Tuesday, July 23, 2024

News, updates and more from NYC Council Member Rafael Salamanca, Jr.

 

150-UNITS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR SENIORS 

🏡 Senior housing isn’t just about providing shelter for the pillars of our community - it’s about empowering our elders to age in dignity, and to remain integral members of the communities they helped build.

👉 With its 150-units of affordable housing for seniors 62 years young and up, Garden Towers Apartments does just that for the future seniors who will call the building home.

I thank my colleagues in government for their financial support and commend Foxy Management for their continued commitment to ensuring #Bronxites have access to safe, affordable housing.



"PROTECTING NEW YORK CITY'S FOOD SUPPLY"

Did you know:
👉 If the Hunts Point Meat Market lost power for 3 consecutive days, they would lose close to $200 million in meat production.

During a productive walkthrough at the Market yesterday, I received updates on their expansion plans - including upgrades to their old refrigeration system, which is supported by the $12.7 million my office has allocated to them over the last 2 years.

"MENTORING OUR FUTURE LEADERS"

Let's extend a warm welcome to our Interns- Alesha & Robert- who will be joining 
#TeamSalamanca will assist with administrative and community services through the remainder of the summer.

UPCOMING EVENTS

IN THE NEWS

"I felt that the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA)’s policy didn't have any teeth into it. NYCHA is not reviewing these e batteries to make sure they're not black market e batteries. Right now, there's no police to have them register, so how do they know who has one and who doesn't? There's no way to monitor it - NYCHA said it's a ‘see something say something policy.’”
More ⬇️
https://abc7ny.com/post/new-york-city-housing-authority-has-enacted-new/15064129/

Visit our District Office at: 
1070 Southern Boulevard
Bronx, New York 10459
(718) 402-6130
salamanca@council.nyc.gov

New York Man Appears on Federal Drug Charge

 

The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Vermont announced that Jamonty Brister, 29, of Queens, New York, appeared in United States District Court in Burlington on a complaint charging him with a federal drug offense. U.S. Magistrate Judge Kevin J. Doyle ordered that Brister be detained without bail pending trial, which has not been scheduled at this time.

According to the criminal complaint filed on July 18, 2024, in June 2024, Burlington Police Department drug investigators and DEA Task Force officers made three controlled purchases of fentanyl from Brister utilizing a confidential source. Earlier this week, officers obtained a state court warrant to search the Burlington residence where Brister had been living. They executed the warrant on the morning of July 17 and arrested Brister, who was alone in a locked bedroom. During the search of Brister’s bedroom, officers recovered about 900 grams of cocaine base, about 130 grams of fentanyl, about $10,000 in cash, and a handgun. The complaint charges Brister with possessing the seized narcotics with intent to distribute.

The United States Attorney emphasizes that the charges in the complaint are accusations only and that the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until he is proven guilty.

If convicted, Brister faces up to 20 years of imprisonment and a fine of up to $1,000,000. The actual sentence will be determined by the U.S. District Court with guidance from the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines and the statutory sentencing factors. 

This case was investigated by the Burlington Police Department and the Drug Enforcement Administration. 

Brister is represented by Assistant Federal Public Defender Sara Puls. The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Gregory Waples.

This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results. For more information about Project Safe Neighborhoods, please visit Justice.gov/PSN.

PARENTS OF TEEN DRIVER SENTENCED ON CHILD ENDANGERMENT CHARGES IN GROUNDBREAKING CASE AFTER SON ALLEGEDLY KILLED 14-YEAR-OLD GIRL IN GRUESOME COLLISION

 

Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz announced that the parents of a teen driver – who was charged with manslaughter in the death of the 14-year-old passenger in the BMW he was driving – were sentenced today in a groundbreaking case on endangering the welfare of a child charges for facilitating the child’s access to the car when he was legally unable to drive the vehicle.

District Attorney Katz said: “The parents of a 16-year-old gave their son a BMW when he did not have legal authority to drive it anywhere in New York City. We allege that because of that teenager’s actions, 14-year-old Fortune Williams is now dead after she was thrown from the car when it crashed into a UPS truck at more than 100 miles an hour. With this conviction, we have shown that the culpability in a fatal crash can go beyond the driver. Parents who provide vehicles to their children and let them drive illegally can be held responsible in the case of tragedies such as this one. We will continue to seek justice for Fortune Williams and her grieving family.”

The teen driver’s father, Sean Smith, 40, of 227th Street in Springfield Gardens, pleaded guilty on June 11 before Supreme Court Justice Michael Yavinsky to endangering the welfare of a child. He was sentenced today to three years of probation. As a condition of the sentence, he must take a 26-week parenting class and attend the Victim Impact Panel Program.

The boy’s mother, Deo Ramnarine, 43, also of 227th Street, pleaded guilty to endangering the welfare of a child and disorderly conduct on June 11. Judge Yavinsky sentenced her to a 26-week parenting class and to attend the Victim Impact Panel Program. If she successfully completes both, she will be allowed to withdraw her plea to endangering the welfare of a child and only the disorderly conduct charge will stand.

The now 17-year-old, of 227th Street, was arraigned in December on charges of manslaughter in the second degree; three counts of assault in the second degree; assault in the third degree; reckless endangerment in the second degree; endangering the welfare of a child; reckless driving; driving in excess of the maximum speed limit; unsafe lane change on a roadway laned for traffic; making an unlawful turn; two counts of operating a motor vehicle with a tinted windows; operating or driving a motor vehicle without a license; and operating a motor vehicle in violation of a restricted permit or license.

The case against their son is ongoing and he faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted of the top count.

According to the investigation:

  • On May 17, 2023, at approximately 6:38 p.m., the then 16-year-old defendant was driving a red 2005 BMW 325i westbound on North Conduit Avenue near 160th Street at a speed calculated at 101 miles per hour. The posted speed limit was 30 miles per hour.
  • The teenager lost control of the vehicle when attempting to move from the left-center lane to the right-center lane and crashed into the back of a parked UPS truck. After hitting the truck, the BMW spun across the roadway and struck a tractor-trailer traveling westbound.
  • As a result of the initial collision, Williams was ejected from the front passenger seat of the BMW into the back of the UPS truck. She suffered severe head trauma and was pronounced dead at the scene.
  • A UPS employee was getting into his truck just as the BMW collided with it, throwing the worker to the ground. He was taken to a local hospital where he was treated for a large hematoma to his leg, a laceration to his face and a bruise to his chest.
  • At the hospital where he was being treated for minor injuries, the defendant explained to police that he had picked Williams up at her home and was taking her to his grandmother’s house. His father, who was with his son at the hospital, told police that while the BMW was registered in his name, he had bought the vehicle for his son and that the car was his son’s.
  • The son had a junior driver’s license, which prohibited him from driving under any circumstances in New York City.
  • Three weeks after the fatal crash, on June 7, Smith told the car’s insurer that his son had driven the BMW approximately twice with him in the vehicle and that his son was a good driver.
  • Prior to the fatal collision, in November 2022, witnesses from the defendant’s school saw him regularly driving the same BMW and a school administrator informed the parents that their child was driving to school.
  • The child was also ticketed in November 2022 for driving without a license and driving while using a portable electronic device. His name is being withheld because of his age.

POLICE COMMISSIONER EDWARD A. CABAN MARKS ONE YEAR IN OFFICE


Reductions in violent crime, improved community relations, and a more representative NYPD 

New York City Police Department Commissioner Edward A. Caban recently marked one year in office, and the work of the men and women of the NYPD continues to keep New York the safest big city in the nation. Over the past 12 months, Commissioner Caban has overseen a steady decline in major violent crime citywide, including ongoing reductions in murder, burglary, grand larceny, and auto theft. The department has also seen positive results in its ongoing fight against gun violence, with both shooting incidents and victims at a five-year low. These reductions are driven by the NYPD’s relentless work to rid our neighborhoods of illegal firearms: Thus far in 2024, NYPD cops have taken nearly 3,700 guns off our streets – adding to the more than 17,000 illegal guns seized since the beginning of the current mayoral administration.

Notably, at the midway point of this year, major crime is down in all of the department’s operational bureaus: in patrol precincts, in housing developments, and in the transit system. In our patrol precincts, this crime decline is an extension of the tireless work NYPD cops are doing in neighborhoods across the city. In our subway system, it is a reflection of a focused, concentrated effort to reverse the uptick of transit crime seen in early 2024 – an effort which has now driven transit crime 11 percent below pre-COVID levels. And in the city’s housing developments, recent drops in major crime are the result of the NYPD Housing Bureau’s unwavering commitment to the 154,000 families who live in the 2,100-plus NYCHA buildings citywide. And on top of this, the NYPD is continuing to hold violent criminals accountable at a historic rate, with major felony arrests currently at a 26-year high.

Highlights of NYPD crime-fighting and public-safety initiatives undertaken in the last year – many of which involve ongoing, close working partnerships with several federal, state, city, and other local agencies – include:

• Gun Violence Prevention Task Force;

• Auto Crime Suppression Plan;

• “Ghost gun” and 3-D printed gun long-term investigations;

• “Ghost car” taskforce (illegal/unregistered vehicles);

• Enforcement against illegal scooters, ATVs, and mopeds;

• “Operation Padlock to Protect” (illegal/unlicensed smoke and cannabis shops);

• Clearing of homeless encampments;

• Ongoing work with local Business Improvement Districts to combat retail theft, including the rollout of the Fusus Pilot Program;

• Enhanced use of technology to fight crime more efficiently and better serve New Yorkers, including the expansion of the NYPD’s drone program, the rollout of the subway metal detector initiative, upgrading the NYPD’s communication system, and more;

• Expansion of the International Liaison Program (in partnership with the New York City Police Foundation), with new posts opening in Bogotá , Colombia and Tucson, Arizona, to address modern public-safety issues of drug and human trafficking across the southern border.

Also in the last year, Commissioner Caban has led several internal department initiatives, including: the expansion of, and promotions within, the Special Victims Unit; enhanced training for School Crossing Guards, along with the distribution of improved safety equipment to all Guards; streamlining the departmental disciplinary process, clearing the backlog of cases and ensuring that both complainants and officers receive fairer and faster resolutions; breaking ground on the new NYPD Bomb Squad Operations Center at Rodman’s Neck; and overseeing the completion of the NYPD’s 116th Precinct, serving Queens.

Furthermore, the NYPD strongly supports New York City’s Minority & Women-Owned Business Enterprise (M/WBE) Program, and has made it a priority to ensure an increase of M/WBE utilization in the department’s contracting process. This is just a part of Commissioner Caban’s efforts to build a more inclusive, diverse police department – from his leadership team, to new recruit hires, and everyone in between. As the first Hispanic police commissioner in the 179-year history of the department, Commissioner Caban knows firsthand how much representation matters. New York is the most diverse city in the world, and today the members of the NYPD reflect that diversity more than ever before. What is more, nearly 70 percent of recruits hired in the past 12 months have been New York City residents – ensuring that the people who patrol our local neighborhoods actually come from those communities themselves. This makes NYPD officers more understanding and responsive to the unique needs of the people they serve, and it results in a safer city for all.

Under Commissioner Caban’s leadership, the NYPD has worked to deepen relationships with the community, especially New York City’s young people. As an example, the NYPD and the NYC Police Foundation recently announced the expansion of the Arthur Avenue NYPD Options Wellness Center. This facility already houses an Options Virtual Reality Lab with 3-D printers; art, music, financial literacy, and interactive gaming studios; a professional development room; and a computer lab. The next phase of the project includes a 1,600-square-foot hydroponic farm, a sports complex and boot camp area, trades classrooms, and a communication broadcast center. Other community-focused NYPD initiatives include enhancing the citywide Clergy Liaison Program, promoting transparency and collaboration at Precinct Community Councils and through CompStat 2.0, and reinstating a fully staffed Police Commissioner’s Liaison Unit to address the specific issues and concerns of protected classes from the highest levels of the department. The NYPD is committed to enriching outreach and engagement with New Yorkers of every age and background, and that work will continue in earnest.

"One year ago, Mayor Adams appointed me the 46th Police Commissioner of the City of New York, and entrusted me with the safety and security of our nation’s largest city," said Commissioner Caban. "When I joined the NYPD more than three decades ago, I never imagined that a young Puerto Rican kid from the Bronx would one day go from standing a foot post in the 40th Precinct to being the top cop in the greatest police department in the world. None of it would have been possible without the exceptional people supporting me along the way – including my incredibly talented executive team, and all the remarkable men and women who go to work every day to keep New York the safest big city in America. Together, we will make our city better tomorrow than it is today."

U.S. Attorney Announces Non-Prosecution Agreement With International Bus Parts Supplier CBM

 

CBM Agrees to Monetary Penalties for Scheme to Mislead U.S. Transit Authority Customers About the Sources of Bus Parts that CBM Contracted to Sell the Transit Authorities

Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York; Christopher A. Scharf, the Special Agent in Charge of the Northeast Region of the U.S. Department of Transportation, Office of the Inspector General (“DOT-OIG”); and Daniel Cort, the Inspector General of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (“MTA-IG”), announced that international bus parts supplier CBM entered into a non-prosecution agreement (the “NPA”) with the U.S. Attorney’s Office.  Under the NPA, CBM agreed to pay significant monetary penalties for engaging in a scheme to defraud U.S. transit authority customers through false and misleading statements about the sources of contracted-for bus parts during the period from approximately 2010 to April 2021.  Specifically, the NPA requires CBM to forfeit $463,243.41 to the United States, representing its profits from the scheme, and pay a fine of $1,500,000.  In addition, CBM has agreed to pay restitution to victims who submit claims and to revert unclaimed funds up to $438,859.52 to the Crime Victims Fund, administered by the Department of Justice’s Office for Victims of Crime.  The NPA also requires that for at least two years from the date of the agreement, CBM will further cooperate with the United States, self-report any future violations of U.S. law, and continue its ongoing efforts to implement and maintain an adequate compliance program.  In the event that CBM violates the NPA, the U.S. Attorney’s Office may prosecute CBM for any newly discovered criminal activity and for the conduct that gives rise to the NPA.

This corporate action reflects a careful weighing of factors relevant to the appropriate corporate resolution.  The NPA recognizes that, although CBM’s serious misconduct was reported to the U.S. Attorney’s Office before CBM self-disclosed it, (i) CBM US cooperated extensively with the U.S. Attorney’s Office, including through detailed disclosures and accountings of conduct not already known when CBM’s cooperation began; (ii) the most serious wrongdoing at CBM was limited to two individuals, though they were at the highest levels of the company; (iii) CBM has no history of criminal conduct, including any resolved through prior NPAs or deferred prosecution agreements; (iv) CBM has undertaken extensive remedial measures to ensure that similar conduct does not occur or go undetected in the future; and (v) CBM has taken full responsibility and agreed to make full restitution to all victims that seek compensation.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “CBM, primarily through the actions of a limited number of managers outside of the United States, represented to U.S. transit authorities that CBM was providing bus parts from specific suppliers and under specific brand names.  Fortunately, none of the transactions at issue involved parts that bear on the safety of any affected buses.  Since this Office’s investigation came to CBM’s attention, the company has cooperated fully and taken significant and commendable steps to remediate the institutional failures that allowed this situation to occur in the first place.  But this NPA also ensures that CBM is held financially accountable for its conduct and that victims will be made whole.  It should serve as a reminder to all companies that it will lose its profits, and then some, when this Office becomes aware of business practices like CBM’s in this case.”

DOT-OIG Special Agent in Charge Christopher A. Scharf said: “This NPA is an important step in remedying the harm caused by CBM when it misled U.S. transit authority customers.  DOT OIG remains committed to holding transportation industry suppliers accountable for their actions that compromise the integrity of contracted goods and services.”

MTA Inspector General Daniel Cort said: "The MTA must have faith in the integrity of its supply chain, and any breach of that trust is unacceptable.  I thank our federal partners for holding vendors accountable for deceptive behavior."

As part of the NPA, CBM agreed to a statement of facts describing its conduct and the remedial measures that it took in response to learning of that conduct.

Mr. Williams praised the outstanding investigative work of the DOT-OIG and thanked the MTA-IG for its assistance.  

Chinese National Indicted for Importation of Enough Chemicals to Make Millions of Fatal Doses of Fentanyl

 

A Chinese national was indicted for his part in a conspiracy involving the importation of what is believed to be the largest amount of fentanyl precursors found in the Southern District of Texas and one of the largest in the country.

Minsu Fang, 48, also known as Fernando, was charged in a four-count indictment with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance, conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance for purpose of unlawful importation, conspiracy to import a controlled substance, and conspiracy to export a controlled substance.

“We charged this defendant for importing enough fentanyl precursor chemicals from China to kill millions of Americans,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “Fentanyl is the deadliest drug threat the United States has ever faced, and the Justice Department is committed to breaking apart every link in the global fentanyl supply chain.”

“To end the deadliest drug threat the United States has ever faced, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) starts where the harm begins – with the Chinese chemical companies and the individuals that are selling chemicals to those who make and sell the fentanyl that is killing Americans. This work led DEA to Minsu Fang, who is charged with selling more than 2,000 kilograms of fentanyl precursors. This marks one of DEA’s largest seizures of fentanyl chemicals to date in the United States,” said DEA Administrator Anne Milgram. “The DEA is laser-focused on saving American lives by disrupting the entire global fentanyl supply chain that is responsible for flooding our communities with fentanyl. By disrupting Fang’s operations, DEA and our partners saved countless lives in the United States.”

“My office is focused on disrupting and dismantling the transnational criminal organizations flooding the United States with fentanyl, a drug that is killing our children,” said U.S. Attorney Alamdar S. Hamdani for the Southern District of Texas. “Fang allegedly imported over 2,000 kilograms of raw materials from China destined for various places in Mexico used in the manufacture of fentanyl. This historic seizure represents a multi-agency collaboration that prevented the production of millions upon millions of deadly doses of fentanyl-laced pills.”

“Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) plays a pivotal role in disrupting the supply of illicit opioids at every point in the drug supply chain: internationally, at our nation’s borders, and in communities throughout the United States,” said Special Agent in Charge Craig Larrabee of HSI San Antonio. “The partnerships in this investigation were key to securing this indictment. The threat imposed by fentanyl dictates that agencies not only deconflict and coordinate, but to also collaborate. This investigation and prosecution are the perfect example of collaboration across agencies and throughout the country.”

The now unsealed charges allege Fang and his associates shipped over 2,000 kilograms of fentanyl precursor chemicals from China into the United States and on to Mexico in approximately 100 separate shipments between August and October 2023. Fang and his co-conspirators were able to avoid law enforcement interdiction of the shipments by declaring them to have a de minimis value, less than $800, and commingling the boxes containing the precursor chemicals with similarly low valued import items, according to the charges.

As a result, each of the shipments were allegedly admitted into the United States without a detailed inspection of the individual contents. Once in the United States, Fang, through co-conspirators, shipped the chemicals into Mexico, according to the charges.

If convicted, Fang faces a maximum penalty of life in prison on each count, as well as a $10 million fine. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

The DEA and HSI investigated the case.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Richard D. Hanes and Heather Rae Winter for the Southern District of Texas are prosecuting the case.

An indictment is merely an accusation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

BRONX MAN SENTENCED TO 34 YEARS TO LIFE IN PRISON FOR RAPING TWO WOMEN, SEXUALLY ASSAULTING A THIRD WOMAN IN HIS HOME; ONE VICTIM RESCUED AFTER SEEKING HELP ON FOOD-DELIVERY APP

 

Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark today announced that a Bronx man has been sentenced to a total of 34 years to life in prison for raping two women and sexually assaulting a third woman over the course of six days in his Eastchester apartment. One victim was rescued after sending a message on a food delivery app, asking the restaurant to call police. 

District Attorney Clark said, “The defendant brutally sexually assaulted three women. Thanks to the quick thinking of one of the victims, we were able to hold this sexual predator accountable, and prevent him from terrorizing additional victims.” 

District Attorney Clark said the defendant, Kemoy Royal, 34, of Pratt Avenue, the Bronx, was sentenced today by Bronx Supreme Court Justice Jeffrey Zimmerman to 34 years to life in prison. The defendant was sentenced to 17 years to life in prison for Predatory Sexual Assault, 10 years for first-degree Rape, and 7 years for Attempted Criminal Sexual Act in the first degree. These sentences are to run consecutively. The defendant was convicted by a jury on May 14, 2024, after a two-day deliberation. Upon his release from prison, he must register under the Sex Offender Registration Act or SORA. 

According to the investigation, on June 13, 2022, the defendant met with a 27-year-old woman whom he had been speaking to on a dating app for a few days and invited her to his home. The defendant raped the victim, forced her to perform sexual acts on him and performed sexual acts on the victim without her consent.

On June 14, 2022, the defendant met the second victim, a 26-year-old woman, on the street claiming he knew her through a friend. The defendant lured her to his apartment, refused to let her leave, and threatened to kill her. Royal attempted to force her to perform sexual acts on him and strangled her before letting her leave hours later. 

On June 18, 2022, the third victim, a 24-year-old woman, met with the defendant at his home after talking on a dating app. Royal refused to let her leave, took her phone, and threatened to kill her. He strangled the victim and raped her and forced her to perform sexual acts. Early the next morning, she told Royal she wanted to order food, and ordered food through a food delivery app, asking the restaurant to call the police. The Yonkers restaurant called the police, who responded and arrested the defendant. 

District Attorney Clark also thanked Office of Chief Medical Examiner Department of Forensic Biology Criminalist Cassandra Williams, NYPD Officer Maura Delohery of the 47th Precinct, NYPD Detectives Malik Wright, and Carolyn Tully of the Bronx Special Victims Squad, for their work in the investigation. 

Governor Hochul Announces $15 Million to Fund Suicide Prevention Services for At-Risk Youth

youth counseling 

Funding to Develop Services for Hispanic/Latinx, Black/African American, Asian American/Pacific Islander, American Indian/Alaskan Native, and LGBTQ+ Youth

Prevention Effort Focused on Unique Cultural Factors Putting Historically Underserved, Racial and Ethnic Groups at Heightened Risk

Governor Kathy Hochul announced five conditional awards totaling $15 million over five years to help community-based service providers to develop innovative programs that will help reduce suicide risk among youth from historically underserved populations. Administered by the Office of Mental Health, the state funding through the Connecting Youth to Mental Health Supports program will help develop programs and suicide prevention strategies among racial and ethnic minority populations and LGBTQ+ groups, including those in rural areas.

“While New York’s suicide prevention efforts are nation-leading, we have seen alarming trends developing among youth and young adults since onset of the COVID-19 pandemic four years ago,” Governor Hochul said. “These awards will help develop innovative and culturally appropriate programs to serve the mental health needs of the young New Yorkers – especially those at the center of these tragic trends.”

The awards will develop community-based, treatment-adjacent mental health services aimed at building a sense of safety and connectedness at-risk populations and to establish partnerships to help these individuals access treatment when needed. Grant recipients with their total award amount over five years include:

  • Contact Community Services Inc., Onondaga County; $2.9 million
  • Child Center of New York, New York City; $3.4 million
  • John R. Oishei Children's Hospital of Buffalo, Erie County; $2.9 million
  • Access: Supports for Living Inc., Orange County, $2.9 million
  • Comunilife Inc., Nassau County, $2.9 million

Contact Community Services will use the funding for its youth suicide prevention program with a focus on Black/African American, Hispanic/Latinx, and LGBTQ+ youth between the ages 12 and 18 in Onondaga County. This program provides culturally responsive and trauma-informed services to marginalized and at-risk youth to promote safety, connectedness, and good mental health to reduce the risk of suicide and establish age-appropriate pathways for intervention.

The Child Center of New York will develop a program to reduce the risk of suicide and build a sense of safety and connectedness for high-risk youth and young adults up to age 24 who are living in Queens and Brooklyn. Specifically, the program will focus on groups more likely to experience post-pandemic poor mental health outcomes, including Black/African Americans, Hispanic/Latinx, Asian/Pacific Islanders, and LGBTQ+ youth.

The John R. Oishei Children's Hospital of Buffalo will implement a new protocol that will expand its prevention efforts to all patients between the ages of 11 and 21 who are screened for suicide, not just those at the highest risk. The funding will also allow Oishei to expand prevention screening services, making them available at tabling events involving underserved populations.

Access: Supports for Living Inc. will develop Youth Resilience, Education, and Advocacy for Children’s Health program –also called Youth REACH –to focus primarily on suicide prevention for youth and young adults from historically marginalized or underrepresented communities, with a special focus on LGBTQ+ individuals. Serving both rural and urban communities in Dutchess, Orange, Orange, Rockland, Sullivan, and Ulster counties, this program will provide treatment-adjacent risk assessment and include safety planning and connection to crisis intervention services, screenings, individual and group support services, and peer support services.

Comunilife will expand its ‘Life is Precious’ program to provide culturally and linguistically appropriate suicide prevention activities for at-risk Latina teens between the ages of 12 and 18 and their families in Hempstead and in Nassau County on Long Island. The program will focus on teens enrolled in school and living with depression, suicide ideation or other diagnosed mental illness.

Governor Hochul has made youth mental health a focus of her administration. The FY25 Enacted Budget expands mental health support for children statewide, fulfilling an agenda she outlined in her State of the State address in January.

The Budget provides $20 million in start-up funding for school-based mental health clinics and a rolling application process to expedite these awards, which were previously secured through the state procurement process. An additional $2 million was dedicated to expanding peer-to-peer mental wellness efforts among young people across the state, including training programs like teen Mental Health First Aid.

While the suicide rate in New York State has remained relatively stable since 2012, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Youth Risk Behavior Survey found alarming mental health trends among high school-aged youth between 2011 and 2021 – especially among teen girls. Nearly a third of teen girls seriously considered attempting suicide in 2021, an increase from 19 percent the prior decade; about three in five felt persistently sad or hopeless in 2021, which was twice the rate of teen boys and represents a nearly 60 percent increase over the rate recorded in 2011.

This survey also found that youth from marginalized populations are more likely to suffer mental health issues: More than half of LGBTQ+ students expressed having poor mental health, with one in five reporting having attempted suicide in the past year. Suicide attempts were also elevated among Black youth when compared to White youth, according to the report.

The awards build on state efforts to engage at-risk and underserved populations with prevention efforts and mental health supports, including youth and young adults identifying as transgender, gender non-conforming and non-binary and help those questioning or struggling with gender identity. Earlier this year, OMH conditionally awarded a total of $1 million to three service providers through the Connecting Youth to Mental Health Supports-TGNCNB initiative, which is part of the Lorena Borjas Transgender and Non-binary Wellness and Equity Fund and provides funding to support trans-led and staffed community-based services for this underserved population.

Likewise, there have been alarming increases in suicide rates among Black youth. Suicide rates among Black individuals ages 10 to 19 have increased 54 percent since 2018, and faster than all other racial and ethnic groups, according to a report released by the Pew Charitable Trust in April.

The suicide rate among Black youth, ages 10 to 17 rose 144 percent from 2007 to 2020, even though overall youth suicide rates were trending downward. Black adolescents were also significantly less likely than their peers in other demographic groups to receive mental health care, the report found.