with moldy units, holes in floors, and broken walls,” Comptroller Stringer said. “These apartments are our most valuable affordable housing resource, which is why it’s so vital for NYCHA to bring these units into a state of good repair. Fixing these troubling conditions and giving every NYCHA resident a safe place to live must be a priority for the City.”
The Comptroller’s analysis examined the most recently published data from the Housing Vacancy Survey, a comprehensive set of point-in-time measurements conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau. Structural condition data is based on assessments by Census field representatives while maintenance and apartment deficiencies are informed by survey responses of City residents.
The 2014 survey data found that the structural condition of NYCHA buildings had declined in 9 of 18 measures from 2011 and improved in other categories. However, the rate of observed deficiencies in four of the seven most important apartment maintenance categories grew during this same time period.
How-NYCHA-Lives
Key findings include:
  • In 2014, reports of musty and moldy smells were included in the HVS for the first time. The analysis found that 7.1% of NYCHA households, more than 12,600 units, reported musty/moldy smells on a daily basis inside their apartments and 13.3% reported that condition a few times in a year. That daily rate is more than double the rate of rent stabilized tenants (3.5%) and substantially higher than market-rate tenants (1.2%) and owner-occupied housing (0.3%).
  • Bulging or sloping wall conditions, a sign of significant structural neglect, more than tripled from 365 in 2008 to 1,164 in 2014. Observations of boarded up windows steadily increased during that same time period, rising from 1,372 in 2008 to 2,003 in 2014. There were 1,983 slanted or shifted doorsills or door frame observations in 2014, the highest-recorded level since 2002.
  • Half of the measures of structural conditions deteriorated in NYCHA buildings from 2011 to 2014. These included a 371.8% increase in major cracks in outside walls, a 72.6% increase in holes or missing floors and a 38.1% increase in sagging or sloping floors.
  • For the first time in at least 12 years, rates of observed instances of heating equipment breakdowns, additional heating required, presence of mice or rats, cracks and holes in interior walls and ceilings, floor holes, broken plaster, and peeling paint and water leakage were all higher at NYCHA than in rent-stabilized, market rate rental and owner-occupied housing units.
  • Two other notable maintenance deficiency rates in the City’s public housing stock that worsened from 2011 to 2014 include toilet breakdowns (6.2% increase) and kitchen facilities not working (7.0% increase).
  • Areas where conditions improved from 2011 to 2014 included rotten or loose window frames (48.1% decrease), broken or missing windows (44% decrease), elevators not accessible for wheelchairs (38.1% decrease), dilapidated buildings (35% decrease) and missing siding or outside walls (23.3% decrease).
In September 2014, Comptroller Stringer called for the projected surpluses from the Battery Park City Authority to be directed specifically toward critically needed repairs at NYCHA properties, which would be the first new funding stream to NYCHA in a generation.  In order to enact this policy, the Governor, New York City Mayor and Comptroller must all support the redirection of funds.  In January 2016, the Governor backed the plan.
“These findings are deeply troubling and we must take immediate steps to ensure that housing conditions at NYCHA improve across the board. I again urge the Administration to give their support to direct surplus Battery Park City Authority funds to create the first new funding stream in a generation for NYCHA . If we want every New Yorker to have a fair and fighting chance to make it in this city, we have an obligation to act without delay,” Stringer said.


owner_occupied_chart
Source: NYC Comptroller’s Office from New York City Housing and Vacancy Survey Microdata
To read the full report, click here.

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Join BronxWorks in a 5K Multi-Charity Event - All Non-Profits Will Raise New Revenue





Join BronxWorks in a 5K Multi-Charity Event
All Non-Profits Will Raise New Revenue
 
 
LUNCH INFORMATION SESSION
When: Tuesday, April 12, 2016 at 12:30 p.m.
Where: BronxWorks Carolyn McLaughlin Community Center
1130 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY 10456
 
 
The Generosity Series of multi-charity 5K Run/Walks is an integrated peer to peer fundraising platform that's making fundraising better, easier and more predictable. Our Charity Partners raise funds at a rate of five times higher than the industry average. Our company handles all event logistics and your non-profit receives customized bibs, T-shirts and medals for your participants with your logo. Learn how your non-profit can raise money by joining the Bronx 5K run/walk event to be held Sunday, June 26, 2016 in Van Cortlandt Park.
 
Here's a 2-minute video clip from one of our events:www.youtube.com/watch?t=2&v=A9HYmv5FTgA
 
The Generosity Series website: www.generosityseries.com
 
Please contact Julie at julie@generosityseries.com or 718-506-9777 x507

Phil Cardone
 Grants & Events Director
 Bronx Chamber of Commerce
"The Network For Business Success"
1200 Waters Place, Suite 106
Bronx, NY 10461

Assemblyman Mark Gjonaj's Sanitation Forum- April 21, 2016



Assemblyman Mark Gjonaj's
Legal Series Forum  
Join us for our first Legal Forum on

 NYC Sanitation Guidelines 

Thursday, April 21, 2015
6 pm to 8 pm

Bronx House
990 Pelham Parkway South
Bronx, N.Y. 10461

For more information, please contact the office of 
Assemblyman Mark Gjonaj

Greenway Day - Next Sunday, April 17th



Sunday, April 17, 2016
Riverdale Station Park
254th Street and the River
1-3pm
Event
will feature music, food, children's activities and more right alongside the beautiful Hudson River!

Community Members are urged to attend the upcoming 
Community Board 8 Greenway Meeting
April 13, 7:30pm
Riverdale Y