Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Governor Cuomo Announces New York State to Adopt New CDC Guidance on Mask Use For Fully Vaccinated People

 

New Guidance Issued by CDC Today Available Here

Guidance Reemphasizes the Importance of Getting Vaccinated for COVID-19


 Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced that New York State will adopt the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's new guidance on mask use for fully vaccinated people. The guidelines state that fully vaccinated people, defined as two or more weeks after receiving the second dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine or the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine, no longer need to wear masks outdoors, except in certain crowded settings and venues. However, masks should still be worn indoors and should still be worn by people who are not fully vaccinated. This guidance reemphasizes the importance of getting vaccinated and closely adhering to public health guidance, particularly if you are not yet vaccinated. Fully vaccinated individuals with immunocompromising conditions should consult with their healthcare provider first.

"The CDC announced new guidance today saying that when Americans who are fully vaccinated are outside, biking, hiking, running, or in small gatherings, you don't need to wear a mask. That is liberating, especially now that the weather is getting warmer," Governor Cuomo said. "New York has adopted that guidance, so that's going to go into effect in the State also and we want to thank CDC for that. This news underscores the fact that if you get vaccinated, more freedom is available to you, and I encourage all eligible New Yorkers who have not yet received the vaccine to make an appointment today."

According to the new CDC guidance, fully vaccinated people can engage in more activities than unvaccinated people, which include:

  • Fully vaccinated workers no longer need to be restricted from work following an exposure as long as they are asymptomatic
  • Fully vaccinated residents of non-healthcare congregate settings no longer need to quarantine following a known exposure
  • Visit with other fully vaccinated people indoors without wearing masks or physical distancing
  • Visit with unvaccinated people (including children) from a single household who are at low risk for severe COVID-19 disease indoors without wearing masks or physical distancing
  • Participate in outdoor activities and recreation without a mask, except in certain crowded settings and venues
  • Resume domestic travel and refrain from testing before or after travel or self-quarantine after travel
  • Refrain from testing before leaving the United States for international travel (unless required by the destination) and refrain from self-quarantine after arriving back in the United States.
  • Refrain from testing following a known exposure, if asymptomatic, with some exceptions for specific settings
  • Refrain from quarantine following a known exposure if asymptomatic
  • Refrain from routine screening testing if asymptomatic and feasible (in nonhealthcare settings)

This modification will be noticed to the legislature but will take effect immediately using the exigency provisions of Ch. 71 of the laws of 2021, enacted earlier this year.

State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli Statement on New York City's Executive Budget


New York City’s $98.6 billion executive budget for FY 2022 and its financial plan for FY 2022-FY 2025 reflect a drastically improved short-term budget outlook, buoyed by more than $15 billion in federal relief since December and better-than-projected revenues.

“The city plans to help pace its recovery by stretching federal relief through FY 2025, avoiding new taxes, establishing short-term programs to aid businesses and individuals, restoring and adding certain city services, and reducing out-year gaps. The city has also reinstated a planned drawdown from its retiree health benefits trust of $1.6 billion.

“The financial plan reflects just how critical the economic recovery is to New York City’s ability to achieve structural balance. The city projects employment growth to double from January projections and reach 4.5 million jobs in FY 2021, but the timing of the return of real estate values, commuters and tourists leave forecasts uncertain. The city is projecting further improvement in both income and corporate taxes, while revising sales taxes downward and keeping property taxes flat. Any decline in these revenues due to a slower-than-expected recovery or behavioral changes related to increases in state income or corporate tax rates, which push the city’s combined income and corporate tax rates to the highest rates in the country, would widen the budget gaps.

“Despite historic federal relief, the plan would still leave the city with significant budget gaps in FY 2023 through FY 2025 and creates out-year risks by increasing baseline spending and using some federal aid for recurring operational costs, particularly for education, that are not directly related to COVID-19.

“The city no longer faces an immediate fiscal emergency and can avoid drastic actions for short-term savings. The restoration of planned cuts should be followed by renewed commitment to long-term initiatives that allow for recurring savings while addressing collective bargaining agreements, which will begin expiring in May.

“My office’s full analysis of the FY 2022 budget and the Mayor’s executive financial plan will be released in the following weeks.”


Former New York Giant On Home Confinement Under CARES Act Charged With Narcotics Trafficking

 

 Audrey Strauss, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Raymond P. Donovan, Special Agent in Charge of the New York Division of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”), Peter C. Fitzhugh, Special Agent-in-Charge of the New York Field Office of Homeland Security Investigations (“HSI”), Dermot Shea, the Commissioner of the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”), and Marty Raybon, the Acting Director of the New York Office of Customs & Border Protection (“CBP”) announced that Clyde Hall, a/k/a “Peter,” was arrested on April 24, 2021, in New York, New York.  A criminal Complaint was subsequently filed in Manhattan federal court charging HALL with possessing with intent to distribute over five kilograms of suspected cocaine.  HALL, a former professional football player with the New York Giants, was previously sentenced in 2010 to 20 years in prison following his conviction for various financial fraud crimes HALL was serving his prison sentence and was recently released to home confinement by the Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (“CARES ACT”), which expanded the authority of the Director of the BOP to place federal prisoners on home confinement earlier than otherwise permissible.  HALL was arrested on the instant narcotics charge while on home confinement and will be presented today before United States Magistrate Judge Gabriel W. Gorenstein. 

As alleged in the Complaint unsealed in Manhattan federal court[1]:

On April 24, 2021, HALL was found in possession of approximately seven kilograms of suspected cocaine, which he attempted to sell to a confidential source.  In addition, HALL claimed that another five kilograms was on its way.

HALL, 82, of New York, NY, is charged with narcotics distribution, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years and a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.  The statutory maximum penalty is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant would be determined by the judge.

Ms. Strauss praised the outstanding investigative work of the DEA, HSI, NYPD, and CBP.

This case is being handled by the Office’s Narcotics Unit.  Assistant United States Attorney Ni Qian is in charge of the prosecution.

The charge contained in the Complaint are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

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

Statement From Senior Advisor to the Governor Rich Azzopardi Re: New York Post Question of Governor Cuomo

 

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"Once again the Post has willfully distorted and misreported the Governor's statement. The Post asked the Governor at a press conference yesterday about a New York Times story using blind sources to claim the Governor made anti-LGBTQ and anti-Semitic statements. The Post asked why these "people say those things" in the Times story. The Governor said "Who knows. People are venal, people want attention, people are angry, people are jealous. Who knows why people spread rumors?"  The Post then intentionally distorted this interaction to say that the Governor's response was to "accusers," presenting this exchange to readers as if it was about sexual harassment complaints. It was not. That was untrue and false reporting and should be corrected if they have any journalistic integrity."

Transcript provided below:

Bernadette Hogan, NYP: Governor, The New York Times put out a story a couple of weeks ago, where they interviewed 80 people either close to you or had worked with you, and they detailed accounts that you had said things like anti-trans slurs and also some to the effect of saying that Jews lived in F-ing tree houses. Did you say those things, and if not, why—

Governor Cuomo: I never said any such things and I told the Times that I never said any such thing. They printed slurs and slander, and you'd have to ask them why they did that.

Bernadette Hogan, NYP: Why would people say those things, that you had said them, if that's not true?

Governor Cuomo: People say a lot of things. People say a lot of things in politics.

Bernadette Hogan, NYP: Governor, also—

Governor Cuomo: That's, why do people say things? Who knows. People are venal, people want attention, people are angry, people are jealous. Who knows why people spread rumors?

Comptroller Stringer Investigation: City Lost $1.86 Million in Failed Effort to Purchase Ventilators During the COVID-19 Pandemic

 

Investigation shows how the City, having suspended contracting rules early in the pandemic, ignored early warning signs and pre-paid $8.26 million for 130 ventilators that it never received

Global Medical Supply Group LLC exploited the City’s public health emergency with a high-pressure sales pitch and false assurances, never delivered any ventilators, and failed to return $1.86 million of City tax money

Mayor’s suspension of City procurement rules exposed taxpayers to risk of fraud, waste, and abuse

Comptroller recommends emergency procurement procedures to enable the City to quickly purchase what it needs, while reducing risks of waste and fraud

Today, New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer released the findings of an investigation into the City’s full prepayment of $8.26 million to Global Medical Supply Group LLC (Global) in an unsuccessful attempt to purchase 130 ventilators during the initial COVID-19 surge in March 2020. Comptroller Stringer’s investigation found that Global, a business formed less than two weeks before the City’s prepayment, never delivered any ventilators and, even after protracted negotiations and litigation, failed to return $1.86 million of City taxpayers’ money—nearly a quarter of the City’s payment.

“Our investigation found that the City lost nearly $2 million on lifesaving equipment that it never received,” said Comptroller Stringer. “I am again calling on the City to immediately restore City procurement rules to protect taxpayers from abuse by unreliable vendors and from costly mistakes. While the pandemic took us by surprise, there is no excuse not to learn from our misfires going forward. If we fail to heed these findings and take sensible measures to safeguard taxpayer dollars for the next emergency, then the City will once again let New Yorkers down.”

Comptroller Stringer’s investigation found that City procurement officials at the Department of Citywide Administrative Services (DCAS), Mayor’s Office of Contract Services (MOCS), and other agencies were able to arrange the prepayment of $8.26 million to Global 36 hours after receiving its unsolicited proposal—with no price competition, no goods delivered, no security, no meaningful assessment of Global’s business history and reliability, and no signed contract—because the Mayor had issued an emergency executive order suspending City procurement laws and rules for COVID-19-related purchases. Global sent much of the City’s money to a bank account in China maintained by Global’s supposed ventilator supplier—a trading company that exported shoes—compromising the City’s ability to trace and recoup the remainder of what it is owed through the U.S. legal system.

In this case, with key procurement safeguards removed, City employees—pressed to acquire scarce items quickly for emergency use—were extraordinarily vulnerable to exploitation by unscrupulous actors and to mistakes and omissions that the rules might have prevented.

The investigation identified three factors that led to the City’s monetary loss: Mayor de Blasio’s March 2020 executive order suspending City procurement rules without substituting other controls; Global’s exploitation of the City’s emergency need for ventilators with a high-pressure sales pitch and false assurances of immediate delivery; and obvious warning signs of Global’s untrustworthiness that City officials missed or disregarded.

Comptroller Stringer’s investigation of the City’s payment of $8,261,500 to Global revealed the following:

  • The suspension of City procurement rules for COVID-19-related purchases, including rules requiring vendors to disclose their business histories and those requiring signed contracts for multimillion dollar purchases, exposed the City to risks of waste, fraud, and abuse.
  • Global exploited the City’s public health emergency with a high-pressure sales pitch and false promises of immediate delivery of 130 ventilators when the City was an epicenter of the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic and was publicly calling for 15,000 ventilators to help care for hospitalized patients at risk of death.
  • Global engaged in an intensive marketing campaign—including at least 28 phone calls, 149 texts, and 60 emails in a four-day period centered around a weekend—to convince City decision makers to pay the full $8.26 million price in advance for 130 ventilators that Global promised would be shipped immediately.
  • City officials ignored an early warning sign that Global’s assertions were unreliable, specifically, Global’s initial claim that it could “lock [the City] in” for “up to 20 million” brand-name, N95 respirator masks. A City official immediately alerted colleagues that the masks’ manufacturer had warned the City—just one day earlier—to be “wary” of “vendors claiming to have those types of numbers.”
  • The City advanced $8.26 million to Global, even after finding the company’s existence “tough to confirm,” as one City official noted at the time. With procurement rules suspended, Global was not required to disclose basic background information, including its business history, and City officials knew little about the new company.
  • The City also knew little about the company Global named as its “direct source” for the ventilators it offered to sell to the City. City officials reviewing Global’s proposal learned that its supposed source for the ventilators was a trading company that had previously exported footwear from China to a U.S.-based company. They found no evidence that it had ever dealt in medical equipment.
  • City officials lacked a clear understanding of Global’s relationship with the factory where it claimed to have secured ventilators. When City officials requested evidence of Global’s access to the ventilators it was offering the City, Global provided a few photographs and video recordings of unknown origin and publicly available information about the product. A City official later acknowledged that in retrospect the ventilators shown in a video Global sent to the City “could have been anyone’s vents.”
  • City officials missed two red flags in Global’s ventilator pitch—Global’s repeated, implausible claims that it could ship 20,000 brand name ventilators to the City from China at a rate of 1,000 per day, and Global’s far-fetched assertion that it had secured capacity for 80,000 of those ventilators at a single factory. Both claims were belied by public reporting at the time. The brand manufacturer later informed the Comptroller’s Office that its total production capacity in April 2020 (the month following Global’s ventilator proposal to the City) was less than 1,000 units per month.
  • The City lost $1,859,068.94 in the Global transaction, even after concerted efforts to recover the funds, including a recently settled legal action the City filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern Direct of Florida. In June 2020, the City recovered $3,977,594.28 and, under the recent settlement, has received or will receive an additional $2,424,836.78 from Global and others involved in the transaction. Upon collecting the settlement amount, the City will have recovered $6,402,431.06 of its $8,261,500 payment to Global for the ventilators it never received and will have lost $1,859,068.94. The City has also obtained a judgment in that loss amount against Global. However, according to the settlement agreement, Global has informed the City that its liabilities exceed the value of its assets.

Comptroller Stringer recommended seven measures to enable the City to purchase what it needs to address emergencies, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, while mitigating the associated risks of fraud, waste, and abuse. The recommendations urge the City to:

  • Follow the City’s existing procurement rules, which already allow expedited emergency purchases, and amend them, if necessary, for additional speed and flexibility.
  • Institute dollar limits and additional safeguards to mitigate the inherent risks of prepayments that might be necessary in emergencies.
  • Develop a toolkit of resources for emergency procurements to help balance the need for speed with safeguards to prevent waste, loss, and abuse of City funds.
  • Develop an adaptable short form contract with standard provisions to protect critical City interests when emergency procurements are necessary.
  • Develop a short-form vendor-disclosure template to help expedite vendor responsibility determinations in emergency procurements.
  • Create a centralized clearinghouse for expedited vendor responsibility determinations that all City agencies can use for emergency procurements.
  • Develop guidelines for quick vendor responsibility determinations in emergency procurements.

Comptroller Stringer has repeatedly urged Mayor de Blasio to rescind Emergency Executive Order (EEO) 101, Section 2, which has suspended laws and regulations related to procurement in the City since March 17, 2020. Following two letters sent to the Administration in August and October of 2020 that yielded no response or action, Comptroller Stringer for the third time in March 2021 underscored the need to rescind the Mayor’s emergency suspension of procurement laws. The City Charter and the City’s Procurement Policy Board (PPB) Rules already provide for expedited emergency purchases but with safeguards and transparency mechanisms in place to protect the City’s interests. Under Mayor de Blasio’s emergency powers, the City has entered into 1,356 contracts totaling more than $6.1 billion in City funds since March 2020 without the crucial statutory oversight of the Comptroller’s Office.

To read Comptroller Stringer’s investigation of the City’s failed purchase of ventilators from Global Medical Supply Group LLC, click here.

250 DAys and Counting

 


Forget about what you are seeing on television or hearing on the radio, the NYPD is working hard to keep New York City the Safest Big City. We have just presented the largest budget in New York City history thanks to the stimulus money New York City will be getting from Washington, thank you President Harris

All is well here in New York City.


Affordable Housing Lottery Launches For 972 Washington Avenue In Morrisania, The Bronx

 

972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx. All images courtesy of NYC Housing Connect

The affordable housing lottery has launched for 972 Washington Avenue, a 12-story building in Morrisania, The Bronx. The 83,811-square-foot development was designed by EQ Architecture And Design, and yields 107 supportive housing units. Available on NYC Housing Connect are 41 units for residents at 60 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $31,406 to $57,300.

Residences will have energy-efficient appliances, air conditioning, and smart controls for heating and cooling. Additional amenities include a shared laundry room, bike storage lockers, a children’s playroom and playground, outdoor areas, media room, an on-site resident manager, and community events and classes.

Interiors at 972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx

Interiors at 972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx

Interiors at 972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx

Interiors at 972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx

At 60 percent of the AMI, there are 41 studios with a $843 monthly rent for incomes ranging from $31,406 to $57,300.

Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than June 25, 2021.

Monday, April 26, 2021

Bron Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. Endorses Eric Adams For Mayor

 


On the very famous Fordham Road overpass of the Grand Concourse Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. along with dozens of Bronxites voiced their support for Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams for Mayor of New York City.

BP Diaz Jr.  told the story of when he was a young assemblyman from the South Bronx twenty-two years ago of a fatal shooting of a man in a hallway by police many times. He said it was Captain Adams who led 100 Black men to investigate the police shootings

 


Bronx BP Diaz Jr. Hugs his good friend Eric Adam after introducing him.


Mayoral candidate Eric Adams explains there are some candidates who are pretenders, and then there are candidates such as himself who get things done. 


I told candidate Adams that when I questioned candidate Andrew Yang on topics such as NYCHA and Homelessnes Yang's answer was that will be taken care of when he (Yang) becomes mayor. Candidate Adams called Andrew Yang one of the pretender candidates.