Sunday, October 24, 2021

Assemblymember Nathalia Fernandez - Fall Festivities in the 80th Assembly District


Hello,

Join us next weekend for some fun fall festivities!


Allerton Fall Festival

Date: Saturday, October 30th

Time: 12:00pm - 4:00pm

Location: Allerton Avenue between Holland Avenue and Wallace Avenue


Safe Streets & Treats

Date: Saturday, October 31st

Time: 2:30pm - 4:30pm

Location: Big Deal Supermarket


We look forward to seeing you there!


Best Regards,

New York State Assemblywoman Nathalia Fernandez

It should be noted that October 31st the date for the Safe Streets event is on Sunday not Saturday as written by Assemblywoman Fernandez. 

You can ask Assemblywoman Fernandez and the Wannabe candidates present with her about the 540 homeless adult males being dumped into the 80th Assembly District, do to the New 'NO CASH BAIL LAW' passed in the state legislature last year.

69 Days and Counting

 


Doctor Chokshi is this my Johnson and Johnson Booster shot? I told you I wanted only one shot, and that was why I said to give me the Johnson and Johnson vaccine. Now I find out that the J & J vaccine was the least effective. Here I went up to the Bronx going around without wearing a mask. 


At least now that you gave me a flu shot and with a second dose of vaccine, but I hope you know what is in there. That pesky reporter from the Bronx Chronicle thought we poisoned him, or should I say the state poisoned him two days after his second dose of the Pfizer vaccine. Everything is O.K. with the J & J right? 

Well Mr. Mayor. 

Well what Doctor Chokshi? 

 



New York State Restaurant Association needs your input! They have put together a quick survey to get a better sense of how the vaccine mandate is impacting restaurant businesses so far. There will be an oversight hearing about the vaccine mandate during the week of October 25, 2021, and they are requesting businesses to fill out the survey for useful data to represent the Bronx and all boroughs. 


Restaurant


CONTACT INFO
1200 Waters Place
Suite 106
Bronx, NY 10461




TWO QUEENS RESIDENTS CHARGED WITH STEALING THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS INTENDED FOR NYC’S SUMMER YOUTH PROGRAM

 

Approximately $20,000 Stolen; Defendants Face Up to Seven Years in Prison if Convicted

 Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz, joined by New York City Department of Investigation Commissioner Margaret Garnett, today announced that Rahmello Poole and Mariah Moore, have been charged with grand larceny, defrauding the government and other crimes for allegedly stealing thousands of dollars intended for youth summer employees. The pair – who worked at the Central Queens Y in 2018 – allegedly filed bogus timesheets for non-active employees and then used the earnings deposited on debit cards for their own personal gain. 

 District Attorney Katz said, “The funds allocated to the City’s Summer Youth Employment Program is intended to provide job opportunities to Queens teenagers as well as funding for literacy services, after school programs and more. As alleged, these defendants found a way to manipulate the system to enrich themselves by withdrawing funds from the debit cards and making point of sale transactions. I want to thank the investigators with DOI for their hard work looking into this matter. And let this be a warning to those who seek to cash in with crooked schemes, my Office will continue to team up with our law enforcement partners to root out fraud and other illegal cons.”

 Commissioner Garnett said, “As charged, these defendants committed a series of alleged crimes to pocket the nearly $20,000 in taxpayer funds intended for the City’s summer youth program: brazenly submitting false timesheets for real but inactive program participants and cashing debit cards that provided the wages to these participants, defrauding this government-subsidized program. Thankfully, when the parents of the teenage participants received paperwork showing wages their children never received, they alerted the Central Queens Y. The Central Queens Y double-checked and then notified the City Department of Youth and Community Development (DYCD), and DYCD reported the financial discrepancies to DOI for further investigation. I thank all the parties that stepped up to report this matter and help DOI stop the corruption. And I thank the Queens County District Attorney’s Office for its partnership on this investigation.”

 Poole, 27, of 141st in South Jamaica, Queens, and Moore, 23, of Dix Avenue of Far Rockaway, Queens, were arraigned late yesterday before Queens Criminal Court Judge Edwin Novillo on a 34-count complaint. The two are charged with grand larceny in the third and fourth degree, falsifying business records in the first degree, offering a false instrument for filing in the first degree, defrauding the government and tampering with public records in the second degree. Judge Novillo ordered the defendants to return to Court on December 16, 2021. If convicted Poole and Moore face up to 2 1/3 to 7 years in prison.

 According to the charges, in the summer of 2018, Poole worked as a worksite coordinator and Moore was his clerk. Poole’s duties included providing oversight for the teenagers’ work areas and processing their timesheets. In this role, Poole had access to the debit cards that were used to pay the workers and the PIN numbers. Defendant Moore, in her role as an administrative clerk, was responsible for organizing and entering the timesheets into the system’s payroll database. Debit cards were used to pay some workers in lieu of direct deposit into bank accounts. 

 DA Katz said, an investigator with DOI audited the records and found 13 youth workers who were registered with the program but were not actually employed in the summer of 2018. Yet, there were timesheets created for those participants and debit cards used to pay for the hours those young people supposedly worked. Defendant Moore allegedly inputted the false work hours and Poole is accused of approving those timesheets.

 According to the complaint, Poole loaded debit cards with $10,144 and allegedly withdrew $9,330 from ATMs for his own personal use and made a $56 point of sale transaction. Moore is accused of fraudulently uploading $8,043 and made ATM withdrawals totaling $7,582 and spent another $360 in point of sale transactions at various merchants.

 Criminal complaints and indictments are accusations. A defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Statement Of U.S. Attorney Damian Williams On Guilty Verdicts Against Lev Parnas And Andrey Kukushkin

 

 “A unanimous federal jury has found that Lev Parnas and Andrey Kukushkin conspired to manipulate the United States political system for their own financial gain.  In order to gain influence with American politicians and candidates, they illegally funneled foreign money into the 2018 midterm elections with an eye toward making huge profits in the cannabis business.  Campaign finance laws are designed to protect the integrity of our free and fair elections – unencumbered by foreign interests or influence – and safeguarding those laws is essential to preserving the freedoms that Americans hold sacred.  I commend the career prosecutors of this Office’s Public Corruption Unit whose outstanding work has helped bring to justice those who sought to illicitly influence our government.”


Governor Hochul Updates New Yorkers on State's Progress Combating COVID-19 - OCTOBER 24, 2021

 Clinical specimen testing for Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) at Wadsworth Laboratory

50,355 Vaccine Doses Administered Over Last 24 Hours

32 COVID-19 Deaths Statewide Yesterday


 Governor Kathy Hochul today updated New Yorkers on the state's progress combating COVID-19.  

"New Yorkers are resilient, they are thoughtful, and throughout the pandemic they have proven they will do what is necessary to keep their communities safe," Governor Hochul said. "The vaccine is the best asset we have in protecting ourselves from COVID-19. Getting the vaccine is free, it's effective, and there are doses readily available all throughout the state."

Today's data is summarized briefly below:

  • Test Results Reported - 162,737
  • Total Positive - 2,861
  • Percent Positive - 1.76%
  • 7-Day Average Percent Positive - 2.12%
  • Patient Hospitalization - 2,007 (-41)
  • Patients Newly Admitted - 251
  • Patients in ICU - 453 (-8)
  • Patients in ICU with Intubation - 245 (-5)
  • Total Discharges - 206,835 (+265)
  • New deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS - 32
  • Total deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS - 45,348

The Health Electronic Response Data System is a NYS DOH data source that collects confirmed daily death data as reported by hospitals, nursing homes and adult care facilities only.

  • Total deaths reported to and compiled by the CDC - 57,617

This daily COVID-19 provisional death certificate data reported by NYS DOH and NYC to the CDC includes those who died in any location, including hospitals, nursing homes, adult care facilities, at home, in hospice and other settings.

  • Total vaccine doses administered - 26,637,790
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 24 hours - 50,355
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 7 days - 363,041
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose - 83.6%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series - 76.0%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 86.7%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 78.0%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose - 70.8%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series - 64.3%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 73.5%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 66.1%

Job Fair by NY Department of Labor and Assemblywoman Fernandez

 

I would love to report on how good the Job fair at Columbus High School by the New York State Department of Labor and Assemblywoman Nathalia Fernandez went, but after taking a few photos with permission, Assemblywoman Fernandez's Executive Director told me I could not take anymore photos and asked me to leave. 


While I did speak to the Ms. Ingrid Gonzalez from the NYS Department of Labor who said I could take photos, I saw the anger in Assemblywoman Fernandez's Executive Director about the photo Ms. Kimberly Meindl, a supervisor for Hunter Ambulance who gave me permission to take her photo after she fixed her hair and glasses. Assemblywoman Fernandez's Executive Director directed me to delete that photo, which I obliged not wanting to have the Assemblywoman who I had come to photograph mad at me. 


It seems that Hunter Ambulance was headquartered in Inwood Long Island before recently arriving in the Bronx, and appearing at events with Assemblywoman Fernandez. Only being told Assemblywoman Fernandez would arrive later, so I decided to leave, as wanted by the assemblywoman's Executive Director. Below are the few photos I did get to take in a public high school at a public event. All photos were taken with the approval of the people being photographed. 


I can only say that I have sat down with Assemblywoman Fernandez to tell her of my intention to run for Democratic Male District Leader of the 80th Assembly District, and I have been told that she may have another person in mind for her slate. I would hate to think that politics is now being put in place by Assemblywoman Fernandez, and the Bronx Democratic Party Leader Jamaal Bailey, who I have been told has given Assemblywoman Fernandez here new District Leader choices. It appears that Assemblywoman Fernandez is throwing away the Conservative values of the 80th Assembly District to force on it very Liberal Socialist Laws such as opening the doors to Rikers Island, and the placement of 540 single adult males some who could be Level One and Level Two Sex Offenders, Drug Addicts, and other Quality of Life offenders who were being held in jail into the 80th Assembly District, and Community Board 11.




Here two staffers of Senator Biaggi, and a nicer staffer of Assemblywoman Fernandez hold up information from their respective offices. 




DEC ENCOURAGES NEW YORKERS TO HELP SAFEGUARD BATS DURING ANNUAL 'BAT WEEK'

 

Annual Halloween Week Observance Raises Awareness to Reduce Human Disturbance to Endangered and Threatened Bats

 In observance of the annual, internationally recognized Bat Week, Oct. 24-31, which raises awareness about the critical role of bats in our environment, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Basil Seggos today urged outdoor adventurers to avoid visiting caves and mines during the fall and winter months. Bats hibernate in many of these underground cavities, where relatively constant, warm temperatures protect bats from noise and harsh winter temperatures above ground. Human disturbance is especially harmful to New York’s bat populations since the arrival of white-nose syndrome, a fungus that has killed more than 90 percent of bats at hibernation sites in the state.

"With Halloween fast approaching, DEC is urging outdoor adventurers to steer clear of caves and mines to protect New York’s at-risk bat populations," Commissioner Seggos said. "Right now, bats hunkering down in their winter homes are highly susceptible to disturbance from even the quietest cave visits. If disturbed, bats will wake from hibernation and expend significantly more energy than normal, increasing the harm caused by the white-nose disease. If explorers do venture out and come across hibernating bats in a cave, I urge these visitors to leave quickly and quietly."

DEC reminds the public to follow all posted notices restricting access to caves and mines. When bats are disturbed during hibernation, it forces them to raise their body temperature, depleting crucial fat reserves. This stored fat is the only source of energy available to the bats until the weather warms in spring and insects become readily available. The more frequently bats are disturbed, the less likely they are to survive the winter.

Bat Week (leaves DEC's website) is observed through Oct. 31, and is organized by representatives from conservation groups and government agencies in the U.S. and Canada.

In recent years, scientists have found some evidence of recovery of the once-common little brown bat throughout New York State. While this apparent stabilization provides a hopeful outlook after more than a decade of devastating declines, similar evidence of stabilization is not yet seen for other severely affected bat species. Two species of bats are currently protected under federal and State endangered species law. The Indiana bat, which is sparsely distributed across New York, is a federally endangered bat listed before white-nose syndrome began affecting bat populations. The northern long-eared bat is protected as a threatened species under federal and New York State endangered species law. The current population for this formerly common bat is approximately one percent of its previous size, making this species the most severely affected by white-nose syndrome. Nonetheless, northern long-eared bats are still widely distributed in New York and their presence has been documented in most of the state's approximately 100 caves and mines serving as bat hibernation sites.

Anyone entering a northern long-eared bat hibernation site from Oct. 1 through April 30, the typical hibernation period for bats, may be subject to prosecution.

There is currently no treatment for bats suffering from white-nose syndrome. Along with the New York State Department of Health, DEC is partnering with researchers from the National Wildlife Health Center in Madison, Wisconsin, and experts at universities across the country to better understand the disease and develop a treatment. This collaborative effort helped identify that reducing disturbances at hibernation sites during the winter can help the remaining animals survive. For more information about white-nose syndrome, visit the White-Nose Syndrome Response Team website. Details about the protection of the northern long-eared bat can be found on DEC's website.