Wednesday, January 20, 2021

Attorney General James Responds to President Trump's Latest Round of Pardons and Commutations

 

New York Attorney General Letitia James this morning released the following statement in response to President Donald Trump using his presidential authority to issue 143 pardons and commutations in his final hours as president:

“President Donald Trump started his administration with unethical behavior and he will end it no differently. The 143 pardons and commutations, issued in the twilight hours of the Trump Administration, perfectly sum up what this lame-duck president has always been about: favoritism towards those who show absolute loyalty to Donald Trump. At noon today, the Trump presidency and this national nightmare will finally be over. In a matter of hours, the rule of law will be restored and our nation will begin to heal from four years of abuse, corruption, and hate. We are all counting down the minutes.”

346 Days and Counting Down

 


346 days until a new Mayor.

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Second Two-Hundred Bed Single Adult Men's Homeless Shelter Proposed For Community Board 11


A proposed second 200 bed Single Adult Men's homeless shelter has been proposed for 1682 Stillwell Avenue, on the site of a closed automotive repair shop. This will be the second 200 bed Single Adult Men's Shelter sited for Community Board 11, and would be more than fifty percent of the homeless responsibility the board has. So why the need for more single adult men's homeless shelters?

I was able to ask that very question of Mayor Bill de Blasio last year where as he said that since the beginning of the new 'No Cash Bail Law' there was an increase of Single Adult Males, and Females who can no longer be held because they could not afford bail. There is a formula that the Department of Homeless Services uses to place the homeless, which is not to be more than twenty-five percent of either single adult males or females, with seventy-five percent or more families. 

While the Bronx has only eighteen percent of the entire population of the city, the Bronx houses thirty-seven percent of the homeless population. This also was brought up to the mayor by me, and his response was that the city would stop sending homeless people to the Bronx from other boroughs, that is unless it is an emergency situation. 

The sites chosen for the two Community Board 11 Single Adult Men's homeless shelters 1682 Stillwell Avenue and the 1400 Blondell Avenue need Environmental Impact Statements done on each site to see what hazardous materials are on or below the sites. The Blondell Avenue site is also a closed auto repair shop, and is next to Royal Flush, a Portable toilet company which cleans out their units on site with unknown chemicals. The Stillwell Avenue site is next to a parking lot that has partially caved in, by the 311 call center, and next to the Amtrak/Metro North railroad tracks.  

There is also the question of what homeless men will be placed in the two sites, Blondell Avenue 4- 5 blocks from Lehman High School, and 2 - 3 blocks from PS 12, while 1682 Stillwell Avenue is less than two blocks from the Icahn Charter School. Level One sex Offenders are determined to be low risk off reoffending and low risk to the public, and Level Two Sex Offenders have a moderate risk of reoffending could be placed in either or both of these homeless shelters. Level Three Sex Offenders are considered to have a high risk of reoffending, and would not be placed in either shelter. There are 2,286 sex offenders in the Bronx, 726 level one, 870 level two, 640 level three, and 50 undetermined. The Bronx has the highest number of sex offenders of all five boroughs in NYC, and any county in New York State according to Division of Criminal Justice. 

Above - 1400 Blondell Avenue

Below - Royal Flush on a normal day.





Above -  1682 Stillwell Avenue

Below - The parking lot next to 1682 Stillwell Avenue, with the 311 call center and Amtrak/Metro North Railroad tracks behind the site.



NYC Public Advocate WILLIAMS CALLS ON CITY AND STATE TO RELEASE REAL-TIME COVID-19 VACCINATION DEMOGRAPHIC DATA

 

 "Speed, equity, and efficiency are not mutually exclusive aspects of vaccine distribution - they are as interconnected as they are essential. The city and state were delayed in recognizing and responding to the disparity in COVID-19 cases and resource distribution for some demographic and geographic groups, with deadly results. We cannot repeat the same errors in distributing the vaccine, particularly in a moment when trust in government is both critical and critically depleted. 

"I have called on the city and state to transparently report the data of vaccine distribution to date, continue those reports in real time, and demonstrate a strategy for reaching high risk communities and high risk workers moving forward with the limited supply of doses available. When the administration delayed the release of demographic data we requested on social distancing enforcement, it ultimately showed what we suspected- communities of more color disproportionately harmed. If the same is true now, immediate steps must be taken to expose and address disparity. Getting the vaccine to New Yorkers quickly and safely is an incredible challenge, but with strong leadership, not an insurmountable one."

U.S. Army Soldier Arrested For Attempting To Assist ISIS To Conduct Deadly Ambush On U.S. Troops

 

U.S. Army Private First Class Cole James Bridges Provided Tactical Guidance in Attempt to Help ISIS to Attack U.S. Forces in the Middle East

 Audrey Strauss, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, John C. Demers, the Assistant Attorney General for National Security, William F. Sweeney Jr., Assistant Director-in-Charge of the New York Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), Dermot Shea, Commissioner of the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”), and Roy T. Cochran, Director, U.S. Army Counterintelligence Coordinating Authority, announced today the arrest of COLE JAMES BRIDGES, a/k/a “Cole Gonzales,” a Private First Class in the U.S. Army, on federal terrorism charges based on BRIDGES’s alleged efforts to assist ISIS to attack and kill U.S. soldiers in the Middle East.  BRIDGES was charged by Complaint with attempting to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization, and attempting to murder U.S. military service members.  The FBI and Army Counterintelligence arrested BRIDGES today, and he will be presented on Thursday, January 21, 2021, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss said:  “As alleged, Cole Bridges betrayed the oath he swore to defend the United States by attempting to provide ISIS with tactical military advice to ambush and kill his fellow service members.  Our troops risk their lives for our country, but they should never face such peril at the hands of one of their own.  Today, thanks to the efforts of the agents and detectives of the JTTF, and our partners in the Department of Defense, Bridges is in custody and facing federal terrorism charges for his alleged crimes.”

Assistant Attorney General John C. Demers said:  “Bridges is charged with giving military advice and guidance on how to kill fellow soldiers to individuals he thought were part of ISIS.  This alleged personal and professional betrayal of comrades and country is terrible to contemplate, but fortunately, the FBI was able to identify the threat posed by Bridges, and today’s charges are the first step in holding him accountable for his crimes.  ISIS ideology continues to infect those who would threaten the nation’s security from within and without, and we will continue to fight this threat.”

FBI Assistant Director William F. Sweeney Jr. said:  “As we allege today, Bridges, a private in the U.S. Army, betrayed our country and his unit when he plotted with someone he believed was an ISIS sympathizer to help ISIS attack and kill U.S. soldiers in the Middle East.   Fortunately, the person with whom he communicated was an FBI employee, and we were able to prevent his evil desires from coming to fruition.  Bridges could have chosen a life of honorable service, but instead he traded it for the possibility of a lengthy prison sentence.  This case should serve as a reminder that the FBI’s New York JTTF will never quit in its commitment to protect our Nation from all those who seek to do it harm.”

Army Counterintelligence Coordinating Authority Director Roy T. Cochran said:  “Army Counterintelligence’s top priority is protecting the force so it can remain committed to fighting and winning our Nation’s wars.  The results of this investigation show the efforts of Army Counterintelligence agents working alongside our partners in the FBI.  We are dedicated to protecting our Soldiers, Civilians, and Families from terrorist acts and insider threats.”

According to the criminal Complaint charging BRIDGES,[1] which was unsealed today in Manhattan federal court:

BRIDGES joined the U.S. Army in approximately September 2019, and was assigned as a cavalry scout in the 3rd Infantry Division based in Fort Stewart, Georgia.  Beginning in at least 2019, BRIDGES began researching and consuming online propaganda promoting jihadists and their violent ideology.  BRIDGES also expressed his support for the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (“ISIS”) and jihad on social media.  In or about October 2020, BRIDGES began communicating with an FBI online covert employee (the “OCE”), who was posing as an ISIS supporter in contact with ISIS fighters in the Middle East.  During these communications, BRIDGES expressed his frustration with the U.S. military and his desire to aid ISIS.  BRIDGES then provided training and guidance to purported ISIS fighters who were planning attacks, including advice about potential targets in New York City, such as the 9/11 Memorial.  BRIDGES also provided the OCE with portions of a U.S. Army training manual and guidance about military combat tactics, for use by ISIS.

In or about December 2020, BRIDGES began to supply the OCE with instructions for the purported ISIS fighters on how to attack U.S. forces in the Middle East.  Among other things, BRIDGES diagrammed specific military maneuvers intended to help ISIS fighters maximize the lethality of attacks on U.S. troops.  BRIDGES further provided advice about the best way to fortify an ISIS encampment to repel an attack by U.S. Special Forces, including by wiring certain buildings with explosives to kill the U.S. troops.  Then, in January 2021, BRIDGES provided the OCE with a video of himself in body armor standing before a flag often used by ISIS fighters and making a gesture symbolic of support for ISIS.  Approximately a week later, BRIDGES sent a second video in which BRIDGES, using a voice manipulator, narrated a propaganda speech in support of the anticipated ambush by ISIS on U.S. troops.

BRIDGES, 20, of Stowe, Ohio, is charged in the Complaint with (1) attempting to provide material support to ISIS, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2339B, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison; and (2) attempting to murder U.S. military service members, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1114, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.  The statutory penalties are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant would be determined by the judge.

Ms. Strauss praised the outstanding efforts of the FBI’s New York Joint Terrorism Task Force, which consists of investigators and analysts from the FBI, the NYPD, and over 50 other federal, state, and local agencies.  Ms. Strauss also thanked U.S. Army Counterintelligence, the FBI Washington Field Office, the FBI Atlanta Field Office and its Savannah Resident Agency, the FBI Cleveland Field Office, the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Georgia, the Air Force Office of Special Investigations, U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command, and the U.S. Army 3rd Infantry Division for their assistance.

 [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.

Comptroller Stringer Releases ‘Fair Shot NYC’ Plan for Vaccine Equity

 

Calls on the City to release real-time demographic data by age, race, profession and zip code, mandate businesses provide paid time off for employees who need to get vaccinated, and ramp up outreach and education through public advertising campaigns and local community leaders and organizations

Urges more transparency and outreach to increase access for communities of color, low-income neighborhoods, outer borough zip codes, and immigrant New Yorkers 

 Today, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer released Fair Shot NYC, a vaccine equity plan to ensure that New Yorkers across backgrounds, income-levels, occupations and age groups have equitable access to vaccines as the City ramps up distribution. Comptroller Stringer’s Fair Shot NYC plan includes recommendations for more transparency and outreach to increase access for communities of color, lower-income neighborhoods, and immigrant New Yorkers.  Comptroller Stringer called on the City to release demographic data in real time broken down by age, race, profession and zip code, mandate businesses provide paid time off for employees who need to get vaccinated, and drastically scale up outreach and education through public advertising campaigns and local community leaders and organizations.

“Communities of color and lower-income New Yorkers bore the brunt of the pandemic, and now these same communities face systemic barriers to accessing life-saving vaccines,” said Comptroller Stringer. “We cannot continue to sideline our most vulnerable New Yorkers during the most important vaccine rollout of our lifetime. I am proposing a Vaccine Equity Agenda to center the communities who need it most and ensure our distribution and communication are meeting New Yorkers where they are – regardless of the color of your skin, language you speak, zip code you live in, or income you earn. That means not only making more data and information available to identify areas for improvement, but ramping up outreach efforts to proactively address and mitigate issues that are uncovered. We need to move quickly to ensure a fast and equitable vaccine rollout – our recovery from this pandemic depends on it.”

Comptroller Stringer’s Fair Shot NYC plan calls on the City to:

  • Release all demographic data in real time on who has received vaccination shots to date, with breakdowns by age, race, profession and zip code; allow for people to track in real time the availability of doses in their neighborhoods; ensure that there is broad racial equity in the provision of the vaccine and that New Yorkers of all backgrounds and incomes are able to receive the vaccine.
  • Mandate that all businesses provide paid time off for all employees who need to get a vaccination; give employees both days off for the deployment and to contend with any side effects or fatigue that might follow in the days after the shot.
  • Reassign the majority of contact tracers to the critical task of promoting vaccine access in all communities, including making appointments, with emphasis on the elderly and other high-risk groups. Given that significant community spread is unlikely to slow down until a significant proportion of the population is vaccinated, the city must prioritize vaccinating high-risk groups by getting shots in arms.
  • Massively ramp up outreach and public education and direct to consumer marketing through targeted public advertising campaigns combined with a new corps of “trusted messengers”, including faith leaders, workplace leaders, and other community leaders, as well as widely known public figures and influencers. The City should look for ways to partner with ethnic and community media to publicize key information in multiple languages. Given the nation’s long history of systemic racism and discrimination in public health, it is essential that the City work with and within impacted communities to combat mistrust, misinformation and avoid exacerbating health inequities.
  • Build strategic partnerships with employers of high-risk workers who are eligible for the vaccine, like Home Health Care agencies and supermarket chains, so they can share official information about how and where to get vaccinated with their workforces.
  • Plan for the anticipated arrival of new vaccines, including single-dose vaccines with less onerous storage requirements; explore the possibility of distributing vaccines within homes, apartment buildings, or other settings.
  • Establish a supply chain management task force, led by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and the Mayor’s Office of Operations, that will assign supply chain management workers to track and redistribute vaccine supplies in real time away from sites that are struggling with vaccine delivery, to higher performing sites, as well as provide capacity building and technical assistance to lower performing sites to increase their vaccination performance.

Comptroller Stringer sent a letter to Mayor de Blasio calling on the City to streamline and expedite vaccination and to utilize every available dose by creating “standby’’ lists of high-risk individuals, developing a central database of information to help hospitals and health care providers track demand and usage, and doubling down on outreach to communities to disseminate crucial information on eligibility and vaccination sites.

Governor Cuomo Updates New Yorkers on State's Progress During COVID-19 Pandemic - JANUARY 19, 2021

 

9,236 Patient Hospitalizations Statewide 

1,614 Patients in the ICU; 1,049 Intubated 

Statewide Positivity Rate is 7.06%

167 COVID-19 Deaths in New York State Yesterday

 Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today updated New Yorkers on the state's progress during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. 

"On the eve of a new federal administration, New York is encouraged by the accelerated progress we are confident we will make in the coming months on the COVID front," Governor Cuomo said. "We are seeing new strains of the virus from the UK, South Africa and Brazil that could spark a second wave. New York has used our experience from the spring to prepare our hospitals and our residents as we continue to fight this invisible enemy. As we prepare for better days, I encourage all New Yorkers to remain New York Tough: wear a mask, social distance and avoid large gatherings."

Today's data is summarized briefly below:

  • Test Results Reported - 177,269
  • Total Positive - 12,512
  • Percent Positive - 7.06%
  • Patient Hospitalization - 9,236 (+368)
  • Patients Newly Admitted - 922
  • Hospital Counties - 56
  • Number ICU - 1,614 (+91)
  • Number ICU with Intubation - 1,049 (+52)
  • Total Discharges - 117,052 (+550)
  • Deaths - 167
  • Total Deaths - 33,224

Mayor de Blasio News Briefing and COVID-19 Update


Mayor Bill de Blasio: Good morning, everyone. It’s a great day, because in just a little more than 24 hours we'll be able to say President Joe Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris and so much is going to change for the better for this nation for this city. It's an exciting moment. And there are so many reasons to be excited, the one I want to focus on is President-elect Biden's very clear, powerful pledge to vaccinate Americans at a record rate. He's calling for 100 million doses to be given in his first 100 days. I commend him. That's the kind of goal we need. What a clear departure from what we have known. And that's the kind of commitment that's going to help us here in New York City to get the vaccine we need, because the central message today is we are vaccinating people faster and faster, it's getting better and better, and just now we are running out a vaccine and we need it desperately. A new president, I think, is going to make all the difference.  

 

So, let's talk about what's going on with our vaccination effort here. It's extraordinary. Last week, we set a public goal of 175,000 vaccinations. We surpassed that goal this last week, ending Sunday, ending up the week was about 220,000 – over 220,000 vaccinations in New York City. So, the pace of vaccination is going faster and faster. Look, these numbers keep growing. What it meant – as of Sunday, that a New Yorker was being vaccinated every three seconds. That's what was happening in New York City. Every three seconds a New Yorker got vaccinated as of Sunday. As of today, since the beginning of the vaccination effort, 455,737 doses have been given here in New York City. Later today into tomorrow, we'll go get to half-a-million doses having been given since the beginning. Look, the good news is we have the ability to do this faster and faster. We're setting a goal for this week, assuming we have the vaccine – and I'll talk about that in a moment – if we have the vaccine we needed, we could vaccinate 300,000 people this week we're in right now – if we had the vaccine. The problem is, right now, we don't. So, right now, we had a small supply come in – today are coming in – today, 53,000 doses, leaving us with only 116,000 for the week ahead. Look, at the race we are going, we will begin to run out on Thursday – this Thursday, two days from now. And we will have literally nothing left to give as of Friday. What does that mean? It means if we don't get more vaccine quickly, a new supply of vaccine, we will have to cancel appointments and no longer give shots after Thursday for the remainder of the week at a lot of our sites. We will not get on the current schedule resupplied again until next Tuesday, which means for many of our sites we couldn't vaccinate again until the day after next Wednesday. This is crazy. This is not the way it should be. We have the ability to vaccinate a huge number of people. We need the vaccine to go with it.  

 

So, right now, it is up to the federal government, it is up to the State, it's up to the manufacturers to do everything they can to get us the maximum supply, because we are proving that, literally, every passing day, we can reach more and more people. Again, I'm very hopeful the Biden Administration is going to fix a lot of this. They are just coming into office, of course, it's going to take time, but their commitment is there and I appreciate that deeply. Right now, in New York City, capacity, growing every day – four 24/7 sites open right now, 15 Health Department hubs, new 24-seven sites coming, including the Empire Outlets in Staten Island, a Citi Field, which we’ve talked about before. Yankee Stadium, coming soon – and we're excited about that. Thank you to the New York Yankees. But all of this is what we need, but it won't work without vaccine. There are so many people ready to be vaccinated. We need the vaccine to reach all the New Yorkers who, right now, are ready to put their arms out and get the shot.  

 

Now, I want to talk about what it's going to take, going forward, to get this right. Supply, of course, but let's talk about the approach we need. So, we're putting forward today five principles that really should govern what we do from now on. If we're going to get this right, if we're going to make it fast and smooth and really hit the huge numbers we need over the coming months, these are the five principles that should govern our actions. One – supply, bottom line. Federal government and the manufacturers, working with the State, maximize the supply to New York City because we have shown a trajectory, we have shown what is going to be – what's going to be possible in terms of vaccinating – hundreds of thousands of people. Again, the goal this week, 300,000 people, we're confident we can make it if we have the vaccine. Next week, even more. Get us the vaccine. So, that's one. Two – if we put together more and more sites, the vaccine has to be there to meet the sites. So, the bottom line is, we want maximum sites, we want this to be as decentralized as possible, we want this to be as local as possible. That's what's going to encourage people. You know, we talked a while ago about all the hesitancy out there. Well, we see that hesitancy is reducing and more and more people want the vaccine, particularly older New Yorkers. But if it's hard to get to, that is going to slow things down. We want as many sites as possible, as local as possible. Number three, cut the red tape, keep the supply flowing. Federal government, State government have a variety rules. Some of those rules are making things go a lot slower than they have to. We have to reduce those bottlenecks. We don't need complexity. We need simplicity at a moment like this. So, the idea is, the better we know what kind of supply we're going to have that we can rely on, it is moving fast, we understand exactly what we can depend on, the more people we can vaccinate, the more lives we can save. Number four – again, the importance of localness. We want people to trust this process. If they're going to a local site, if they're going to a site staffed by local people, if local organizations are involved in that site, that is going to engender trust. So, hesitancy is clearly still out there. There's still trust issues that have to be addressed, but those issues get mitigated if more and more local people are involved, trusted people, trusted organizations and the site are of, and by, and for the community with community-based providers involved – that's the direction of the future. That's what's going to help us to reach millions and millions of New Yorkers. And then, number five, let's keep it simple – let's recognize that we need all of the folks who should be vaccinated to have the right to be vaccinated. We need the freedom to vaccinate a whole variety of people in the same site for just pure efficiency. And we also have some folks who still don't qualify. It just doesn't make sense. Let's look at our Sanitation workers – we absolutely depend on them, they've been heroes throughout the coronavirus crisis. I want to thank all the men and women of the Sanitation Department that you don't get the credit you deserve a lot of time, but I feel deeply for what you do. And I thank you every chance I get. You should have the right to be vaccinated. We need you. You should have the right to be vaccinated. We need you on the job. We need to protect you.  

 

But there's other folks too – and I want to talk about our court system, our DA’s, our grand juries. Look, right now, in addition to the coronavirus crisis, we've got a lot of work to do to address what's happened in our neighborhoods as a result of this perfect storm of the COVID crisis. So many things afflicting so many people simultaneously, and that created real issues in our neighborhoods. If we're going to fight back some of the challenges we've had, we need the criminal justice system to be working nonstop. It can't be bogged down. Therefore, it makes all the sense in the world to say, look, folks who work in our court system, folks who work in our District Attorney's offices, the folks who are presenting the cases that help bring justice to help protect communities, the folks who are going to step forward to be jurors. If you get a notice to join a grand jury you should know you can do that safely. So, I want to thank some of my colleagues in government, District Attorney Melinda Katz, of Queens; District Attorney Cy Vance, in Manhattan – they've been raising these issues to me. Clearly, we want people to serve on juries. We want them to be safe. We need those juries to happen reliably. That's part of how we intensify our efforts and safety in the city. Everyone who participates in a jury should have the opportunity to get vaccinated so they know that they can do – they can participate safely. It's going to be an encouragement. And that's how we get rid of this huge backlog of cases. Our criminal justice system, it's almost been a year since it's functioned normally. Let's deal with that backlog. If everyone's vaccinated, then they can have the assurance that they can come forward and do the job.  

 

Okay. So, that is a lot of what we need to do. Those principles govern what we need to do, going forward. That's going to put us on a real war footing, where we can really vaccinate people on a huge level. That's going to make sure that folks who need the vaccine first are getting it. That's going to make sure that effort is local and powerful and reaches people. That's all a strong, clear path forward. Now, I mentioned the court system in particular, and now I want to link it to another important issue. Again, we've got so much to do in the year 2021, to bring our city back, to speed our recovery. We've got so much to do to make our communities safe, both in terms of the health front and public safety in general. The best way to do that, of course, get everyone vaccinated, but another crucial part of the equation is deepening the relationship between police and community. We know we have work to do, and we're committed to doing that work. That's what neighborhood policing has been about all along. The NYPD in the year 2021, is going to redouble its efforts to gain trust and understanding and mutual respect at the community level. There's a lot of ways you do that. Neighborhood policing tells us that one of the number-one ways is just communicate, a lot of person-to-person communication locally. And that's been a really clear, strong element over the years that's helped us a lot. And the vast majority of our officers do their job, do it well, do it the right way, but some officers do the wrong thing. When they do the wrong thing, one of the things communities demand is fairness and consequences, really clear consequences and transparency. It makes sense.  

 

So, last year in the first half of the year, a process was developed to start to rethink our entire approach to police discipline. And then in August last year, a proposal was put out publicly. A lot of great public comment came in and it culminated with the publishing on Friday of the new NYPD discipline matrix. This is an extraordinary document, everyone. And I want you to take a look – if you care about the relationship between police and community, if you care about public safety, if you care about reforming police and changing police culture, read this document. It is powerful. You can get it at nyc.gov/disciplinematrix. This will revolutionize the way we discipline police officers who have done the wrong thing. Now, again, we hope and we pray that as very few officers, but one of the ways to ensure it's very few officers is clear consequences. So, here you will see for the first time in NYPD history, each specific offense and the specific consequences that will occur if someone commits that offense. Everybody deserves due process. We believe in due process across the board in our society. But if that due process system says guilty, you did that offense, then the specific penalties are outlined right here – the minimums and the maximums. And what it says clearly is, for many offenses, particularly those involving the use of force, it is clear the ultimate penalty is termination. And I want to emphasize, it's not just use of force. There's a variety of other offenses that, if someone has done them, that indicates very clearly that they should not be a member of the NYPD. And I want to particularly focus here on hate speech, racism, white supremacy, anybody who utilizes speech and has beliefs that do not conform with the values of this city and this nation can't be a police officer. So, if we have an instance where someone expresses on the job racist beliefs, and exclusionary beliefs, and white supremacist beliefs – it's quite clear in this matrix, if they're found guilty of that offense, they will no longer be a member of the NYPD. That's the kind of thing we have to do forcefully and clearly, and now for the first time in our history, we have a clear public transparent template that will govern how discipline occurs, and that is for the good of all.  

 

Okay. Before we wrap up here and turn to our indicators, just want to note, I started with the positive point about what's going to happen tomorrow in Washington D.C., and something, obviously, that will be a celebration of our nation and our democracy. But, tonight, we're going to have a more somber moment all over the nation – 5:30 tonight, the COVID Memorial, where we're going to, all together, as Americans, remember those we've lost. This is something that President-elect Biden, Vice President-elect Harris, asked everyone to participate in together as a show of unity and respect for those we've lost and for their families who are always in our thoughts and prayers. So, at 5:30 tonight, you're going to hear a church bells ringing all over the city. You're going to hear – you're going to see buildings lit up to memorialize those we've lost. I'm going out to the Statue of Liberty with Chirlane. We're going to have a ceremony there to remember the 25,000 of our fellow New Yorkers we've lost. And I think everyone out there, you know someone who we've lost or a family who lost someone – this has touched every one of us. So, tonight, let's join together in true unity and give our hearts to those families who have lost loved ones and never forget them and resolve to move forward as a city and a nation. 

 

Okay, let's go over today's indicators. Number one, daily number of people admitted to New York City hospitals for suspected COVID-19, today's number is 255 patients. We know that is too high. And the hospitalization rate continues to grow 5.05 per 100,000. Again, despite this very real challenge New York City hospitals are doing remarkably well. They have learned so many important lessons in this crisis and continue to save lives in a remarkable fashion. But this does mean more and more pressure on our hospitals. It's something we're watching very closely. We're communicating with the State about closely. This is something to watch. This is, as the Governor has talked about the single most sensitive factor. We're going to keep an eye on that closely. New cases, daily number of cases – new cases of COVID-19 seven-day average, today's number. 5,009. A very, very high number. And then, current testing percentage of New York City residents testing positive, seven-day rolling average 8.23 percent. Again, way too high. Everybody we vaccinate, however, let's bring it back to where we started. Every single person we vaccinate changes the reality, and we're vaccinating the folks who are most vulnerable and most in greatest need. First, this is why the supply of vaccine is so crucial. With the numbers we're putting up now 300,000 people in a week, come on. That is a game changer. That starts to affect the overall environment, if we have the vaccine to go with it. So that's what we're going to talk about incessantly until we actually get the deliveries we need here in New York City.