Monday, January 14, 2019

SAGE - Ready for a banner 2019?


“This is home. This is community.”
SAGE will soon make history—and fulfill a decades-long dream—when it opens the first-ever LGBT-welcoming housing developments in New York City, the birthplace of the LGBT movement. In 2019, as we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall uprising, we could not be prouder to honor the Stonewall generation by providing them the housing they deserve and ensuring they have the opportunity to age with dignity and respect.

We’re excited to share that the Ingersoll Senior Residences will open in the summer of 2019 in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, and the Crotona Senior Residences in the Bronx will open in late 2019. Individuals and couples who are at least 62 years old and income-qualified for affordable housing in New York City can apply. The application process for Ingersoll Senior Residences is expected to begin in March. Sign up for more information or read our frequently asked questions.  
Sparking new dialogue on LGBT aging issues 
SAGE staff will join thousands of LGBT activists in Detroit, Michigan, from January 23 to 27 to participate in Creating Change, the biggest LGBT activist gathering in the country. The annual conference brings together leaders in the LGBT movement who are working to create a world in which our community is protected, welcomed, and celebrated. SAGE will present a series of workshops and trainings and, in collaboration with the National LGBTQ Task Force, will honor revered Detroit LGBT community organizer and leader Cornelius Wilson Jr. with the Creating Change SAGE Advocacy Award for Excellence in Leadership on Aging Issues.
Hot off the press: SAGE’s 2018 fall magazine
If you haven’t done so yet, check out our most recent SAGEMatters magazine. Our newest issue digs into what it means to be “Building a Movement,” including lifting up everyday leaders who helped shape SAGE and our shared LGBT history. Read our most popular stories, including "LGBT Elders Now Have a Place to Call Home," "My Religion Stops Where Your Civil Rights Begin," and "The Ongoing Threat of Religious-Based LGBT Discrimination"—or download the entire issue.
Toys Party draws thousands
We had a blast at the 33rd annual Toys Party! This year’s event on Sunday, December 9, raised more than $280,000 to benefit SAGE and collected more than 5,000 toys for children in need. The crowd heard inspiring speeches from CNN’s Don Lemon and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. The two were joined by special guests including New York City Council Speaker Corey Johnson and actors Lorraine Bracco, Mariska Hargitay, and Frankie Grande. Thank you to hosts Robby Browne, Chris Kann, and David Tufts for their extraordinary efforts to bring our LGBT community together for a great cause. Check out our Flickr page to view, download, and share photos!
Do you have a Stonewall story?
As we embark on honoring the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising, we’re looking for individuals to participate in a variety of projects in 2019. Did you, or someone you know, participate in the NYC Stonewall Uprising in 1969? Do you have a connection to the Stonewall Uprising, and/or a story to share? Do you remember the impact of the Stonewall Uprising on the LGBT community? Do you simply want to share what Stonewall, either as the marker of the beginning of the modern LGBT movement or as a place, means to you? If so, we want to hear from you. Email us at stonewallstories@sageusa.org.
Metrosource names SAGE to its “People We Love 2018” list
SAGE was honored and proud to be named one of Metrosource’s 2018 “People We Love.” The piece shines a spotlight on SAGE’s work, keeping LGBT elder issues in the national conversation and helping to ensure a fulfilling future for all LGBT people.
Mark Your Calendars!
January 20, 2019 | Palm Springs, CA
Please join SAGE and supporters as we honor the LGBT Community Center of the Desert for their tireless commitment to advancing LGBT rights. Buy tickets »
 
February 9, 2019 | The Betsy Hotel, Miami Beach, FL
Join us for drinks and hors d’oeuvres in Miami to celebrate our community’s trailblazers and honor local leaders Raquel Matas and Carla Lupi. Buy tickets »
 
SAVE THE DATE: SAGE Day of Advocacy
March 13, 2019 | Washington, D.C.
SAGE and LGBT elders from across the country will gather in D.C. for SAGE’s first-ever National Day of Advocacy on March 13, 2019. Find out more »

Engel, Brooks, DeGette, Herrera Beutler Introduce Poison Control Bill


  Congress Members Eliot Engel (D-NY), Susan Brooks (R-IN), Diana DeGette (D-CO), and Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-WA) have introduced H.R. 501, the Poison Center Network Enhancement Act of 2019, to assist with potential poison exposures and help combat the national opioid epidemic.

Poison control centers are vital to preventing toxic exposure and poisoning injury and deaths, including opioid and other drug overdoses. This bill reauthorizes funding for the Poison Center Network, including their national toll-free number (800) 222-1222. It also clarifies that poison control centers can be called upon to assist with public health emergencies, responses, and preparedness; and requests that enhanced communications capabilities like texting be established.

“The Poison Control network is a valuable tool to help keep families safe and to combat the nationwide opioid crisis. In Westchester County, 124 people died due to opioids in 2016. In the Bronx, more New Yorkers died of overdoses than in any other borough. This bill shows an ongoing bipartisan commitment to continuing support for the nation’s poison control centers that millions of Americans rely on every year. I am proud that we were able to introduce it so early in the 116th Congress,” said Rep. Engel.  

“On behalf of the 1,852 Hoosiers who died of an opioid overdose in 2017, I am proud to join my colleagues to introduce this bill because poison control centers are essential to combatting the deadly opioid crisis. These centers across the country are fielding almost 192 cases a day of opioid abuse and misuse and compile data that can be used to discover hotspots for opioid abuse and misuse. It is important we reauthorize the national network of poison control centers because they save lives by offering free, confidential, and expert medical advice 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” said Rep. Brooks.

 “Our poison control centers play a vital role in the fight to combat the nation’s growing opioid epidemic. Not only do these centers help us identify communities at a heightened risk of opioid abuse, they also provide training and education programs on safe opioid prescribing practices. If we, as a country, are going to be serious about protecting the public from the dangers of opioid misuse, funding these centers is a must,”said Rep. DeGette.  

“We are facing a crisis level of opioid overdoses in our country and Congress has to continue combatting this devastating epidemic. One important tool we have is the network of Poison Control Centers, which are on the front lines of preventing drug overdoses in our communities. I am proud to join my colleagues in this bipartisan effort to ensure the Poison Control Network is equipped to educate, raise awareness, and continue their work to save lives in Southwest Washington and communities across our country,” said Rep. Herrera Beutler.

DE BLASIO ADMINISTRATION SUES FIRM FOR RUNNING $20 MILLION ILLEGAL SHORT-TERM RENTAL OPERATION


The Mayor’s Office of Special Enforcement estimates as many as one-third of short-term rentals in New York City are part of a highly developed commercial operation

  The Mayor's Office of Special Enforcement is bringing a lawsuit against Manhattan real estate brokerage firm, Metropolitan Property Group (MPG), five current and former MPG employees, and 18 corporate entities affiliated with these employees for turning at least 130 apartments across 35 residential buildings, including one entire building in East Harlem, into illegal short-term rentals primarily through Airbnb.

“Illegal hotels take precious housing away from New Yorkers and destabilize our communities. My administration is cracking down on corporate operators to ensure residents and visitors are safe and are treated fairly,” said Mayor de Blasio.

“Over and over again, well-meaning visitors are being misled by sophisticated businesspeople into booking illegal rentals. Only with better data and cooperation from the booking websites can we efficiently identify and shut down these operations. Our top priority is preserving housing and a sense of community in New York neighborhoods, and we want guests to feel safe when they visit our city,” says Christian Klossner, Executive Director of the Mayor’s Office of Special Enforcement.

MPG and their employees advertised short-term rentals on Airbnb through approximately 250 listings via approximately 101 host accounts using various fake identities. Nearly 70 percent of locations advertised omitted the house number for the rental location. The platforms’ data shows the same contact information was often used to set up the distinct host accounts. 

Users who advertise housing for rent on booking platforms were allowed to use fake identities, create multiple host accounts, and omit location information, obstructing enforcement as well as consumers’ ability to receive complete information and track reviews. In response to community complaints, OSE conducted inspections and issued violations in five buildings named in the lawsuit. OSE then utilized data obtained from the platforms via administrative subpoena to connect illegal activity to the ring of real estate professionals.

OSE was also able to determine the 18 entities affiliated with MPG and its employees received at least $20.7 million in short-term rental revenue through Airbnb alone from 2015 to 2018. MPG employees conducted 13,691 short-term rental transactions, involving over 75,000 guests who were not notified of the illegality of the rentals nor the lack of safety measures. Revenue from almost 3,000 short-term rental transactions were made payable to MPG’s headquarters.

OSE identified at least 138 listings on Airbnb advertising short-term rentals within the five Subject Buildings, located at 200 East 116th Street in East Harlem, which has entirely been converted to short-term rentals, 123 East 54th Street in Midtown East, 207-215 East 27th Street, 230 East 30th Street and 2118 3rd Avenue in Kips Bay. OSE estimates MPG has advertised and maintained short-term rentals in 30 other buildings in Manhattan since 2014.

Based on data the booking platforms make publicly available, there are approximately 60,000 listings on the top five platforms for vacation rentals. OSE estimates 33 percent of listings are commercial listings.

The complaint filed in court today can be found here.

“These egregious violations are prime examples of just how serious the illegal hotel problem is in our city. I commend OSE for their stellar work and look forward to further strengthening our enforcement tools so that we may meet this challenge head on. This Council will continue to combat the illegal hotel problem to increase public safety and protect our affordable housing stock,” said City Council Speaker Corey Johnson.

MAYOR DE BLASIO EXPANDS NYC FERRY SYSTEM, CONNECTING ALL FIVE BOROUGHS


Revised ridership projections anticipate serving 11M annual riders by 2023


Following his State of the City address last week, Mayor de Blasio today released additional details about the expansion of the NYC Ferry system, which will begin serving all five boroughs in 2020. The expansion includes the addition of two new routes that will run from Staten Island and Coney Island, plus the modification of two existing routes to include new stops in the Bronx and Brooklyn. A new ferry stop in the Throggs Neck/Ferry Point Park section of the Bronx will join the Soundview route, and a stop at the Brooklyn Navy Yard will be added to the Astoria Route.

“It’s official. The NYC Ferry will now serve all five boroughs!” said Mayor de Blasio. “We’re delivering new routes to Staten Island, Coney Island, and new stops in the Bronx and Brooklyn. As New Yorkers take to the water to get around our city more than ever before, we will look forward to improving the NYC Ferry system to make it better than ever.”

“In less than two years, NYC Ferry has become one of the most reliable, affordable, and beloved transit systems in the city,” said James Patchett, New York City Economic Development President and CEO. “Expansion of the system means getting even more New Yorkers where they need to go, increasing access to good-paying jobs, schools, and other neighborhoods, all for the price of a subway ride. We are proud to have delivered an invaluable asset to the city that makes all five boroughs fairer and stronger.”

The expansion will increase service for many waterfront communities where neighborhoods are growing, and job centers are burgeoning. The NYC Ferry expansion includes:

· Launch of the St. George Route in 2020: The new route will run from St. George to Battery Park City/Vesey St., ending at Midtown West (W. 39th St. /Pier 79). Anticipated total run time is ~35 minutes.

· Launch of the Coney Island Route in 2021: The Coney Island route will launch in 2021, with a stop in Bay Ridge, before ending at Wall St. /Pier 11, an anticipated total run time of ~35 minutes from start to finish. The route is estimated to serve approximately four thousand NYCHA residents that live within a half-mile radius of the landing.

· Extension of the Soundview Route in 2021: A new landing in Throggs Neck/Ferry Point Park will be added to the Soundview route. Launched in August 2018, the Soundview route connects residents and workers in the East Bronx with stops on Manhattan’s Upper East Side (E. 90th St.), Midtown East/E. 34th St. and Wall St./Pier 11. Riders boarding at the new Throggs Neck/Ferry Point Park ferry stop are able to transfer for free to the East River, Rockaway, Astoria, and South Brooklyn routes at East 34th St. and Wall St. /Pier 11. The extended route will take approximately ~51 minutes from start to finish.

· Modification of the South Brooklyn Route in 2021: The South Brooklyn Route will be reconfigured to start from Sunset Park/Brooklyn Army Terminal (BAT) instead of Bay Ridge, which will be added to the new Coney Island Route and will no longer stop at DUMBO/BBP1. Alternatively, DUMBO/BBP1 will only be accessible via the East River Route. Starting in 2021, the new estimated run time will be ~34 minutes from start to finish. In addition to current route reconfiguration, future modifications may occur to expand service to emerging job clusters.

· Modification of the Astoria Route in 2019 to include the Brooklyn Navy Yard: This May, a stop will be added at the Brooklyn Navy Yard on the Astoria Route. The Navy Yard, which currently serves as NYC Ferry’s homeport, is undergoing a historic expansion of the campus and is expected to more than double its workforce by 2020. The Navy Yard ferry stop also offers a new commuting option for the many surrounding neighborhoods along the stretch of waterfront, including over 14,000 NYCHA residents. Starting this May, the Astoria Route will take ~45 minutes from start to finish.

Following the launch of the Lower East Side route in August 2018, New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) commenced the 2018 Feasibility Study to determine whether the system could expand to serve more waterfront communities throughout the five boroughs. The study included feedback from New Yorkers, elected officials, and community boards. The feasibility study results are available here.

In 2015, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced his vision for a six-route citywide ferry service that would expand transportation access across the city affordably and reliably. In the summers of 2017 and 2018, NYCEDC launched the East River, Rockaway, South Brooklyn, Astoria, Lower East Side and Soundview routes. With 21 landings across New York City, NYC Ferry has served nearly eight million riders to date. With the addition of the St. George and Coney Island routes, and the Throgs Neck/Ferry Point Park and BK Navy Yard’s landings, revised annual ridership forecasts project the system will reach 11 million annual riders by 2023.

In May of 2018, the de Blasio administration announced it was preparing to invest $300 million in capital for the service over the next five years.  The long-term capital plan announced in May 2018 will invest in infrastructure improvements and upgrades to existing infrastructure, larger capacity vessels, a second homeport facility, and improvements to the City’s two main ferry terminals, Wall St./Pier 11 and E. 34th St. The City will invest an additional $100 million in capital to add fleet capacity, build new landings, and invest in existing landings to support the system’s expansion.

“Our City’s ferries have proven to be a great alternate mode of transportation and a useful utilization of our waterfronts,” said City Council Speaker Corey Johnson. “I'm thrilled that ferry service is being expanded across the City, and that residents on the West Side will now have a direct link to Lower Manhattan and Staten Island. I want to thank EDC and the administration for their commitment to expanding ferry service in the city.”
  

Sunday, January 13, 2019

Public and Private Partners Help The Arts Flourish in the Bronx


KZA Realty Group Instrumental in Bringing
Bronx Kreate Space Arts Incubator to the Borough

The artistic renaissance in the Bronx is getting a boost as workplace and community incubator Bronx Kreate Space obtained 15 Canal Place in the Mott Haven neighborhood.
Made possible in part by a $595,000 Downtown Revitalization Award from New York State and a $350,000 loan arranged by The Bronx Overall Economic Development Corp. and its president, Marlene Cintron, Bronx Kreate Space plans to establish a modern arts hub that will provide local artists with affordable creative space that fosters artistic synergies while also driving the local economy.
But first, the entity had to find a suitable site, eventually settling on a four-story warehouse built in 1908. Bronx Kreate Space singled out Kathy Zamechansky, president of KZA Realty Group, for her pivotal role in securing the new space.
“Kathy was instrumental in helping Bronx Kreate Space find and secure our location in the South Bronx,” said Dan Herdoon, CEO of Bronx Kreate Space. “We began working with Kathy more than two years ago and despite some challenges, she persevered as a partner and advocate for our team, taking an interest as if it were her own project. This is a win for us, and a win for the borough.”

Bronx Kreate Space will lease affordable studios to more than 100 artists and makers, along with offering community memberships that allow participants to take part in classes, lectures, gallery space and maker markets.

“This project is of utmost importance to the continued revitalization of the Bronx especially the ability to attract artists and artisans,” said Zamechansky, an award-winning real estate professional who has helped spur the borough’s commercial and residential renaissance. “This deal would not have happened without support from the Borough President’s office, who encouraged Dan Herdoon and his team to open the site in the Bronx, and the Bronx Overall Economic Development Corporation, who provided a portion of the financing needed to build out the site and facilitated the New York State grant. We are grateful for their help.”

In partnership with local museums, non-profit organizations, schools and government agencies, Bronx Kreate Space will establish a cultural destination in the borough and foster a strong sense of community in the immediate area. Resident and affiliated artists will also mentor local public and private school students.

“The Bronx has always been an innovator in the arts and music, but now we have a home where artists can work in a communal setting,” said Marlene Cintron, president of the Bronx Overall Economic Development Corporation. “The economic development impact of supporting our local artists in the Bronx under one roof will be unprecedented. I look forward to financing more of them as the need for even more space becomes apparent.”

In addition to hiring management, maintenance and hospitality employees, Bronx Kreate Space will partner with a local coffee shop to occupy a cafe space and help build traffic for the ground floor gallery. The space will also host local events.

“Bronx Kreate Space will be instrumental in sending the message that art is for everyone and we need to keep it alive in the Bronx,” said Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz, Jr. “My office supports projects like this to help break down barriers of entry for local artists and the community and I am excited to see this project come to fruition. I thank KZA Realty Group and Kathy Zamechansky for their contribution to the Bronx arts community through the development of this project and the Bronx Overall Economic Development Corp. for providing a significant percentage of the funding to make this happen.”

Councilman Santa Mark Gjonaj Holds Toy Giveaway



  It may have been a few weeks after Christmas, but Sunday Councilman Mark Gjonaj and some of his staff gathered the toys collected from his Christmas Party and spread them out in his office. This was so children could receive another toy from Councilman Santa Mark Gjonaj. While there were hundreds of toys on display for children to choose from, any toys that were not chosen will be given to Einstein Hospital for children at the hospital to enjoy.


Above and below children show off their toys they received from Councilman Santa Mark Gjonaj.




Above - These four children show off their toys they received from Councilman Santa Mark Gjonaj.
Below - There were toys for even the youngest of children from Councilman Santa Mark Gjonaj.



Second Truck in As Many Days Stuck On Henry Hudson Parkway



  This three truck caravan wound up getting stuck on the Henry Hudson Parkway just before the nine foot seven inch clearance West 239th Street overpass this afternoon. It took NYPD Highway police and the help of a large truck tow-truck over two hours to help maneuver the three truck caravan off the parkway. The GMC truck caravan departed Texas enroute to Maine. This was the second truck to have a problem in as many days at this West 239th Street overpass.

New York State Police have said at a prior truck incident which sheared half of the roof off months ago at this overpass, that the four large 'NO TRUCKS' signs at the entrance to the Henry Hudson Parkway at the George Washington Bridge were replaced with only one smaller sign. It would only make sense that today's truck caravan enroute from Texas to Maine went across the George Washington Bridge.


Above - You can see that as this truck caravan backed up, the rear truck went one way, the middle truck a different way, and the first truck a third way.
Below - Police were finally able after two hours able to get the truck caravan to a place where it could be driven off the parkway over an island.




The truck caravan now safely off the Parkway sits on the service road where the driver was given four summonses, and a bill for one thousand dollars by the tow truck company which had to assist in getting the trucks off the parkway.