Thursday, October 22, 2020
STATE AGENCIES ANNOUNCE KEY MILESTONE FOR ADIRONDACK RAIL TRAIL
MAYOR DE BLASIO ANNOUNCES CITY WILL ADVANCE FUNDING FOR HOUSING NEW YORK PLAN
Greetings and Welcomes (2 Mins.)
Overview of the agenda (3 Mins.)
House Rules (5 Mins.)
Reviewing the Zoom features
Adding your name/neighborhood you live in to chat box
Sign-in form
Introducing Juan Nunez from Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition
Juan Nunez speaks (15 Mins.)
Q&A (10 Mins.)
Upcoming Elections and Creating a voting plan (10 Mins.)
Recap of last month meeting (10 Mins.)
Report on work Committee on Reactivating Bronx Progressives is doing (10 Mins.)
Reviewing and discussing Bylaws
Around the room discussion/Feedback (20 Mins.)
Next Steps (10 Mins.)
A call to action on reactivating Bronx Progressives
Recruitment of reliable members to serve in a steering committee to reactivate Bronx Progressives
Adjourn
MAYOR DE BLASIO, FIRST LADY CHIRLANE MCCRAY AND TASKFORCE ON RACIAL INCLUSION AND EQUITY ANNOUNCE EXPANSION OF MENTAL HEALTH SUPPORTS FOR STUDENTS IN NEIGHBORHOODS HARDEST HIT BY COVID-19
New initiatives will provide trauma-informed counseling and connect students to outpatient mental health clinics
Mayor Bill de Blasio and First Lady Chirlane McCray today announced that the City will add new mental health services to hundreds of schools in the neighborhoods hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. Two new programs will use existing resources to maximize mental health support for students and confront the trauma that has been caused by the public health crisis. This work is supported by the administration's Taskforce on Racial Inclusion & Equity, which brings an equity-based approach to COVID-19 response and recovery efforts in hardest-hit communities.
“COVID-19 has taken a tremendous emotional toll on our city’s students,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “Now, our educators, parents, and school communities will not endure the trauma of the pandemic alone. To those who are suffering, your city sees you and we are here to help.”’
“Now, more than ever, we want all of our students to know that they are not alone, and there are compassionate, trained professionals ready to help them process anxiety, grief and trauma that may have intensified during the pandemic.” said First Lady Chirlane McCray. “Parents and educators in our communities hardest hit by COVID-19 have called out for this kind of direct support and we are responding.”
More specifically, the School Mental Health Consultant Program was converted to the School Mental Health Specialist Program. Launched in 2016, the Consultant Program served 46% of the City’s public schools. Licensed social workers worked with these schools to survey their existing mental health resources, build custom mental health plans, and, when needed, connect students to mental health support in the school system and to clinical services in their community. Currently staffed by mental health workers, the Consultant Program has delivered 6,993 trainings to 217,379 Department of Education (DOE) teachers and staff since 2016.
Under the new program, the current mental health workers will become Specialists and begin delivering trauma-informed group work, to students at 350 schools in the neighborhoods hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. Starting in late October, each Specialist will serve up to five schools, and, in addition to direct services, will provide mental health education to caregivers and school staff to help them address students’ mental health needs and strengthen community and family ties.
The Specialist program, like the Consultant program, will be implemented by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH), in partnership with DOE, with programmatic oversight from ThriveNYC. The $8.7 million Fiscal Year 2021 budget for the Consultant Program will be entirely converted to support the Specialist program, with the new direct service model requiring no additional costs. The Mayor’s Fund has raised $35,000 to cover the cost of training curriculum and material to transition the program. Data on the program’s reach and impact will be regularly published on ThriveNYC’s data dashboard.
Second, a first-ever formal partnership between NYC Health + Hospitals (H+H) and the City’s public schools will directly connect 26 schools in the neighborhoods hardest hit by COVID-19 to outpatient mental health clinics, where children and adolescents can receive ongoing therapy, psychiatric evaluation, medication management, and other clinical services. A designated staff person will be appointed in each school to coordinate directly with H+H, ensuring that referrals happen quickly and easily for students in need. Schools will also receive training to better understand when a referral to ongoing mental healthcare at H+H may help a student.
In the last six years, the City has significantly expanded onsite mental health services in schools, including adding clinics to over 200 high-need schools across the City. For some students with ongoing or acute mental health needs, schools may need to connect students to community-based providers. The new H+H initiative, Pathways to Care, closes this critical gap in care, expediting referrals and connection to community-based services for students in the neighborhoods that have experienced high levels of trauma and loss during the COVID-19 pandemic. This new partnership will use existing resources, without the need for a new budget. Pathways to Care will be implemented by H+H and DOE, with programmatic oversight from the Mayor’s Office of ThriveNYC.
While schools are operating both in-person and virtually, students and their families will be able to access services through both of these new programs both onsite and via tele-mental health.
The strategies announced today are part of an ongoing, citywide effort to meet the mental health needs of children and young people in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic. In August, the Mayor, First Lady and Chancellor announced the Bridge to School program to help schools integrate trauma-informed practices into school reopening, following an historic investment to address the social-emotional needs of students. In addition, ThriveNYC and DOE collaborate on several innovative mental health programs that serve children and families, which offer a combination of in-person and tele-mental health support during the pandemic.
“The academic success and mental health of our students are completely intertwined, and this direct support to our hardest hit communities will be invaluable in supporting our students as we continue to navigate this pandemic,” said Schools Chancellor Richard A. Carranza. “These initiatives give schools reliable and easily accessible care, and I thank the Mayor and First Lady for their unwavering dedication to the health and wellbeing of our students.”
“Whether it was the impact of months of isolation, coping with loss due to COVID-19, or anxieties associated with the pandemic, it is critical that students receive the proper mental health support now, and we’re proud to be partnering with other City agencies to make this a reality,” said NYC Health + Hospitals Deputy Chief Medical Officer and Director of the Office of Behavioral Health Charles Barron, MD. “School-aged children and young adults are at a pivotal stage of development and it’s important to provide the most comprehensive mental health services conveniently so they can overcome the stresses and trauma felt by so many during this pandemic.”
"From the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, children have coped with stressors at home, family illness and loss," said Dr. Daniel Stephens, Deputy Commissioner for Family Child Health for the New York City Health Department. "Schools offer a supportive environment where children and families can receive mental health care and connections to necessary resources. I am proud to partner with DOE, H+H, and Thrive NYC to provide these critical mental health services."
"So many students in our schools are coping with the profound emotional toll of the COVID-19 pandemic - from grief, loss and trauma to anxiety and isolation," said Susan Herman, Director of the Mayor's Office of ThriveNYC. "With these new strategies, the City is acting swiftly to bring more mental health support to the children and young people who need it most right now. I thank all the clinicians and mental health workers who are meeting this extraordinary moment with creativity and resolve."
"Young New Yorkers have been facing the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemics on all fronts--in school, at home, and in their communities. Individualized attention and support is key to ensuring they remain mentally and physically healthy and resilient," said Toya Williford, Executive Director of the Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City. "We are proud to leverage the strength of our partnerships to help provide the necessary support and care to the children of this city."
“Now, more than ever, students and families need support for their mental health and well-being,” said Sideya Sherman, Executive Director of the Taskforce on Racial Inclusion & Equity and EVP for Community Engagement & Partnerships at NYCHA. “These new initiatives will bring much needed mental health services and connections to outpatient clinical services, to schools in the communities hardest-hit by COVID-19. Through interagency collaboration, the City is taking proactive steps to meet the social and emotional needs of young people.”
"The American Psychological Association applauds this plan to provide much-needed care to New York City's school children," said APA CEO Arthur C. Evans, PhD. "We know from our polling research that the youngest generation is experiencing the most stress of all age groups as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic so extra attention to their mental health needs will be critical to their future development."
“New York City’s children have lost so much to COVID, beloved family members have died, school has been disrupted, and normal and needed activities with friends have been on hold for months and months,” said Linda Rosenberg, Executive Director of External Relations, Columbia University Department of Psychiatry. “Mayor de Blasio and First Lady Chirlane McCray’s decision to use existing resources to add mental health services to hundreds of schools in the neighborhoods hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic is right and just. In a crisis of this dimension and duration, we must attend to the present while building for the future, and our children are the future.”
“Children and young adults have been the ones most deeply affected by the pandemic across a variety of mental health indicators, including anxiety, depression, and self-harm or even suicidal thinking,” said Paul Gionfriddo, President and CEO of Mental Health America. “At Mental Health America, literally millions have come directly to us or our local affiliates for help since the start of the pandemic. It is essential that we support them where they are – in their homes, neighborhoods, and schools. This great initiative can serve as a model for the nation and remind communities that no matter how many resources they have, it is essential to direct as many of these as possible to supporting the mental health of our children during these incredibly challenging times.”
head of Pivotal November Election, NYIC Action Announces Endorsement of Vice President Joe Biden for President - BUT
We are starting with our Editor's Comment first, because one has to read this endorsement carefully.
This endorsement follows a 2016 endorsement by NYIC Action of Hillary Clinton for President, after she had committed to launch critical immigration initiatives.
Why would NYIC Action endorse someone who could not get their critical immigration initiatives passed for the eight years he was Vice-President from 2008 through 2015? It does not make any sense.
NYIC Action also puts two different dates as to when it was founded. In this press release it states founded as a sister organization to the New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC) a 501(C)(3) organization. 501(C)(3)'s are forbidden from any political endorsements, that is why the 501(C)(4) title was created so that the same organization could endorse under the separate 501(C))4) title.
So NYIC when was the 501(C)(4) created? in 2010 as listed in this press release, or in 2007 as listed on the website states?
About NYIC Action
NYIC Action (nyicaction.org) was originally formed in 2010 as a sister organization to the New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC), a 501(c)(3) coalition with 200 member organizations across New York State. In order to increase the political potency of the immigrant vote, Immigrant Action endorses candidates and elected officials who stand up for immigrant communities and against anti-immigrant opponents. Immigrant Action engages in targeted advocacy on specific immigrant-related issues such as legislative scorecards, pointed advocacy flyers highlighting individual elected officials’ stances, and intensive grassroots and direct lobbying of elected officials.
On the NYIC website the following is listed
NYIC Action was founded in 2007 as a a 501(c)(4) not for profit corporation, in order to make sure immigrants had a seat at the table of the national comprehensive immigration reform debate. We are pioneering a new immigrant power-building concept by building a large base of dues-paying individual members who will be directly plugged into potent immigrant rights advocacy campaigns. Working with our sister 501(c)(3) organization, the New York Immigration Coalition, NYIC Action will outreach to the over 200 nonprofit organizations serving immigrants in New York State.
In order to increase the political potency of the immigrant vote NYIC Action endorses candidates and elected officials who stand up for immigrant communities and against anti-immigrant opponents. NYIC Action engages in targeted advocacy on specific immigrant-related issues such as legislative scorecards, pointed advocacy flyers highlighting individual elected officials’ stances, and intensive grassroots and direct lobbying of elected officials.
NYIC Action is a founding board member of Movement of Immigrants in America (Mia), a national 501(c)(4) membership organization.
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Councilman Salamanca and Assemblyman Rivera Food/Mask Giveaway at Keith Plaza
Councilman Rafael Salamanca and Assemblyman Jose Rivera came to Keith Plaza opposite the Bronx Zoo to give away five-hundred boxes of food (provided by the Metropolitan Council), and a face mask for every box of food.
Keith Plaza was chosen by Assemblyman Rivera because there are two thirty-one story buildings and two schools there. Each elected official brought a crew of help to hand out the boxes of food and face masks. Also on hand was the new Male District Leader for the 78th Assembly District Angel Santana. The line of people was down the block, but they received their food and face mask quickly.
Above - Assemblyman Jose Rivera gives some last minute instructions to those who will be handing out the five-hundred boxes of food in the background.
Below - Assemblyman Rivera, Councilman Salamanca, and District Leader Santana stand with boxes of food.
Above - District Leader Santana places this box of food on this persons wagon.
Below - Northwest Bronx Democrats founder places a Northwest Bronx Democrats Club Pin on Councilman Salamanca as Assemblyman Rivera videos the event.
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
49Pct - Neighborhood Coordination Officers Sector A – Build The Block Meeting
Wednesday evening the 49th Precinct Neighborhood Coordination Officers for Sector A held a Build the Block meeting at the F & J Pines. NCO officers Stephen Brancatelli and Patrick Nicewicz have been NCO Sector A partners since the tart of the NCO program in the 49th Precinct, and were well received as they always are at community meetings.
The two officers were joined by the Youth Coordination Officer, Transit Division 12 officers, and Crime Prevention officer Tyrone Mederos who all spoke about what was going on in their areas of expertise. all took questions , and stayed to answer any more individual question s or complaints.
MAJOR MILESTONE REACHED IN CITY’S COMMITMENT TO CLOSE RIKERS ISLAND JAILS
Latest steps come on the anniversary of the historic City Council vote to shutter Rikers Island and bring new, modern facilities closer to communities
The de Blasio Administration today reaffirmed its commitment to the closure of jails on Rikers Island, providing the City Planning Commission with the most comprehensive plan to date to build four new borough-based facilities.
With a new completion date of 2027, the timeframe will allow adequate time for City officials, community stakeholders, justice advocates, building contractors, and others to work together to ensure the best possible results amid the interruptions caused by the COVID-19 crisis. The date also maintains the Mayor’s commitment to finishing the project in a 10-year timeframe.
“We are moving forward with our historic plan to close Rikers Island and create a smaller, safer and more humane jail system,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “This comprehensive plan gets us one step closer to bringing people back to their communities, one step closer to ending the cycle of recidivism and one step closer to ending mass incarceration once and for all.”
"The City Council overwhelming voted to close Rikers Island, and our goal of shutting this living symbol of mass incarceration in our city remains the same. Today’s vote ensures that there is a legally binding mechanism for this administration and future administrations to stay on that course and I want to acknowledge and thank the criminal justice advocacy community for all their efforts to get us here,” said Council Speaker Corey Johnson.
The updated plans come on the anniversary of the historic City Council vote that began the process of shuttering the jails on Rikers Island, and the building of new smaller, safer, fairer facilities. The vote represented the culmination of years of efforts, begun by justice and community activists. Mayor de Blasio announced the City’s plans for borough-based facilities in August 2018, kicking off the City’s land use process that ended with the successful Council vote in October 2019.
The City’s ability to close the island jails on Rikers will be made possible by the continued reduction of the City’s incarcerated population. Since 2013, the number of people in jail has dropped significantly, down 61% from the 11,500 seven years ago. The City has simultaneously invested in jail diversion for those awaiting trial like the award-winning Supervised Release program, alternatives to incarceration programs for those who would otherwise serve jail sentences, as well as robust re-entry services to help keep those departing jail from ever returning.
The updated plans presented to the City Planning Commission include dates through the end of 2021 for request for proposals from interested developers and architects to participate in the innovative design-build process. Designers and builders are paired to streamline the construction process, from concept to shovels in the ground, while saving taxpayer money. The borough-based program is the City’s first use of this system.
The proposal process will have the added benefit of a peer review as an additional step to ensure designs meet the highest levels of quality. The Manhattan peer review is being facilitated by The Architectural League of New York's Executive Director Rosalie Genevro.
The request for proposals to the pre-qualitied Manhattan design-build teams will be issued before the end of 2020.
“We remain committed to moving operations into new borough-based facilities that represent the very best in correctional design, and providing the safest, most humane environment possible for those who work and live in our jails. We have not, however, waited for the physical move and have made great strides towards realizing positive culture change and implementing best correctional practices,” said Department of Correction Commissioner Cynthia Brann.
"The process of creating a new model for justice in New York City and the nation begins with literally building a better system from the ground up. The design and construction of the new borough-based facilities represents a powerful initial opportunity to further transform justice in New York City," said Elizabeth Glazer, Director of the Mayor's Office of Criminal Justice. "We expect our new justice facilities to have a significant beneficial effect on the lives and well-being of those inside who are detained and those who work inside, as well as become civic assets for the communities in which they are situated."
“We continue to move the City’s Borough Based Jails program forward to meet the essential goal of closing Rikers island and building more equitable and just facilities closer to courts, services and loved ones,” said NYC Department of Design and Construction Commissioner Lorraine Grillo. “New, borough-based facilities are a cornerstone of the historic effort to close Rikers and DDC is working to deliver humane and safe facilities.”