2018 The Year of the Bird

Along with it being the Year of the Dog…!

Stay tuned for local events/updates

National Geographic’s The Year of the Bird

“In 2018, we mark the centennial of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, the most powerful and important bird-protection law ever passed. In honor of this milestone, nature lovers around the world are joining forces to celebrate the “Year of the Bird” and commit to protecting birds today and for the next hundred years.”

February is The Great Backyard (Park/Community Garden) Bird Count. Look for birds in many places. Here’s more.

 

“IF YOU TAKE CARE OF BIRDS, YOU TAKE CARE OF MOST OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS IN THE WORLD”

 

With thanks to:

Read More2018 The Year of the Bird
  • Post category:News

Presentation by MTA & NYC Dept of Transportation on the L Train Shutdown Impacts

CB 3 Transportation Committee meeting regarding coming (April 2019) L Train shutdown

Tuesday, February 13, 2018 at 6:30 PM

Grace Church School. 46 Cooper Square (at 6th street/Bowery)

MTA and DOT will present the latest plans and answer your questions.

The Transportation Committee will vote on a resolution to send your concerns to the MTA and DOT and ask for plans to address these concerns.

CB3 needs your help identify possible impacts and problems that need to be addressed.

 

 

Questions/Concerns on impacts on the SDR Park community

The plan to mitigate the transportation needs during the shut down of the L train would entail 70 Diesel buses an hour coming through our community across Delancey Street (and returning down Chrystie Street). This will increase pollution, bring unprecedented traffic down Chrystie/Delancey Streets alongside and through the park in a high-density area with children, seniors, deaf residents, blind gardeners, students, ball players, bikers, families, small businesses and workers.

We understand that this is a massive, unplanned and necessary shut down to fix the Sandy -damaged tunnel.

Here are our questions/concerns:

Street Congestion

  • There are several buildings in various phases of planned/current construction on Chrystie Street where buses are planned to travel to get to the Williamsburg Bridge via Delancey Street. We see scenarios of backed up buses and traffic bringing yet more pollution and dangerous crossings here unless building on those construction sites are halted during the shut down. https://ny.curbed.com/maps/lower-east-side-apartments-development-boom-nyc
  • Will congestion pricing help with this?
  • Has there been any study of how existing bus traffic (both local MTA buses serving this community and the interstate bus stands) along and near Delancey and Chrystie Streets will be affected by this new influx (deluge?) of buses?
  • Given that we have 4,000 cars per day using the Williamsburg Bridge is it time to demand the EZ Pass toll on this and other downtown bridges that are used as drive-throughs to and from NJ?

 

Health Affects of 70 Diesel Buses Per Hour on Adjacent/Nearby Corridors 

 

Vulnerable Populations/Pedestrian & Bike Safety:

  • We have schools alongside SDR Park: Tenzer, Cascade, Satellite Academy, Pace HS, Emma Lazarus, IS 131, Great Oaks, along SDR Park on Forsyth Street.
  • We have deaf housing on Forsyth Street.
  • We have a senior center within the park on Delancey Street/Chrystie. And a senior daycare on Chrystie
  • We have a large homeless population in SDR Park.
  • We have a two-way bike lane that already endangers slower moving people (children/elders) with DOT refusing to install signage warning of pedestrian crossings on Stanton/Rivington/Broome/Hester. (and still waiting for DOT study results to install a speed bump requested by the deaf community on Forsyth Street).
  • Children, families, school classes from nearby daycare, nursery, elementary school and after school programs use 3 playgrounds in SDR Park.
  • Soccer fields/Handball court/Basketball courts are dedicated areas in SDR Park that are always in use.
  • General quality of life decline.
  • Access – A -Ride disruptions

 

The L train/Williamsburg Bridge Service Area

  • Any data on how many people who use the L train work or shop in the Delancey/Chrystie neighborhood or use it to shop or work along the L train line?
  • Any data on how many of the trucks/cars coming across the Williamsburg Bridge have these communities as their destination?
  • What are the benefits to this neighborhood for enduring the 70 buses per hour, bad air, potential accidents and disruption to our communities?

Other Websites with information

The contribution of motor vehicle emissions to ambient fine particulate matter public health impacts in New York City: a health burden assessment

https://ehjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12940-016-0172-6

Asthma facts NYC:

http://www1.nyc.gov/assets/doh/downloads/pdf/asthma/facts.pdf

The Public Health impacts of PM2.5 from traffic air pollution

http://a816-dohbesp.nyc.gov/IndicatorPublic/traffic/index.html

Emissions Inventory System (EIS) Gateway

https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-inventories/emissions-inventory-system-eis-gateway

 

Read MorePresentation by MTA & NYC Dept of Transportation on the L Train Shutdown Impacts
  • Post category:News

Generosity, As Often, From Those Who Have The Least

NYTimes, David Gonzalez:

From San Juan to New York, He Offers Help and Hope for the Uprooted

David Gonzalez/The New York Times

“I have nothing,” he said. “Whatever I have is to be shared. We know struggle. To be in a bad way. But I always try to help people get something, even if only for one day. Tomorrow is another story.”

Rafael Ocasio Barreto refused to leave Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria tore through his part of San Juan…He soldiered on for two weeks… Finally, his friends forced him — wearing just the clothes on his back — to get on a plane to the States.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency resettled him at a suite motel in Queens…plump winter coats and new sneakers are piled atop the bed. The kitchen is stocked with food. Just as he cared little for material possessions in Puerto Rico, these items are not for him, but to share with other uprooted Puerto Ricans also staying at the motel as they await the next steps when FEMA stops covering their hotel costs on Feb. 14.

…“In Puerto Rico, even with all its dire needs, you can get someone to help. Here, that really doesn’t exist. Here, it’s about individualism. You feel the racism. It’s not the affection you felt back home. Fortunately, even in this motel, I have found Dominicans, Hondurans and Ecuadoreans who identify with us and extend their hand like a brother nation.”

Think we could learn a thing or two from him?

Read MoreGenerosity, As Often, From Those Who Have The Least
  • Post category:News