Tuesday, December 3, 2024

New Yorkers for Parks - Giving Thanks – Thanks to you!

 

You play a huge role in the success of our advocacy and programs. We are a tiny (but mighty!) team of five, and without your contributions of time, talent and support we simply wouldn't be able to accomplish all we have accomplished this year. And with you, we’ve accomplished a lot!  

 

We are here to defend the city’s parks budget against deeper cuts -- cuts that we simply cannot afford if we want our parks to remain a vital public resource for communities across the city.   

 

And we will continue to be here, year in and year out, to challenge roll backs and push for the resilient parks system all New Yorkers deserve!  

 

You make this continued fight possible, and for that we are immensely grateful.  

This Giving Tuesday we are proud to partner with Patagonia once again, to offer two giveaways to two lucky supporters. Donate $200 or more and you’ll be entered into a drawing to win a Patagonia hat and bag combo – a value of nearly $300 dollars!  

 

We are so grateful for your continued support!  

 

Thank you!  

Housing Lottery Launches for Tryon North at 4778 Broadway in Inwood, Manhattan

 


The affordable housing lottery has launched for Tryon North, a 12-story mixed-use building at 4778 Broadway in Inwood, Manhattan. Designed by Aufgang Architects and developed by Maddd Equities, the structure yields 80 residences. Available on NYC Housing Connect are 23 units for residents at 40 to 130 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $31,235 to $218,010.


Tryon North at 4778 Broadway in Inwood, Manhattan via NYC Housing Connect

Residents will have access to a shared laundry room, gym, and bike storage lockers. Units come with patios or balconies. Tenants are responsible for electricity.

At 40 percent of the AMI, there is one studio with a monthly rent of $784 for incomes ranging from $31,235 to $49,720; six one-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $828 for incomes ranging from $33,395 to $55,920; and two two-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $967 for incomes ranging from $39,875 to $67,080.

At 60 percent of the AMI, there are four studios with a monthly rent of $1,251 for incomes ranging from $47,246 to $74,580; one one-bedroom with a monthly rent of $1,328 for incomes ranging from $50,538 to $83,880; and four two-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $1,567 for incomes ranging from $60,446 to $100,620.

At 110 percent of the AMI, there are two one-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $2,579 for incomes ranging from $93,429 to $153,780, and one two-bedroom with a monthly rent of $3,068 for incomes ranging from $111,909 to $184,470.

At 130 percent of the AMI, there is one one-bedroom with a monthly rent of $3,298 for incomes ranging from $113,075 to $181,740, and one two-bedroom with a monthly rent of $3,939 for incomes ranging from $135,052 to $218,010.

Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than February 3, 2025.

Community Notice: Office Closed Today

 

Dear Friends, 

Due to an unforeseen issue with our HVAC system which has left our office without heat, our community office will remain closed today, December 3rd. 

Our team will be working remotely and fully accessible to help by phone. We can be reached at 718-409-0109 or email us at District80@nyassembly.gov

We look forward to welcoming you back to the office later this week. Thank you in advance for your patience and understanding.

 

In Gratitude,

John Zaccaro, Jr. 

Money in Your Pockets: Ahead of January 1, 2025 Start Date for First-in-the-Nation Paid Prenatal Leave, Governor Hochul Announces New Campaign to Mobilize Eligible New Yorkers

Governor Hochul and a group of mothers holding babies

Governor Hochul Fought To Pass the Nation’s First-Ever Paid Prenatal Leave Policy, Helping Pregnant Women Facing Economic Challenges

As Paid Prenatal Leave Policy Takes Effect On January 1, 2025, State Unveils Public Awareness Campaign To Notify Eligible New Yorkers

Under Governor Hochul’s Leadership, New York Has Taken Major Steps To Improve Affordability for Working Families

Governor Kathy Hochul kicked off a statewide campaign to raise awareness of New York’s first-in-the-nation paid prenatal leave policy, which takes effect on January 1, 2025. This nation-leading policy, proposed in Governor Hochul’s 2024 State of the State and signed into law in April, gives workers the ability to take paid leave for any pregnancy-related medical appointments. In the past year alone, Governor Hochul has made New York more affordable for working families through investing $1.8 billion in child care, delivering $2.3 billion in property tax relief, brokering a landmark affordable housing deal and more.

“No pregnant woman in New York should be forced to choose between a paycheck and a check-up — and that’s why I pushed to create the nation’s first paid prenatal leave policy,” Governor Hochul said. “From raising the minimum wage to investing in affordable child care, we’re making New York the best and most affordable place to raise a family.”


Led by the State’s Department of Labor, New York’s statewide public awareness campaign is aimed at promoting New York State’s groundbreaking Paid Prenatal Leave policy. The campaign will officially kick off with the unveiling of subway ads. The goal of the awareness campaign is to educate New Yorkers and businesses about the new law and to remind pregnant women in New York State that they never have to choose between a paycheck and prenatal care.

Additional campaign efforts will include social media outreach, a dedicated webpage, newsletters, a virtual media tour with New York State Department of Labor Commissioner Roberta Reardon, and collaboration with various stakeholders and influencers to raise awareness throughout 2025.

New York State Department of Labor Commissioner Roberta Reardon said, “With Paid Prenatal Leave, New York is not only taking care of pregnant women, but also future generations of our workforce. I applaud Governor Hochul’s ongoing commitment to New York State families.”

Effective January 1, 2025, any privately employed pregnant New Yorker will now be able to receive an additional 20 hours of paid sick leave for prenatal care. The New York State Department of Labor estimates that about 130,000 pregnant women per year will be eligible for this benefit, with about 65,800 of those being hourly workers.

Pregnancy-related health care includes:

  • Physical examinations
  • Medical procedures
  • Monitoring
  • Testing
  • Discussions with a health care provider needed to ensure a healthy pregnancy
  • Fertility treatment
  • End of pregnancy care

The paid prenatal leave benefits are in addition to New York State Paid Family Leave, existing employer-provided leave and existing sick leave benefits, ensuring workers can receive the health care needed to address all pregnancy related care to create healthy outcomes without jeopardizing their employment or finances. The law applies to all private employers in New York State, with no minimum employee threshold, and is applicable to both full-time and part-time employees.

As New York’s first mom Governor, Governor Hochul has continued to build on the state’s commitment to maternal health care and supporting families. In addition to paid prenatal leave, as part of her broader plan to improve maternal and infant mortality, the Governor established 12 weeks of paid parental leave benefits for more than 80 percent of the state workforce, extended postpartum coverage for up to a full year for Medicaid and Child Health Plus enrollees, established statewide Medicaid coverage for doulas, created the state’s first doula directory, and has taken steps to eliminate cost-sharing for certain pregnancy-related benefits for those enrolled in the state’s Essential Plan or Qualified Health Plans.

New York's publicly funded child care system — and the new, online application launched in July — is part of the Governor’s ongoing effort to make child care more affordable, accessible and equitable for New York families. Governor Hochul has improved access to the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP) by raising the child care income eligibility limit to the federal maximum, capping families' out-of-pocket child care costs, and increasing State reimbursement rates to child care programs. The enacted 2024-25 state budget more than doubled funding forCCAP to $1.8 billion, and in 2023, Governor Hochul also announced a combined $100 million commitment in capital grants for child care center construction and business tax credits for workplace-based child care expansion to address a critical shortage of child care supply in New York State.


Justice Department Files Civil Forfeiture Complaint Against Sanctioned Oligarch’s U.S. Music Studio Sale Proceeds

 

A civil forfeiture complaint was filed for $3.4 million in proceeds from the sale of a music studio in Burbank, California. The complaint alleges that the proceeds, which are beneficially owned by Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, are the proceeds of sanctions violations. An indictment charging Deripaska with sanctions violations had been unsealed on Sept. 29, 2022, and Deripaska remains at large.

“As the allegations in the complaint once again demonstrate, those who have illicitly accumulated great wealth in support of lawlessness and international chaos invariably turn to the safety and stability of the United States’ rule of law principles in order to preserve their ill-gotten gains. It is predictable, hypocritical, and illegal,” said Co-Director Michael Khoo of Task Force KleptoCapture. “We are nearly three years into Russia’s unprovoked further invasion of Ukraine, but today’s actions show that Task Force KleptoCapture remains vigilant and fully engaged in its mission to protect the American financial system against the abuses of criminal actors.”

“This filing of a civil forfeiture complaint against over $3 million in illicit proceeds of Oleg Deripaska exemplifies this office’s commitment to utilizing all available legal remedies to enforce our critical sanctions program,” said U.S. Attorney Damian Williams for the Southern District of New York. “We remain committed to piercing the opaque financial networks utilized by sanctioned oligarchs attempting to illegally transact business in U.S. dollars.”

“As alleged, Oleg Deripaska, an OFAC Specially Designated National, through a series of companies and associates attempted to earn over $3 million in proceeds from the sale of a California-based music studio,” said Acting Special Agent in Charge James E. Dennehy of the FBI. “This forfeiture filing shows the FBI’s commitment to stopping individuals from obfuscating their activities to violate sanctions. The FBI will continue to enforce the national security laws of the United States and will ensure any violation of these laws and sanctions is punished accordingly.”

According to the court documents, on April 6, 2018 (the Designation Date), the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) designated Oleg Deripaska as a Specially Designated National (SDN) in connection with its finding that the actions of the Government of the Russian Federation in Ukraine constitute an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States. Deripaska was sanctioned for his support of the Russian government and for his activity in the Russian energy sector. On or about the same date, OFAC also designated Basic Element Limited, EN+ Group and other entities for being owned or controlled by, directly or indirectly, Deripaska.

On Sept. 29, 2022, an indictment returned by a grand jury sitting in the Southern District of New York was unsealed, charging Deripaska and his associates Olga Shriki and Natalia Mikhaylovna Bardakova with a conspiracy to violate sanctions.

As alleged in the indictment, for over four years after Deripaska was sanctioned in 2018, and in violation of those sanctions, Deripaska paid Shriki to provide various services for his benefit in the United States. These services included the sale of a music studio in Burbank, California, in 2019, as well as hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of other services to aid in Deripaska’s efforts to have two of his children be born in the United States in 2020 and 2022, and to purchase goods for Deripaska from the United States.

Prior to his designation by OFAC, in or about 2008, Deripaska, through a series of shell companies, acquired the music studio for over $3 million. The direct owner of the studio was an entity named Ocean Studios California LLC, which held a bank account at Wells Fargo (the Ocean Studios Account).

Between in or about 2013 and in or about 2018, Shriki lived in the United States and worked for Deripaska’s entity Basic Element in its Manhattan office. Before and after the designation date, Shriki and Deripaska’s cousin Pavel Ezubov, among others, helped to operate and fund the music studio on behalf of Deripaska, and made clear that Deripaska was the ultimate decisionmaker with regard to the music studio.

In or about July 2018, approximately three months after OFAC designated Deripaska as an SDN, Shriki created a consulting business named Global Consulting Services LLC (GCS). Through GCS, Shriki coordinated with associates of Deripaska, including Ezubov and Bardakova, to continue providing services to and for the benefit of Deripaska and to continue receiving funds from Deripaska or entities controlled by Deripaska. GCS opened a bank account at a bank in Manhattan. Between August 2018 and September 2019, the GCS account received wires totaling over $500,000 from two entities associated with Deripaska, one of which entered into a separate agreement with an indicted co-conspirator to manage other Deripaska properties abroad after the designation date.

Beginning in July 2019, the Ocean Studios account received approximately $69,000 of transfers from Shriki’s GCS account, which in turn was funded by overseas accounts tied to Deripaska, as noted above.

In or about June 2019, Shriki effectuated a sale of the contents of the music studio for more than $500,000. In December 2019, more than a year after the designation date, while employed by Deripaska, Shriki assisted with the sale of the music studio by Ocean Studios California LLC in various ways, such as preparing the property for sale, coordinating with the accounting firm for the music studio, communicating with the real estate broker to approve the sale, facilitating the payment of outstanding taxes and bills for the music studio, signing over the property deed, and liquidating the other assets in the music studio. The music studio sale resulted in net proceeds of over $3 million, which were deposited in the Ocean Studios account.

During 2020, while Shriki was employed by Deripaska and continued to perform services for Deripaska, Shriki requested that an accounting firm transfer the proceeds from the sale of the music studio to a bank account in Russia in the name of a company that funded the music studio’s accounts after the designation date — or, in the alternative, requested that the accounting firm add Shriki as a signatory on the bank account for the music studio so that Shriki could effectuate the transfer of funds on behalf of the owner. The firm declined to effectuate the wire transfer itself.

In or about March 2021, Wells Fargo made the determination to block the Ocean Studios account and the funds on deposit due to Ocean Studios account’s relationship with Deripaska. The blocked funds subject to the complaint amount to approximately $3,435,676 plus accruing interest.

The FBI is investigating the case. The Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs assisted in the investigation.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Vladislav Vainberg for the Southern District of New York is litigating the case.

On March 2, 2022, the Attorney General announced the launch of Task Force KleptoCapture, an interagency law enforcement task force dedicated to enforcing the sweeping sanctions, export restrictions, and economic countermeasures that, beginning in 2014, the U.S. has imposed, along with allies and partners, in response to Russia’s unprovoked military invasion of Ukraine. The Task Force will leverage all the Department’s tools and authorities against efforts to evade or undermine the economic actions taken by the U.S. government in response to Russian military aggression.