Monday, November 17, 2025

Growth of E-Commerce Exacerbated Traffic Crashes, Pollution, and Workplace Injuries: Comptroller Lander Reports

 

In a new report, Fast Shipping. Slow Justice, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander found that the City’s lack of regulations on rapidly growing e-commerce and last-mile delivery services led to significant increases in crashes, traffic and workplace injuries, and concentrated air pollution in predominantly in Black and Brown neighborhoods.  

Daily package deliveries in New York City grew from 1.8 million before the pandemic to 2.5 million in 2024, with roughly one-in-three New Yorkers receiving packages daily. Today, Comptroller Lander joined elected officials, workers’ rights advocates, street safety advocates, and environmental justice organizers in calling on City Hall to address the growing problem. 

“We’ve become so accustomed to getting our toilet paper, socks, or butter cookies right away that we’ve stopped thinking about the consequences; but we all pay the price of more traffic crashes, worsening air quality, and worker injuries,” said Comptroller Brad Lander. “This report is a wake-up call: adopt reasonable regulations for delivery services or worsen street safety, environmental impacts, and workers’ rights. We cannot allow the benefits of e-commerce to come at the expense of limbs, lungs, and lives.” 

The key findings of Comptroller Lander’s include:  

Traffic Crashes

  • Increased traffic crashes: After “last mile” delivery facilities opened, 78% of nearby areas saw more injury-causing crashes, with injuries within a half-mile radius rising by an average of 16%. Truck-related crashes increased by 146%, and truck-injury crashes rose by 137%.  
  • Hotspots in Maspeth, Queens: In Maspeth, Queens, crashes near two major FedEx and Amazon warehouses rose by 53% and 48%, respectively. A cluster of four East New York facilities also saw a sharp increase in crashes within a half-mile radius. 

Air Quality & Environmental Justice Impacts

  • Environmental justice issues: 68% of last mile warehouses are located in officially designated Environmental Justice (EJ) Areas, including Red Hook, East New York, Maspeth, and Hunts Point. 65.8% of residents in these neighborhoods are Black or Latine, compared to 49.2% citywide, and already face higher levels of air pollution. 
  • Warehouse-dense areas experience poorer air quality: Health Department data show that neighborhoods like Newtown Creek, Red Hook, Sunset Park, and Hunts Point have notably higher air pollution levels, likely tied to truck congestion and industrial activity. 

Worker Safety  

  • Worker safety woes: Between 2022 and 2024, 38 of 50 facilities (76%) identified by the New York City Department of City Planning reported injuries to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), totaling over 2,000 injuries, or an average of 678 per year. Injury rates per 100 employees at last mile facilities are more than triple the national average for all private employers (8.3 vs. 2.4). 
  • Amazon’s subcontractor model: Amazon’s Delivery Service Partner (DSP) program in 2023 and 2024 had an injury rate per 100 employees of 9.2 and a Days Away or Restricted, or Transferred (DART) rate of 8.1, exceeding those of the greater last mile and courier industries. 

The report attributes these problems to a fragmented regulatory landscape, where warehouses can open “as-of-right” without public review, and major corporations use subcontracting models like Amazon’s DSP to evade liability for labor and safety standards. 

To address the crisis, Comptroller Lander’s report urges the City to take immediate action, including: 

  • Pass the Delivery Protection Act (Intro 1396) to establish a licensing program to establish essential labor standards, bring liability to facility operators via requiring direct employment, and to curb worker injuries and vehicle crashes. 
  • Enact an Indirect Source Rule (Intro 1130) to require warehouse operators to reduce harmful truck emissions. 
  • Scale up the City’s freight management and Clean Trucks programs in dialogue with workers, including commercial cargo bikes, Neighborhood Loading Zones, and Smart Curbs.  
  • Finalize the Last Mile Facility Text Amendment to end as-of-right development of last mile facilities and prevent further concentration of facilities in overburdened neighborhoods. 
  • Establish a new coordinating entity to oversee the entire delivery industry and integrate zoning, labor, and environmental enforcement. 
Read the report here. 

Governor Hochul Highlights Multi-Agency Partnership to Support Crash Responder Safety Week

A yellow hardhat

New York State Police, Department of Transportation, Thruway Authority and Bridge Authority Partner to Remind Drivers of Roadway and Traffic Safety

Highlights Enforcement of the Move Over Law in Recognition of First Responders and Highway Workers Injured or Killed While Handling Traffic Incidents; Governor Hochul Signed Legislation Expanding Provisions

Governor Hochul Issues Proclamation Recognizing Crash Responder Safety Week – November 17-21, 2025

Governor Hochul today issued a proclamation recognizing Crash Responder Safety Week and announced a multi-agency partnership between the New York State Police, the New York State Department of Transportation, the New York State Thruway Authority and the New York State Bridge Authority to remind drivers to slow down and safely move over for emergency vehicles stopped on or next to a roadway. Crash Responder Safety Week runs from Monday, November 17, 2025, through Friday, November 21, 2025. This year’s theme is “Safety Starts With You — Slow Down and Move Over!”.

“We can’t say it enough – when you see police, firefighters, highway workers and tow truck drivers responding to a crash – slow down, move over and stay alert,” Governor Hochul said. “We have zero tolerance for drivers who continue to put our first responders and maintenance workers in harm’s way. Troopers will be out in force during this period to ensure that motorists are being safe and obeying the law.”The New York State Police, Thruway Authority, Department of Transportation, Bridge Authority and the Governor’s Traffic Safety Committee recommend these safe driving tips:

  • As soon as you see lights, vests, or reflectors, check traffic around you, SLOW DOWN and MOVE OVER if safe to do so.
  • Drivers MUST use due care when approaching an emergency vehicle or hazard vehicle including police vehicles, fire trucks, ambulances, construction and maintenance vehicles and tow trucks. In 2023, the Move Over Law was expanded, requiring drivers to exercise due care to avoid all vehicles stopped on the roadway, including by changing lanes.
  • The Move Over Law applies to both sides of the roadway, not just the shoulder on the right.

 

MAYOR ADAMS AND CHANCELLOR AVILES-RAMOS ANNOUNCE NEW YORK CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS HAS EXCEEDED 60 PERCENT CLASS SIZE REDUCTION MILESTONE AFTER ADMINISTRATION INVESTED $450 MILLION INTO CLASS SIZE REDUCTION

 

64 Percent of Classes Now in Compliance  

New York City Mayor Eric Adams and New York City Public Schools Chancellor Melissa Aviles-Ramos today announced that New York City Public Schools has surpassed the 60 percent class size reduction milestone originally planned for the 2025-2026 school year. The announcement comes after the Fiscal Year 2026 Adopted Budget funded over 3,700 teaching positions and 100 assistant principal positions across nearly 750 New York City Public Schools, as well as collaborative planning between with United Federation of Teachers (UFT), the Council of School Supervisors and Administrators (CSA), and school leaders across the public school system,  

  

“Smaller class sizes change lives by making it easier for kids to learn, and today’s milestone shows what’s possible when we invest in our students and work hand-in-hand with our union partners and school leaders,” said Mayor Adams. “Thanks to our administration’s investment of $450 million in class size reductions, we’re giving our educators the support they need to build more personalized, nurturing classrooms. Surpassing 60 percent of our class size reduction target for the 2025–2026 school year is a major step forward, and we’re not slowing down. We will continue working with the United Federation of Teachers, the Council of School Supervisors and Administrators, and leaders across our system to ensure we get to 80 percent next school year, and, more importantly, to ensure every child in every borough has the learning environment they need and deserve to thrive.” 

  

“I am proud to share that in partnership with our union partners and school communities, our school system this year continues to be in compliance with the class size law, now with 64 percent of classes in compliance,” said Public Schools Chancellor Aviles-Ramos. “Our priority this past year was to ensure that our school leaders had the support they needed in making the transition to lower class sizes, and we are thrilled to welcome thousands of new teachers and staff towards that end. I am eager to work closely with our district and school leaders as they continue to bring more classes into compliance.”  

  

Understanding that the complexity of this law’s implementation required school and community level input, today’s announcement serves as the result of a school-driven planning process, comprising an over $450-million investment in New York City Public Schools. This investment in the city’s public schools — made up in part by tax levy funds — represents an ongoing commitment to fully funding public schools and supported over 3,700 teaching positions and 100 assistant principal positions across the public school system. In addition to significant investments for class size efforts, the city continues its commitment to equitably funding all public schools, and, as part of that commitment, worked to hold schools harmless this year.  

  

New York City Public Schools will also continue to ensure equitable funding through the Fair Student Funding Formula, through the two newest weights — the concentration weight and the students in temporary housing weight, added after significant public engagement through the Fair Student Funding Working Group — and collectively providing over $120 million of funding to the highest need schools via the formula this year. Notably, schools that received additional teachers through this initiative increased compliance by 27 points, along with significant progress made across the board. Currently, nearly a third of non-compliant classes are only one to three students over the new caps, and the number of classes that were six students or more above the cap has substantially decreased year over year. 

  

Today’s announcement includes an agreement reached by New York City Public Schools, the UFT, and the CSA on exemptions for Specialized High Schools that did not have space to comply, as well as for schools without space to comply that will be positively impacted by planned and sited capital projects. This information and other reporting on the implementation approach is outlined in the Annual Class Size Implementation Report. New York City Public Schools has already announced the launch of the planning process for schools for the 2026-2027 school year. Building on the success of last year’s school-driven approach and the city’s continued commitment to embracing school-level engagement as essential to this implementation, all schools in Districts 1-32 are now working to assess their needed resources and report on what will be needed to support the next system-wide milestone of 80 percent of classes at or below the caps. 

  

Today’s announcement also builds off core educational accomplishments under the Adams administration, including instituting nation-leading dyslexia screening for all students, adding 57 Gifted and Talented programscementing new labor contracts for teachers and other education officialsinvesting $167 million in new funding to secure critical early childhood education programs, dramatically increasing early childhood education enrollment to 150,000 children across the city’s system, and securing mayoral accountability twice in three years while investing $180 million to implement a comprehensive class size reduction plan. 

  

“We applaud our principals and their school leadership teams for all the work that allowed New York City Public Schools to meet this year’s class-size reduction milestones,” said CSA President Henry D. Rubio. “Our school leaders know their students, their enrollment, and their buildings best. We commend the mayor and the chancellor for embracing a school-driven approach, and we thank them for providing the necessary resources to implement plans with care and integrity. We look forward to using this same school-driven process this year as the city identifies and builds new classroom spaces to achieve the law’s goals.” 

  

“The class size law is a success. More than 64 percent of the classrooms across the city are in compliance. Thousands of students are feeling the impact. Educators are sharing they have more individual time with their students. Our job now is to keep moving until all students can benefit from lower class sizes,” said UFT President Michael Mulgrew. “We will continue to work with the DOE, parents, and school communities across New York City to fulfill this promise for our school system.” 


Sunday, November 16, 2025

DHS Launches Operation Charlotte’s Web to Target Criminal Illegal Aliens Terrorizing Americans in Charlotte, North Carolina

 

Sanctuary policies prevented nearly 1,400 detainers from being honored, putting criminal illegal aliens back on Charlotte’s streets 

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced DHS law enforcement is surging resources for Operation Charlotte’s Web in North Carolina. This DHS operation will target the criminal illegal aliens who flocked to the Tar Heel State because they knew sanctuary politicians would protect them and allow them to roam free on American streets. Nearly 1,400 detainers across North Carolina have not been honored—releasing criminal illegal aliens into North Carolina’s neighborhoods.

"Americans should be able to live without fear of violent criminal illegal aliens hurting them, their families, or their neighbors,” said Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin. “We are surging DHS law enforcement to Charlotte to ensure Americans are safe and public safety threats are removed. There have been too many victims of criminal illegal aliens. President Trump and Secretary Noem will step up to protect Americans when sanctuary politicians won’t.” 

Below are just a handful of the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens—including murderers, rapists, and pedophiles—who were RELEASED back on to North Carolina’s streets because of sanctuary policies.

1

Jordan Renato Castillo-Chavez, a criminal illegal alien from Costa Rica, was arrested for indecent liberties with child, first degree sexual exploitation of a minor, attempted statutory sexual offense with a child less than 15 years old, and solicitation of a child by a computer. He was released after authorities failed to honor the ICE detainer.

1

Jose Ulloa-Martinez, a criminal illegal alien from Honduras, was arrested for murder. He was released after authorities failed to honor the ICE detainer.

2

Osman Armondo Paz-Ortiz, a criminal illegal alien from Honduras, was arrested for statutory sex offense with a child, indecent liberties with a child, and sex acts by a substitute parent/custodian. He was released after authorities failed to honor the ICE detainer.

3

Jeferson Moises Martinez-Sorto, a criminal illegal alien from Honduras, was arrested for sexual battery, resisting an officer, and fleeing/eluding arrest with a motor vehicle. He was released after authorities failed to honor the ICE detainer.

4

William Santos-Roca, a criminal illegal alien from Guatemala, was arrested for carrying a concealed weapon. The next day, he was arrested for a DWI. Santos-Roca has had previous arrest for a hit-and-run and multiple DWIs. He was released after authorities in North Carolina failed to honor an ICE detainer.

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Carlos Manuel Portillo-Guevara, a criminal illegal alien from El Salvador, was arrested for carrying a concealed weapon and discharge of a weapon. He was released after authorities failed to honor the ICE detainer.

j

Olvin Esau Calero-Martinez, a criminal illegal alien from Honduras, has a career criminal history which includes vehicle theft, larceny, trespassing, burglary and forced entry, property damage, possession of stolen property, and drug possession. He was released after authorities failed to honor the ICE detainer.

Justice Department Announces Nationwide Actions to Combat Illicit North Korean Government Revenue Generation

 

Four U.S. Nationals and Ukrainian Identity Broker Plead Guilty

Department Seeks Forfeiture of More Than $15M in Virtual Currency Stolen and Laundered by North Korean Hackers 

The Justice Department announced five guilty pleas and more than $15 million in civil forfeiture actions against the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) remote information technology (IT) work and virtual currency heist schemes. The DPRK government uses both types of schemes to fund its weapons and other priorities in violation of sanctions. 

First, as described in court documents associated with the guilty pleas, facilitators in the United States and Ukraine assisted North Korean actors with obtaining remote IT employment with U.S. companies. For example, the facilitators’ provided their own, false, or stolen identities, and hosted U.S. victim company-provided laptops at residences across the United States to create the false appearance that the IT workers were working domestically. In total, these defendants’ fraudulent employment schemes impacted more than 136 U.S. victim companies, generated more than $2.2 million in revenue for the DPRK regime, and compromised the identities of more than 18 U.S. persons. 

Second, as described in the two civil forfeiture complaints, a North Korean military hacking group known to the private sector as Advanced Persistent Threat 38 (APT38) carried out multimillion-dollar virtual currency heists at four overseas virtual currency platforms in 2023. While APT38 actors continued to launder their ill-gotten gains for these heists, the U.S. government froze and seized more than $15 million worth of virtual currency that it now seeks to forfeit for eventual return to the rightful owners. 

“These actions demonstrate the Department’s comprehensive approach to disrupting North Korean efforts to finance their weapons program on the backs of Americans,” said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg. “The Department will use every available tool to protect our Nation from this regime’s depredations.” 

“Ensuring national and economic security are paramount to the Department’s mission,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Matthew R. Galeotti of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “Hostile nation-states raising funds for illicit programs by stealing from digital asset exchanges threatens both. The Criminal Division is steadfast in its determination to forfeit ill-gotten gains from bad actors and return funds to victims.” 

“FBI investigations continue to expose the North Korean government’s relentless campaign to evade U.S. sanctions and generate millions of dollars to fund its authoritarian regime and weapons programs,” said Assistant Director Roman Rozhavsky of the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division. “These guilty pleas send a clear message: No matter who or where you are, if you support North Korea's efforts to victimize U.S. businesses and citizens, the FBI will find you and bring you to justice. We ask all our private sector partners to improve their security process for vetting remote workers and to remain vigilant regarding this emerging threat.”

The Department’s actions to combat both the North Korean IT worker and hacking schemes are the latest in a series of law enforcement actions under a joint National Security Division (NSD) and FBI Cyber and Counterintelligence Divisions effort, the DPRK RevGen: Domestic Enabler Initiative. This effort prioritizes targeting and disrupting the DPRK’s illicit revenue generation schemes and its U.S.-based enablers. The Department previously announced other actions pursuant to the initiative, including in January and June 2025.

As the FBI has described in Public Service Announcements published in May 2024 and January 2025, North Korean remote IT workers posing as legitimate remote IT workers have committed data extortion and exfiltrated the proprietary and sensitive data from U.S. companies. DPRK IT worker schemes typically involve the use of stolen identities, alias emails, social media, online cross-border payment platforms, and online job site accounts, as well as false websites, proxy computers, and witting and unwitting third parties located in the U.S. and elsewhere.

Three Guilty Pleas – Southern District of Georgia

In the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia, U.S. nationals Audricus Phagnasay, 24, Jason Salazar, 30, and Alexander Paul Travis, 34, each pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud conspiracy. From approximately September 2019 through November 2022, Phagnasay, Salazar, and Travis provided their U.S. identities to IT workers they knew were located outside the United States so that the workers could fraudulently apply for and obtain employment with victim U.S. companies. In addition, the three defendants hosted victim U.S. company-provided laptops at their residences, and installed remote access software on those laptops without authorization, so that the IT workers could create the false appearance that they were remote working from the defendants’ residences. Each defendant also assisted overseas IT workers in passing employer vetting procedures. Travis and Salazar, in particular, appeared for drug testing on behalf of the overseas IT workers.

“My office is committed to pursuing individuals that seek to harm the United States,” said U.S. Attorney Margaret E. Heap for the Southern District of Georgia. “This collaboration with our law enforcement agencies exemplifies how our joint efforts are successful in identifying, investigating and prosecuting those defendants.”

Travis, an active-duty member of the U.S. Army at the time, received at least $51,397 for his participation in the scheme. Phagnasay and Salazar earned at least $3,450 and $4,500, respectively. The fraudulent scheme earned approximately $1.28 million in salary payments from the victim U.S. companies, the vast majority of which were sent to the IT workers overseas.

The FBI Augusta (Georgia) Resident Agency is investigating the cases.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Alexander Hamner for the Southern District of Georgia and Trial Attorney Jacques Singer-Emery of the NSD National Security Cyber Section are prosecuting the cases.

Oleksandr Didenko Guilty Plea – District of Columbia

On Nov. 10, in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Ukrainian national Oleksandr Didenko pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud conspiracy and one count of aggravated identity theft in connection with a years-long scheme that stole the identities of U.S. citizens and sold them to overseas IT workers, including North Korean IT workers, so they could fraudulently gain employment at 40 U.S. companies. Victim U.S. companies paid Didenko’s IT worker clients hundreds of thousands of dollars for their work. As part of his plea, Didenko agreed to forfeit more than $1.4 million, which includes more than $570,000 in fiat and virtual currency seized from Didenko and his co-conspirators.

“North Korea is focused on victimizing and perpetrating fraud on American citizens, companies, and banks by stealing the identity of U.S. citizens and selling them around the world so foreign actors can gain employment in America,” said U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro for the District of Columbia. “These convictions prove that we will stop at nothing to uncover complex fraud schemes especially when they are committed by North Korean actors to fund their weapons program.”

The case was investigated by the FBI New York Field Office, with assistance from the FBI Norfolk and San Diego Field Offices and the Jefferson City (Tennessee) Resident Agency. In May 2024, Polish authorities arrested Didenko and on Dec. 10, 2024, he was extradited to the United States.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Karen P. Seifert and Steven Wasserman for the District of Columbia are prosecuting the case, with valuable assistance from Trial Attorney Jacques Singer-Emery of the NSD National Security Cyber Section. The U.S. Attorneys’ Offices for the Southern District of California, Eastern District of Tennessee, and Eastern District of Virginia, and the Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs provided significant assistance.

Erick Ntekereze Prince Guilty Plea – Southern District of Florida

On Nov. 6, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, U.S. national Erick Ntekereze Prince, 30, pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud conspiracy. From approximately June 2020 through August 2024, Prince, through his company Taggcar Inc., contracted to supply allegedly “certified” IT workers to victim U.S. companies, knowing that the IT workers were located outside the United States and were using false and stolen identities to gain employment. In addition, Prince hosted victim U.S. company-provided laptops at Florida residences and installed remote access software on those laptops without authorization, so that the IT workers could create the false appearance that they were remote working from Prince’s residence. Prince earned more than $89,000 for his participation in the scheme.

“These prosecutions make one point clear: the United States will not permit the DPRK to bankroll its weapons programs by preying on American companies and workers,” said U.S. Attorney Jason A. Reding Quiñones for the Southern District of Florida. “We will keep working with our partners across the Justice Department to uncover these schemes, recover stolen funds, and pursue every individual who enables North Korea’s operations.”

Prince, U.S. national Emanuel Ashtor, and a Mexican national Pedro Ernesto Alonso de los Reyes were charged in January 2025 by indictment alleging their participation in a criminal scheme that obtained work for North Korean IT workers from more than 64 U.S. companies. The fraudulent scheme earned more than $943,069 in salary payments from victim U.S. companies, the vast majority of which were sent to the IT workers overseas. Ashtor is awaiting trial, and de los Reyes is pending extradition from The Netherlands.

The case was investigated by the FBI Miami Field Office.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Sean Cronin for the Southern District of Florida and Trial Attorney Gregory J. Nicosia Jr. of NSD’s National Security Cyber Section are prosecuting the case.

Forfeiture Complaints for More Than $15 Million in Stolen Funds – District of Columbia

The Department recently filed two civil complaints to forfeit USDT, a virtual currency stablecoin pegged to the U.S. dollar, that the FBI seized in March 2025 from North Korean APT38 actors: an Oct. 24, 2025 complaint (1:25-cv-03771) to forfeit 1,159,834.52 USDT; and a complaint filed today (1:25-cv-03943) to forfeit 13,980,951.103 USDT. In total, the seized USDT is valued at more than $15 million.

As alleged in the complaints, the seized virtual currency relates to North Korean APT38 actors’ efforts to raise revenue for the DPRK government through four heists from virtual currency providers: (1) a July 2023 theft of approximately $37 million in virtual currency from an Estonia-based virtual currency payments processor; (2) a July 2023 theft of approximately $100 million from a Panama-based virtual currency payment processor; (3) a November 2023 theft of approximately $138 million from a Panama-based virtual currency exchange; and (4) a November 2023 theft of approximately $107 million in virtual currency from a Seychelles-based virtual currency exchange. Efforts to trace, seize, and forfeit related stolen virtual currency remain ongoing, as the APT38 actors continue to launder such funds through various virtual currency bridges, mixers, exchanges, and over-the-counter traders.

The FBI Los Angeles Field Office and the FBI’s Virtual Assets Unit are investigating the cases associated with these complaints.

Senior Counsel Jessica Peck of the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section, Trial Attorneys Gregory J. Nicosia Jr. and Prava Palacharla of NSD’s National Security Cyber Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Rick Blaylock for the District of Columbia are handling the forfeiture actions.

Other public advisories about the threats, red flag indicators, and potential mitigation measures for these schemes include a May 2022 advisory released by the FBI, Department of the Treasury, and Department of State; a July 2023 advisory from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence; and guidance issued in October 2023 by the United States and the Republic of Korea (South Korea). As described the May 2022 advisory, North Korean IT workers have been known individually to earn up to $300,000 annually, generating hundreds of millions of dollars collectively each year, on behalf of designated entities, such as the North Korean Ministry of Defense and others directly involved in the DPRK’s weapons programs.

The U.S. Department of State has offered potential rewards for up to $5 million  in support of international efforts to disrupt the DPRK’s illicit financial activities, including for cybercrimes, money laundering, and sanctions evasion.

Bronx River Art Center (BRAC) - Last Chance to have your voice heard for City Funds!

 

RSVP today! 🎨

Have Your Say in How NYC Funds The Bronx!

Bronx River Art Center,

1087 E Tremont Ave, Bronx, NY
 Wednesday, November 19th

4PM to 6PM

We’re excited to invite you to BRAC’s Idea Generation Workshop, in partnership with The People’s Money, NYC’s citywide participatory budgeting initiative led by the Civic Engagement Commission (CEC)!


This is your chance to directly influence how part of the city budget is spent in The Bronx. All New Yorkers ages 11+ can bring ideas for creative, community-focused projects that strengthen our borough.



Why attend?

  •   Shape which ideas move forward to next year’s ballot.
  •  Help BRAC secure supportive funding through The People’s Money.
  •   Enjoy free lunch, on-site childcare, and live Spanish translation.
  •   Spin the Prize Wheel for a chance to win fun prizes

Your voice matters, and it’s fun too!


Bring your family, friends, and neighbors. The more ideas, the stronger our Bronx community becomes!


Let’s make sure Bronx voices are leading the way. See you there!

Akia, Stephany, Jhanique, Jennifer, Priscilla, Ukari, and Richard

The BRAC Team