Saturday, March 19, 2022

Bronx Chamber of Commerce - Bronx Business News You Can Use


Upcoming Events, City News, Opportunities for Our Network, & More
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(Friday) Extra, Extra!
Click here for this week's video

Mayor's COVID roundtable update
Chamber community, your input is needed
Upcoming Chamber Education and Networking Events
and more!
2 Important Surveys: Your Response Is Requested








The Bronx Chamber is working with the NYC Department of Small Business Services to better understand NYC small business owners’ need for funding. This will help the City design better solutions to help small businesses grow.  This 5-minute survey will assist in collecting information about small business’s experience with, and interest in, financing assistance. 

 

Please take this separate 5-minute Small Business Regulatory Survey to add your voice regarding the impact violations have on NYC small businesses. This brief survey will allow you to share what small business go through, and for NYC government to assess the common violations.

To share additional feedback please email the NYC SBS Regulatory Reform at regreform@sbs.nyc.gov.
Update on NYC DOT Shared E-Scooter Pilot Program
Since the August 2021 launch of the shared e-scooter pilot program that started last year in the Northeast Bronx (serving Eastchester, Wakefield, Pelham Parkway, and Co-Op City), residents and visitors have taken over 425,000 rides, an average of more than 2,100 rides per day.

DOT plans to expand the service area in June 2022, bringing the pilot to Parkchester, Soundview, and Throggs Neck. The three participating companies, BirdLime and Veo, will continue to provide service across the East Bronx.
 
Click to access the feedback map which allows users to place pins down at locations where they’d like to see designated parking corrals, which will help organize the scooters on busy corridors. The Bronx Chamber of Commerce was glad to be part of the launch effort last year, and will continue to support ongoing promotion of this initiative to improve access to afforable transportation options in the borough.
Don't Miss Our Upcoming Events!
Tuesday March 29 8:30 - 10:00am
The Conference Center at 1200 Waters Place, Hutch Metro Center

Join representatives from Ponce Bank as they present an in-person workshop on Risk Management to the Bronx Chamber community, covering:

Building Your Financial Future
Assets and Assets Building
Creating A Financial Foundation
Training and Education

Tuesday April 5 9:00 - 10:00am
Want to travel to Egypt with the Bronx Chamber?

Join representatives from Aventura World at our Virtual Info Session to learn about an exclusive Early Bird deal for the Bronx Chamber Community. Our President Lisa Sorin (see photo) went on this life-changing trip last year!

Access the full travel packet here, and click below to register for the 4/5 Zoom where you can get all your pressing questions answered:

Tuesday April 12 6:00pm
Wingate by Wyndham Haven Park Hotel

Spring into Networking Mixer

Member Tickets: $20 Future Members: $25

We had a blast at our most recent St. Patrick's day mixer and we hope to see you at the next one on April 12 where you'll enjoy complimentary food on the gorgeous Haven Park Hotel Rooftop, sponsored by Rosa's at Park restaurant and the Wingate!

Wednesday April 13 9:00am
Your Financial Journey Workshop
Part of our BxCC How to Get Bankable Series

Join the Bronx Chamber and Yesenia Quinones, Bronx Community Manager for JPM Chase, for a free online workshop that will guide you through your financial journey with an in-depth discussion on savings and budgeting.

Save the Date: Thursday, April 21
Earth Day Networking BreakfastBronx Zoo, Schiff Hall
For the complete Bronx Chamber Events Calendar, featuring educational workshops, networking events and other opportunities hosted by the Chamber, its members, & partners, please visit and bookmark our website events calendar link in your browser - new events are added weekly!
Bronx Chamber Foundation Signature Event
Women of Distinction Event
Women Providing Healing, Promoting Hope

Honoring Christine Croke, RN
Montefiore Weiler Hospital, Einstein Campus

Friday, March 25, 2022
11:30am - 2:00pm at Villa Barone Manor

Many thanks to our sponsors (list to date):
Con Edison, Ponce Bank, Verizon, The Monroe Foundation, Simone Development, New York Botanical Garden, Orange Bank & Trust Co., KZA Realty, Sandra Erickson Real Estate, Woodlawn Cemetery & Conservancy, F&F Insurance, Metro Optics, & MBD Housing

Information: foundation@bronxchamber.org
NYC Small Business Services Webinar
Wednesday, March 23 from 1:00 - 2:30pm
NYC Small Business Services (SBS) experts will share information about the M/WBE certification process and eligibility requirements, and how you can best leverage your certification to build relationships with key government contacts and increase your opportunities to do business with the City.

The City spends up to $20 billion per year on goods and services. Getting certified will help you compete for these opportunities and access exclusive programs to help your small business grow!

Exclusively For Chamber Members

Senator Biaggi's Week in Review: 3/14/22-3/18/22

 

Senator Alessandra Biaggi

Dear Community,

I am proud to announce that Governor Hochul has signed S812A, my bill with Assemblymember Yuh-Line Niou to establish a toll-free confidential legal hotline for victims of workplace sexual harassment. This hotline will connect complainants with experienced pro-bono attorneys who will help inform them of their legal rights and advise them on the specifics of their individualized cases. 

Unfortunately, only 30% of victims of workplace sexual harassment report the harassment to an official channel. This is often because employees don’t know where to go or what their options are. By creating a free legal hotline, employees across the state – in a variety of workplaces and industries – can now easily access confidential legal guidance through the Division of Human Rights.

The Governor also signed two other bills, S3395A and S5870, to address workplace sexual harassment. I am grateful to Governor Hochul for prioritizing survivor justice in New York, and would also like to acknowledge and thank the Sexual Harassment Working Group for their tireless commitment to building a harassment-free New York. 

This week, the State Senate also passed its one-house budget resolution. This resolution lays out the priorities of the legislature, and is the starting point for our negotiations with the Governor as we finalize the state budget. Stay tuned for another email from my office with more details on the crucial investments made in this year’s one-house budget resolution. 

Lastly, I would like to wish everyone a happy Purim, St. Patrick’s Day, and Holi! I hope everyone celebrating had a festive and joyful week. 

With Gratitude,

State Senator Alessandra Biaggi

NYC PUBLIC ADVOCATE RELEASES EDUCATION EQUITY REPORT CENTERING INVESTMENT IN SCHOOLS

 

The new report on recovery and renewal for New York City public schools comes two years after school buildings closed due to COVID-19.

 New York City Public Advocate Jumaane D. Williams today released a new report outlining key priorities for equitable investment in and renewal of the city's school system as the city works to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. The paper, Invest in Education, explores how New York City public schools can better support and empower young people across the city. It comes two years after city school buildings closed in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, and as the city and state now remove some COVID precautions from schools.

The following two years of the pandemic have laid bare the inequities among different students, schools, and communities. As the future of education funding is being discussed and debated on both city and state budget levels, this report sets a framework of investment, not austerity, to address the issues that predated the pandemic as well as those it exacerbated, and build a more sustainable, more equitable future through recovery. 


“Combating inequity through investment, not austerity, should be at the center of our approach to education as we move forward in recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic that upended our schools, creating immense new challenges and exacerbating the old for students, teachers, parents and school staff,” said Public Advocate Jumaane D. Williams on releasing the report. “If we return to the old patterns and practices, rather than forging a new normal, we will have failed our students. We can’t rely on one-time expenditures or federal infusions to move forward in recovery and renewal for our our schools – we need sustained investment of attention and resources to correct longstanding inequities, injustices, and inadequacies and strengthen a school system that forms the foundation of our city.” 


The report outlines several key priorities for improving accessibility and equity across the system, highlighting a series of areas in need of attention and investment. Among them are ensuring the health and safety of students in the classroom amidst the past two years of trauma, creating healing-centered educational environments where all types of students can thrive, developing offices and programs to better serve the most vulnerable students, and expanding and implementing extracurricular initiatives that complement classroom learning. The report also looks to other school systems and individual schools from outside of the city for inspiration and information on potential models to implement these reforms on the ground. 


To renew our school system to better serve our young people, as well as teachers, parents, and school staff, the report recommends:


  • Creating healthier school environments for students. 
  • Schools must have lead-free pipes, enhanced ventilation, social distancing, testing capacity to meet demand, and a remote option for students who need it. 
  • Equitably funding all of our public schools.
  • The DOE must commit to a plan for spending and allocating fair student funding
  • Transitioning to healing-centered schools.
  • Schools should adopt a healing-centered framework to support their students, and this framework would take steps to ensure that all students, staff, and families feel safe, supported, and seen.
  • The DOE must also invest in funding for this training for staff and school communities
  • Supporting students with disabilities.
  • All students with disabilities must have access to the services to which they are entitled, such as speech, physical, and occupational therapies, from preschool through college
  • Ensuring every student feels safe at school.
  • Schools should focus on restorative justice instead of simply punishment.
  • Prioritizing students who are English learners.
  • Immigrant families and households need to be engaged in the languages that they speak
  • Implementing culturally responsive teaching in our schools.
  • Some studies have linked culturally relevant teaching and targeted support for students of more color to reduced dropout rates and increased attendance and grades. 
  • Establishing an Office for Students in Foster Care
  • Students in Foster Care have specific and unique challenges, and the public school system must work to help these students and keep them in their original schools whenever possible. 
  • Ending the digital divide.
  • The city must continue its efforts to ensure that all students have access to devices and the internet when at home. 
  • Reducing class sizes.
  • Too many students are learning in overcrowded classrooms, and this leads to insufficient resources for all students but especially disabled students or students still learning English. 
  • The Department of Education must hire more teachers and improve teacher retention.
  • Desegregating our schools.
  • New York City’s public schools are among the most segregated in the nation, and this hurts all of our students. Eliminating gifted and talented programs would be a significant step towards desegregating our schools; at the same time, screened and specialized schools continue to perpetuate and worsen school segregation. 
  • The Department of Education must create an established diversity planning process and implement a whole-school enrichment model. 
  • Streamlining and growing successful programs like Summer Rising, the Student Academic Achievement Plan, and the Academic Recovery Plan Transporting students safely and reliably to and from school. 
  • The Office of the Public Advocate suggests a pilot program for the recruitment, training and nomination of sub-paras (part-time paraprofessionals) specifically for the use of serving students in need. 
  • Providing more professional experience for recent high school and CUNY graduates
  • Experiences provided through SYEP and city-funded internships, fellowships, and networking and professional development opportunities help graduates improve employment prospects.


With the city budget hearings for education beginning next week, the state budget for education in late stages of negotiation and development, and both students and adults in schools adapting to new changes in pandemic protocols, this is a critical moment to address both the urgent and the underlying issues in our schools. Invest in Education provides a framework of priorities to help renew the system with justice, equity, and opportunity.  


The full report is available for review on the Public Advocate’s website.

Friday, March 18, 2022

U.S. Attorney Announces Conviction Of Chappaqua Man For Gunpoint Robbery Of Over 100 Kilograms Of Cocaine, Smuggling A Firearm And Other Contraband Into The Metropolitan Correctional Center; Wife’s Conviction For Her Role Also Unsealed

 

 Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced the unsealing today of a four-count superseding information charging DEEJAY WHITE with offenses relating to his participation in a May 29, 2019 gunpoint robbery in the Bronx targeting more than 150 kilograms of cocaine, his participation in a conspiracy to smuggle contraband—including narcotics and a firearm—into the Metropolitan Correctional Center (“MCC”), a federal detention facility, and his possession of that firearm while incarcerated.  DEEJAY WHITE pled guilty on July 23, 2021, before U.S. District Judge P. Kevin Castel. 

Mr. Williams also announced the unsealing of a five-count information charging DAWNTIANA WHITE, DEEJAY WHITE’s wife, who pled guilty on July 13, 2021 before U.S. District Judge Katherine Polk Failla to conspiracy to distribute narcotics, conspiracy to provide prison contraband, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.  DAWNTIANA WHITE also pled guilty on March 17, 2022 before Judge Failla to a one-count superseding information charging her with perjury.

DEEJAY WHITE is scheduled to be sentenced on May 17, 2022, and DAWNTIANA WHITE is scheduled to be sentenced on June 14, 2022.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said:  “Deejay White was responsible for a dangerous gunpoint robbery of more than one hundred kilograms of cocaine that left several victims injured.  Even after he was arrested and in jail, facing up to a life sentence on those charges, Deejay White continued to commit crimes.  Deejay White and his wife, Dawntiana White, placed inmates, staff, and court personnel in grave danger by smuggling drugs and a firearm into a federal detention facility.  Individuals who are tempted to defy law and order should be on notice that we will continue working to identify and put an end to their alarming conduct and to hold them accountable.”

According to the Informations unsealed today, court filings, and statements made during earlier court appearances:

In late May 2019, a Bronx-based member of a Puerto Rico-based drug trafficking organization (“DTO”) was expecting a delivery of furniture concealing approximately 176 kilograms of the DTO’s cocaine.  DEEJAY WHITE and others learned of the expected shipment and planned a violent robbery of the DTO’s cocaine.  On May 29, 2019, DEEJAY WHITE parked outside the Bronx apartment where the DTO’s cocaine was stored while four co-conspirators forced entry into the apartment and held up the ten victims, including four children, at gunpoint.  Two victims were pistol-whipped during the robbery and a third sustained serious injuries after jumping out of the apartment’s third-floor window in an attempt to flee to safety.  One of the robbers threw a duffel bag containing kilograms of cocaine into DEEJAY WHITE’s car, which then drove off.

DEEJAY WHITE was arrested on November 25, 2019 on charges relating to the robbery and conspiracy to distribute the stolen cocaine, ordered detained, and housed at the MCC in Manhattan.  Days after entering the MCC, DEEJAY WHITE began using contraband cellphones to conspire with others—including his wife, DAWNTIANA WHITE—to commit additional crimes.  Among other things, DEEJAY WHITE directed DAWNTIANA WHITE to smuggle drugs to DEEJAY WHITE in the MCC, which DAWNTIANA WHITE did on multiple occasions.

In or about January 2020, DEEJAY WHITE conspired with DAWNTIANA WHITE and others to have a firearm (the “Firearm”) and drugs smuggled to DEEJAY WHITE inside the MCC.  After they successfully smuggled the Firearm and contraband into the MCC, DEEJAY WHITE confirmed to DAWNTIANA WHITE that he had received the Firearm. 

On or about February 26, 2020, Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) officials discovered a contraband cellphone in DEEJAY WHITE’s cell and transferred him to the Specialized Housing Unit (“SHU”).  While in the SHU, DEEJAY WHITE lied to a MCC investigator about his own role in smuggling the Firearm into the MCC and his possession of the Firearm inside the MCC, which led to an extensive lockdown of the MCC while BOP officials searched for the gun and other contraband.  Following a search of the MCC, on or about March 5, 2020, the Firearm, which was loaded, was recovered from inside a wall of DEEJAY WHITE’s MCC cell. 

On or about July 14, 2021, DAWNTIANA WHITE falsely testified before a Grand Jury in the Southern District of New York about how she obtained the Firearm to smuggle to DEEJAY WHITE inside the MCC.

DEEJAY WHITE, 45, of Chappaqua, New York, pled guilty to conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery, which carries a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in prison; brandishing a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, which carries a statutory maximum sentence of life in prison, and a mandatory minimum sentence of seven years in prison to run consecutively to any other term of imprisonment; being a felon in possession of a firearm, which carries a statutory maximum sentence of 10 years in prison; and conspiracy to receive contraband in prison, which carries a statutory maximum sentence of five years in prison.  The maximum potential sentences in DEEJAY WHITE’s case are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of DEEJAY WHITE will be determined by the judge.

DAWNTIANA WHITE, 38, of Brooklyn, New York, pled guilty to narcotics conspiracy, which carries a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in prison; prison contraband conspiracy, which carries a statutory maximum sentence of five years in prison; obstruction of justice, which carries a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years; two counts of wire fraud, each of which carries a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in prison; and perjury, which carries a statutory maximum sentence of five years in prison.  The maximum potential sentences in DAWNTIANA WHITE’s case are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of DAWNTIANA WHITE will be determined by the judge.

This effort is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) operation.  OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach.  Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at https://www.justice.gov/OCDETF.

The prosecutions of DEEJAY WHITE for conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery and brandishing a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, and of DAWNTIANA WHITE for narcotics conspiracy and wire fraud, are being handled by the Office’s Narcotics Unit.  Assistant United States Attorneys Juliana N. Murray, Ryan B. Finkel, Peter J. Davis, and Kaylan E. Lasky are in charge of the prosecutions.  Mr. Williams praised the outstanding investigative work of the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (“ATF”), the New York Field Division of the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”), the New York Office of the United States Postal Inspection Service, and the New York State Police (“NYSP”) in this investigation.

The prosecutions of DEEJAY WHITE for conspiring to receive contraband in prison and being a felon in possession of a firearm, and of DAWNTIANA WHITE for participating in a prison contraband conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and perjury are being handled by the Office’s Narcotics and Public Corruption Units.  Assistant United States Attorneys Juliana N. Murray, Ryan B. Finkel, Peter J. Davis, Kaylan E. Lasky, Aline R. Flodr, Daniel H. Wolf, and Jonathan E. Rebold are in charge of the prosecutions.  Mr. Williams praised the outstanding investigative work of the New York Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General New York Field Office, Special Agents from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection in New York, the DEA, ATF, NYPD, and NYSP in this investigation.

MAN INDICTED FOR MURDERING ESTRANGED WIFE

 

Defendant Stabbed Victim Multiple Times After Lying in Wait in Her Home

 Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark today announced that a man has been indicted for second-degree Murder and additional charges for stabbing his estranged wife in her home.

 District Attorney Clark said, “The defendant allegedly sought out a key to the victim’s home, waited for her arrival, and repeatedly stabbed her, leading to her death. He stole a mother away from two children. We will seek justice for this heinous act and continue to hold perpetrators of domestic violence accountable.”

 District Attorney Clark said the defendant, Exiquio Castillo, 47, last of 840 Grand Concourse, was arraigned today on second-degree Murder, first-degree Manslaughter, fourth-degree Criminal Possession of a Weapon, and fourth-degree Criminal Mischief before Bronx Supreme Court Justice George Villegas. The defendant was remanded and is due back in court on June 1, 2022.

 According to the investigation, in the early morning hours of February 16, 2022 inside her home in the Van Nest section, the defendant allegedly entered Flor Recio Noble’s home, knowing she wasn’t there. While waiting for her to return, he allegedly slashed furniture, clothing, and the bed, and destroyed televisions and personal items.

 When Recio Noble arrived home, the defendant allegedly pulled her inside while holding a knife. A friend who was with the victim attempted to stop the defendant by wrestling away the knife. The defendant retrieved a second knife from the kitchen and stabbed Recio Noble multiple times. The victim was taken to a nearby hospital and died from her wounds.

 District Attorney Clark thanked NYPD Detective Manuel Figueroa of the 43rd Precinct and Detective Sheldon Smith of Bronx Homicide for their work in the investigation.

An indictment is an accusatory instrument and not proof of a defendant’s guilt.