Posted on 21 April 2010. Tags: bloomberg, brooklyn, brooklyn eagle, daily news, gonzalez, haiti, immigration, new york magazine, post, ps 150, schools, sunset park
*The Daily News reported that P.S. 150 has the longest wait list in the city, due largely to demand from Chinese families who have moved into Sunset Park in recent years.
*Police at the 72nd Precinct think they may have caught the burglar who has been targeting and stealing from Chinese residents who live the 40s and 50s, and driving up the burglary rate, Inspector Jesus Raul Pintos said last week.
*The lack of Brooklyn-bound toll on the Verrazano has some people worked up, including local owners who have trouble parking in Sunset Park, the Eagle reported.
*The weekly park sweeps at Lets Clean Sunset Park! are back up and running. Want to join in? Check out the website to keep up to date.
*Thanks to the Brooklyn DA, Haitians in need of clothing after the earthquake will soon be sporting a load of designer knockoffs confiscated last year from a Sunset Park storage facility, according to the Post.
*Councilwoman Gonzalez held a leadership summit last week, the Eagle reports. She also brought together a group to talk about the somewhat contentious issue of legislation on vendors along Fifth Avenue. Details on that to come.
*Mayor Bloomberg and City Council Speaker Quinn last week announced the New York City Waterfront Vision and Enhancement Strategy (WAVES), “a citywide initiative that will create a new sustainable blueprint for the City’s 578 miles of shoreline.” Sunset Park obviously has a good bit of that waterfront. I haven’t had a chance to look through it carefully, but I’ll report back on the details of the plan.
*Picturing Sunset Park: Check out a kind of unusual shot I stumbled upon here, and good shot of Chinatown here.
*Frank of The Sunset Park Blog noted a couple of new Italian places in the neighborhood, and made a well-deserved plug for staying in (the neighborhood) when going out to eat.
*Things have been cooking, sprouting and…shopping…over at Sunset Parkour. Take a look out how her seedlings are progressing, and her note on Sunset Park’s recent meh ranking in NYMag’s list of “most livable” New York neighborhoods. Eh, they can keep Park Slope.
*Got any other news? Send it along…
Posted in Announcements, Arts & Culture, Crime, Economy, In the News, Picturing Sunset Park, education, seen and heard
Posted on 22 March 2010. Tags: bullying, daily news, day care, felix ortiz, ny1, respect for all, salt ban, sara gonzalez, schools, state sentate, station agents, tom colicchio, top chef, velamette montgomery

Councilwoman Sara Gonzalez with teacher Maria Diaz and students at P.S. 24, photo by William Alatriste
Local Politics–Councilwoman Sara Gonzalez keeps busy:
*Councilwoman Sara M. González last week joined Schools Chancellor Joel Klein, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn and others at P.S. 24 on 38th Street for the official launch of ‘Respect For All Week’, a citywide program to address bullying, harassment and discrimination in New York City Schools. “We will be instilling a most valuable life lesson to children at a young age, that bullying, harassment and discrimination are not acceptable in today’s society,” said Councilwoman González in a press release.
*On March 12, the councilwoman took part in a panel discussion chaired by Senator Velmanette Montgomery as part of an emergency meeting at Borough Hall in Brooklyn to address the slated closures of day cares and Head Start programs throughout the city. DC 1707, Council of School Supervisors and Administrators and the Day Care Council called the meeting in response to the threatened cuts.
*Friday was supposed to be the final voyage, but the Rockaway Ferry will forge on, NY1 reported. A last minute deal brokered between the City Council, including Councilwoman Sara Gonzalez, and the mayor’s office will extend the ferry service until July, including its service to the Brooklyn waterfront.
In State News:
*Congressman Felix Ortiz raised the ire of many local restaurateurs when he proposed a bill to ban salt, yes that is the use of all salt, in New York restaurant. Ortiz advocates the ban as a way to address health issues such as hypertension that have skyrocketed in recent years. But you can imagine how fans of salami, pastrami, French fries, salt cod, soy sauce and, well, most dishes with flavor felt about the Sunset Park Democrat’s plan. Tom Colicchio, star of “Top Chef” and owner of Craft restaurant, served as token foodie in the Daily News coverage. “New York City is considered the restaurant capital of the world,” he said. “If they banned salt, nobody would come here anymore.”
After much tomato-tossing, Ortiz last week he backed down from the ban, the YourNabe reported. It seems, in the long run, good for Sunset Park’s many eateries. The tears of the Top Chef crowd might not tug on any heartstrings in Sunset Park, but the end of savory banh mi and chorizo-laden pambazos is another story.
*Congresswoman Yvette Clark joined with two other House Democrats in to oppose the reduction in the number of station agents in New York City subways, Gothamist reported. Clark is the Chairwoman of the Homeland Security Subcommittee on Emerging Threats, Cybersecurity and Science and Technology. The letter to MTA chairman Jay Walder implied the reduction could have serious consequences: “We strongly urge you to re-evaluate the current plans” and not, potentially, “compromise” subways, they wrote. You can read more at the NY Times.
Posted in Announcements, Features, Health and Environment, In the News, Politics, seen and heard
Posted on 03 March 2010. Tags: bay ridge, brokelyn, brooklyn, brooklyn eagle, congress, daily news, gothamist, jerrold nadler, raw milk, sunset park
*Sunset Park is in the news again, with both the Daily News and Brokelyn touting steals to be found around these parts of South Brooklyn. I’m working on putting a map together of their picks (stay tuned) but for now, you can check out the News’ list here, and Brokelyn’s picks here and here.
*Mommies go raw? Both Bay Ridge and Sunset Park have drop spots for illicit unpasteurized milk from Pennsylvania, newly trendy in certain foodie circles. Read more at Gothamist.
*The Brooklyn Eagle put out a mea culpa this morning to Congressman Jerrold Nadler, who they mistakenly wrote represented Brooklyn Heights. Nadler’s aid quickly corrected, saying, “Just for the record, Congressman Nadler does not represent Brooklyn Heights. In Brooklyn, he represents Coney Island, Brighton Beach, Borough Park and Bensonhurst.” The aide apparently forgot to mention that Nadler also represents Red Hook, Gravesend, Dyker Heights, Bath Beach, Seagate and Sunset Park. I often hear complains that Sunset Park gets little play on the political stage–what do you think?
Posted in In the News
Posted on 28 February 2010. Tags: beltrani, brooklyn, daily news, felix ortiz, New York, peralta, sunset park, sunset park stils
Good morning. It’s Monday. The snow slowed things down, but there are a few things to report:
*The Daily News’ Liz Benjamin gave some context to Felix Ortiz’s press Sunday press conference on domestic violence legislation, as well an noting the surprise guest Administrative Law Judge Robert Beltrani – the Republican running against Hiram Monserrate and Assemblyman Jose Peralta in the March 16 special election for Monserrate’s seat.
*Sunset Park Stills posted some great shots of sledders in the park. Take a look.
*The Daily News last week reported on a second subway-hero story in Sunset Park–a young nursing student helped save a stroke-victim on the 36th Street subway platform. Read it here.
*Sunset Park Councilwoman Sarah Gonzalez, head of the City Council’s Juvenile Justice Committee, last week presided over a meeting to discuss the merger the Department of Juvenile Justice and the Administration of Children Services, the Brooklyn Eagle reported.
Posted in In the News
Posted on 01 February 2010. Tags: 19 high schools, bloomberg, brooklyn eagle, CEC-13, CEC-15, daily news, disctict 15, district 13, fat, greg floyd, health, james devor, john liu, lawsuits, local 237, new york times, preservatives, ps 133, salt, school closures, school lunches, schools
* Protests, lawsuits and contentious conversation have followed the announcement the city plans to shutter 19 schools for poor performance. The city has since 2002 closed 91 schools, many large high schools that have reopened as smaller and charter schools. A recent New York Times article offers insight into some of the city politics behind these closures. The new comptroller, John Liu, is adding his two cents–he questioned the school vote when he appeared last week on Local 237 President Greg Floyd’s new radio show, the Daily News reported.
* Other school issues have hit close to home. The Brooklyn Eagle last week covered a meeting about the slated consolidation of students from District 13 (Fort Green, Downtown, Park Slope) and District 15 (Sunset Park, Red Hook, Park Slope, Windsor Terrace). The building that houses P.S. 133 will be rebuilt, and students from Sunset Park’s overcrowded schools will join them in a new, larger building. “Sunset Park is in a crisis situation,” James Devor, president of CEC-15, a governing body for District 15, told the Brooklyn Eagle. But not everyone was pleased with the plan. The Eagle reports race issues bubbled up, with parents from P.S. 133 worried that their 300 children would get short shrift after the arrival of 660 students from District 15, who are predominantly white.
* Though the Bloomberg administration has touted its success slashing fat and fillers, the Daily News reports lunches may not be as healthy as they look. Cheese sandwiches, mozzarella sticks and pizza still make regular appearances on school menus. These dishes feature unpronounceables like azodicarbonamide (a bleach used in food), the maligned high-fructose corn syrup, and processes food with high levels of fat and salt.
Posted in Health and Environment, In the News, Politics, education