Friday, January 14, 2011

Fidel Castro Has an Opinion on the Arizona Shooting

Man Has Good Response to Neighbors Who Complain About Birdcage-Covered House
crazy in arizona

Fidel Castro Has an Opinion on the Arizona Shooting

Fidel Castro Has an Opinion on the Arizona Shooting

Photo: Sven Creutzmann/Mambo Photo/Getty Images

In a column entitled "An Atrocious Act," Cuba's former leader offered his take on Saturday's shooting. Castro condemned accused gunman Jared Lee Loughner's actions, writing:

"Even those of us who don't share his (President Barack Obama's) political or philosophical ideas in the least sincerely hope that no children, judges, congressmen or any U.S. citizen should die in such an absurd and unjustifiable way."

But he also took the opportunity to take a jab at America's right wing, calling Giffords an enemy of the tea party for her position on immigration reform, stem-cell research, and alternative energy, "measures that are hated by the far right." Psst, Fidel, in case no one told you, we're actually trying to tone down the finger- (or crosshair-) pointing rhetoric and return to some measure of civility. At least for today.

Castro weighs in on Arizona shooting [CNN]

Thursday, January 13, 2011

The Other Side of The National Arts Club




http://www.design2share.com/storage/National_Arts_Club_New_York.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=
The National Art Club at Gramercy Park

The following photographs show reason for concern to the residents of Gramercy Park, particularly those who live, work and play at 15 Gramercy Park South, the National Arts Club. The decaying state of the National Historic Land Mark which houses the Club is apparent in the photographs.

Many of the residents of the National Arts Club are essentially surrounded by kindling. In 2008, the Arts Club emerged unscathed from an OSHA investigation. Then, in 2009, the FDNY attempted entrance to the premise due to allegations of hazardous conditions. They warned the Club's President O. Aldon James Jr., that unless he produced a key they'd start breaking down doors. The doors were never broken down. The FDNY never gained entry.
Neither did they return to complete their investigation.

YFP will document the startling details of "Artsgate" in the following weeks. Stay tuned.

Click on the links below to see other images and video .

www.flickr.com/photos/58267480@N07/

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

PRESIDENT OBAMA AND THE FIRST LADY HONOR THE VICTICTIMS OF SATURDAY'S SHOOTING IN TUCSON, ATIZONA




TUCSON, Ariz. -- Summoning the soul of a nation, President Barack Obama on Wednesday implored Americans to honor those slain and injured in the Arizona shootings by becoming better people, telling a polarized citizenry that it is time to talk with each other "in a way that heals, not in a way wounds."

Following a hospital bedside visit with Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, the target of the assassination, he said: "She knows we're here, and she knows we love her."

President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama at Tucson memorial
Jewel Samad, AFP / Getty Images

President Barack Obama and the first lady attend a memorial service in Tucson honoring the victims of Saturday's shooting rampage.
In a memorably dramatic moment, the president said that Giffords, who on Saturday was shot point-blank in the head, had opened her eyes for the first time shortly after his hospital visit. First lady Michelle Obama held hands with Giffords' husband, Mark Kelly, as the news brought soaring cheers throughout the arena.

Speaking at a memorial in Tucson, Obama bluntly conceded that there is no way to know what triggered the shooting rampage that left six people dead, 13 others wounded and the nation shaken. He tried instead to leave indelible memories of the people who were gunned down and to rally the country to use the moment as a reflection on the nation's behavior and compassion.

"I believe we can be better," Obama said to a capacity crowd at the University of Arizona basketball arena - and to countless others watching around the country. "Those who died here, those who saved lives here - they help me believe. We may not be able to stop all evil in the world, but I know that how we treat one another is entirely up to us."

In crafting his comments, Obama clearly sought a turning point in the raw debate that has defined national politics. After offering personal accounts of every person who died, he challenged anyone listening to think of how to honor their memories, and he was not shy about offering direction. He railed against any instinct to point blame or to drift into political pettiness or to latch onto simple explanations that may have no merit.

"At a time when our discourse has become so sharply polarized - at a time when we are far too eager to lay the blame for all that ails the world at the feet of those who think differently than we do - it's important for us to pause for a moment and make sure that we are talking with each other in a way that heals, not a way that wounds," the president said.
The shooting happened as Giffords, a three-term Democrat who represents southern Arizona, was holding a community outreach event in a Tucson shopping center parking lot Saturday. A gunman shot her in the head and worked his way down the line of people waiting to talk with her, law enforcement officials said. The attack ended when bystanders tackled the man, Jared Lee Loughner, 22, who is in custody.

Obama's speech, by turns somber and hopeful, at times took on the tone of an exuberant pep rally as he heralded the men who wrestled the gunman to the ground, the woman who grabbed the shooter's ammunition, the doctors and nurses who treated the injured, the intern who rushed to Giffords' aid. The crowd erupted in multiple standing ovations as each was singled out for praise.

The president recalled how federal Judge John Roll was on his way from attending Mass when he stopped to say hello to Giffords and was gunned down; Dorothy Morris, shielded by her husband, but killed nonetheless, and Phyllis Schneck, a Republican who took a shine to Giffords, a Democrat, and wanted to know her better.

Obama spoke to a crowd of more than 14,000 in an arena and thousands more listened on from an overflow area in the football stadium. About a mile away, at University Medical Center, Giffords lay fighting for her life. Other victims also remained there hospitalized.

MAYORS AGAINST ILLEGAL GUNS: OUTLINED STEPS TO HELP PREVENT ANOTHER SHOOTING TRAGEDY LIKE THE ONE OCCURRED IN TUCSON, ARIZONA


video by Rafael Martínez Alequín

video by Rafael Martínez Alequín

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

BLOOMBERG'S COMMISSIONERS: APOLOGIES and "MEA CULPA"

January 10, 2011

Deputy Mayor Stephen Goldsmith, along with commissioners, Joseph F. Bruno (OEM), John J. Doherty (Sanitation) and Salvatore J. Cassano, they bend backward with apologies and "Mea Culpa" for their failure of not issuing a snow alert. The Question is: Where was the Mayor? Perhaps, in Bermuda. The following un-edited videos were taken during the Council Hearing.


video by Rafael Martínez Alequín

video by Rafael Martínez Alequín

Monday, January 10, 2011

AFRO -PERUVIAN DOCUMENTARY


Documentary filmmaker, Alfredo Bejar has created a block buster movie about Afro-Peruvian boxer, Mauro Mina. Bejar takes the viewer on a journey through interviews and rare archival footage of the dynamic career of a champion. A must see not only for boxing fans but for those interested in latin american politics and society.



HOME TRAILER ABOUT THE FILM PRESS/REVIEWS DIRECTOR'S BIO SCREENINGS CREDITS CONTACT

With Angelo Dundee, Bobby Foster, José Torres, Hank Kaplan, Alberto Best, Ricardo Delgado, José Campos, Otto Salas - Music by A. Llorens Copyright ABA Productions 2010 - e-mail: bejar1@yahoo.com

Friday, January 7, 2011

One More For The Pedro Espada Files: Tax Evasion

pedro espada grimacing_0.jpgFormer state senator Pedro Espada, Jr. will be socked with a new indictment charging him with tax evasion, a federal prosecutor said today. Our John Marzulli reports:

Espada and his son Pedro G. Espada were charged last month with looting over $500,000 from non-profit health clinics in the Bronx for personal expenses including tickets to Broadway shows and sports events, dinners and a luxury car.

Assistant Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Colleen Kavanagh said the government expects to file a new indictment in the next four to six weeks charging father and son with tax violations relating to the plundered funds.

Kavanagh said no plea deal has been extended to the Espadas.

"I don't anticipate the case will be resolved short of trial," she said

Outside court, defense lawyer Susan Necheles said the tax charges were expected and suggested the government had rushed to get out the first indictment so Espada could be arrested while he was still in office.

Necheles said he wasn't interested in a plea offer.

"They could offer an apology," she said.

Federal prosecutors have turned over hundreds of thousands of documents seized from the Soundview Healthcare Network during the investigation that was started by then-Attorney General Andrew Cuomo and completed by Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch.

Federal Judge Frederic Block - who called the former senate majority leader "Mr. Estrada" - tentatively scheduled the trial for sometime this fall.

Espada Jr., who was ousted from office in the last election by disgusted voters, was asked how he's keeping himself busy these days.

"I've been devoting my time to my family, my business and staying in shape in the winter," he said.

Serrano Denounces Vote Stripping of Territories, D.C. by House Republicans

Congressman José E. Serrano

Representing the Sixteenth District of New York

January 5, 2011

January 5, 2011 –Washington, DC – Congressman José E. Serrano today announced his strong disapproval of the decision by House Republicans to take away the territorial and D.C. delegates’ right to vote on the House floor. Along with the Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico, delegates from D.C., Guam, American Samoa, the Virgin Islands and the Northern Mariana Islands will not be allowed to vote in the Committee of the Whole, a right the Democrats gave them four years ago.

“This is a shameful step backwards that House Republicans took today, and it is a slap in the face of the millions of citizens and people living under the U.S. flag in these territories. They have had the ability to have their voices heard in the U.S. House of Representatives for only four short years, and there is no excuse for taking that right away from these duly elected leaders.

“I have spent much of my career here in Washington seeking equality for those living in the territories. Had my parents not left Puerto Rico, I would certainly have been in the situation that these people find themselves in through no choice or fault of their own. I have worked to give them dignity and a say in matters that affect them. House Republicans have taken away civil liberties through their decision and I find it outrageous.

“On behalf of the millions living under the American flag in D.C. and the territories, I call on Speaker Boehner and the House Republicans to reconsider this terrible decision and restore their voice in the House of Representatives.”


Serrano Condemns Republican Efforts to Repeal Health Care Reform Bill

January 7, 2011 –Washington, DC – Congressman José E. Serrano today voted against the first step the House Republicans have taken toward repealing the historic health care reform bill that passed last year. “I did this for New York, and for our children,” said Serrano about the vote.

“The Republicans are trying to take away the hard-won and much-needed reforms to our broken health care system, and I will not stand for it,” said Serrano. “They may have the numbers in the House, but the numbers and facts on the health care reform bill are not with them. The American people have been crying out for decades for real reforms to our system that would help control costs and protect them from insurers eager to profit by dropping their coverage when they need it most.

The statistics for New York alone are shocking. If the Republican repeal were successful the following would come true:


77,800 young adults would lose their insurance coverage through their parents’ health plans;

734,000 people in New York would be at risk of losing their insurance because of pre-existing conditions;

2.9 million seniors in New York who have Medicare coverage would be forced to pay a co-pay to receive important preventive services.

“I sincerely do not believe that people want these outcomes. I will vote against any effort to repeal the historic reforms that our nation needed so badly. Today was the first of those votes, but it seems the Republicans will not allow it to be the last.”

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Jeff Klein On The Independent Democratic Caucus

Speaking of the new state Senate Independent Democratic Caucus, here's Gannett's Nick Reisman interviewing Bronx State Sen. Jeff Klein about what the new four-person bloc means and wants.

The new caucus includes Klein and Sens. David Carlucci, Diane Savino and David Valesky.

As our Glenn Blain pointed out today, "The Daily News first reported on New Year's Day that Klein was fed up with the leadership of Senate Democratic Conference Leader John Sampson (D-Brooklyn) and would resign his post as deputy minority leader... The revolt by the four white senators is likely to inflame long-simmering racial and regional tensions among the Democrats, who boast a large number of African-American and Hispanic members."

Watch live streaming video from gannettnewyork at livestream.com

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

The Last Investigators

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

The Day Old Media Investigative Journalism Died

By Gary Tilzer

Yesterday the Internet chatter exploded when news broke that Wayne Barrett and Tom Robbins were leaving the Village Voice. With the large number of people commenting it was clear that we lost more than just two excellent writers. We lost Local journalism.


Over a decade ago the Voice's power to publish a investigative story that would shake the politician or city government to the core has past. Despite the lose of power Barrett and Robbins keep the old time muckraking going with quality investigative reports that because of their institutional understand and excellent contacts produced information and connected the dots for all of us. Barrett said yesterday, "Tom and I do things on the beat that are very valuable to it," he said. "We can read a news story that every other reporter has read and we can bring a new set of eyes to it, see it as a pattern of conduct, grasp the history, put in context. We bring a body of experience that is important to this beat." When all the media was airbrushing Al Sharpton, Barrett told the truth about the skeeviness of this shakedown artist, racial arsonist, and former FBI informer. Wayne didn't pick sides, he picked you apart: "Barrett said, It was always the conduct that prodded me to write, not the person. And that is what I lived for, a chance to say something that revealed and mattered. To me, the story will always be the thing. It is all I can see."


During his 35 years Barrett was at the Voice corporate owners bought up most media outlets and newspapers. In a city of media owners who use their papers as a cheerleader to allow Bloomberg to change term limits and run for a third term, Barrett and Robbins were like old time artisans, from and era when journalist were free to tell the public the truth. These new owners are more interested in what they can do with the power of ownership for themselves, than quality journalism designed to inform the public what their government was really up to. Our First Amendment Right.



Stepford Reporters
Today investigative reporters like Barrett and Robbins are a dieing breed, copy cat journalism is the norm. Today reporters simply use the Internet stories of there competition to write their articles. Any additional info they put in their story in their story is usually gotten from political flacks, lobbyist and government press offices who are paid to shape and control the news. Most of the newspapers, TV and radio news programs today have the same stories. Most blogs run by old media act act as cheerleaders for lobbyist, pols and insiders. They ignore and make fun of independent bloggers like Rafael Martínez Alequín who broke the Espada rip of case years before the others A Journalist Breaks Through City Hall's "Blue Wall of Silence" TV reporters get this jobs by the size of their breast and good looks, not their ability to investigate. The happy talk and number of stories about pets is sicking and is shown to cause brain damage in rats. Shrinking Newspaper Coverage Means Less Real TV News More Sexy Reporters

Investigative stories breaking new ground is very rear, almost never done anymore. That is why so many people were very sad yesterday at what the Voice did. We know that copy cat journalism written by clueless reporters with no institutional memory is the future and that our city, nation and democracy will fail because of that. 2 Veterans Leave Village Voice (NYT) * Wayne Barrett Says He Fears for the Future of Local Political Reporting * Wayne Barrett: Hail and Farewell
Journalist Salute
Post like this appeared all over Facebook yesterday. This one is from Dean Chang of the NYT "What the Village Voice loses in respect, stature, experience and quality can not be overstated. The same goes for the principles, integrity and heart of Tom Robbins, who exemplifies the better part of valor."

Former Voice editor Don Forst says, "With the loss of Wayne and Tom, they lost Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle." Barrett's and Robbin's departure leaves us that much poorer-and that much less protected from the malefactors who are attracted to the political process.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Ace Investigative Journalists, Wayne Barrett, Tom Robbins, Are Leaving the Village Voice

By Henry J. Stern
January 4, 2011

On rare occasions, someone writes an article which I believe is so significant that I want to share it with you, our readers, without delay and with no need for linkeage.

This morning we received the following column from Wayne Barrett, announcing that after 33 years as a columnist for the Village Voice, he was leaving the weekly paper, which is now a throwaway (distributed free). This unexpected news is a great loss for the City of New York.

The New York Times blog reported later this morning that Barrett had been let go by the Voice to save money and that Tom Robbins, the only other name reporter in New York City coverage, had resigned in protest at the management decision to fire Barrett. The Voice has been bought and resold by many owners in the last thirty years. Barrett was its lead investigative journalist, but previous managers, including Rupert Murdoch, Clay Felker and Carter Burden, did not interfere with his column. Barrett had won many honors in his years at the Voice, and was responsible for uncovering numerous municipal scandals.

The Voice is now owned by a Phoenix, Arizona-based conglomerate of 17 weeklies around the country. The executive editor is Michael Lacey and the CEO of Village Voice Media is James Larkin. Neither man is widely known in New York. The founders of the Voice in 1955 included Daniel Wolf, the paper's editor, Edwin Fancher, a Greenwich Village psychologist, and Norman Mailer.

Over the years, Barrett has produced a remarkable body of work which should be made readily available to the general public. In my judgment, as far as New York politics and ethics are concerned, he is and has been the conscience of his generation. Although we do not always agree, and I think some of his judgments are too harsh, his fact-collecting abilities and those of his interns at the Columbia School of Journalism, where he teaches, are unsurpassed.

If this dogged and painstaking reporter did not possess that unique combination of integrity, industry and intensity, he would not have been able to do the work that he has done so consistently and so capably for a third of a century. If the three levels of government had acted on more of the information he collected and presented, this city, state and nation would be better served. If other journalists had followed up on more of his stories, instead of ignoring them because they appeared first in the Voice, the results would have been beneficial to honest public officials and harmful to those who betrayed their trust. Nonetheless, his impact over the years has been substantial, and who can tell what wrongful conduct his columns deterred?

Barrett and Tom Robbins are two of the most knowledgeable writers about what really goes on inside New York's multi-layered cosmos of government, politics, real estate and big business.

The articles they wrote are part of a great legacy of reform journalism, initiated at the Village Voice by Daniel Wolf (1915-1996), and carried on by Mary Perot Nichols (1926-1996) and Jack Newfield (1938-2004). We hope that Wayne and Tom continue to write, that New Yorkers continue to read, and authorities begin to take action on the events and issues that they have so courageously and unhesitatingly called to their attention over the years.

This is the column we received today. We are proud to send it to you.

TIME FOR SOMETHING NEW
by Wayne Barrett

January 4, 2011

Ed Koch and I were inaugurated on the same day in 1978. He became mayor and I became his weekly tormentor.

I had written a few pieces for the Voice before I took over the Runnin' Scared column that January, going back as far as 1973.

But I was now inheriting a column that Mary Nichols, the Voice's editor-in-chief, had made famous, and that had been written by greats like Jack Newfield, Ken Auletta, and Joe Conason. A country kid out of Lynchburg, Virginia, where I'd founded the Teenage Republicans, I was suddenly occupying the first two pages of New York's counter-cultural crier.

Since then, I have written, by my own inexact calculation, more column inches than anyone in the history of the Voice. These will be my last.

I am 65 and a half now, and it is time for something new.

If I didn't see that, others did.

The paper has always been more than an employer to me. I turned down other jobs that paid better three times to stay here. Though my mentor Newfield used to say we got our owners "from office temporaries," and though I worked for 14 different editors, the Voice was always a place where I could express my voice. And that meant more to me than larger circulations or greater influence or bigger paychecks.

It is called a writer's paper because we decide what we will write. That is not a license to spout and I never took it as such. Across all these years, I almost never wrote in the first person and, even when I did, the piece was still packed with reportage. In my extended family, I have become the go-to guy for eulogies and I report every one of them, learning more about my mother, for example, by interviewing her sisters than she ever told me when she was alive.

When I was asked in recent years to blog frequently, I wouldn't do it unless I had something new to tell a reader, not just a clever regurgitation of someone else's reporting.

My credo has always been that the only reason readers come back to you again and again over decades is because of what you unearth for them, and that the joy of our profession is discovery, not dissertation.

There is also no other job where you get paid to tell the truth. Other professionals do sometimes tell the truth, but it's ancillary to what they do, not the purpose of their job. I was asked years ago to address the elementary school that my son attended and tell them what a reporter did and I went to the auditorium in a trenchcoat with the collar up and a notebook in a my pocket, baring it to announce that "we are detectives for the people."

When the Voice celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2005, I said "we thought a deadline meant we had to kill somebody by closing time," and that, as a liberal Democratic paper, we were "better at goring one of our own." It never mattered to me what the party or ideology was of the subject of an investigative piece; the reporting was as nonpartisan as the wrongdoing itself. I never looked past the wrist of any hand in the public till. It was the grabbing that bothered me, and there was no Democratic or Republican way to pick up the loot.

The greatest prize I've ever won for the work I've done in these pages was when Al D'Amato called me a "viper" in his memoir. Chuck Schumer, who ended D'Amato's reign after 18 years, ascribed his victory in a 2007 memoir to a story I'd written a decade earlier that devastated the incumbent Republican. What Schumer didn't say was that as soon as Hank Morris, Schumer's media guru, went up with an ad based on my revelations about D'Amato, Arthur Finkelstein, who was running D'Amato's 1998 campaign, aired a commercial about Schumer's near-indictment and flashed my nearly two-decade-old clips breaking that scandal on the screen as well. I was the maestro of a commercial duel.

Even as my scandal stories skewered David Dinkins in the 1989 and 1993 mayoral campaigns, I chronicled the devolution of his nemesis, Rudy Giuliani, from hero prosecutor to used 9/11 memorabilia salesman.

As awkwardly as I felt about it, Carl Paladino's toughest shots at Andrew Cuomo this fall were garbled renditions of two 6000-word exposes I'd done here about Cuomo's HUD record. For a week in the 2009 mayoral campaign, I couldn't turn on the TV without seeing a Bloomberg commercial drawn from my expose of Bill Thompson's conflict-ridden home mortgage. But I'd delivered one cover-story blow after another throughout the cycle about everything from the mayor's culpability in the Deutsche Bank fire debacle to his own governmental incest with Bloomberg L.P.

It was always the conduct that prodded me to write, not the person. And that is what I lived for, a chance to say something that revealed and mattered. To me, the story will always be the thing. It is all I can see.

I believe I have much left to learn, still armed with my notebook, and thus much left to tell you. It may be books or blogs or something in between. I hope to bring my trademark interns with me because they have, for more than 30 years, helped me think young, especially when it comes to the climate and water crises. The city and state beat are precious to me, but what is happening to our nation is also a frightening pull on me, so I don't know what I will wind up writing in this new life.

I have loved my bond with you and have never traded an inch of truth for a moment, or even a season, of access. I tell the young people still drawn to this duty that it is the most honorable one in America, and that I have never met a corrupt journalist. I even met one, Tom Robbins, so brave that when he heard I was leaving, he quit himself and didn't even tell me he was. "I'm going out with the guy who brought me to the dance," Robbins told me after he resigned, crafting a lede with the very fiber of his life.

"If a newspaper writes the story of its city without compromise or calculation," I wrote in that 50th anniversary piece, "it is as breathtaking as a ballet, each detail another artful step. Put us together as bound volumes in the memory of this grandest of cities and the Voice reads like a classic, ever passionate and principled."

I will pray it always does.


Wayne and Tom, we salute you. The city is in your debt, more than most New Yorkers know.

Blizzard baby's funeral highlights Bloomberg's failure to effectively manage city during snowstorm

Michael Daly

Tuesday, January 4th 2011, 4:00 AM

A newborn baby died after her mother gave birth in a vestibule during the snowstorm. Ambulances were delayed because of the weather.
Hondros/Getty
A newborn baby died after her mother gave birth in a vestibule during the snowstorm. Ambulances were delayed because of the weather.

Monday, a hearse bore the blizzard baby's tiny remains the 11 blocks from Interfaith Medical Center to the House of Hills funeral home.

The death certificate recorded only a surname for this girl born in a Brooklyn apartment building's vestibule, where the mother was forced to seek refuge from the storm.

The official cause of death will not be entered until tests determine if the baby was able to take even a single independent breath.

But the primary contributing causes certainly must include the city's failure to clear the streets so the mother could reach the hospital in time.

The responsibility for that ultimately rests with the man who so often extols the magic of management, Mayor Bloomberg.

He must have been unaware of the magnitude of the city's failure when a reporter asked if he had any regrets.

"I regret the whole world," he said sarcastically, his words indelible.

Also responsible is the man in charge of city operations, Deputy Mayor Stephen Goldsmith. He is in the midst of "reengineering" the Sanitation Department, but felt no need to rush back to the city from Washington when the blizzard threatened.

"GOOD SNOW WORK BY SANITATION," he tweeted just as indelibly.

In a sense, Goldsmith was not completely wrong.

Those almost certainly not to blame are the sanitation workers who were out there trying to clear the streets after City Hall's disastrous refusal to declare a snow emergency.

I think too highly of the mayor to believe he is party to an effort to shift blame to the working stiffs. Whoever is party to it has spread rumors that there was a slowdown in response to the city's plan to demote 100 sanitation supervisors.

Never mind that the demotion plan was announced back in October and that the sanitation crews had just kept doing their thankless job without a slowdown for week after week.

The mayor spoke of them with the highest regard Dec. 21, after 39-year-old sanitation worker Angel Roldan was struck by a car and killed outside his Bronx garage.

"Sanitation workers have a vitally important job that they perform regardless of the bitter cold or sweltering heat," Bloomberg said.

The blizzard hit five days later, subsiding the next morning. Roldan's wake was held at the Montera Funeral Home in the Bronx that afternoon, and Bloomberg managed to attend, respectfully sitting in his Suburban under the elevated Deegan Expressway until the family arrived.

Bloomberg was then able to circle through the boroughs, from Ozone Park to Bay Ridge to Staten Island. The major highways and roads along the way were clear enough to allow passage and perhaps give a false impression of the city's condition.

Bloomberg encountered a whiteout on the Belt Parkway but was able to proceed.

It would have been hard to imagine that right about then in an unplowed zone of Brooklyn a woman who could not reach the hospital was giving birth in a vestibule to a doomed child.

Tissue samples will allow the medical examiner to enter an official cause of death.

The cause of the failure to clear the streets will be harder to determine. As unlikely as it seems, it is possible a tiny minority of disheartened sanitation supervisors did give less than their all.

Even so, the blame ultimately lies with those at the top, not with workers whose dedication even the mayor praised at Roldan's wake.

mdaly@nydailynews.com



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/01/04/2011-01-04_blizzard_babys_funeral_highlights_bloombergs_failure_to_effectively_manage_city_.html#ixzz1A4q7AhDS

Friday, December 31, 2010

A MEXICAN FAMILY: AN AMERICAN DREAM

In 1968, at the age of 16, Reynaldo Robledo came to the United States as a mexican migrant farm worker earning $1.10 per hour. He was born in the town of Zamora, high atop the Sierra Madre mountains in the state of Michoacán, Mexico. After years of toiling in the vineyards Reynaldo is now a vineyard owner and producer of fine wine. Reynaldo invites you to visit his tasting room decorated with handmade furniture from his home town. As a sign of pride and commitment, wife Maria and all nine children work for the family business. Reynaldo considers his life the true "American Dream." One of his son said to YFP, "On Christmas, instead of baseball bat—we got a shovel."


video by Rafael Martínez Alequín

The FOLLOWING video is Lazaro Robledo, the manager of the Robledos tasting room.
video by Rafael Martínez Alequín

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Bronx BP Diaz, Mayor Bloomberg do battle over plans for Kingsbridge Armory

Bronx borough president Ruben Diaz is protesting Mayor Bloomberg's plan to block moving a National Guard unit from the Kingsbridge Armory.
Noonan for News
Bronx borough president Ruben Diaz is protesting Mayor Bloomberg's plan to block moving a National Guard unit from the Kingsbridge Armory.

The battle between Mayor Bloomberg and Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. over the Kingsbridge Armory escalated Thursday.

Diaz, backed by a group of elected officials and community leaders, brought the fight to City Hall, where they protested the mayor's plan to block moving a National Guard unit from the armory to an Army reserve center.

The city instead wants to put a homeless shelter in the Sgt. Joseph E. Muller Army Reserve Center in Wakefield, a neighborhood that locals charge is becoming oversaturated with homeless shelters.

Moving the National Guard unit out of the armory would make room for badly needed schools and open the way for armory development, say Diaz and the group.

Diaz killed Bloomberg's development plan to turn the armory into a shopping mall, and on Wednesday effectively blocked the homeless shelter plan by boycotting a key vote.

The reserve center is still owned by the Army, subject to any request for use by the city.

"You can't run for President ... until you lend an ear to the common folk," Diaz said yesterday on the steps of City Hall. "Learn your lesson here."

"It is shameful this administration has ignored the collective voice of the Bronx," added state Sen. Jeff Klein (D-Bronx-Westchester). "Enough is enough. You have to stop."

The mayor claims he is complying with federal regulations governing the disposition of shuttered military property.

"The federal base-closure process gives priority to homeless assistance facilities," said a mayoral spokeswoman.

A Local Redevelopment Authority was formed to decide the center's future, with Diaz and two deputy mayors as the voting body.

Diaz skipped the last two LRA meetings, leaving it without a quorum.

Some have suggested that Bloomberg's insistence on a homeless shelter is revenge for Diaz's scuttling the Kingsbridge Armory redevelopment.

Diaz had insisted armory tenants pay a "living wage" to their workers. The developer, The Related Companies, ditched its plans to redevelop the site.

"The mayor is being vindicative and petty," charged the Rev. Richard Gorman, chairman of Community Board 12. "This is payback for Kingsbridge."

mjaccarino@nydailynews.com

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

40 Years Ago It Was The Lindsay Snow Storm, Today the Media Kid Gloves Shields Bloomberg From Blame"

Tuesday, December 28, 2010


Get Out of Queens You Bum Lindsay"

Perhaps no event has shown how much the media is in the tank with the mayor than the Sunday's snowstorm. 40 years ago the NYT, Daily News and other media charged Mayor Lindsay for Paralyzed the city Remembering a Snowstorm That Paralyzed the City(NYT) * WINTER OF DISCONTENT LINDSAY'S SNOWSTORM, 1969 (DN) * The "Lindsay Snowstorm" (Feb. 9-10, 1969) * WINTER OF DISCONTENT LINDSAY?S SNOWSTORM, 1969 (DN)


Today the Media Shields the Mayor From Blame

Outrage as transit stops, Bloomy insists 'the city is going on' (NYP) * Choreographing a Snowplow Ballet, to Mixed Reviews (Again) (NYT) *Christmas Blizzard of 2010: LaGuardia, JFK airports are back flying, but mass transit remains a mess (DN)

Even the NYP Editorial Was Soft on the Mayor Next time, try harder (NYP Ed) After 9 years of practice in office and his eye on the presidency fat chance.

When real problems were written about the media distanced blame from the mayor or included this public relations team spin - Mayor explanation for 3 hour 911 backup "To many non emergency calls"

Only the WSJ Brought Up the Budget Cuts as a possible cause Budget Cuts Seen Slowing Cleanup(WSJ)

Only the Staten Island Advance Allowed Anger to Be Expressed Against the Mayor

Islanders slam pathetic blizzard response: City gets an 'F'

"NOBODY is plowed," one Sunnyside resident told the Advance after comparing notes with friends in other Island neighborhoods. "Everybody is cursing Sanitation and the mayor. Something went terribly wrong with the city's response to this." . . . "While Bloomberg ate a snack of pickles, coleslaw and Saltine crackers at the diner, callers flooded the Advance newsroom with queries about transit service. Many said they were frustrated after not being able to reach 311 for answers." . . . "It left Islanders scratching their heads about the root cause of the inadequate response. Some suggested it was the result of Sanitation workers' engaging in a deliberate slowdown as a result of a labor dispute with the mayor. Others thought the city was caught off-guard with staffing levels at a bare minimum during the Christmas weekend. And some deemed the cause simpler yet: Failure of leadership at City Hall."

When the Media Creates A False Reality It Changes History and

Media Cover Ups Public Anger

In the 60's when the media was less corporate owned and public relations experts did not influence reporters like today the public anger came out Mayor Lindsay and ended his political future.

The Lindsay Snow Storm

A few months later the mayor lost the republican primary. Lindsay was re-elected as an independent but his career was over. He made an embarrassing attempt to run for president in 1972. People from Queens traveled to primaries and heckled him. In 1980 Lindsay ran in the New York democratic primary for U.S. Senate. He came in third with 15 percent of the vote. By the 1990?s he was sick and broke. Mayor Giuliani appointed him to some city jobs so he would qualify for a pension and health care. He died in 2000.

Mayor John Lindsay, the republican Kennedy they called him, nearing the end of his first term went to Queens and attempted to walk the streets to calm people. His limo got stuck. He got in a four wheel drive truck but it didn?t help. Lindsay walked. Just as he did in Harlem when he stopped race riots from breaking out the year before. The storm was crueler. People booed him. Others yelled ” get out of here you bum.”

NY's Dumbest; NYC sanitation workers destroy a Ford Explorer (Video)

Sunday, December 26, 2010

The indictments may keep coming for Pedro and Pedro G. Espada

Outgoing State Senator Pedro Espada (center right) and his son, Pedro G. Espada (behind him) were indicted last week.
Ward for News
Outgoing State Senator Pedro Espada (center right) and his son, Pedro G. Espada (behind him) were indicted last week.

The grand jury may not be finished just yet with state Sen. Pedro Espada.

The Espadas, dad Pedro and son Pedro G., were indicted last week, charged with tap dancing on the books at their Soundview Healthcare empire.

We now hear that Loretta Lynch, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District, may be preparing a superceding indictment slamming them with income tax charges.

Last week's indictment charged them with stealing a half million dollars from the clinic chain for such personal goodies as $20,000 in sushi deliveries to the senator's home in Mamaroneck, outside his Bronx district.

That plus 49G from a Soundview subsidiary as a down payment on a $125,000 Bentley, 14G on sports events and Broadway shows, and even a pony and petting zoo (any bunnies?) for a family birthday.

As for the timing of the indictment, which had been rumored to hit sometime after February, some quarters believe Governor-elect Andrew Cuomo pushed to drop the hammer on the Espadas while he was still attorney general, and Pedro, defeated in the November elections, was still a state senator.

But there are those that say that U.S. Attorney Lynch does things her way, period.

Oh, and why not the Manhattan U.S. attorney handling the case?

We're told the case jurisdiction revolves around some checks being mailed out of Jericho, L.I., within the Eastern District.

But then again, as one cynic pondered, could it have been to avoid a Bronx-centric pro-defendant jury?


Amigo wanted

State Sen. Ruben Diaz Sr. joking, "I have an opening for an amigo now."

The Rev created his fair share of tsuris in Albany by joining with amigos/banditos Pedro, Hiram Monserrate and Brooklyn's Carl Kruger to shake down/shake up Albany.

But even with all that, Diaz said he believes some good did come out of it "even though we never got the credit for what we did for the Hispanic community."

That includes the first Hispanic secretary of the Senate, Angelo Aponte; the chairmanships of the Housing, Transportation, Aging and Consumer Affairs Committees, and the first Latino majority leader.

But with Republicans regaining control of the Senate, probably thanks in part to Pedro's Albany hijinks - "All that is lost."

Board of Elections shakeup

The last of former Bronx Dem Party Chief Jose Rivera's patronage appointments are disappearing.

Latest to go is Anna Torres, Democratic co-deputy chief at the Bronx Board of Elections, who submitted her resignation last week.

Torres' hubby is ex-west Bronx Assemblyman and current Bronx County Clerk Luis Diaz.

New Bronx Dem Boss Carl Heastie is expected to announce her replacement Tuesday.

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BLOOMBITO'S ISLANDS

From the inception of the new bike lanes, there has been controversy. The fact is that Mayor Bloombito "stuck it" to NYC motorists because he was defeated in his congestion tax proposal.
Thus, in his attempt to curry favor with the bike crowd, he has created another and perhaps lethal traffic hazard.

Wednesday, December 01, 2010 www.chaptzem.blogspot.com
Update on Ft. Hamilton Pedestrian Islands Issue
Assemblyman Dov Hikind (D-Brooklyn) met today with New York City Department of Transportation Deputy Commissioner David Wallach about the recent installation of pedestrian islands along Fort Hamilton Parkway. The meeting took place at the contested site, where Hikind was able to demonstrate to the Deputy Commissioner the extreme dangers the islands pose to first responders, firefighters and sanitation workers, as well as the frustration of business owners and motorists.

Since the installation of the islands, firefighters have reported that their response time has been slowed, while the ability of ambulance companies to swiftly reach Maimonides Medical Center has also been negatively impacted. At the Community Board 12 meeting last week, Hikind relayed an incident where a patient in cardiac arrest, who was being transported to Maimonides, died en route to the hospital after traffic was snarled because of the pedestrian islands.“Did DOT consult with the people who live and work in this community before installing these islands?” Hikind asked Mr. Wallach. “Did you take into consideration that Maimonides is one of the busiest hospitals in New York City, with dozens of ambulance companies shuttling patients to the emergency room, where every second counts?”

Hikind also asked Deputy Commissioner Wallach what criteria the DOT used in selecting the four blocks along Fort Hamilton Parkway where the pedestrian islands were installed.Of the ongoing battle to remove the islands, Hikind said, “The fight is not over. But at least now, the DOT is listening to our concerns. If the community is as determined as I am to fight this, then with God’s help, we will be successful in getting these islands removed.”Deputy Commissioner Wallach promised to convey Hikind’s questions and remarks to his superiors and report back to the Assemblyman. The DOT has previously defended the installation of the islands, claiming they were necessary to improve senior safety.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

MUSLIM MAN DENIED CUSTODY OF HIS SON

Sandy Dahmra (L) with Muhammed Khalil (R) (Photo/Steve Sandberg, 1010 WINS)

Reporting Steve Sandberg
PATERSON, N.J. (1010 WINS) — A New Jersey father says he’s being denied custody of his young solely because he’s a Muslim.
At a news conference Tuesday, Muhammed Khalil told reporters including 1010 WINS’ Steve Sandberg that a Division of Youth and Family Services worker unleashed a barrage of insults at him in a crowded Paterson restaurant.
1010 WINS’ Steve Sandberg reports
Khalil, a green card holder originally from Egypt, said the case worker asked him “where is your knife? You’ll slit my throat” and also asked “where is your bomb strapped on you?”
Another Muslim woman, Sandy Dahmra, who was with Khalil at the restaurant, was allegedly told “go back to your country.”
Both Khalil and Dahmra said they had other comments directed toward them including “terrorist,” “Bin Laden lover” and “why don’t you call your Allah.”
The case worker also publicly declared he would never get his boy back, Khalil said.
Khalil has not seen his 6-year-old son since he was taken from his mother’s home a year ago and placed with foster parents for reasons unknown because of privacy laws. Khalil was not living there at the time and is separated from the boy’s mother.
Khalil wants an investigation and said the worker also violated privacy laws by disclosing the case in public. Ultimately, though, Khalil said he just wants his little boy back.
“I only want my son. I want my son,” he said, breaking into tears. “I think I have all the reason to have my son with me, give him toys, enjoy with him.”
Khalil claimed he has had run-ins with the case worker before, but that there were never any witnesses.
The Department of Children and Families said it was “aware of the alleged incident” and “is looking into this allegation.”
The agency said it “continues to have an ongoing dialogue” with CAIR (Council on American Islamic Relations), which is supporting Khalil in his fight.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Mayor Michael Bloomberg tries to explain CityTime mess saying $80M debacle 'slipped thru cracks'

Mayor Bloomberg blamed the unforeseen complexity of computerizing the city's multi-layered payrolls for CityTime debacle.
Hermann for News
Mayor Bloomberg blamed the unforeseen complexity of computerizing the city's multi-layered payrolls for CityTime debacle.

Mayor Bloomberg Friday offered a simple explanation for how the bloated CityTime project became a nest of fraud.

Stuff happens.

"You can't look every place," the mayor said on his weekly WOR radio appearance. "I'm not trying to excuse it. It is something we certainly should focus on. On the other hand, if you want to know how big projects have big things that slip through the cracks, this is as good an example as you need."

In response, critics wondered how such a debacle could occur under the nose of a mayor who prides himself on his managerial skills.

"We need you to do what you said you could do, which is manage finances," said Councilman Jumaane Williams (D-Brooklyn).

The mayor's explanation came after four highly paid CityTime consultants and two others were arrested on charges of siphoning $80 million out of a project where costs have ballooned radically.

CityTime, an attempt to convert thousands of public employees to electronic timesheets, is years behind schedule and hundreds of millions of dollars overbudget.

As part of its expanding probe, the city Department of Investigation spoke on Thursday with Joel Bondy, the director of the Office of Payroll Administration, which oversaw the project, sources say.

Later that day, Bondy was suspended without pay.

Investigators say the alleged ringleader of the conspiracy, Mark Mazer, had unusual access to Bondy during the project. A lawyer for Mazer insisted yesterday that his client made no payments to Bondy.

"Joel Bondy did not receive a dollar from my client," said attorney Gerald Shargel. "Plainly stated, there was no corruption. The relationship between Mr. Mazer and Mr. Bondy was well within ethical and legal boundaries."

The DOI investigation alleges Mazer and three other computer consultants stole millions of taxpayer dollars by inflating consultant hours and fees and funneling the profits through a network of shell corporations.

Some shells were set up by Mazer's wife and mother, both of whom were arrested.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara alleged that Mazer and his subordinate, Scott Berger, signed off on dozens of bogus timesheets to inflate their take.

Yesterday the city also stopped payment to a pre-K school owned by Mazer's wife, Svetlana. This year, the city has paid the ABC Preschool in Woodside, Queens, $237,000.

On the radio show, Bloomberg claimed the city would recover the money stolen by insiders but admitted the scandal undermines public trust in government.

DOI Commissioner Rose Gill Hearn "thinks we'll recover virtually all the money, but it certainly doesn't recover our reputation," Bloomberg said. "It reflects poorly on everybody."

As for how CityTime's original $63 million cost skyrocketed to $700 million, he blamed the unforeseen complexity of computerizing the city's multi-layered payrolls.

gsmith@nydailynews.com