Tag Archive | "sara gonzalez"

Renovations of Sunset Park Will Bring Green to “The Big Slab”


A plan for the renovations of Sunset Park

In a great example of how community journalism can work, I got this note about the goings on at a Community Board 7 meeting on parks. A reader attended, and sent this note back:

Sunset Park will be undergoing some serious changes–$4 million in renovations starting this year. Sara Gonzalez helped acquire the funding, the reader said.

The first is a reworking of the concrete baseball/soccer field (“the big slab”) in the middle of the park. It will be turned into a more legitimate multi-purpose field, faux-grass and all, as the picture above shows. The comfort station (I believe that’s the bathroom) and the area with the chess tables will also get spiffed. The playground, however, will not get reworked…yet. Some of the parents at the meeting were not too happy to hear that, but the playground will apparently top next year’s list.

Another unfortunate budget victim is summer camp:  registration in Sunset Park has been delayed as the is no money in the budget for it. Rumor is it may not happen this year, the reader said.

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Reader Says Sunset Park Vending Bill is a Boon for the Neighborhood


Vendors make patellitos on Fifth Avenue in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.

“Tee Gee” left this long and comprehensive reply to a short news update about Councilwoman Gonzalez’s vendor legislation for Sunset Park. I had noted it has been controversial, based in part on this article I came across quite a while ago, as well as some general tensions I know exist between local businesses and street vendors. I’ll continue to report on this, but in the mean time, here’s one neighborhood take on the proposed legislation. Keep scrolling to see the P.S. on local pols. Read and reply!

The Sunset Park Street Vending bill is one of the more amazing pieces of business to come before the City Council. For years, store-based businesses have complained about unfair competition from street vendors. They pointed out that the vendors were unlicensed, didn’t give receipts, didn’t guarantee goods, didn’t post prices, didn’t follow department of health regulations and were just unfair to rent paying businesses.
But when the Sunset Park Business Improvement District investigated on behalf of its member businesses (all store-based), they found that there were at least 3 different types of street vendors. One, were opportunistic folks who had regular jobs but came out just before holidays to sell inferior goods and knock-offs of name brands. The second type, were often recent immigrants who were selling on behalf of greedy business people who “charged” the vendors a ridiculous fee to vend their goods. These vendors were victims forced to vend aggressively just to break even for the day after prepaying the folks who sent them out. And the third type of vendor (which is predominant in Sunset Park) are recent immigrants who live in Sunset Park and are providing foods and goods that for the most part are not available in local stores.

After much investigation, the BID determined:
1. The city has not given vending licenses in so long that the wait is many years and thus most vendors do so illegally.
2. Sunset Park vendors want to be licensed and follow the regulations that stores follow but are subject to constant fines and sometimes arrest.
3. Daily sidewalk vending (not the ones who just appear before holidays) actually helps store-based businesses by increasing business throughout the district.
3. The BID and the local vendors agreed to develop a pilot program that would permit vendors on side streets (and not near stores with similar products and not on 5th Avenue). The vendors would follow a detailed list of regulations that the stores follow and in addition would provide assistance in maintaining the cleanliness of the avenue and especially the street corners. Their presence on the side streets would greatly promote the store located on side streets.
4. The Brooklyn Public Library and several other not-for-profits agreed to provide a package of free services for the vendors (mainly recent immigrants) and their families (and also for the store owners & their employees & families).
5. The BID put together this coalition of service providers that would provide these services:
a. English language development
b. Business skill development
c. Citizenship & Naturalization Assistance
d. Housing assistance
e. Assistance in navigating the school system
f. Career planning
g. Legal services
h. Health services.

The plan is much more detailed than my limited comment here. But basically it would recognize our local vendors as legitimate members of the business community and the community at large. It would embrace rather than attack these hardworking individuals. It would “jump start” our newest wave of future Americans into the role of active citizenship. Unlike the parents of many of us, who came to the U.S. two or more generations ago and had to wait for their children or children’s children to be viewed as “valid” citizens, our newest neighbors would be welcomed into the American dream. And America (I should point out that many of these immigrants are already Americans – South & Central & North, we misuse the term when what we mean is United States of America) would get a new boost of patriotism from these new citizens as they become proof that the American dream is real and not a trumped up scam.
In closing, this is not a compromise plan where everyone loses equally. This is instead, a very rare case of a true “win-win” situation. Needed services would come to the vendors, and numerous benefits would come to store-based businesses. And in the end, Sunset Park’s Main Street would be cleaner, offer a greater variety of goods, and become a fulfillment of the American dream.

P.S.

I would like to add an additional comment about the Sunset Park Vending bill. The “family” of Sunset Park elected officials: Congresswoman Velazquez, Borough President Markowitz, our three State Senators – Montgomery, Adams & Savino, Assemblyman Ortiz, and City Councilwoman Sara Gonzalez are all strong supporters of the plan. Our Community Board has signed on and the Speaker of the City Council – Quinn has made its passage a priority.

But yet, the plan faces stiff opposition! And here is the reason why – street vending has two camps that have been fighting for generations. It is almost like the two sides in World War I. The sides are so deeply entrenched that “peace” seems impossible. There are vendors (not local ones) and there are store based businesses (again, not the local ones) who fear this bill’s passage. They mounted a stiff campaign of demonstrations at City Hall, letter writing and the lobbying of various elected officials.

The two sides have been enemies for so long that neither is willing to trust any changes in position except for total surrender by the other side. They have lost all ability to negotiate – and for good reason – thru the years, the City has modified the vending laws from time to time and each time, only made the situation worse by hurting both sides. So government in general has lost the trust of the two sides.

Another major problem is that Mayor Bloomberg’s advisors have backed away from the plan. When the plan was first proposed, they were in such strong support that they wanted to immediately begin the plan in several neighborhoods without even going before the City Council for passage of a bill. They were going to do it thru an Executive Order of the Mayor.

Sunset Park agreed to changes asked for by the Mayor’s people but insisted that the plan NOT be imposed on any community. We felt it was essential that a community ask for the plan to be tried – the general community and both the stores & the street vendors. Just like we wouldn’t want something imposed on Sunset Park, we wouldn’t want to impose our plan on another community.

But when the two deeply entrenched sides began lobbying the Mayor, his people dropped the plan like a hot potato. Their excitement became silence. They avoided phone calls from Sunset Park and adopted a cowardly policy worse than neutrality. They ignored that the plan was on the table at all.

For people who are fearful of the bill possibly not working as we imagine it will work, the response is simple. This is a pilot program that would end after one year if not renewed.

Some of us in Sunset Park will not forget that the Mayor had a chance to do something of major benefit for Sunset Park’s street vendors & businesses and instead took on the role of the Wizard of Oz’s Cowardly Lion. The Sunset Park plan could have been the first step in resolving street vending problems throughout the city.

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In the News: Sunset Park Politicians on Bullying, Day Cares, Salt Bans and Station Agents


Sara Gonzalez launches "respect for all" week at P.S. 24 in Sunset Park

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.

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In the News: Pastoral Parks, Councilwoman Gonzalez, Fire and Crime


Good morning. It’s Thursday. The weekend looms. Let’s start with the prettiest in news:

*Lush trees, boggy wetlands and birds…in New York City? That’s precisely what Joel Meyerowitz portrays in large-scale photographs of 50 city parks on show at the Museum of the City of New York. Commissioned by the parks department, the exhibit is the largest documentary of the city’s 29,000 acres of parkland since they were photographed as part of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s WPA project of the 1930s. Sunset Park made the cut, City Limits Online reports, offering a little bit of urban to the pastoral scenes of the lesser known green in our nation’s great metropolis. Legacy: The Preservation of Wilderness in New York City Parks, at the Museum of the City of New York, Tuesday through Sunday 10 a.m. – 5 p.m., adults $10, through March 21.

*Governor David Paterson led the way in welcoming Councilwoman Sara M. González at the new Sunset Park High School into her second term on the council, YourNabe reported. The comment section (ever enlightening) offers a range of reactions to the news.

*Last weekend, nearly every paper ran stories on the tragic fire that killed five in Bensonhurst, including the mother of two young children.The New York Times offered some history, and the story about how the blaze affected families of the dead in Guatemala. The Post reported while the alleged arsonist said “demons” drove him to torch a baby carriage that drove the blaze, it may have had more to do with revenge. A Daily News story portrayed 2-year-old Josias’ confusion at his mothers death. Their home destroyed, the family has taken up residence in Sunset Park.

*A string of holdups in local warehouses, including at least one in the 72nd precinct, continued this week. From YourNabe.com: On January 11, two black males armed with handguns entered a warehouse on Centre Street between Smith and Court Streets and robbed a 43-year-old man inside. Police said that cops have connected the thieves to four similar robberies in the nearby 78th Precinct in Park Slope and the 72nd Precinct in Sunset Park.

*In other crime news, a police arrested a man believed to be a thief with a thing for mailboxes. Officials alleged 49-year-old John Sturiale was one of two men who in December stole metal and plastic post office containers worth upward of $2500 (who knew?) from the post office on 58th Street, YourNabe.com reported. First email, then missing containers. Times are tough for USPS.

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Sunset Park in the News: Local Teens and Councilwoman Gonzalez Toss Around Their Weight


Two Sunset Park-related articles caught my eye recently.

The New York Times did a great piece on the Ardon Sweet Science Gym, the last boxing gym left in Sunset Park. Pat Russo used to run another gym at the Sunset Park Rec Center. The Parks Department ousted the ring from the Sunset Park Rec Center in 2007 to make room for an after-school program. Don’t miss the slideshow that accompanies the story.

The Brooklyn Eagle featured a run down of what city council member spent in their recent campaigns for office. The quarter-million dollar figures seem like chump change when compared with the whopping $100 million that Bloomberg shelled out in his race for a third term. That said, it’s always interesting to see how much people think their seat is worth. Councilwoman Sara Gonzalez of Sunset Park made the list; according to the Eagle, she spent $232,858 during her successful bid to stay in office.

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Rezoning Press Release from Councilwoman González


For those who are interested, find a press release by Councilwoman Sara González on the recent passage of the Sunset Park Rezoning Plan below:

Read the full story

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