Wednesday, June 20, 2018

News From Congressman Eliot Engel


Engel Cosponsors Keep Families Together Act to End Family Separation at the Border

  Congressman Eliot Engel, who today called for the resignation of Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, is an original cosponsor of H.R. 6135, the Keep Families Together Act, legislation just introduced to prohibit the Trump Administration from separating families at the border.

The Keep Families Together Act would ban the Department of Homeland Security from separating children from their parents, restrict prosecution of asylum seekers, increase child welfare training for border agents, ensure transparency, and reunite separated families. The President could end this horrific policy of family separation at any time, but he refuses to do so and has instead falsely blamed Congress for the practice.

“Our country has long been known as a beacon of freedom and opportunity to those seeking a better life. The Trump Administration’s family separation policy is a betrayal of our American values,” Engel said. “It is unconscionable that President Trump is using the lives of vulnerable parents and children as a bargaining chip to demand his anti-immigrant policies and border wall. I refuse to stand by and allow young children to be torn from their parents’ arms and sent to detention centers and tent cities in the desert. I’m proud to support this critical legislation to end President Trump’s cruel and inhumane family separation policy.”

News From Congressman Joseph Crowley


Congressman Crowley, NYC Councilman Dromm, NYC Transit Authority President Andy Byford, MTA Announce Millions of Dollars in Long-Awaited Repairs to the 7-Line Train

  Congressman Joe Crowley, Chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, was joined by NYC Transit Authority President Andy Byford, and NYC Councilman Daniel Dromm  to announce a $45 million contract to begin the comprehensive repair and re-painting of the elevated 7-line train.
For years, Congressman Crowley, local officials, and Queens families have demanded much-needed repairs to the 101-year-old train line, particularly to remediate lead paint peeling from the tracks. Last month, Congressman Crowley secured a firm commitment from the MTA to comprehensively repair the 7-line on an expedited timeline. The project is expected to begin in July.
As part of his Better Deal for Queens and the Bronx plan, Congressman Crowley pledged to work with the MTA to address the lead paint associated with the 7-line and make any repairs necessary to ensure the train runs as efficiently as possible. Congressman Crowley was able to fulfill this goal in collaboration with New York City Councilmen Dromm and Francisco Moya (D-East Elmhurst, Elmhurst, Jackson Heights, and Corona), additional members of the New York City Council, New York State Assembly, and New York State Senate representing Queens, Queens Borough President Melinda Katz, Members of Community Boards 3 and 4, the District Council 9 International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, and families and community leaders residing in the borough.  
“This is an important moment for Queens residents, like myself, who have been dismayed by the quality of subway service in our borough,” said Congressman Crowley. “Throughout my life, I have relied on the 7-line to travel across the city, and today, we are embarking on an exciting new era for public transportation in Queens. I deeply appreciate President Byford taking the time to join us today and for working swiftly with his team to begin the process of repairing and re-painting the 7-line. This project will not only bring improved service to Queens, but will also remediate lead paint associated with the train line.”  
"Finally the #7 train is getting re-painted," said NYC Councilman Daniel Dromm. "This is welcome news for the thousands of people who live near the #7-line trestle and ride the train daily. For many years, I have worked diligently to hold the MTA accountable for the deteriorated condition of the #7-line trestle. I rallied with local residents and business owners last year to announce a lawsuit to force the MTA to repaint the trestle. Together we will carefully monitor the progress of this project and will make every effort to ensure that it stays on track. I am pleased to work alongside Congressman Crowley to move this important issue forward."

Congressman Crowley, NYC Councilman Van Bramer Announce $6.5 Million for Woodside Library
  Congressman Joe Crowley, Chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, joined NYC Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer (D-Sunnyside, Woodside, Long Island City, Astoria, Dutch Kills) and Queens Library President & CEO Dennis Walcott yesterday to announce millions of dollars in renovations to the Woodside Community Library.
“Our city’s libraries are vital to enriching our communities, but many of our branches do not receive the funding they need to help our children and students grow,” said Congressman Crowley. “The millions of dollars in funding we are announcing today will help ensure Queens library continue to instill compassion, wisdom, and open-mindedness in our children for years to come. This is one of most important investments we can make for our community.”
“Council Member Van Bramer and Congressman Crowley have made an excellent investment not only in this branch and our customers, but in the entire community, and we are grateful for their continued steadfast support,” said Queens Library President and CEO Dennis M. Walcott. “We look forward to working with our government partners to deliver an inspiring space where the public can learn, discover and grow.”

Chairman Crowley Statement on House Republican Budget
House Democratic Caucus Chairman Joe Crowley, released the following statement on the release of the House Republican budget:
“Six months after President Trump and Republicans gave lavish tax breaks to special interests and the wealthiest one percent, House Republicans have now released a budget that will inflict even more damage on middle-class families. From gutting Medicaid and Medicare and repealing the Affordable Care Act to eliminating protections for those with pre-existing health conditions and slashing anti-poverty programs, retirement security, and education, Republicans are once again making American families pay the price.
“We need a budget that invests in America and the American people. A budget that rebuilds our crumbling infrastructure, makes college more affordable, ensures seniors have reliable health care and retirement security, and gives working families a real shot. This is the kind of budget Americans deserve and this is the kind of budget Democrats will fight for.”

2nd Annual Mott Haven H.E.ARTS Festival


MAIN STAGE: Hip Hop Legends: Grand Wizard Theodore 
(Inventor of Scratching!), DJ Phase, T Ski Valley, Voice 
of Harlem, Happy Original Pioneer | M.A.K.U. 
Soundsystem | Mazarte Dance Company | 
UpBeat NYC Latin Jazz Big Band
RSVP
The 2nd Annual Mott Haven H.E.ARTS Festival will bring 
together a wide array of local South Bronx residents, artists, 
musicians, grassroots organizations and businesses to 
celebrate Mott Haven as a uniquely vibrant and diverse 
community. The event's focus will be on the conversion 
of the former Lincoln Detox Center into a center for health, 
education and the arts that will serve as an anchor for our 
families and local organizations who are fighting systemic 
injustice and displacement (including the unveiling of our 
recently completed feasibility report!)

Participating Organizations: Birthing Project | Boogie Down 
Books | Bronx Filmmakers Collective | BxArts Factory | 
Community Connections for Youth | ID Studio Theater | 
MLK SUNY ATTAIN | Mott Haven-Port Morris Community 
Land Stewards | National Acupuncture Detoxification 
Association | NY Dept of Youth and Community Development 
| Radical Health | South Bronx Unite |Taller Experimental 
del Arte | UpBeat NYC

FOOD
Traditional cuisine for sale from local families and vendors

ARTS, FILMMAKERS, CRAFTS & APPAREL
Local artisans, filmmakers and vendors will offer their 
goods for sale

ACTIVITIES FOR KIDS
Arts projects, children's books, face painting and bouncy house 

HEALTH & EDUCATION ACTIVITIES
Meet and greet education and health professionals with 
discussions/services related to community building, 
alternatives to incarceration, acupuncture, pregnancy, 
birthing and much more 

FEASIBILITY REPORT UNVEILING
H.E.ARTS Center design and feasibility report and model 
unveiling, as well as information about our local community 
land trust, the Mott Haven-Port Morris Community Land 
Stewards

More about the H.E.ARTS Community Center-
Following multiple community envisioning sessions and 
several large-scale events and festivals, the Mott Haven-
Port Morris Community Land Stewards (community land 
trust) aims to acquire and renovate the city-owned, vacant, 
28,000 square foot former Lincoln Detox Center into a home 
for more than a dozen health, education and arts 
organizations in the Mott Haven-Port Morris community.
Other Actions/Events Taking Place

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Joshua Adam Schulte Charged With The Unauthorized Disclosure Of Classified Information And Other Offenses


Relating To The Theft Of Classified Material From The Central Intelligence Agency

  Geoffrey S. Berman, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, John C. Demers, Assistant Attorney General for National Security, and William F. Sweeney Jr., Assistant Director-in-Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), announced today that JOSHUA ADAM SCHULTE was charged in a 13-count Superseding Indictment (the “Indictment”) in connection with his alleged theft of classified national defense information from the Central Intelligence Agency (“CIA”) and the transmission of that material to an organization that purports to publicly disseminate classified, sensitive, and confidential information (“Organization-1”).  The Indictment also charges SCHULTE with the receipt, possession, and transportation of child pornography, as well as criminal copyright infringement.  SCHULTE, who is presently detained on the child pornography charges, will be arraigned by U.S. District Judge Paul A. Crotty.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said:  “Joshua Schulte, a former employee of the CIA, allegedly used his access at the agency to transmit classified material to an outside organization.  During the course of this investigation, federal agents also discovered alleged child pornography in Schulte’s New York City residence.  We and our law enforcement partners are committed to protecting national security information and ensuring that those trusted to handle it honor their important responsibilities.  Unlawful disclosure of classified intelligence can pose a grave threat to our national security, potentially endangering the safety of Americans.”
Assistant Attorney General John C. Demers said:  “The National Security Division, alongside our partners in the Intelligence Community, will not waver in our commitment to pursue and hold accountable these officials, and I commend all those at the Department of Justice and the FBI who have worked diligently to investigate this matter and bring these charges.”
Assistant Director-in-Charge William F. Sweeney, Jr. said:  “As alleged, Schulte utterly betrayed this nation and downright violated his victims. As an employee of the CIA, Schulte took an oath to protect this country, but he blatantly endangered it by the transmission of Classified Information. To further endanger those around him, Schulte allegedly received, possessed, and transmitted thousands of child pornographic photos and videos. In an effort to protect this nation against crimes such as these, the FBI's Counterintelligence Division in New York will continue to keep our mission at the forefront of our investigations in protecting the American public."
According to the Indictment, other court filings, and statements made during court proceedings:[1]
On March 7, 2017, Organization-1 released on the Internet classified national defense material belonging to the CIA (the “Classified Information”).  In 2016, SCHULTE, who was then employed by the CIA, stole the Classified Information from a computer network at the CIA and later transmitted it to Organization-1.  SCHULTE also intentionally caused damage without authorization to a CIA computer system by granting himself unauthorized access to the system, deleting records of his activities, and denying others access to the system.  SCHULTE subsequently made material false statements to FBI agents concerning his conduct at the CIA.         
SCHULTE was previously arrested on August 24, 2017, on charges relating to his receipt, possession, and transportation of approximately ten thousand images and videos of child pornography.  In March 2017, members of the FBI had searched SCHULTE’s residence in New York, New York, pursuant to a search warrant and recovered, among other things, multiple computers, servers, and other portable electronic storage devices, including Schulte’s personal desktop computer (the “Personal Computer”).  On the Personal Computer, FBI agents found an encrypted container (the “Encrypted Container”), which held over 10,000 images and videos of child pornography.  The Encrypted Container with the child pornography files was identified by FBI computer scientists beneath three layers of password protection on the Personal Computer.  Each layer, including the Encrypted Container, was unlocked using passwords previously used by SCHULTE on one of his cellphones.  Moreover, FBI agents identified Internet chat logs in which SCHULTE and others discussed their receipt and distribution of child pornography.  FBI agents also identified a series of Google searches conducted by SCHULTE in which he searched the Internet for child pornography.
SCHULTE, 29, of New York, New York, is charged with one count each of (i) illegal gathering of national defense information, (ii) illegal transmission of lawfully possessed national defense information, (iii) illegal transmission of unlawfully possessed national defense information, (iv) unauthorized access to a computer to obtain classified information, (v) theft of Government property, (vi) unauthorized access of a computer to obtain information from a Department or Agency of the United States, (vii) causing transmission of a harmful computer program, information, code, or command, (viii) making material false statements to representatives of the FBI, (ix) obstruction of justice, (x) receipt of child pornography, (xi) possession of child pornography, (xii) transportation of child pornography, and (xiii) copyright infringement.  A chart containing the charges and maximum penalties is below.  The maximum potential sentences in this case are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the judge.
Mr. Berman praised the outstanding investigative efforts of the FBI. 
The prosecution of this case is being handled by the Office’s Terrorism and International Narcotics Unit.  Assistant U.S. Attorneys Sidhardha Kamaraju and Matthew Laroche are in charge of the prosecution, with assistance from Trial Attorney Scott McCulloch of the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section.
Count Number
Description
Maximum Penalty
One
Illegal Gathering of National Defense Information
18 U.S.C. §§ 793(b) and 2
10 years in prison
Two
Illegal Transmission of Lawfully Possessed National Defense Information
18 U.S.C. §§ 793(d) and 2
10 years in prison
Three
Illegal Transmission of Unlawfully Possessed National Defense Information
18 U.S.C. §§ 793(e) and 2
10 years in prison
Four
Unauthorized Access to a Computer To Obtain Classified Information
18 U.S.C. §§ 1030(a)(1) and 2
10 years in prison
Five
Theft of Government Property
18 U.S.C. §§ 641 and 2
10 years in prison
Six
Unauthorized Access of a Computer to Obtain Information from a Department or Agency of the United States
18 U.S.C. §§ 1030(a)(2) and 2
5 years in prison
Seven
Causing Transmission of a Harmful Computer Program, Information, Code, or Command
18 U.S.C. §§ 1030(a)(5) and 2
10 years in prison
Eight
Making False Statements
18 U.S.C. §§ 1001 and 2
5 years in prison 
Nine
Obstruction of Justice
18 U.S.C. §§ 1503 and 2
10 years in prison
Ten
Receipt of Child Pornography
18 U.S.C. §§ 2252A(a)(2)(B), (b)(1), and 2
20 years in prison
Eleven
Possession of Child Pornography
18 U.S.C. §§ 2252A(a)(5)(B), (b)(2), and 2
10 years in prison
Twelve
Transportation of Child Pornography
18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(1)
20 years in prison
Thirteen
Criminal Copyright Infringement
17 U.S.C. § 506(a)(1)(A) and 18 U.S.C. § 2319(b)(1)
5 years in prison
 (1) As the introductory phrase signifies, the entirety of the text of the Indictment, the description of the Indictment set forth herein, as well as the other statements described herein, constitute only allegations, and every fact described should be treated as an allegation.

Stringer Report Finds Students Too Often Have No Place to Turn Amid Rising Bullying in Schools


In 2017, 82 percent of students surveyed in grades 6-12 said there was bullying in their schools, an all-time high, up from 65 percent in 2012
Only one guidance counselor per 375 students and one social worker per 612 students in public schools
In 2016-17 school year, 725 schools serving students across all grades – 45 percent of all schools – had no social worker at all
  New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer released a new report outlining the stark state of mental health and social services in our public schools, and data that illustrates a rise in bullying among City students. Comptroller Stringer’s new report, “Safe and Supportive Schools: A Plan to Improve School Climate and Safety in NYC,” presents a review of current data related to school safety – including a jump in bullying, and an alarming level of arrests and handcuffing of students – and from that data draws a series of holistic recommendations on how to make City schools healthier and more secure. Separately, a new audit revealed operational failures in how the City reports violent incidents in schools to the State and evidence of underreporting of these incidents in our audit sample. Based on the findings of the report and the audit, Comptroller Stringer is calling for increased social supports in City schools, an expansion of social-emotional learning advisories to all schools, and universal school-based mental health services.
“This report makes clear that our kids are facing greater social challenges than ever at school, and the City must properly identify the magnitude of the problem and provide additional resources to bring down the conflict and bullying that’s become pervasive. Our young people are yearning for mental health support – we heard it straight from them, and it’s time we address the problem head on,” said New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer. “Schools should be sanctuaries where every child feels safe and supported, but all too often, when students need help, they don’t receive the care they need. We need to improve our school climates with a significant, system-wide investment in order to unleash the potential of every child in this city. That’s why I’m calling for the City to prioritize supporting all students through small group advisories, a proven way to ensure each student has a trusted adult in school they can turn to. The City should also expand universal school-based mental health services. If we’re going to give every child the care and support they deserve, we have to do it right.”
Increased and expanded social services are critical to address the growing prevalence of violence, bullying and punitive action uncovered by the policy report:

  • In 2017, 82 percent of students reported that their peers harass, bully, or intimidate others in their schools, up from 65 percent in 2012, based on student responses to the most recent NYC School Survey.
  • Similarly, roughly one in five students say they personally do not feel safe in or around their school.
  • During the 2016-17 school year, students were handcuffed in over 1,800 incidents – including 120 cases involving children age 12 and under. While recently released data from the first quarter indicates improvement, Black and Latino students continue to be disproportionately impacted.
  • In the first half of the 2017-18 school year, school suspensions increased by 20 percent following several years of decline.
  • Meanwhile, a separate audit by the Comptroller’s Office found DOE failed to record some 21 percent of the sampled “violent or disruptive” incidents in school year 2015-2016 in its incident database, based on a sample of 10 middle and high schools. As a result, these incidents were not considered for inclusion in mandatory reports to the State.
  • The separate audit also found that DOE did not consistently track the necessary disciplinary and referral action information needed to properly assess whether certain incidents should be reported to the State.
Research shows that punitive actions like suspensions have severe impacts on students’ academic outcomes and significantly increase the likelihood that a student will not complete high school or will become involved in the criminal justice system. The City’s ThriveNYC program provides a laudible baseline of mental health support for schools, however there remains an acute need for more mental health professionals in schools to help resolve conflicts and support students. As it is, city schools are vastly under-resourced. Our report found:
  • There is only one guidance counselor per 375 students and only one social worker per 612 students in our public school system.
  • In the 2016-17 school year, 725 schools serving students across all grades – 45 percent of all schools – had no social worker at all.
  • According to student surveys, 17 percent of students feel there is no adult in their school in whom they can confide.
In response, Comptroller Stringer’s report calls for expanding small group advisories, increasing in-school social workers and other critical staff as well as mental health services to accommodate students’ needs.
The Comptroller’s Office simultaneously released an audit of the Department of Education. Under state law, the DOE is required to report certain “violent and disruptive incidents” in schools to the state’s Violent and Disruptive Incident Report (VADIR) system, including minor altercations, episodes of intimidation or harassment, as well as assault, weapons possession and sexual offenses. The system is intended to capture data on the initial disruptive or violent incidents, and the school’s follow-up procedure, which may include suspension, removal, or referral to guidance counselors, among other actions taken.
The audit found clear breakdowns in communication in the reporting and tracking of incidents and actions taken. Specifically, the audit found that across all City public schools, 1,553 schools reported a total of 41,559 incidents – ranging from 1 to 271 incidents per school. 44 schools reported no incidents. The audit also includes a deeper analysis based on a sample of 10 schools – key findings reveal a lack of reporting and conflicting records from School Safety Records, the City’s tracking system and the state’s VADIR tracking system. Significantly, DOE had no records of corrective action in 83 percent of required student behavioral incidents, including nearly 400 incidents that were classified as serious infractions.
Comptroller Stringer’s report lays out a series of comprehensive recommendations for improving school safety and climate and reducing the high economic and social cost to the City of current disciplinary practices. Recommendations include:

  • Expand small social-emotional learning advisories in all schools, which are known to be a highly effective way to support students’ social-emotional learning and to ensure that each student has at least one adult in school they can turn to in times of need. Students who have a trusted group of peers and at least one adult to confide in have greater academic outcomes as well as more positive social attitudes and behaviors.
  • Expand the ranks of in-school social workers and other mental health professionals, who are best equipped to respond to emotional or behavioral crises.
  • Clarify the role of School Safety Agents and update the Memorandum of Understanding that governs DOE’s relationship with NYPD to clearly outline appropriate interventions for specific scenarios involving student misconduct.
  • Fund a Comprehensive Mental Health support continuum to provide direct service and targeted interventions for the highest need students and schools including hospital-based mental health partnerships, mobile response teams, and school-based mental health care.
  • Establish and oversee system-wide trauma-informed schools to tackle problems consistent with the chronic stresses of poverty. As trauma can severely disrupt a student’s academic potential, the DOE should support educators in taking a trauma-informed approach to students, to recognize signs of trauma and understand how to positively respond in a non-violent and respectful way to students. Results from the Positive Learning Collaborative pilot indicate measurable school climate improvements in schools that provide intensive training and support to school staff to prevent and de-escalate crisis situations.
  • Expand and baseline funding to implement restorative practices system-wide, which requires investment for embedded school-based capacity-building and implementation.

MAYOR DE BLASIO, COMMISSIONER O’NEILL UNVEIL NEW POLICY TO REDUCE UNNECESSARY MARIJUANA ARRESTS


By September 1st, the majority of New Yorkers found smoking in public to receive criminal summonses which will help reduce marijuana arrests by about 10,000 per year

  Mayor Bill de Blasio and Police Commissioner James P. O’Neill today announced a new policy to reduce unnecessary marijuana arrests. By September 1st, 2018, the majority of New Yorkers found smoking marijuana in public will face criminal summonses instead of arrest– continuing a significant shift in overall marijuana enforcement to better balance fairness with public safety and quality of life concerns. The change is the result of the final report and recommendations produced by the 30-Day Working Group on Marijuana Enforcement that convened in May, and according to NYPD projections, will likely reduce overall marijuana arrests in New York City by about 10,000 per year based on 2017 arrest records and patterns. 

New Yorkers will still be subject to arrest if they are on probation or parole, if they have existing criminal warrants, don’t have identification, have a recent documented history of violence, or their smoking poses an immediate public safety risk—such as while driving a car. The new policy builds on previous efforts by Mayor de Blasio and the NYPD to strike balance on marijuana enforcement between fairness and safety. In 2017, the NYPD made 64 percent fewer arrests for possession from 2010, going from 53,000 to 19,000 arrests. Of these arrests, 50,000 were for smoking in public in 2010 compared to less than 17,000 in 2017.

“Nobody’s destiny should hinge on a minor non-violent offense,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “Neighborhood policing has helped to bring officers and community together, but we still have more work to do to right the wrongs in the criminal justice system. This new policy will help reduce unnecessary arrests, while making our City fairer and safer.”

“We know that it is not productive to arrest people who have no prior criminal history,” said Police Commissioner James O’Neill. “In fact, it hampers our efforts to build trust and strengthen relationships with the people we serve, and it does nothing to further the NYPD’s mission of ridding our streets of those responsible for violence and disorder. Issuing summonses for marijuana offenses that do not directly affect public safety will allow our officers to do their jobs effectively and safely, and in a way that always promotes public safety and quality of life for all New Yorkers.”

Elizabeth Glazer, Director of the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice, said. “Today is a significant step forward in our work to make New York the fairest city in the country. We have record low crime rates at the same time we have the lowest incarceration rate of any large city in the country. And while it is extremely rare for people to go to jail for possessing marijuana, any touch from the criminal justice system should be proportionate to the activity involved and the shared goal of public safety. This new policy will lighten the touch and continue our work with New Yorkers to keep this the safest and fairest city.”

The policy change was the product of the 30-Day Marijuana Working Group, initiated by Mayor de Blasio and conducted by the NYPD.  The overarching objectives of the Working Group were to identify why differences in arrest rates exist; ensure that NYPD enforcement practices are consistent with the values of trust and community engagement at the foundation of Neighborhood Policing; determine ways to reduce arrests for marijuana offenses if and when those arrests do not impact public safety or reduce quality of life; and review overall marijuana enforcement to ensure it is implemented fairly while also promoting public safety and quality of life for all New Yorkers.

The Working Group gathered insight, analysis and input from the five district attorneys, public defenders, the speaker of the City Council, community groups, scholars, drug policy advocates, tenant organizations, faith leaders, Business Improvement Districts, national organizations, community councils, police unions, and young adults impacted by these policies. 

The Working Group found that most New Yorkers believe public smoking of marijuana was a public nuisance that should be curtailed; however, the consensus favored summonses in lieu of arrest if public safety and quality of life were unaffected. Currently, about 40 percent of people arrested for smoking marijuana had no prior arrest history. The change in policy has the potential to help thousands of younger New Yorkers with no record avoid the burden of an arrest.

In 2017, New York City received nearly 52,000 complaints from the public about the public smoking of marijuana, and addressing these complaints is important in order to protect the livability of City neighborhoods.  Even in those states and jurisdictions where recreational use is now legal it remains illegal to smoke marijuana in public. While New York State law makes possession and smoking of small amounts of marijuana a misdemeanor, New York City police officers have discretion on how to exercise their enforcement powers.

Patrol Officers will receive guidance on how to implement this new policy thorough the summer. In the future, if unusually high arrest rates occur, the Police Department should conduct additional analysis to ensure that the enforcement levels are appropriate. Tracking arrest trends is an important aspect of these recommendations. The City will also issue quarterly reports on arrests and criminal summonses for marijuana possession by race and borough.

Beyond the enforcement policy announced today, New York City is also convening a separate Mayoral Task Force to determine the appropriate regulatory framework and identify the public safety, health and financial consequences should the State move forward with legalization. A report is expected by 2019. The work will be coordinated by the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice and composition will include the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, the NYPD, the Law Department, Department of Education and others.

Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez said, "I applaud the Mayor and the Police Commissioner for adopting a policy to stop making arrests in the vast majority of marijuana cases, which is the approach I have been calling for and a step in the right direction. As we take this important step, we cannot forget those who have convictions on their record based on this conduct that we no longer prosecute, and so my Office will be vacating and sealing past marijuana convictions for thousands of people in Brooklyn. We must bring a sense of fairness to the past at the same time that we implement these new enforcement policies in the present. "

SENATOR RIVERA INTRODUCES RESOLUTION RECOGNIZING JUNE AS IMMIGRANT HERITAGE MONTH IN NEW YORK STATE


GOVERNMENT HEADER
Today, State Senator Gustavo Rivera introduced a resolution recognizing the month of June as Immigrant Heritage Month in New York State. For the fourth consecutive year, Senator Rivera's resolution serves to highlight, acknowledge and celebrate the countless contributions immigrant communities have made and continue to make to New York State.

"For centuries, New York State has stood firmly as a beacon of hope for those who leave their hometowns in search of a brighter future for themselves and their families. Despite the harmful and malicious policies deliberately designed by the current administration in Washington to tear our communities apart, New York State will not waver in its commitment to support our immigrant communities. We will continue fighting ferociously to implement comprehensive and compassionate policies that will protect our immigrant communities and will help them grow and thrive. I would like to thank my colleagues in the New York State Senate for adopting the resolution and joining me in celebrating our heritage as a State of immigrants."