From Council Member Chin “Show Some Love to Chinatown”

From Council Member Chin’s Newsletter (to get updates directly get info at: https://council.nyc.gov/district-1/#)

 

Since the coronavirus made the news, we have been seeing a rise in xenophobia and discrimination against Asian New Yorkers and businesses.

There’s never an excuse to discriminate, yet sadly during Lunar New Year, what should be the busiest time of the year, Chinatown shop and restaurant owners have been hit especially hard.

But we’re committed to turn crisis into opportunity.

Last weekend, crowds of New Yorkers celebrated a new year and new beginnings at the Lunar New Year parade. This week, I stood with Chinatown Partnership, Council Member Rivera, and small business owners to ask you to show some love to Chinatown.

You can share your solidarity by visiting a local business to enter for a raffle sponsored by the Chinatown Partnership, taking a pic at the new Valentine’s Day themed backdrop at the Baxter Street kiosk, or using #DineinChinatown and tagging us.

Thank you to all the elected officials who have shown their support!”

Read MoreFrom Council Member Chin “Show Some Love to Chinatown”
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Audubon 2nd Community Meeting!

Our second community input gathering meeting will be:

Audubon NY New Demonstration Garden Community Input wanted:

Thursday, February 27 at 6pm

Hear about plans for a new garden space at SDR Park and provide your input and ideas! Landscape architect, Emily Tyrer, will be on hand to start the design discussion. Light refreshments will be served.

BRC Senior Services, Center 30 Delancey St. Sara Roosevelt Park (btw) Chrystie/Forsyth St.

RSVP: Email Richard S.: rsantangelo@audubon.org

Read MoreAudubon 2nd Community Meeting!
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Affordable Housing at Essex Crossing

From Essex Crossing:

ESSEX CROSSING SITE 4

1735 PARK AVENUE STE. 300

NEW YORK, NY 10035

INFO@ESSEXCROSSINGSITE4.COM

Tel. 212-348-3248 Fax. 212-348-3670

Dear: To Whom it may concern,

Subject: Affordable Housing Open for Applications

Date: _02/13/2020___

We wish to inform you that applications are now being accepted for affordable housing at 180 Broome Street, New York, NY 10002.

Please note that rents and income limits are subject to change and asset limits may apply. In addition, minimum incomes listed may not apply to applicants with Section 8 or other qualifying rental subsidies.

We encourage interested persons to apply online at www.nyc.gov/housingconnect or write to request a paper application and advertisement (see below). Online and paper applications are available in English, Arabic, Chinese, Haitian Creole, Korean, Russian, and Spanish.

Address to obtain paper applications:

Essex Crossing Site 4, Triborough Finance New Station,

PO Box 2003,

New York, NY 10035

 

Please remember that online applications must be submitted by the deadline date and that the applications received after this deadline date will not be considered. Completed paper applications must be sent to the Post Office Box address indicated on the application, postmarked by the application deadline date. Applicants may not submit more than one application per household.

This development also includes 142 market rate apartments. People can find more information on our website www.essexcrossingsite4.com or by contacting essexcrossing@elliman.com

Sincerely,

Essex Crossing Site 4 Marketing Team

Read MoreAffordable Housing at Essex Crossing
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Fencing to Protect Hua Mei Bird Sanctuary

Thanks to the working people of the NYC Parks Department for a great response to the protecting this 4-decade old unique Sara Roosevelt Park institution.

A model of a win/win for shared Park use.

Thank you to Tommy Chen for your dedication to that project.

Thank you for all the thoughtful follow-up by Long-Range Policy and Planning Chief Sarah Neilson.

 

photo Lee Elson

Read MoreFencing to Protect Hua Mei Bird Sanctuary
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Preserve The East River Park Compost Yard

We must reject any misguided policy of removing the public’s and neighborhood’s home-grown efforts that make our NYC Parks unique, vibrant, and respond to the specific issues of their communities. The ethos of our Community Gardens and Park advocacy on the Lower East Side and other low-income communities has been built on the concept of environmental justice.

Especially when our Parks and communities have been on the front lines pushing back against “Climate Change” before it had a name.

 

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Welcome from Wildlife Unit of NYC Parks to Raptor Nest Monitoring

From NYC Parks Wildlife Unit:

Hi Everyone,

Sunny and I would like to officially welcome all of you to the 2020 season of raptor nest monitoring! 

To the new citizen science scouts and monitors, we will be holding a webinar training on Thursday, February 13th at 5:30 pm. We will provide the link to you very soon. During the live stream you will have the ability to ask questions, but do not worry if you cannot make it at 5:30pm. It will be recorded and you can access it later just by going back to the link.  

To the returning scouts and monitors, it is optional if you want to participate in the webinar training again. Please feel free to access it if you need a refresher. If you have not done so yet, please check on the nests that you monitored last year for any breeding raptor activity.  

If you still need to send us your waiver, please download the attached file and either email it back or mail it my address below soon.

Feel free to contact us if you have any questions. We look forward to working with you all and thank you again for joining us!

Cheers,

Katie

Katie Leung Associate Wildlife Biologist® , Field Technician, Wildlife Unit  E Katie.Leung@parks.nyc.gov

NYC Parks Wildlife Unit, 1234 Fifth Avenue, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10029, nyc.gov/parks

Read MoreWelcome from Wildlife Unit of NYC Parks to Raptor Nest Monitoring
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Forgotten NY Sara Roosevelt Park

Forgotten NY Sara Roosevelt Park

By SERGEY KADINSKY
Forgotten NY correspondent

“In the crowded Lower East Side of Manhattan there is a linear park covering seven blocks between Houston and Canal Streets. It is the product of Depression-period slum clearance that provided much-needed public green space for the poor, tired, huddled masses yearning to breathe free.”

A fascinating ‘walk through’ Sara Roosevelt Park with links to in depth histories.

Read MoreForgotten NY Sara Roosevelt Park
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Saul Griffith on Ezra Klein Podcast

“How to solve climate change and make life more awesome”

Ezra Klein podcast: You can listen to this conversation — and others — by subscribing to The Ezra Klein Show

This conversation is about a vision of decarbonization that is genuinely awesome, and how we can actually get there.

Ezra Klein

“Can you paint a picture of what it could be like to live in a decarbonized world? Is there a vision of a decarbonized future that could actually be awesome — that people will want to buy into?”

Saul Griffith

“I think this is a great question. All of the politicians are pitching their climate plans from some top-down economic view, saying things like, “We’ll decarbonize this industry by this date.” It all sounds very abstract. No one has presented the Green New Deal from the kitchen table out: What will it look like in my home?

Instead of burning natural gas to make your coffee in the morning, you’ll have an induction range, which [can] be programmed to cook your coffee for you in a way that’s much easier. You’ll have better air quality, which will help cure things like allergies and severe asthma. You won’t have to worry about carbon monoxide anymore. You’ll be warmed by your radiant floor heating, which won’t give you that dry mouth in the middle of the night. The car will be charged overnight by renewables like wind. The rest of your house will be powered by the solar on your roof that day.

Also, your total energy costs will go way down. We ran the numbers grossly for Australia, and if you did that package of electric vehicles, heat pumps, and rooftop solar, you would save the average Australian family about $1,000 to $2,000 a year. So there’s more money in your pocket to enjoy the rest of your life.

I think our failure on fixing climate change is just a rhetorical failure of imagination. We haven’t been able to convince ourselves that it’s going to be great. It’s going to be great.”

“The largest material flows globally are

#1 Dirt: humans move gigatons and gigatons of dirt every year–agriculture

2nd largest material flow we move is CO2

3rd trees, paper, pulp

4th cement, and concrete ½ to 1 ton of cement for every person on the planet every year.

We currently put 50 gigatons of CO2 into the atmosphere every year.

Realistic estimates, are we could draw down on at least 3 to as many as 5 gigatons of CO2 a year just by changing the way we make concrete and cement and by managing forestry better.

Those technologies where we are trapping CO2 in physical, solid material that have a long resonance time in our economies is totally sensible. And at the rate of 3 to 5 gigatons a year if we do the other project to decarbonize  in a decade or two as we could, over those two decades if we’re also deploying that carbon sequestration in our material economy you can take out enough to get us close to the 1.5 degrees.”

– Saul Griffith is an inventor, a MacArthur genius fellow, and the founder and CEO of Otherlab, a high-tech research and development company on the frontlines of trying to imagine our clean energy future.

Read MoreSaul Griffith on Ezra Klein Podcast
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Local “Beat Cops” Police Officers Bozzo and Officer Urena Meeting to Hear from Community

Safety concerns, suggestions of how to help, good news, etc.

Build awareness with your neighbors.

Cascade High School, 198 Forsyth (at Stanton)

Thursday February 27th, 2020

6pm doors open

6:30pm Meeting Starts

Appreciations to the women and men of our local precinct.

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