Tomorrow Monday Feb. 27th: Proposed Tompkins Square Park Avenue B Children’s Playground Renovation

Please come and voice your opinion about YOUR Park!

Councilwoman Rosie Mendez & NYC Parks and Recreation:

Monday February 27th, 2017

6:30pm -8pm

Public Resources decided by the public.

“Born in the wake of Ferguson, the Creative Reaction Lab rejects “design thinking” for a more inclusive approach to systemic inequality.”
“…workshops aren’t just for designers; they also bring together policy experts, speakers, community partners, and citizens working in different fields. Importantly, they look and sound nothing like a design event. You will not hear Carroll preaching about “design thinking” or solutionism. Rather, the Creative Reaction Lab starts from the premise that design’s greatest value is in exposing the invisible mechanisms of inequality, many of which were by design themselves.”

 

Read MoreTomorrow Monday Feb. 27th: Proposed Tompkins Square Park Avenue B Children’s Playground Renovation
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Police Floodlights are Unlikely to Reduce Crime, But Could Harm Your Health

From MOTHERBOARD:

 

ETHAN CHIEL Feb 25 2017

“Citing recent research findings that “brighter residential nighttime lighting is associated with … impaired daytime functioning and obesity,” the American Medical Association adopted a set of guidelines for reducing the potential harm some types of LED streetlights could cause last June. The new guidelines recommend that outdoor lighting shouldn’t have a color temperature above 3,000 degrees kelvin (K). Many of the mobile lights set up in NYCHA housing, including those at the Riis Houses are 1250-watt Allmand Night-Lite Pro II models, which give off light with a color temperature of 3954K….

In launching the initiative, de Blasio said he hoped “to light up the areas that have previously been obscure and problematic, and make it easier for the NYPD to do its job.” But a VICE article argued that the machines were part of a larger strategy of “omnipresence,” which the Times had already reported entails increasing police patrols while deemphasizing interaction with community members. In further illuminating sidewalks teeming with cops, the lights add the impression that police are always watching NYCHA residents….

In a June report in Crain’s, a teenager and resident of a housing block told the reporter, bluntly, “These lights are for you.”

 

 

Read MorePolice Floodlights are Unlikely to Reduce Crime, But Could Harm Your Health
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CityLab: “High Line creator admits the park is a problem for residents”

Cautionary Tale and Attempt at Redemption.

CityLab:

When Robert Hammond first conceived of turning a disused elevated railway on Manhattan’s West Side into a high-design “linear park” …He and co-founder Joshua David didn’t really think about what the High Line could do to the neighborhood…”

Now they are asking themselves different questions.

“…the stakes are much higher than visitor statistics. The network of project leaders is tackling a long overdue conversation about how to improve neglected neighborhoods, without pushing away the very people they intend to serve.”

“…Locals aren’t the ones overloading the park, nor are locals all benefiting from its economic windfall. The High Line is bookended by two large public housing projects; nearly one third of residents in its neighborhood, Chelsea, are people of color. Yet anyone who’s ever strolled among the High Line’s native plants and cold-brew vendors knows its foot traffic is, as a recent City University of New York study found, “overwhelmingly white.” And most visitors are tourists, not locals….

“We were from the community. We wanted to do it for the neighborhood,” says Hammond,…executive director of Friends of the High Line….”Ultimately, we failed.”

“Instead of asking what the design should look like, I wish we’d asked, ‘What can we do for you?’” says Hammond. “Because people have bigger problems than design.”

“…findings led to the several new initiatives. In 2012, FHL launched a suite of paid jobs-training programs aimed at local teenagers, focused on environmental stewardship, arts programming, and educating younger kids. The organization also started to partner with the Elliot-Chelsea and Fulton Houses, the two public housing projects, to develop their programming schedule.”

Mistakes get made, but the real challenge is not to defend them. Kudos to Hammond and the community.

Read MoreCityLab: “High Line creator admits the park is a problem for residents”
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SDR Park Community Coalition Was a Nominee for Golden Trowel Award

We were not selected in the end but very pleased to be nominated! It’s always good to have work noticed. Especially given the stiff ‘competition’! Many thanks to Partnerships for Parks and a big heartfelt congratulations to the winner. Proud to be in the same business.

From: Sabina Saragoussi, Director, Partnerships for Parks

To: Sara Roosevelt Park Community Coalition.

Each year, Partnerships for Parks honors partners at the It’s My Park Awards Reception who demonstrate exceptional leadership and commitment to their local parks through service, advocacy, and collaboration. We are pleased to inform you that the Sara D. Roosevelt Park Coalition was a nominee for the Golden Trowel Awards due to the group’s outstanding efforts and ongoing dedication to neighborhood parks throughout the 2016 season.

As a nominee, your group is considered to embody the mission and vision of Partnerships for Parks by effectively partnering with local residents and decision makers to transform your neighborhood green space into a dynamic community asset.  You are building long-term investment in public space, and strengthening the social fabric of our communities. For this, we congratulate and sincerely thank you.

While your group was not selected for an award this year, we encourage you to continue your important work, and know that Partnerships for Parks will continue to support you in making a positive impact on our parks and neighborhoods. We appreciate everything you have done and look forward to seeing what this new year brings.  Thank you again.

Partnerships for Parks (PfP) is the public-private program that supports and champions a growing network of leaders caring and advocating for neighborhood parks and green spaces. We equip people, organizations and government with the skills and tools they need to transform these spaces into dynamic community assets.

Read MoreSDR Park Community Coalition Was a Nominee for Golden Trowel Award
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Senator Daniel Squadron warns of adverse affects of slashing funding for Senior Centers

From Pix11:

“Sen. Daniel Squadron warned the seniors [that] a preliminary state budget proposal could close 65 centers in New York City and cut services.

“To cut it is unacceptable. There’s a simple way to save it, every senior every family should raise their voice so Albany doesn’t ignore it,” Squadron said.

If you would like to sign petition, click here.

Read MoreSenator Daniel Squadron warns of adverse affects of slashing funding for Senior Centers
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Turtle Expert Helped with Turtles in M’Finda Kalunga

Looking Back, 2003: Caring for 1,200 Turtles in a Hudson Street Loft

“Editor’s note: In 2003, the Trib visited Richard Ogust in his loft at 161 Hudson Street, where he was caring for 1,200 turtles. At that time, he hoped to soon find them a home in a yet-to-be created turtle preserve in New Jersey. The story, which appeared in the October 2003 print edition of The Tribeca Trib, is one of an ongoing series from the archives of the Trib.

“..Most of Ogust’s pets were destined for soup pots in China, where …20 million of the creatures are eaten each year. Endangered turtles, it seems, are just as delicious as their more common brethren, and the hunters, who earn just pennies per turtle, don’t discriminate. On their way to the markets, the reptiles are starved to make them easier to ship, then choked full of sand to beef up their selling weight. Most arrive at the market plagued with parasites, fungus and infections. The lucky ones are confiscated by Asian government inspectors in foodmarket raids or by customs officials at JFK airport. And then Ogust gets the call. A state-licensed wildlife rehabilitator, Ogust quarantines them for months and nurses them back to health in consultation with a team of veterinary specialists….”

Ogust was later reportedly forced out of his apartment, which in 2005 was sold to comedian Jon Stewart and wife Tracey. A 2007 PBS film on Ogust, “The Chance of the World Changing,” traces Ogust’s vain struggle to realize his dream of an institute for turtle conservation. (He is forced to find fellow preservations around the country to care for the turtles in his collection.) Ogust still lives in New York City. Attempts by the Trib to reach him were unsuccessful.

Read MoreTurtle Expert Helped with Turtles in M’Finda Kalunga
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CM Rosie Mendez & NYC Dept. of Parks & Recreation: Proposed Tompkins Square Playground Renovation

Weigh in on your thoughts re: the proposed Tompkins Square Park Avenue B Children’s Playground Renovation.

Should the fences in the playground be lowered from 7 feet to 4 feet?

What are the implications? The good/the bad.

February 27th 6:30pm to 8pm Saint Brigid – Saint Emeric Church

119 Avenue B Entrance on East 8th Street

DNAinfo: Weigh In On City Plan to Lower Tompkins Square Park Playground Fences:

“…community representatives say lowering the fences would expose children using the playgrounds to “vagrants” and drug paraphernalia in the park.

… The community board penned a resolution stating local parents believe lowering the fences would create a “serious safety issue” in light of the problems outlined in Mendez’s letter.

The Ninth Precinct’s commanding officer… told DNAinfo New York he also believes the fences should not be lowered while police work with other agencies to address homelessness and substance abuse issues in the park….”The fences help, especially around the playground. …”There are a lot of needles…

…Mendez in December met with Silver to reiterate her concerns and he committed to holding an information session to gather more feedback from community members before moving forward with the plan…

Department representatives…will give a presentation with renderings on the current plan to lower the fences and will allow community members to weigh in on the design… The department has pledged it will not finalize its plan for the park until after it hears from community members at the meeting.

“We’re confident that this design approach will increase accessibility and safety at the park,” said Parks Department spokeswoman Crystal Howard.”

Read MoreCM Rosie Mendez & NYC Dept. of Parks & Recreation: Proposed Tompkins Square Playground Renovation
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Urban Natural Resources Stewardship: Stew-Map

The Stewardship Mapping and Assessment Project (STEW-MAP) is a national USDA Forest Service research program designed to answer the questions: Which environmental stewardship groups are working across urban landscapes? Where, why, how, and to what effect?

STEW-MAP studies a city’s or region’s environmental stewardship regime, creating publicly available maps and databases to help support community development. The project adds a social layer of information to biophysical information on ‘green infrastructure’ in metropolitan areas.

STEW-MAP captures environmental stewardship through a combination of methods: an organizational survey to identify organizational characteristics, geographic area of influence (enabling spatial analysis), and relationships with other civic, private, and governmental organizations(social network analysis)

STEW-MAP defines a “stewardship group” as a civic organization or group that works to conserve, manage, monitor, advocate for, and/or educate the public about their local environments.

Where has STEW-MAP been implemented?

[map:] Shows locations of stewardship groups in NYC area.Initially a New York City project, STEW-MAP has grown into a multi-city research program. To date, the project has been replicated in Baltimore, the Chicago region, and Seattle. Studies are underway in Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and San Juan.  Boston, Atlanta, and Washington, DC are also interested in conducting STEW-MAP studies. The original New York City STEW-MAP was developed by a team of Forest Service and university researchers working with dozens of municipal agencies and citywide environmental nonprofits who identified a need to create a common database and map.

Why is STEW-MAP important?
Long-term community-based natural resource stewardship can help support and maintain our investment in green infrastructure and urban restoration projects. STEW-MAP databases and interactive maps enable the public, municipal agencies, and nonprofits to visualize where and how hundreds of civic environmental stewardship groups are working throughout a city or region. Custom downloads of STEW?MAP data have been used by local government and civic organizations in support of policymaking and natural resource management activities. Network analyses of these groups show the connections between civic environmental actors and identify important stewardship nodes within the network. Analysis of where stewardship is or is not taking place highlights opportunities or issues to address in meeting local conservation goals.

Read MoreUrban Natural Resources Stewardship: Stew-Map
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