Girl Scouts from Troops 1039, 1047, 1171, 1247, and 1401 based on Ogden Avenue near Yankee Stadium were found on the other side of the Bronx in the Mall at Bay Plaza selling their famous Girl Scout Cookies. Jazmin Edwards is holding a box of Girl Scout Cookies as her Troop Leader Katrina Smith, and her Mother Candice Edwards are behind the table collecting the money from the sales of the boxes of cookies. The ladies said that this was their second year at the Bay Plaza Mall selling Girl Scout Cookies, because last year was a huge success. Sales were going at the same pace as last year.
Sunday, April 28, 2019
Friends of Pelham Parkway Plant Roses on the Parkway
It took some hard work, and a little of getting your hands dirty, but on Saturday these Friends of Pelham Parkway planted thirteen rose bushes which were given to them by the NYC Parks Department. The Rose Garden is located at the corner of Pelham Parkway North and Wallace Avenue.
Above - Ms. Roxanne Delgado the head of the friends of Pelham Parkway sets this rose bush in before placing support soil all around it.
Below - It was a hard, but a job well done for these four members of the Friends of Pelham Parkway.
DOI STATEMENT ON SENTENCING OF FORMER NEW YORK CITY DEPARTMENT OF YOUTH AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYEE IN THEFT OF MORE THAN ONE HUNDRED CITY MOBILE PHONES
Margaret Garnett, Commissioner of the New York City Department of Investigation (“DOI”), issued the
following statement concerning ERIC LUNA, a former New York City Department of Youth and Community
Development (“DYCD”) employee, who was sentenced today to six months in prison and three years’
supervised release in connection with the theft of more than one hundred City-purchased mobile phones,
which LUNA then diverted and sold online and through other methods for a total of $124,098 in profit. As part
of his sentencing, LUNA will forfeit $124,098, and pay an additional $124,098 in restitution to the City. U.S.
District Judge P. Kevin Castel imposed the sentence in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New
York in Manhattan. The office of Geoffrey S. Berman, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New
York, prosecuted the case.
DOI Commissioner Margaret Garnett said, “This City worker betrayed the public trust by using his
position to steal dozens of cell phones procured by the City for agency personnel and re-sell them for his own
financial gain. Luna made tens of thousands of dollars through this scheme, but it cost him his job and bought
him jail time. DOI thanks the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District for their partnership and prosecution of
this matter.”
LUNA, 36, of the Bronx, N.Y., was arrested in March 2018 and charged with theft of government
funds and wire fraud. He was employed as a Community Coordinator with DYCD since August 2015 and
received an annual salary of approximately $61,334 upon his resignation in April 2018.
According to the criminal complaint and DOI’s investigation, beginning in August 2015, more than one
hundred mobile telecommunications devices procured by DYCD for use by the agency were improperly
diverted by LUNA, who then offered the devices for sale through third-party vendors and over the internet.
The proceeds from those sales went into LUNA’s personal checking and online accounts.
A second City worker, IGOR GOLDSHTEYN, 44, of Staten Island, N.Y., an employee of the City Fire
Department (“FDNY”) was also arrested in March 2018 and charged in a separate but similar scheme,
diverting mobile phones purchased by FDNY and selling those devices online for profit. GOLDSHTEYN
pleaded guilty to theft of federal funds on December 7, 2018, and was sentenced to five years’ probation,
ordered to pay a fine of $4,000, forfeit $18,000 and ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $18,000.
GOLDSHTEYN was employed with the FDNY since August 2015 and, at the time of his arrest in
March 2018, served as a Certified IT Administrator receiving an annual salary of approximately $87,371. He
was on leave from the FDNY from August 2018 until he formally left the agency in April 2019.
DOI Commissioner Garnett thanked Geoffrey S. Berman, United States Attorney for the Southern
District of New York, and his staff, for their partnership in this investigation, in particular, Assistant United
States Attorney Dominic Gentile of the General Crimes Unit, who prosecuted the LUNA and GOLDSHTEYN
cases. Commissioner Garnett also thanked New York City Department of Information Technology &
Telecommunications Commissioner Samir Saini, DYCD Commissioner Bill Chong, and FDNY Commissioner
Daniel A. Nigro, and their staffs, for their cooperation in this investigation.
Comptroller Stringer: Playground “Deserts” Leave Too Many NYC Children with No Place to Play
Playground construction is failing to keep pace with the growing population of children in several neighborhoods
Brooklyn is the most under-served borough, with only eight playgrounds for every 10,000 children
Playground maintenance is completely inadequate, with 521 NYC Parks playgrounds having at least one hazardous feature requiring “immediate attention”
Comptroller Stringer launches “Pavement to Playgrounds” campaign, utilizing an innovative model for building out city playgrounds and calling for the construction of 200 new playgrounds in the next five years
New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer released a new report, “State of Play: A New Model for NYC Playgrounds,” documenting a severe shortage of playgrounds in New York City, particularly in neighborhoods that have seen the fastest population growth. Access to playgrounds varies significantly across community districts, with some containing more than triple the number of playgrounds as others on a per child basis, and neighborhoods with the largest population of children — e.g. Bensonhurst, Borough Park, Corona, Richmond Hill, and Flatbush — having fewer than four NYC Parks playgrounds for every 10,000 children. Looking more broadly, New York City ranks a lowly 48th in playgrounds per capita among the 100 largest American cities, evidence that the City has not sufficiently invested in recreational facilities and failed to anticipate, prepare, and respond to shifting demographics.
Meanwhile, conditions at hundreds of NYC Parks playgrounds were found to be substandard during their latest inspections. In 2018, inspectors found that 521 NYC Parks playgrounds had at least one hazardous feature that required “immediate attention.” These included 807 “Priority 2 Hazards” that “present the chance of slight to moderate injury” and 29 “Priority 1 Hazards” that “present the chance of life-threatening or debilitating injury.”
To address this urgent need, Comptroller Stringer outlined sweeping recommendations for reform, including calling on the City to build 200 new playgrounds in the next five years. Many of these new facilities would be built through Stringer’s newly envisioned “Pavement to Playgrounds” program — a proposed partnership between NYC Parks, the New York City Department of Transportation (DOT), local nonprofits, and community boards — to construct playgrounds and plazas on lightly used residential blocks. Other recommendations from the report include dramatically expanding the successful “Schoolyards to Playgrounds” program, increasing resources for NYC Parks maintenance, developing stronger protections for “Jointly Operated Playgrounds” on DOE property, and ensuring that playgrounds are designed to serve a wide range of ages to better promote learning, playing, and socializing.
“Playgrounds are essential public spaces, offering children a place to socialize, learn, be active, and exercise their imaginations. They are also spaces for children and families to meet their neighbors and develop strong bonds. But our findings reveal stark disparities in access to these critical public spaces in New York City,” said Comptroller Stringer. “That’s why our City needs to overhaul the planning, construction, and maintenance of our playground system. We can make a major impact on the lives and health of New York City children by substantially expanding the number of playgrounds in neighborhoods that are in dire need of these spaces, while also ensuring they are well-maintained and safe for every child.”
The State of New York City’s Playgrounds
Comptroller Stringer’s report examined all 2,067 municipal playgrounds in New York City, of which 1,028 are overseen by Parks, 796 are managed by NYCHA, and 243 are “Schoolyards to Playgrounds” conversions co-administered by NYC Parks and the New York City Department of Education (DOE).
NYC Parks Playgrounds 1,028 | NYCHA Playgrounds 796 | Schoolyards to Playgrounds Conversions 243 |
TOTAL
2,067
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- Brooklyn is the most underserved borough, with only 8 playgrounds for every 10,000 children under the age of ten years old. Manhattan had 15 and Staten Island had 11 playgrounds per 10,000 children.
- In eight Community Districts (CD), there are fewer than five playgrounds for every 10,000 children, including: Crown Heights South & Prospect Lefferts (CD9), Flatbush & Midwood (CD14), Bensonhurst (CD11), Borough Park (CD12), Jackson Heights (CD3), and Woodhaven & Richmond Hill (CD9).
- To a large extent, these disparities are driven by a failure to anticipate, prepare for, and respond to changing demographics in our city. For instance, in the 15 neighborhoods with the lowest ratio of playgrounds, the number of local children increased by a robust 14 percent in recent years, from 275,088 in 2010 to 313,122 in 2017—or 89 percent of the net growth in children city-wide.
A Lack of Safety
Comptroller Stringer’s report also found that hundreds of NYC Parks playgrounds were rated as “unacceptable” by Parks Inspection Program inspectors due to a) multiple features being unsatisfactory, b) one feature having a serious safety hazard, or c) the playground having a failed cleanliness rating.
- Brooklyn had 24 percent of its playgrounds designated as “unacceptable” — the highest percentage citywide.
- More than 25 percent of playgrounds were found to be “unacceptable” in 12 Community Districts, including one in Manhattan, two in the Bronx, three in Queens, and six in Brooklyn (see above).
- 521 NYC Parks playgrounds had at least one “hazardous feature” that required immediate attention (see below). This included 52 pieces of play equipment, 34 benches, 42 fences, and 282 paved and safety surfaces that presented a chance of injury.
Pavement to Playgrounds: An Innovative Approach to Scaling Up our Playground Network
Comptroller Stringer’s report outlined a new model for building out New York City playgrounds, inspired by a small neighborhood playground in Crown Heights. In partnership with DOT and local community boards, NYC Parks would identify neighborhood streets with minimal through traffic — either disconnected from the local grid or at dead ends — and build playgrounds mid-block (see rendering below). Angled street parking would be introduced so that the total number of parking spots would remain constant.
Expanding the “Schoolyards to Playgrounds” Program
Comptroller Stringer’s report highlighted the success of the City’s “Schoolyards to Playgrounds” program, a partnership between NYC Parks, the New York City Department of Education (DOE), the New York City School Construction Authority (SCA), and the Trust for Public Land.
Comptroller Stringer called for an additional 100 “Schoolyard to Playground” conversions in the next five years, specifically targeting high-need neighborhoods in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens that have experienced a substantial increase in their youth population.
Maintenance for Playgrounds
Given the high number of playgrounds with hazardous conditions, Comptroller Stringer called on NYC Parks to prioritize playground maintenance to ensure hazardous conditions are addressed through increased funding for maintenance and operations. These budget increases should be consistent with proposals outlined by the Play Fair Coalition — a consortium of more than 100 community-based organizations as well as NYC Parks employees.
Councilman Torres Calls For Metro North Clean Up on East 161st. Street Metro North Area
Standing on the corner of Park Avenue and East 161st. Street Councilman Ritchie Torres called for the MTA to clean up the garbage from inside the gated area behind him which is on Metro North property. He said that he has an organization that would clean the garbage if the MTA would allow access to the filthy area.
Standing with Councilman Torres was a resident of the Morrisania Houses Ms. Tanya Pedler who said that rats come from all the trash and garbage thrown around the tracks. Also were members of Wildcat, an organization that hires people to clean up business areas.
Councilman Torres was asked when he learned of the situation, answering a few weeks ago. There was no answer as to how the larger items got inside the gated area, or a solution to keep future items out of this gated area.
Above - The gated area leading to where Councilman Torres says the Metro North should clean or give him access to allow his clean up workers do the clean up.
Below - A Metro North train passes under 161st Street at the point where Councilman Torres called for a clean up.
SAGE - We told our stories—and it made a difference
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#BXnightmarket - So much new food to try...here's some info to help you plan better
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