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Vol. 113 No. 1 | January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
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ADAMS ERA BEGINS
(Michael Appleton Mayoral Photography Office)
Adams’ whirlwind first days in office By ARIAMA C. LONG Report for America Corps Member / Amsterdam News Staff
Day. Despite dealing with an ominous police shooting, the COVID surge, and school closures in the first few hours to days of his term, New Mayor Eric Adams quite lit- Adams appeared energized during erally had to hit the ground run- his press circuits. ning after his swearing into office Saturday, Jan. 1 was Adams’ first on Saturday morning, New Year’s full day. On his subway commute
into city hall, Adams, a former transit cop, seemingly flashed back to old beat cop ways by calling 911 to report two men fighting in view of the J train platform at Broadway and Kosciuszko in Brooklyn. Later that same morning, he and newly appointed NYPD Police Commis-
sioner Keechant L. Sewell had to hold a press conference after an officer was injured in a shooting. At around 2:30 a.m. on Saturday, Officer Keith Wagenhauser, 33, was resting in his personal car in between shifts near the 25th See ADAMS on page 6
Adams and Banks want students to ‘Stay Safe’ By STEPHON JOHNSON Amsterdam News Staff
Adams and Banks, while visiting Concourse Village Elementary School and P17X in the Bronx, New York City Mayor Eric Adams discussed the beginnings of their and Schools Chancellor David “Stay Safe and Stay Open” plan to Banks are tasked with implementing keep the school year going witha plan to test, trace and keep chil- out a hitch. The duo promoted the dren and staff members safe. idea of the program to those in at-
tendance. It’s a program whose idea sprouted from the end of the previous administration. Right before leaving City Hall, former New York City mayor Bill de Blasio, Adams and New York State Gov. Kathy Hochul unveiled the program for New Yorkers.
“Way over the past two weeks, positivity rates…have jumped from 7.7 to 21.7%,” Adams said during the announcement. “That’s enough to be concerned. Hospitalizations. It’s all [on] the rise as well. But basically, the data suggests something See STUDENTS on page 6
Mayor Adams making all the right moves his first week in office Urban Agenda by David R. Jones, President and CEO of the Community Service Society of New York - See page 5
2 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
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TUTU’S LAST WISHES SHED NEW LIGHT ON ‘AQUAMATION’ OR ‘GREEN BURIAL’ (GIN)—Over the course of his 90 years, Archbishop Desmond Mpilo Tutu gave voice to his beloved nation in its struggle for change and reconciliation under Black ma-
sisted death. His last request, befitting a man who scorned ostentation and defended the environment, was that there be no “lavish spending” for his funeral and that his casket be simple, made of pine with only a bouquet of carnations from his family. He directed
there is no legislation there specifically covering the practice.
jority rule. His last wishes for a green burial have sparked a tweet storm on the mostly unfamiliar practice among devoted followers of “the Arch.” Archbishop Tutu was a key figure telling the world of the grievances of South Africa’s exploited Black majority. He did not mince words in a meeting with Pres. Ronald Reagan. American policy toward South Africa, he said, known as “constructive engagement,” was “evil, immoral and un-Christian.” To the foreign investors still reaping profits, he urged “persuasive pressure” for racial change but if that failed, “pressure must become punitive, that is, economic sanctions should be imposed.” He even took on his countrymen, faulting the new political rulers for seeking their own advancement before that of the poor. “What is Black empowerment when it seems to benefit not the vast majority but a small elite that tends to be recycled? We are sitting on a powder keg.” The former teacher, cleric and activist was fearlessly outspoken across a range of topics, from Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories to gay rights, climate change and as-
his remains to undergo alkaline hydrolysis, also known as aquamation, an eco-friendly alternative to traditional cremation that uses water rather than fire. Aquamation is part of a growing “green burial” movement that avoids non-biodegradable materials and promotes natural decomposition. Advocates say it’s an environmentally friendly alternative to ornate caskets and cremation by fire, which emits greenhouse gases. After the private aquamation ceremony Archbishop Tutu was interred behind the pulpit from where he once denounced bigotry and racial tyranny. The California-based Green Burial Council tweeted: “Even in death, Desmond Tutu remains a vigilant protector of the environment. He chose a green alternative to cremation— #aquamation—as his final act to nurture the Earth.” “There is a more eco-friendly way of [cremation] and that is aquamation. It’s a process involving water and is more environment-friendly which is what he aspired to as an eco-warrior,” said the Rev. Michael Weeder of Cape Town. Aquamation was introduced to South Africa in 2019. Currently
138-year-old Cape Town Parliament complex. An individual has been arrested in connection with the incident. The roof of the old National Assembly building has collapsed and authorities fear significant damage has been done to priceless artifacts inside, including the manuscript of lyrics for South Africa’s national anthem. Images broadcast on television showed flames leaping from the roof of one large building, while several others in the parliament building area including the National Assembly were enveloped in a thick cloud of black smoke. The fire is believed to have started in one of the older buildings, leading to a security cordon near the cathedral where the ashes of the anti-apartheid hero Archbishop Desmond Tutu were buried on Saturday. “The roof of the Old Assembly building has collapsed and is gone,” said JP Smith, Cape Town’s mayoral committee member for safety and security. “The entire parliamentary complex is severely damaged— waterlogged and smoke damaged.” No casualties have been
reported and the cause of the blaze is not yet known. Parliament spokesman MAJOR DAMAGE FEARED AS FIRE Moloto Mothapo said a man in GUTS SOUTH AFRICA’S HISTORIC his early 50s was arrested inside PARLIAMENT BUILDING the parliamentary complex on (GIN)—Firefighters have Sunday morning, but did not been battling to contain a blaze, give any further details. six hours after it broke out in the Parliamentary officials said (GIN photo)
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INDEX Arts & Entertainment �������������Page 13 » Astro/Numerology ���������������� Page 16 » Food �����������������������������������������Page 18 » Jazz �����������������������������������������Page 19 Caribbean Update �������������������Page 12 Career/Business ���������������������Page 24 Classified ����������������������������������Page 25 Editorial/Opinion �����������������Pages 10,11 Education �����������������������������������Page 9 In the Classroom ��������������������Page 20 Religion & Spirituality ������������� Page 23 Sports ����������������������������������������Page 32 Union Matters ����������������������������� Page 8 Your Health ������������������������������Page 22
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they were not aware of any sensitive documents that might have been affected by the fire. But offices belonging to lawmakers in the African National Congress as well as in two smaller opposition parties— the Good Party and the National Freedom Party—were among those badly damaged. The building houses a collection of rare books and the original copy of the former Afrikaans national anthem “Die Stem van Suid-Afrika” (“The Voice of South Africa”), which was already damaged. The fire broke out at about 3 a.m. on Jan. 1. The National Assembly building, with its red and white facade, is where South Africa’s last apartheid president, FW de Klerk, declared the end of the brutal white minority regime in 1990. South Africans viewed the fire as a double blow on the first two days of the new year, after saying farewell to Tutu and then seeing their Parliament burn. “It’s just really a terrible setback,” President Cyril Ramaphosa said. “The Arch [Tutu] would’ve been devastated as well. This is a place he supported and prayed for.”
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Weekend one, January 2022: public, cop, dog become gun victims By NAYABA ARINDE Amsterdam News Editor “They are out here playing Call of Duty, but there is no reset button when you take someone’s life,” boomed activist Danny Goodine, in light of a Bed Stuy woman and her pitbull killed in a crossfire shooting in a Brooklyn bodega. At about 9:45 p.m. on Sunday, the second day of January, 2022, police responded to a 911 call of a woman shot inside the Salim Smoke Shop & Lottery Corp, 488 Dekalb Avenue, Clinton Hill. Reports say that the gunman was aiming at another man when he hit Jennifer Ynoa, 36, in the torso and her pitbull. When cops arrived she was laid out on the sidewalk “unconscious and unresponsive.” EMS responded and took Ynoa to Brooklyn Hospital where she was pronounced deceased. “These shooters are not trained with weapons, and they shoot recklessly. As the old folk say, ‘These bullets don’t have eyes,’” said Goodine, co-founder of Men Elevating Leader-
ship, named for his son Blake Shamel Harper, a 2004 gun violence victim. “This young woman wasn’t the intended target, she was an innocent bystander. The dog probably lunged at him. With the ASPCA and PETA, they are going to give him more time because of the dog. But, he didn’t care who he shot. People like this have no understanding of what firearms are. There is a real consequence to their reckless behavior.” No arrests have been made and the investigation is ongoing, and PETA has offered a $5,000 reward. Twenty-two-year NYPD veteran, retired captain, now New York City’s 110th mayor, Eric Adams, is faced with twindemic issues of gun violence and police/community relations. The self-described “Get Stuff Done” mayor was confronted with the gun crime issue on day one, when a bullet hit a sleeping officer in the police parking lot of East Harlem’s 25th Precinct. Deciding to sleep in his vehicle as he was due to return to work within hours, Officer Keith Wagenhauser, 33,
January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 3
MetroBriefs `
Councilwoman Kristin Richardson Jordan leads ‘Harlem not for sale’ protest and rally City Councilwoman Kristin Richardson Jordan, and concerned residents of central Harlem, led a protest on Monday against the “One45” development proposed for the corner of Lenox Avenue and West 145th Street. The proposal to construct two 363-foot-tall towers, a civil rights museum and new headquarters for Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network, has been met with much scrutiny from local residents who feel developer Bruce Teitelbaum, and all other profiting parties, have not adequately engaged or even considered the voices of the majority-Black neighborhood. Richardson Jordan says the One45 development will displace the community she represents.Winning election in 2021, the councilwoman said she would fight against the displacement of Black and Brown people in her district and the erasure of Harlem’s Black heritage, culture and radical tradition.
New Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg to hold community inauguration in March
New city councilmembers weigh in on Racial Justice Commission proposals
Alvin Bragg was officially sworn in as district attorney of New York County (Manhattan) on Jan. 1. Only the fourth person to be elected to this office in the last 80 years, he made history as the first Black Manhattan DA. Bragg was sworn in in a private ceremony by the clerk of New York County, the Hon. Milton Tingling. The community Inauguration ceremony has been rescheduled for Sunday, March 6. Before his election, Bragg spent 20 years as chief deputy attorney general in New York State, the first chief of a special unit that investigated police-involved killings, an assistant U.S. attorney in the Southern District of New York, a civil rights attorney and a visiting professor of law and co-director of the Racial Justice Project at New York Law School, where he represented the family of Eric Garner in a case against the mayor that sought key details about Garner’s killing.
ARIAMA C. LONG Report for America Corps Member / Amsterdam News Staff
Attorney General James and Gov. Hochul continue efforts to defend SALT deduction
The New York City Racial Justice Commission (RJC) put out its final report last week outlining three ballot proposals intended to dismantle structural racism in the city’s constitution. Though, some incoming city council members are seeing it as little more than a “symbolic gesture.” “While the Racial Justice Commission was empowered as a charter revision commission, the Commission took seriously its mandate to uproot structural racism at its core—which involved an examination of not only the New York City Charter but also the broader patterns of inequity in our city,” said Anusha Venkataraman, executive director of the RJC. Former Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the formation of the 11member commission on March 23, 2021: the first of its kind in the nation. In the past nine months, the commission compiled three ballot proposals based on public community forums and input. On Dec. 28, members marched from Foley Square to the Office of the City Clerk and delivered its final report. The first proposal calls for the city charter to add a statement about values and equity that acknowledges past and ongoing “harms” experienced by marginalized groups and individuals. The second proposal establishes a Racial
New York Attorney General Letitia James and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced that New York, Connecticut, Maryland, and New Jersey filed a petition for certiorari to the U.S. Supreme Court to continue their lawsuit against the federal government for its unlawful and unprecedented cap on the deduction for state and local taxes, known as SALT. The petition asks the Supreme Court to review an October 2021 ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit that upheld the district court’s rejection of the states’ suit, which argues that the SALT cap was a politically motivated bid by the former federal administration to interfere with the policy choices of predominantly Democratic states. The lawsuit—which was originally filed in July 2018 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York—argued that the new SALT deduction cap was enacted to target New York and similarly situated states, that it interferes with states’ rights to make their own fiscal decisions, and that it will disproportionately harm taxpayers in these states. The top states with the highest average deduction for state and local taxes—a majority of which are Democratic—include New York, Connecticut, Maryland, and New Jersey.
See SHOT on page 21
On Dec. 28, RJC members marched from Foley Square to the Office of the City Clerk and delivered its final report. (Photographer Alexander J. Clark Contributed Photo)
Equity Office, Plan, and Commission. The third proposal requires the city to develop and report an annual “true cost of living” in New York City aimed at redefining the dreaded ‘affordable for who’ debate. Jennifer Jones Austin, chair of the RJC, said that measuring the true cost of living “would be a concrete baseline for both capturing how much it costs to survive and thrive, and a tool to inform and programs that help people, especially persons of color who disproportionately experience wage inadequacy.” See COUNCILMEMBERS on page 21
City’s Health Department releases annual vital statistics data The Health Department today released the Annual Summary of Vital Statistics for 2019 (PDF). The 2019 Summary gives important context on births and deaths in New York City prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, which will help the Health Department understand the deeper health impacts the pandemic has had on New Yorkers in 2020 and beyond. Data for 2020 beyond the final birth and death totals are still being analyzed, however, based on available totals, between 2019 and 2020 total births declined by 9.4% (110,442 births to 100,022 births) and total deaths increased by 51% (54,559 to 82,143). The 2019 citywide crude birth rate reached a historic low of 13.2 births per 1,000, and New York City’s age-adjusted premature death rate has declined by 5% from 2010 to 2019. —Compiled by Cyril Josh Barker
4 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
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Tish v. Trump By HERB BOYD Special to the AmNews N.Y. Attorney General Letitia James moved her civil investigation of the Trump administration a little bit closer as 2022 gets underway, subpoenaing two of his children, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump. Each served in executive positions in his administration and have refused to comply with the subpoena. “Donald Trump, Donald Trump Jr., and Ivanka Trump are trying to stop my office from interviewing them under oath as part of our investigation into the Trump Organization and Mr. Trump,” James tweeted. “Over two years of delay tactics won’t stop our investigation because no one is above the law.” Her quest to get testimony from them became public after the Trump admin-
istration’s lawyers attempted to block the attorney general’s request. The Trumps were served on Dec. 1 several months after Eric Trump, the third child, was ordered to testify after the failure of his lawsuit. James is living up to her promise to investigate the claims that Trump inflated the value of his business empire in order to get loans and subsequently devalued it to lower its taxes. It remains to be seen if the next move by James will renew her subpoena of Trump himself that provoked him to sue her, with him charging that she was violating his constitutional rights. In her quest to get a deposition from Trump, he has called it a “witch hunt.” The attorney general’s probe is akin to the inquiry launched by Cyrus Vance, the former Manhattan DA and one that Alvin Bragg, the new D.A., has promised to continue.
Freshman city councilmembers excited to begin By ARIAMA C. LONG Report for America Corps Member / Amsterdam News Staff New York City Council’s 51-member legislative body is in the process of onboarding 35 fresh faces this month, 31 of which are women and many of whom are people of color. The new council members are hitting the ground running as the city deals with another surge of COVID-19, among other things, that has them working from home. Orientation for new council members started on Dec. 8 as the city shifted attention to the holidays, the new year, and welcoming a new mayor. Now that members are officially sworn in, the real work of adjusting begins. Amsterdam News reached out to a few of the generally listed phone numbers for council members, but they seemed to still be in the process of being set up. Councilmember Rita Joseph, who replaced Councilmember Dr. Mathieu Eugene in Flatbush, confirmed that she’s still waiting to get the all clear to move into the office. Councilmember Crystal Hudson put out a statement via Twitter about her feelings on being sworn in and said that they are waiting for the Omicron variant of COVID to subside before scheduling a public inauguration ceremony. “While I started in my official capacity on January 1, and today was my first day in the ’office,’ my team and I have been hard at work for months,” said Hudson in a statement. “I’ve brought on an all-star team of public servants who I can’t wait to introduce you to later this month. In the next few weeks, we’ll
work together to safely set up a district office, explore creative solutions to serving constituents while keeping rampant spread of COVID19 top of mind, and meet you in your neighborhood—outdoors, masked up and socially distanced.” Hudson also added that she’s excited to vote for Councilmember Adrienne Adams to replace City Council Speaker Corey Johnson this week. Adams is expected to be the first Black woman councilmember to serve as speaker of the New York City Council. “I’m confident in soon-to-be-Speaker Adams’ trust in the body, fairness in legislating, and vision to center New Yorkers who have often been overlooked in her agenda,” said Hudson. Councilmember Chi A. Ossé, who replaced Councilmember Robert Cornegy in Crown Heights and Bed-Stuy, said that he is in his own office at the moment while onboarding from central staff continues with basic phone numbers and email set up. He hadn’t received the keys to Cornegy’s old office, inside the refurbished site of a historic milk bottling plant at Bed-Stuy’s Restoration Plaza, until last week, he said. Ossé said that with the Omicron variant of COVID still in play, people are waiting to see a “peak and fall” before moving in-person to offices hopefully in the next two weeks. Ariama C. Long is a Report for America Corps member and writes about culture and politics in New York City for the Amsterdam News. Your donation to match our RFA grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting: https:// tinyurl.com/fcszwj8w
NewJerseyNews Mount Laurel Township swears in first African American mayor By CYRIL JOSH BARKER Amsterdam News Staff
Kareem Pritchett was sworn in Jan. 1 as Mount Laurel Township’s first African American mayor in the township’s 150-year history. U.S. Sen. Cory Booker administered the oath of office. “It is a great honor and privilege to serve as mayor, and I humbly embrace the immense responsibility ahead,” Pritchett said. “Having served four years on the township council, I’m ready for this opportunity to be a powerful voice for all residents, especially the many that never thought a day like this would be possible in Mount Laurel.” In 2021, Mount Laurel Township began a new era with the most diverse council in history and new leadership with Stephen Steglik becoming the youngest mayor in history. Despite the fiscal challenges faced by local governments throughout New Jersey, the new council improved services to residents while not raising taxes on residents. “During the next year, I will work to ensure our growing township pushes forward smart policies to help our local economy, ensure our residents feel safe, and fight for critical infrastructure improvements we need to improve our roads, water quality, and improve our quality of life,” Pritchett said. Booker said Pritchett’s love for his neighbors led him to become a politician and that his position has expanded in Mount Laurel and that he will provide opportunity for the community he loves so much. “Today, in Mount Laurel, we begin the new year with immense optimism and hope, as Kareem Pritchett becomes mayor of this great community,” Booker said. “It is also a historic day that touches close to my heart. Kareem Pritchett, a son of Newark, is the first Black mayor in the township’s 150-year history.” In 2003, Pritchett was hired by the New Jersey Juvenile Justice Commission and started his career as a correctional officer and was voted Officer of the Year in 2011. A year later he was elected by his peers to represent them in their union, PBA Local 105. Pritchett served two terms as an executive vice president representing the Juvenile Justice Commission and State Parole Officers on the executive board of PBA Local 105. He later decided to run for Town Council of Mount Laurel Township representing the Democratic Party and was elected in November of 2018.
NJ’s minimum wage goes up to $13/hour for most employees By CYRIL JOSH BARKER Amsterdam News Staff New Jersey’s statewide minimum wage increased by $1 to $13 per hour for most employees, effective Jan. 1. The increase is part of legislation signed by Gov. Phil Murphy in February 2019 that gradually raises the minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2024 for most employees. When Murphy took office in 2018, the state’s minimum wage was $8.60 per hour; he and the Legislature immediately identified increasing the minimum wage as a legislative priority. “I was proud to sign legislation to put New Jersey on the path to a $15 per hour minimum wage,” said Murphy. “This increase will greatly improve the lives of countless New Jerseyans and ensure that hardworking people across our state are paid a living wage.” Under the law, seasonal and small employers were given until 2026 to reach $15 per hour to lessen the impact on their businesses. The minimum hourly wage for these employees will increase to $11.90/ hour on Jan. 1, up from $11.10. Agricultural workers are guided by a separate minimum wage timetable and were given until 2027 to reach the $15/hour minimum wage. Employees who work on a farm for an hourly or piece-rate wage will see their minimum hourly wage increase to $11.05, up from $10.44. Additionally, long-term care facility direct care staff will see their minimum wage rise by $1, to $16/hour. Tipped workers will also see their minimum cash wage rise by $1 to $5.13/hour, with employers able to claim a $7.87 tip credit. If the minimum cash wage plus an employee’s tips do not equal at least the state minimum wage, then the employer must pay the employee the difference.
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BKLYN Commons’ Johanne Brierre By ARIAMA C. LONG Amsterdam News Staff, Report for America Corps Member
Johanne Brierre
“They never, ever, ever, ever had an opportunity to build and create something on their own, and I think that’s why what’s so marvelous in what I’m building,” said Brierre. “It’s something that’s life-changing and that’s going to change the whole industry.” Johanne Brierre, 44, is the creator of NYBeauty Suite and helps run BKLYN Commons, a large coworking space for aspiring entrepreneurs and small businesses in Flatbush, Brooklyn. Brierre, who is of Haitian background, grew up in the Flatbush area just down the street from the coworking space’s historic location on Flatbush Avenue and Empire Boulevard and across from the entrance to Prospect Park. From 1925 to 1960 the massive building was the Bond Bread Factory. In the ’90s it was then re-outfitted to be a discount clothing store called Phat Alberts Warehouse. In 2016, BKLYN Commons was founded on the site of the empty warehouse with accessibility, affordability, and community in mind. The space is home to more than 300 small businesses, entrepreneurs, and creators in a vibrant collective community. Brierre joined the mission as a chief brand officer before leveling up to partner in the business space. Before the commons, Brierre worked in the hotel and hospitality industry in Manhattan. “People used to come to me all the time to host events and networking, but at the same time I didn’t want to be in the city anymore and wanted to find a space in Brooklyn,” said Brierre about her journey. “One day I was getting off at the train station and I saw a sign.” Prior to COVID, Brierre’s niece was a member of the beauty community and had a successful business in Florida. She shared with her aunt that during COVID the beauty community was hit extremely hard. Many of the hairdressers and braiders, for instance, were having a hard time making enough money to survive because they were not considered essential workers and relied on rented chairs in commercial rental spaces that were shutdown. In response, Brierre created NYBeauty Suite, which is a cooperative working environment for “beautipreneurs,” or working professionals in the beauty and wellness industry, such as hair braiders, lash technicians, estheticians, nurses, body sculpting, and holistic healers. The beauti-preneurs are fueled by ecommerce, social media, referrals and online advertising as opposed to heavily focusing on a brick and mortar salon with a chair, said Brierre.
January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 5
THE URBAN AGENDA
By David R. Jones
Mayor Adams making all the right moves his first week in office Mayor Eric Adams took the oath of office this week at a time when the city faces extraordinary challenges in crime, education, housing, jobs and the stilllingering coronavirus pandemic. All these crises must be addressed simultaneously. Adams is off to a great start of his first 100 days with the appointment of an impressive core leadership team that reflects the scope and complexity of the job ahead, as well as the politically delicate task of engaging the full range of stakeholders and addressing a nine percent unemployment rate.
Black
New Yorker
“I went to the landlord at BKLYN Commons and I said, ‘Listen I have this idea. I want to test and make a pilot six suites, beauty suites,’” said Brierre. “A month later the whole thing was at 100% capacity with a waitlist of 40 people. That was huge.” Since opening at the height of the pandemic in March 2020, the beauty suite brand and coworking has grown tremendously. Brierre said the beauty business owners, who are primarily young Black women, faced hardship and discrimination in trying to rent spaces for work in other places during last year’s lockdown. While other spaces were shutting down, Brierre said that BKLYN Commons maintained their businesses because of the connection to the community and help from city agencies and other local nonprofits. “I looked at them as me and they looked at me as them,” said Brierre. “So I’m very proud of that. To be the only Black woman in the industry that was able to keep a space with over 300 businesses operational around that time. It was nonstop.” Brierre hopes to launch a second location in downtown Brooklyn at 81 Willoughby Street with 20 suites, including a photography studio, amenities, and kitchen. Ariama C. Long is a Report for America corps member and writes about culture and politics in New York City for The Amsterdam News. Your donation to match our RFA grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting: https://tinyurl.com/fcszwj8w
But Adams cannot expect a honeymoon. Naysayers will quickly test the style, substance and temperament of the city’s second Black mayor, the first being David N. Dinkins, elected in 1989. An immediate challenge for Adams is navigating the current COVID-19 surge and keeping students in classrooms for inperson learning in the new year, which is essential for many parents to go to work. Just before the Christmas break, rising COVID cases caused chaos and disrupted work, tourism and Broadway performances. Restoring school attendance is also critical because so many students, primarily low-income children of color, were “lost” during pandemic remote learning. Separately, Adams must address school desegregation – in particular, revising the single-test admissions policy for specialized high schools. Harvard and other top academic institutions in the country don’t use a single test criteria. The city’s test-based specialized high schools are the starkest example of the segregation which permeates the city’s school system. So far, Schools Chancellor David Banks has said all the right things, especially his promise to pare back administrative waste and focus on classroom learning. His background of helping to launch a group of six public schools that serves mostly boys of color is a perfect fit for the challenge. Gun violence is arguably the city’s most pressing issue, and it was a centerpiece of the Adams campaign. His appointment of Keechant Sewell, the first female New York City Police Commissioner, is the new mayor’s most attention-grabbing move to date. The former Nassau County Chief of Detectives is an NYPD outsider who represents a dramatic departure from the archetypal NYPD commissioner. A former police captain himself, Adams has a clear vision for policing and promised months ago to appoint a woman. Sewell must balance the conflicting goals of a change-management agenda: aggressive crime fighting vs. building trust with communities of color; reining in police abuses vs. working with vocal police unions; and, weeding out bad apples vs. boosting rank-and-file police morale.
The appointments of Banks and Sewell sent a loud and clear message that Adams brings a new agenda to City Hall. He went even further in declaring a new day by surrounding himself with senior leaders comprised of an unconventional mix of women, people of color, city government veterans, former Mayor Bill de Blasio administration holdovers and non-profit executives. The self-proclaimed “pro-business” mayor has also named 60 corporate chieftains from media, life sciences, tourism, real estate and entertainment to a council to advise his administration. You can anticipate Adams giving a voice to his political base of Black and Latinx blue-collar voters in the boroughs, most likely in the form of community development groups and local housing agencies helping address the housing affordability crisis. Adams’ five deputy mayors are women – four of them women of color – led by First Deputy Mayor Lorraine Grillo, a City Hall veteran who is responsible for the day-today operations of city government and will likely serve as acting mayor when Adams is not in New York City. Grillo served under Mayor de Blasio and knows how government works. She has experience working with the New York City School Construction Authority, was involved in citywide development policy, and served most recently as de Blasio’s “recovery czar.” Her background will be useful in tackling the challenges at the New York City Housing Authority, which could receive a windfall for repairs in the Build Back Better social spending bill pending in the U.S. Senate. Adams has publicly called on Gov. Kathy Hochul to earmark some of the federal infrastructure money for NYCHA, which is an essential source of affordable housing for low- and moderate-income families. Prominent voices from outside City Hall now on the mayor’s team include Sheena Wright, Deputy Mayor for Strategic Initiatives, who is the former CEO and president of the United Way of New York City, and Maria Torres-Springer, Deputy Mayor for Economic and Workforce Development, a former Ford Foundation vice president. Adams has pledged to be “a blue-collar mayor” focused on improving public safety, reforming “dysfunctional” city agencies and supporting business to create jobs for the legions of unemployed New Yorkers. Collectively, his team offers both expertise and fresh perspectives to govern in a manner that could exponentially increase the mayor’s influence. The new mayor’s senior appointments matter as he transitions from “Brooklyn Borough Hall problem solver” to citywide agenda setter, diplomat and de facto national spokesperson for urban America.
David R. Jones, Esq., is President and CEO of the Community Service Society of New York (CSS), the leading voice on behalf of low-income New Yorkers for more than 175 years. The views expressed in this column are solely those of the writer. The Urban Agenda is available on CSS’s website: www.cssny.org.
6 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
Students
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that we must really focus on, it’s milder for vaccinated people. We need to be clear with vaccinations and boosters. Those are the best weapons in our arsenal to deal with COVID. That is the most important message we’re going to continue to hammer home.” The biggest part of the project is the expansion of in-school testing with a cross agency effort to make sure results are known early. If someone tests positive, they will be isolated so class can continue for those who tested negative. Staff members and students who were in
Adams
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Precinct in East Harlem. At about 6:15 a.m., Wagenhauser woke up to a shattered rear window and pain in his head. He hadn’t realized he was shot until fellow officers helped him. Wagenhauser was rushed to NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/ Weill Cornell Medical Center in Manhattan, underwent surgery for
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS a classroom with a positive COVID recipient will be given two take home rapid tests to identify any more positives. Staff members will be given two take home rapid tests this month. Jasmine Gripper, executive director, Alliance for Quality Education, hopes that the powers that be keep things under control in a time where things seem uncontrollable. “As the virus once again surges across New York State, we need to ensure that New York’s schools can remain open by taking steps now to reduce the spread of COVID elsewhere,” said Gripper in a statement. “We call on Governor Hochul and Mayor Adams to reimpose restrictions on businesses and other nonessential institutions, expand
access to COVID testing and make remote learning available to families who want it. If we truly value our schools and the education of our children, we must take all other steps possible to quell the spread of COVID before once again resorting to school closures.” “Stay Safe and Stay Open” looks to double the number of people tested, vaccinated and unvaccinated, while working with medical experts in the process. The DOE will also establish a “COVID Command Center” with borough and district workers who will work with the city to gather info in order to speed up the protocol process. United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew said, in a recent statement, that he hopes it’s
an improvement to the last mayor’s “Situation Room.” “We’re also glad that after weeks of lobbying, both the current and the incoming administrations, the Situation Room is being rebuilt, after basically coming apart in the last several weeks, and that the system will increase its ability to provide PCR tests to more adults and children,” said Mulgrew. Schools Chancellor David Banks stated that he was ready to work with Adams and the DOE. “From increased testing to PPE, we are making sure that our schools are safe, and we work closely with our labor partners, parents, and community members to ensure our schools stay safely open,” stated Banks.
a fractured skull, and survived the shooting, said Sewell. “We are truly happy but angry,” said Adams at the press conference. “As I looked at Crystal, his wife, I knew that this could have turned out differently. I knew that a bullet when it strikes an individual, it does not stop its path. It continues to rip apart the anatomy of a family and the community.” Adams and Sewell doubled down on their “aggressive” mission to root out gun violence. In compari-
son, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday were much lighter in tone. On Sunday, Adams was all smiles as he effervescently citi-biked from Gracie Mansion to The Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine to pay his respects to former Mayor David Dinkins, the first ever elected Black mayor of New York City. Then he met with sanitation workers about the incoming storms and cold front. On Monday, he was up bright and early hobnobbing with morning news anchors, such as the Rev. Al Sharpton on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” He spoke about creating a more “visible” presence of officers in the subway, his social and frenetic style, and the COVID-19 Omicron variant in schools. “This city was missing our oomph. We were missing our excitement. People need to see and feel what this city is all about,” said Adams on the show. “This is a place to be and the mayor should personify that. Everything about the mayor should show the energy and excitement and why you want to be in New York. It’s a privilege to live in New York City.” Later, Adams headed to the Bronx to join newly appointed Schools
Chancellor David Banks and local elected leaders as they greeted students and parents at Concourse Village Elementary School. Adams said that “the safest place for our children is in a school building” and that they would do everything they could to keep schools open with a flood of test kits on sites, vaccinations, and the Department of Education’s COVID Command Center. “I know every parent takes the health of their child very seriously,” said Banks. “My guarantee, today, is that we are not relaxing our standards, we’re reinforcing them. We owe it to our children to bring all our resources to bear to support schools staying open. We’ve seen what isolation does to all of us, and we know that it impacts our young people even more.”
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DEMOCRACY PREP NEW YORK SCHOOL MEETING OF BOARD OF TRUSTEES Pursuant to Section 104 Public Notice of the Open Meetings Law, and pursuant to Executive Order 202.1, this notice is to inform the public that the board of trustees of Democracy Prep New York School will hold a remote meeting by teleconference on: January 11th, 2022 at 8:00 am., local time, + 1 646 558 8656, Meeting ID: 872 1204 8191, Password: 746010
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January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 7
Harlem’s Councilmember Kristin Richardson Jordan leads protest rally
Harlem’s Councilmember Kristin Richardson Jordan on Monday led a community protest rally against the demolition of almost a full block on 145th and Malcolm X Blvd. Developers want to build high rise towers which protesters say will destroy the neighborhood. They say, “Developer Bruce Teitelbaum of ‘One45’ and Al Sharpton/NAN will benefit from the displacement of middle income residents and businesses will be priced out.”
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8 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
Union Matters AFL-CIO and nurses’ unions take DOL to protect workers over COVID-19 By STEPHON JOHNSON Amsterdam News
(Photo courtesy of insta_photos via iStock)
The AFL-CIO and nurses’ unions around the country petitioned a Court of Appeals to make a temporary standard protecting healthcare workers permanent. The AFL-CIO, National Nurses United (NNU) and other unions petitioned the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to make a temporary Occupational Safety and Health AdminisHealthcare workers want OSHA to make tration (OSHA) rule requiring healthcare employees to COVID protection guidance permanent. protect their workers against COVID on the job. your loved ones in danger. Bonnie Castillo, RN, National Nurses “It is time for OSHA to issue a permanent United executive director, stated that OSHA standard and protect nurses and healthcare needs to get to work as soon as possible to workers who are on the front lines working protect American workers. to save the lives of others.” “OSHA is charged with ensuring that emThe temporary standard mandated that ployers create and maintain safe workplac- employers strongly encourage their workes, and this delay in issuing a permanent ers to get vaccinated. Now, OSHA expects standard puts the lives of nurses and other employers to work in good faith with emhealthcare workers, patients, and our com- ployers and handle COVID. munities, in jeopardy,” said Castillo. “We In June, when OSHA officials issued the have seen far too many of our fellow nurses temporary stay, it was noted that as of late die during this pandemic. As of today, we May, the CDC tallied 491,816 healthcare have recorded the deaths of 476 nurse workers who had contracted COVID redeaths from COVID. Going to work should sulting in 1,611 deaths. By the end of 2021, not mean putting your life and the lives of 803,454 healthcare workers contracted
COVID resulting in 3,063 deaths. In early November, that rule was extended to private businesses. That extension, according to OSHA officials, protected more than 84 million workers from the spread of the coronavirus on the job. In a statement, AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler, whose union is a part of the petition, wanted to remind the public, and OSHA, that the fight against COVID-19 isn’t over. “We are still in the midst of a deadly pandemic, and healthcare workers are facing dangerous exposures to COVID-19 and need the strongest possible protections in their workplaces,” said Shuler. “We must treat the surge in new cases as the crisis that it is. That means retaining and enforcing the emergency standards originally set by OSHA. COVID-19 hospitalizations have increased nearly sixfold in the last six months. In the face of the Omicron variant, it is not the time to roll back protections, but to fully enforce and make them permanent. “We have no choice but to turn to the courts to ensure that our healthcare workers are protected as they provide such critical care throughout this pandemic.” Recently, the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention issued new guidance for quarantining healthcare workers. According to the CDC, healthcare workers who contract COVID-19 but are asymptomatic can come back to work after 7 days with a negative test. Also, healthcare workers who have been vaccinated with a booster, but still contract COVID-19, don’t have to
quarantine once exposed. “As the healthcare community prepares for an anticipated surge in patients due to Omicron, CDC is updating our recommendations to reflect what we know about infection and exposure in the context of vaccination and booster doses,” said CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky, in a statement. “Our goal is to keep healthcare personnel and patients safe, and to address and prevent undue burden on our healthcare facilities. Our priority, remains prevention— and I strongly encourage all healthcare personnel to get vaccinated and boosted.” AFSCME President Lee Saunders stated that healthcare workers should be treated just like they were treated at the beginning of the pandemic. “Nurses and healthcare workers are the heroes who got us through the worst of the pandemic—but we’re not through with COVID-19 yet,” said Saunders. “Just this week, the U.S. hit a record single-day number of COVID-19 cases: over 1 million. Now is not the time for OSHA to remove the lifesaving protections that have allowed those in our healthcare settings to do their essential work safely and effectively. “To save lives and protect our frontline heroes, OSHA must not rescind the emergency temporary standard and instead promulgate a permanent healthcare standard to protect the lives and health of millions of nurses and other healthcare workers in grave danger from the deadly COVID-19 pandemic,” continued Saunders.
Millions of workers quit their jobs, particularly low-wage ones The U.S. Department of Labor announced this week that 4.5 million Americans quit their jobs in November. Job openings, however, have decreased from 10.6 million to 11.1 million. That number is still a record high. However, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, this could be looked at from a positive perspective. “Large numbers of hires and separations occur every month throughout the business cycle. Net employment change results from the relationship between hires and separations,” read the bureau’s report. “When the number of hires exceeds the number of separations, employment rises, even if the hires level is steady or declining. Conversely, when the number of hires is less than the number of separations, employment declines, even if the hires level is steady or rising.” In December, One Fair Wage (a nonprofit that advocates on behalf of tipped restaurant workers), warned of “severe disruptions” when dining out during the holidays with workers not willing to risk their lives due to the easily transmissible Omicron variant of
the coronavirus. The organizaa future. We as an industry have to tion said workers aren’t willing change to be the best we can be. to risk their lives for tips. We’re trying to make that a reali“Hundreds of thousands of ty as much as we can here at The service workers across the state Queensboro.” of New York are fed up with the One Fair Wage’s own report, low wages and poor working titled “Closed Due to Low Wages: conditions in the restaurant inThe Ongoing Exodus of Workdustry, including the subminiers From the NY Restaurant Inmum wage for tipped workers dustry & The Looming Impact that persists in New York, which on Consumers,” showed that is a direct legacy of slavery,” stated since December 2019, New York Saru Jayaraman, president of State made up 12% of all restauOne Fair Wage. “The industry is rant workers who left the indusin crisis. Unless wages go up imtry with a 18% overall decline in mediately statewide, thousands the overall workforce of any U.S. of workers will continue to orgastate or territory. The report stated nize and many more will continas of May 2021, 53% of all restauue to leave.” rant workers still in the industry A lot of this ire could be diplanned on leaving. rected to Albany. New York And job shortages aren’t only Workers are leaving the restaurant industry in State Gov. Kathy Hochul has droves. Some see that as a good thing. found in the restaurant industry. touted her experience as a According to Pew Charitable Trusts, former tipped worker and called for the boro and leader in RAISE High Road Res- Missouri’s social services are in dire straits. elimination of subminimum wage for taurant, said, Communications Workers of America those kinds of employees. “Long before I owned a restaurant, I Local 6355 officials told Pew that the state’s According to Jayaraman, the ball is in her worked in a restaurant as a busboy, dish- child welfare workers are being assigned court. “She has the power to do so right now, washer, bartender, server. I think it’s impor- as many as 50 cases, which is double the before the end of the year, through a simple tant for us to have a kind of industry that normal amount. Citizens with questions executive action,” Jayaraman said. good people want to stay in. regarding public assistance are on hold for Michael Fuquay, owner of the Queens“With low wages, people don’t feel there is hours before speaking with a worker. (Photo courtesy of Prostock-Studio)
By STEPHON JOHNSON Amsterdam News Staff
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 9
Education Eric Adams may have uphill battle with law enforcement & activists By STEPHON JOHNSON Amsterdam News Staff
New mayor Eric Adams’ police background will determine his future in City Hall
He’s pushed the mantra of “law and order,” but what about “equity and order?” This week marked Eric Adams’ first week as mayor of New York City. The Black, male mayor has preached the mantra of taking back the streets that are already in the people’s possession. Adams campaigned on bringing back the “tough on crime” 20th century relic, which is something that has been pushed by the local right wing since former Mayor Bill de Blasio first took office. In an infamous ad, the team for de Blasio’s opponent, Joe Lhota, put together a collage of images from the city’s “bad old days,” attempting to use scare tactics to get people to the polls. With the pandemic leaving the streets empty and crime slightly increasing, but still low, Adams, a former police captain, saw an opening. During his first set of talks with the media, Adams said that he would
(Photo courtesy of Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office)
reform and bring back the Anti-Crime Unit, which was criticized in the past for using aggressive tactics. Adams has also gone on record stating that he would bring back solitary confinement. Something that anti-police brutality and anti-incarceration groups have fought against for years. “They better enjoy that one-day reprieve because January 1st they are going back into segregation if they committed a violent act,” said Adams of de Blasio’s solitary confinement policy. In September, it was reported that
murders fell 22% and shootings dropped 9% from the same time in 2020. During that same time, it was announced that, overall, crime in the city decreased by 5.4% when compared to 2020. In November, murders decreased by 17.2% when compared to the same time in 2021 along with a 5.7% decrease in burglaries. All stats are tracked by the NYPD’s CompStat system. Marvin Mayfield, lead statewide organizer at Center for Community Alternatives, said that Adams has a chance to continue police
reform or go back to the “bad old days” for communities of color. “New York stands on a precipice. The COVID pandemic has highlighted and exacerbated inequities in our city and we urgently need our new mayor to invest in communities and address the harms of mass incarceration,” said Mayfield. ”We applaud his support for the Clean Slate Act which will end perpetual punishment and allow New Yorkers with old conviction records to access jobs, housing and education. At the same time, we caution him to move away from the misinformation and outright lies that characterized the last mayor’s approach to bail reform and instead to recognize that these necessary reforms have protected thousands of people from the trauma of pretrial jailing and allowed them to maintain their jobs, support their families, and return to court to exercise their most basic rights.” Vera Institute of Justice, which refers to itself as an independent research organization looking to improve the country’s judicial system, investigated the city’s correction budget and noticed that for the proposed fiscal year 2022 it calls for $2.6 billion allocated towards corrections, which, See ERIC on page 24
10 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
Opinion I will continue to stand on principle for the people By COUNCILMEMBER CHARLES BARRON
As he voted ‘No’ in the first new New York City Council stated meeting for the next speaker, returning City Councilmember Charles Barron wanted to share his reasons for doing so with Amsterdam News readers. A majority of this body has been described as more progressive and people-oriented than previous councils. At the outset, there were hopes of a paradigm shift, to move from being under the dictates of the mayor, political county bosses,
union leaders and real estate magnates, in exchange for getting a preferred committee chair. Unfortunately, the traditional process prevailed. We must be the voice and conscience of the people, to protect them from a greedy capitalist system that creates poverty, unemployment, mass incarceration, homelessness, and a myriad of oppressive racial and economic issues. Especially during this pandemic. I appeal to you to stand for the people during the budget process, legislative process, and land use process. We must stand strong for
the people when the over $100 billion budget process begins. We are in a state of emergency. Gov. Hochul, Mayor Adams, and soon-to-be speaker Adams are cut from the same political cloth. They profess police and criminal justice reform, but support the racist, oppressive NYPD with more money and more police. Mayor Adams wants to bring back Guiliani’s racist street crime unit; supports the real estate industry’s gentrifying projects; supports privatizing public housing and education projects; and supports ending “no cash bail.” With the support of the governor and the newly elected speaker, he will turn our Black and Brown communities into a “police
“We must be the voice and conscience of the people, to protect them from a greedy capitalist system that creates poverty, unemployment, mass incarceration, homelessness, and a myriad of oppressive racial and economic issues. Especially during this pandemic.”
Ready for the turbulence ahead
state.” dent bold Black leadership Bad weather, a spiking pandemic, and plummeting poll numbers for The answer to crime is not that stands for the people over President Biden are lead stories this week, as they have been for quite a police containment. It is eco- the party. We don’t want just a while. To this depressing list add the anniversary of the attack on the Capinomic development, job cre- change in the complexion, we tol with still hundreds yet to be summoned and tried for their involvement. ation and a multi-billion-dollar want a change in the direction There is very little we can do about the weather—and it was certainanti-poverty initiative. We say the city is going. ly distressing to see the stalled cars on I-95, some of them for nearly jobs, not jails. Power to the people. Forward a day—nor Biden’s declining popularity with so many voters. Some Finally, STAY WOKE! Don’t ever, backward never. relief appears to have arrived from the CDC about Omicron, though be lulled to sleep or inaction I, Councilmember Charles a survey of citizens offers mixed responses on the extent of its ill-efbecause of Black faces in high Barron, vote “No.” fects and that it may not be as serious and deadly as the Delta version. places. We need indepenThank you. We join the chorus cheering the news that AG Tish James has subpoenaed two of Trump’s children, which is another decisive step toward getting the big fish and the perpetrator of the fraud. As usual Trump was trying to have it both ways in gaining more economDear Editor, higher degrees of learning, and then the ic clout on his property by inflating its value and then reversing the bar was set higher by increasing tuition and value when it came to paying the taxes. As a middle aged African American man, sidelining the ability to enter colleges. Not The lying, deceptive Trump is at the center of the ongoing investigation I have observed the human condition over only was education being pushed out of of last year’s insurrection, his Big Lie promulgating the tumult that has a period of time and I have constructed reach, but jobs as well. The Equal Employspawned a number of insidious lies about the event, including that the my own personal time-line that has given ment Opportunity Commission was a joke, marauders were unarmed, that it was orchestrated by activists on the left, glimpses of change for the better as it relates workforce discrimination was evident and in and that some of the rioters were jailed as political prisoners after being to the community of our people. full practice, and I personally believe it was invited to the Capitol by the police. In the ’50s and ’60s I believe that period all by design. Then the resurgence of drugs Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi has been steadfast and diligent was a time of reinvention, due to the coun- into the communities to further dilute the in heading the committee bringing many of these so-called patriots to be try nas a whole rebounding from the situation cohesiveness of a group ofOpi people nionthat have io Opincreated tried and possibly convicted. by financial ruin of the late ’20s, and been struggling to build. Then police brutalle of a de the midd in Stuck e hik a MTA, take Yes, we are on our way in this fresh flip of the calendar and to say devastating wars of the ’40s. African Amer- ity so vivid and in your face to recreate the that there seems to be few rosy dawns in front of us would be a huge icans were clear on what it took to build a fear that was used during the days of slavery. understatement. strong and financially resourceful commu- Subliminal messaging to diversify and dilute Even so, as in the past, we are ready for the struggle ahead, which nity, so with that understanding the strug- cultural beliefs, it’s a wonder why we haven’t for many of our citizens nothing is new, and that which is new is gle to acquire education for the children of just completely exploded. Political exclusion sure to be met with a renewed and fresh resolve to turn back the on- the communityion mu was vital in perpetuating in passing laws that protect and propel our st end educat Community bids Dr. Ben farewell Smart crook versus cr age inequality ofIn the ’60s and The sav slaught of terribleness. progress. ’70s the country From New communities into better and safer places to York to DC, folk set offlive Are you ready to take a stand against the social, political, economic and as a whole saw the movement of the African and raise a family. on #March2JustiWelcome, ce Attorney environmental storms on the horizon? We are. American community and felt this would be TheLoretta answer to change is simple: stick to General Lynch problematic, and you could see the covertly our narrative, understand our worth, and subliminal attack on dumbing down the di- stand united. aspora of Opinion Lynch s, confirm LorettaSincerely, these communities. No more excuse ALL ONAmsterdam SHARPTON Some still struggled through to attain Tony B, EYES longtime News reader
Understanding our worth to confront blatant racism
WWW.AMSTERDAMN EWS.COM
12 • March 26 - April
1, 2015
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AMSTERDAM NEWS
THE NEW BLACK VIEW
HILLARY’S IN! B’MORE UNREST ©2015 The Amsterdam
News | $1.00 New York
By ELINOR TATUM Publisher and Editor-in-Chief
City
Vol. 106 No. 18 | April 30 - May 6, 2015
THE NEW BLACK VIEW
See HILLARY on page
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By SAMANTHA M. COLTON Special to the Am News
Monday kicked off Justice By HERB BOYD investigation of Gray’s death firstto the AmNews March2Justice. Participants League NYC’s and send two top officials to started their Special walk on Staten Island and will Baltimore to help calm the continue for nine days until Attorney they arrive in Washington, Gener- city and stop the rioting. D.C. Along theU.S. way, Lynch had hardly they plan on engaging al Loretta “As our investigative proin rallies and mobilizations before they meet with finished being sworn in cess continues, I stronglegislators to demand con- as the first African- ly urge every member of the gressional intervention Monday on of woman to hold the Baltimore community to police brutality. According the national crisis American to the organization, they are “inspired and position when the outrage adhere to the principles of moved by young people and others across the country and violence in Baltimore nonviolence,” Lynch said in a that continue to keep this AM NEWS alive movement Freddie Gray’s death in statement Monday evening. in the name of justice. after THE NEW YORK AMSTERDwant We now to see action from the police custody became an “In the days ahead, I intend powers that be, and it's time we take the movement immediate flashpoint. to work with leaders throught them.” The march will cover In effect, she has to hit the out Baltimore to ensure that five states, with movements planned in cities ground running with a sit- we can protect the securisuch as Trenton, Philadelphia, Baltimore and D.C., uation that is becoming all ty and civil rights of all resiwhere the final rally will take place on Capitol Hill. The group thentoo customary in Ameri- dents. And I will bring the full plans Vol. 106 No. February 26 -resources March 4, 2015 Lynch’s first9 | statement of the Department See MARCH on ca. page upon6 taking office was her of Justice to bear in protectpromise that the Justice De- ing those under threat, invespartment will continue the See LYNCH on page 6
past several months, a lot of attention has been focused on killer cops. Every other day, we seem to witness a case of police brutality that ends in murder. Although it is not a new pheis one it nomenon, that is reaching epidemic proportions—a deeply troubling epidemic. But as we shout “Black Lives Matter!” in protest, we have lost of the other battle By NAYABA ARINDE Rodney King insight Los Angeles. violence in our againstpeople Several thousand Amsterdam News Editor communities. have come out into the streets Th there is no Althoughthe of Baltimore protesting And CYRIL JOSH BARKER has never trusted the this is not an either/or dilem- ulation many did and and comparison, killing of 25-year-old Freddieand some may Amsterdam News Staff problem that re- police, a great you restart the battle ma, but a say that Gray over the past fewifdays. wanted to cooperate with them have crime, quires a both/and solution. Black-on-Black their neighbor- once stop And SALIM ADOFO Police arrested to Gray April 12, fighting wars on to strengthen lose focus on the To be sure, has gone by, ly er we incithen or without resistance Special to the AmNews hard enough, hoods. But as time their tactics that two fronts is shift in stree police dent, and he died fromand injuharder when a shift has occurred—a us. So where does but it gets even so apparent cop, areinkilling custody. The killing of anoth- ries suffered while of the so-called trust that is now one need we them us? his voice er Black male by police left His family said that leave that the police cannot do their it leaves us enemies as an ally. 80 percent Baltimore burning Monday, box was crushed,Unfortunately, effectively because there is itive Police-community relations jobs two wars not even from ty a the middle—in and April 27, 2015. It is calmer of his spine wasinsevered ups and downs. no cooperation, com be fought simulta- have had their that must Gray now, with curfews, multi- his neck was snapped. segment of the pop- the victims. andaswiftly. In effect, Whereas a neously into ple arrests and a simmering eventually slipped anger replacing the unbri- coma and died April 19. At a press conference this dled outrage that followed the funeral of Freddie Gray. week, Deputy Police Comand rever- vow cuts The irony is not lost on missioner Jerry Rodriguez time rumored to have controlled receive SOLOMON SAINTwas ByGray social observers that the vol- said, “When Mr. He, too, was back in La- wo a large percent of the illic- sals. than a bac less in atile response to a death in put in that van, he could talk Gardens fayette turbulent it activities in that particular decade. tur … When the police custody occurred just and he was upset.During I early 1990s, when neighborhood. 1980sofand that two days before the 13th an- he was taken out In 1987, 50 Cent was immorsimultaneously, Almost mayhem and drugs Julio “Wemo” stil murder, talk and niversary of the 1992 civil van, he could not National Black United front North Homicide talized when down mu plagued the inner cities, Brooklyn unrest ignited by the vicious he could not breathe.” (Salim Adofo photo) a roving Acevedo gunned him gangsters Squad developed of self-made scores hallway located in foo See BALTIMORE on page 34 videotaped police beating of task force to quell in a dusky Acevedo was a f vied for control of certain 40-man murder epidem- Albany projects. neighborhoods. In Brook- Brooklyn’s detectives, Louis subsequently arrested, con- “W Of all the lyn, Fort Greene and Lafay- ic. victed and shipped to an up- fay famous most was Scarcella re ette Gardens were atop the state prison. solving murders. list that harbored some of for In 1991, a Brooklyn man pa In 1983, Hamilton was jailed was st the most infamous characof violent named Nathaniel Cash While Killer Ben and for an assortment ters. Hamilton’s name in such as manslaugh- murdered. 50 Cent found infamy in Fort crimes, up in the investigation. a weapon possession and came have the pa- A Greene, Lafayette Gardens ter, During his time in Scarcella didn’t was dubbed “Bush Gardens” robbery. and wherewithal for w Elmira prison, Hamilton, tience WWW.AMSTERDAMNEWS.COM because of the way Der- an He believed that he sh self-taught jailhouse lawyer, justice. arrestHe law. rick “Bush” Hamilton, along a the other convicted killers was above with his brother J.R., were helped ed Hamilton post haste. After a a lengthy trial, Hamilton was a WWW.AMS TERDAMN once again convicted and a EWS.COM decades of con- h sentenced to u finement. Hamilton wasn’t worried. Elinor R. Tatum: Publisher and Editor in Chief This wasn’t his first rodeo. In p Member fact, he and fellow Brooklynite c Kristin Fayne-Mulroy: Managing Editor Acevedo ended up in the p same prison. After exchang- m Nayaba Arinde: Editor THE NEW BLACK VIEW ing penitentiary pleasant- I Alliance for Penda Howell: Vice President, Sales, Advertising ©2015 The Amsterdam News | $1.00 New York City Media Audited ries, Hamilton told Acevedo t Wilbert A. Tatum (1984-2009): Emeritus Vol. 106 No. Chairman of the Board, CEO and Publisher that he knew of some legal 4 | Januar y 22 - Januar discrepancies in his case and OverYorkthe ©2015 The Amsterdam News | $1.00 New City
EDITORIAL
By HERB BOYD Special to the AmNews
About a minute and half into her online announcement of her presidential bid last Sunday, Hillary Clinton said, “Everyday Americans need a champion. I want to be that champion so you can do more than just get by, so you can get ahead and stay ahead. Because when families are strong, America is strong.” Interestingly, April 12, 154 years ago, the Civil War began, and Clinton has begun her campaign to turn things around, although with an arsenal of words, at least for the moment. The announcement, which
(Karl Crutchfield photo)
EDITORIAL
Vol. 106 No. 16 | April 16 - April 22, 2015 in their fare, up these 10 cent hike ride, which isn’t way in. Luckily, the to $1.35 a you’re on a riders are not on in welcomed when and the disrapid transit system by the MTA have fixed income— rarely expect When a fare hike Japan, where they Sunday, the abled, who can went into effect common courte“oshiyas,” or pushers, rs, parle an ounce of moans from straphange been workers. whose are responsib have pas- sy from weary ticularly those who estimated that for making sure $2.50 been pay It’s to way struggling even billion is sengers are all the than the more than $30 per ride, were louder upgrade the into the car. coming to a are needed to s brakes of an A train These problems system. Passenger were lucky during subway halt—that is, if you compounded any of that money at your weath- expecting Albany to have one arriving periods of inclement trickle down from the authorities to station on schedule. a longer wait than er. Again, MTA all realize “I realize it and we train. to address have of any weekend have promised is not where to speed up arrival it comes to transportathat service … such issues and and not necWhen restore to we need it to be Andrew the time needed our cusin the state, Gov. far a malfunc- tion essarily meeting appears to be schedules after ns,” said rem- Cuomo in the tomers’ expectatio tely, those in tion. Unfortuna president of as fast more interested to LaCarmen Bianco, edies are not coming sym- cars and on their way Transit. This his New York City and we evidenced by as the fare hikes, ment of the who Guardia, is an understate AirTrain expansion pathize with customers while conthe increase proposed to spruce up the highest order, and want to know if the soul, it services and plan Bridge. fession is good for in fares will improve to the workTappan Zee ers, brings little relief ld system. straphang century-o dear most the the my in be So of the little ing poor, who will To be at the mercy after grin and bear it, dig a increase as even impacted by the into your depleted 4, 5 and 6 lines often inadethe ex- deeper they are by the that extra quarter hour is to have The pockets for —and it’s rush quate service. the next fare daily the more distressing common perience of a sardine. g or two and hope as most Ask any of the regular the ble delays. According to is doubly challengin s on is as slow and distant MTA, the second trains are ordeal ho, by the hike reports from the 6 million commuter complaint—the train. for the elderly—w system and latest ing a the next January there was so jammed with passengers city’s subway of com- through way, are only experienc of more than to wedge your you will hear a litany common an average a month. Even that you have most he delays plaints—t intermina- 43,000 one being the , regardless tacked unfairness or region,Byracial of my ZIP code. AUTODIDAC us honor- because in the Bronx. I lived of a school’s alloT 17 serve who dividing I grew up d income mix, by Special to are tall on to those from school, student en-the AmNews cates on both sides in uniform. I understan on a block away cations by district are all falling ably By ASSEMBLYMAN ideology, but we we are all passionate passed the corner rollment and assessing student n and re- that lives where I Two and pay. of ceremonies at to days MICHAEL BLAKE short on cooperatio is about how about improve the on one side need and local ability Harlem’s this give them bodega Aid was fullyAbyssinian Baptist membering that slice of pizza on an- Sadly, Foundation Church of our children and con- bought my last week allowed as2007-2008 down, I knew that to success. But this the children. in the sociates, fascinating, paths ive if it’s other. Deep didn’t have what funded only comrades, family and Recesunproduct is The dialogue is Great The versation schools fiscal year. friends ion our funding to of acclaimed Kemetafull funding because of inaderanging from school “either or” considerat sion knocked thatphysician ce, tenure, an where we needed, Dr. Yosef A.A. ben-Jothe inequithan a “both and” teacher performan tracks, and quate funding. channanpoint versus char- rather dispar- off the ge that each side to the the opportunity to pay evaluation, public In 1993, that financial light ties re-emerged their parochi- we acknowled points on how respects before he billion to greater $4.9final ter and private versus ions has legitimate l ity reality came of approximately was interred al. All of these considerat to to transform our educationa when the Campaign for Fiscal owed to publicat Ferncliff Cemestill tery timely Friday and CFE money afternoon. areas. the better and deare necessary and Equity was established victo- schools in our neediest social, system for “It’s close honor to to be here and improve the academic, setting termine a path forward. hits an to the landmark inequalitycelebrate invok- later led this great life that New York, This district mental and physicalthe tone We are sometimes in C.F.E. v. State of as my Assembly ry home, has savBut of been amongst us for 97 successfuland images $76 million for young people. where the coalition divi- ing terms owed a staggering years,” than any than pursuing city’s school is become incredibly colleague ore remarked of agery rather money—m ly argued that the education has CFE sides se. in Dr. all Leonard on current compromi Jeffries, woefully York The Advocates was beginning ve in New has been el- sive. we are constructi Thursday that finance system denied its stu- Assembly district evening’s wake, the debate in Albany discourse say that not the first time that funding ed and what the need to the are not, This is capacity crowd word savage underfund constitutional right City. Imagine our evated because of war.” Actually, we kids? Smallererupting in aptheir I have heard the state budget “at could do for plause, chants and drumming. education. dents that terminology pass a New York teachers, basic education. used to describe sizes, more advo- so let’s leave have to s: Chil- of a sound the classroom “Webooks, be aware that Dr. buildInequalitie by March 31. Education addressed In “Savage supplies, That decision Ben has made his transition Schools,” for New York school dren in America’s my chronic shortfalls its logic car- ing repairs, etc. and he’s intoleraexpecting us to condescribed Kozol but this Jonathon schools, You compare tinue his greatgut P.S. 79, in City of poor the equal legacy that he elementary school, to upstate’s mix ble reality with shared with challenges ried us.” and high-tax, of the 178 “failing” that way. Given the 19 - March 25, 2015 James urban districts and blow of 10 One of Jochannan’s schools 12 • March Elinor R. Tatum: Publisher daughthat my great principal,to em- low-wealth small town (I prefer struggling) ter’s exhorted, “IIt’s and Editor in Chief alone. challenge you Carter, had to endure hearts, rural districts. in mytodistrict go home Member and . and continue curing that are the and inhumane power our minds The remedy for : Managing Editor beyond unjustSee BEN putting on page instead of Kristin Fayne-Mulroy 34 of unconstitutionali- The conditions we arecontinued it saddens me that a as scholarly, finding Nayaba Arinde: Editor teachers, adminrobust funding under being described Sales, Advertising as “savage.” ty was called our students, WWW.AMSTERDAMNEWS.COM Penda Howell: Vice President, N on page 32 Alliance for we were described equitable formula EDUCATIO more See was (1984-2009): atframing Audited Media Wilbert A. Tatum CEO and Publisher Emeritus n Aid, which In large part, that Chairman of the Board, future, but Foundatio not because of my
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
12 • April 23 - April 29, 2015
WWW.AMSTERDAMNEWS.COM
OBAMA’S TI y 28, 2015
THE NEW
BLACK VIEW
©2015 Th
Sharpton the newsmaker
THE NEW BLACK VIEW
Vol. 106 No. 11 | March 12 - March 18, 2015
By HERB BOYD Special to the AmNews
©2015 The Amsterdam News | $1.00 New York City
AND STILL WE MARCH The Obama family joins hands as it begins the march with the foot soldiers across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)
(Photo courtesy of
kr) Douglas Palmer—Flic
It may be a great disservice to mention the Rev. Al Sharpton and Rudy Giuliani in the same article, but they are two public figures with a long affair with the media—one longing for it to go away and the other courting it for coverage. This week they are both back in the news—again. Rumors are afloat that Sharpton’s “PoliticsNation” on MSNBC may be put on a weekend schedule. Other hosts on the network are also, as they say in the business world, scheduled for reassignment, including
Joy Reid, Ronan Farrow, Ed Schultz, Chris Hayes and Lawrence O’Donnell. It sounds as if MSNBC is cleaning house and dissatisfied with its leftist orientation. And if we can believe Erica Snipes, Eric Garner’s daughter, Sharpton “is only in it for the money,” as she said to a right-wing mischief maker recording her comments on a concealed camera. She later recanted, indicating that Sharpton and the National Action Network had paid for her father’s funeral. Later, in a statement to NAN, she clarified her position on the matter. “It is unfortunate that the New York
agree with many took happens to outgoing In 1984, the Senate of the policies of the to do That had as much to confirm President attorney general and the onthe presi- a year nominee, the rub. with undermining imRonald Reagan’s president. Several days after It’s simply amazinga dent’s executive authority as attorney going be able panel, Edwin Meese, for past Yes, the Senate may pressing a Senate that bills can get delay was else, and we would chew gum at the general, but that hit that anything Loretta Lynch appeared busi- to walk and believe that the committee then suffer on Meese’s messy succeed Re- be naive to time, but we all s are not at based to be a shoo-in to implacable wall called their And if some same same shenanigan U.S. atthe gum is stuck to on. ness practices. when repugnance. The way, Eric Holder Jr. as confirmati publican their s have are politically leave it Repub- play in Lynch’s and they See SHARPTON on page 6 shoes is right Republican (Bill Moore photo) torney general. But story here is that Sen. Chuck Schumer that Lynch will be tarred with the d. s, meandon’t to the mischievou he noted licans apparently the alleged immobilize are clearly ims to funds on point when same brush, given Two things spirited Republican At “can walk and mind gathering she had with drug for the Senate Lynch’s race and predators fined same time,” dealings money launderers. mutable— rain on her parade. the from at it! gum over temSo get but chew lords and politics.ALLIMADI MILTON and accused of fathering several that the FBI had been activeher least, we hope, only hogwash. By sex trafficking crimes, becomes a difficult (Photo courtesy of Wikipedia Commons) excuses. Confirm children with teenage secre- ly monitoring him, as MalAll of this is be used but this BENJAMIN No more considering porarily. that she COLIN this money can’t is when to problem process the AmNews taries. The popular narrative colm’s files, available on the Pres- Lynch’s LorettatoLynch! to pay for aborJust when she seemed who Special action put forth by partic- by the victims is a strong Black woman was that Malcolm was killed FBI’s website, confirm. Theres contend any be a lock for the post, Obama. tions. Republican Barack ident prominent Was the NYPD involved or by Muhammad loyalists after fore, it isn’t beyond reason use of the money ularly with such Hatch that such did they merely know about he was expelled from the NOI. that the FBI, under the maRepublicans as Orrin Arizo- would compromise the Hyde of the impending murder of But many people, especial- niacal J. Edgar Hoover, could nt, which, except of Utah, Jeff Flake of South Amendme Malcolm X and allow it to ly in the Black community, have played a role in the asforbids use of tax na, Lindsey Graham President Collins of for rape, March 13, 2015 happen 50 years ago? Were never believed that version of sassination by either fomentrights legen Carolina and Susan for abortions. to confirm dollars to do with some reporters, including events as being the complete ing, participating or at least with Rep. Maine promising What has this got Te the famed scribe Jimmy Breslin, story. While there had been turning a blind eye and alof www.white confirmation or her, there is a snag. McConnell problem? Lynch’s This Hon. Mitch tipped off that something was a clear rift between Malcolm lowing it to happen. So what’s the of rice in China? to Majority Leader Senate Ma- price is similar about to go down? and Muhammad, it was also Could it be that the NYPD very problem is e The United States Senate McCo- boondoggl By DEMETRIA The official story has been a period when the FBI was also came to know from the over Homeland jority Leader Mitch n, D.C. 20510 to the impasse Special to the IRWIN that Malcolm X was killed conducting its Counter Intel- FBI, or from its own investithat includ- Washingto By funding HERB nnell and his reluctance AmNews when standi BOYD of a hu- Security ng Feb. 21, 1965, at the Audu- ligence Program, initially tar- gations, that Malcolm would Special to the call a vote because immigration attachReid tunate to have up. I have been forAmNews and gun vio that in- ed an see Hon. Harry The Black bon Ballroom in Harlem be- geting suspected communists be killed by opponents on received the man-trafficking bill would ment. We were pleased to Agenc Leader and support encouragem y Execu Minority ly stressed that ganization cause of a Reid feud between him but later expanding it to dis- that fateful February date? Harry s capitulate on at If the usual cludes a provision Senate recently held tives or- people throug ent of many good rhetorical flair Union addres Mitch McConnell for victims the Republicanand allow the United States annual Dr. and his former allies in the rupt groups such as the Black Could it be that the NYPD sional lyrical 20510 and occaestablish a fund Martin Luther its 38th life in public hout and beyond measure service Washington, D.C. resonance to publichad Of course, those con- that my Luncheon. ntMalcolm service. Not Nation of Islam. Panthers and other Black na- and the FBI worked together were missing commitme from Preside t of Homeland Sefrom fines paid by for the Aptly hosted King Jr. managed one of us nt skills, nt crimes. Departmen Pat Battle, manageme to get to United States attorney York, by NBC4’s a falling out with NOI leader tionalist organizations. to allow Malcolm to be killed and strong of the Union Barack Obama’s State little that dir victed of trafficking the event funding to go forward where we to serve Dear Mr. Leaders: District of New address Tuesda though many at the Hilton without the help of n are the Demo- curity New York her well-suited and his former spiritual guide Indeed, records revealed by not warning him or by not abound with express Eastern those who These funds, as y, it did tossing immigratio in Midtown before us. developed a make I write this letter to a came be used while attended. was well n Ms. Lynch has See MALCOLM on page 6 Elijah after Malcolm’s death show this position. who he’d caproposals for number of audacious itably will affe ts, inMuhammad, crats proposed, could The limbo. “We say that a the Republicans support for the nominatio als ever see record of achievemen therein lies into Dinkins, New Honorable David Our nation requires on and mull the to become long for abortions, and to chew may somebody’s everybody stands on York’s first over before enjoys a reputation of Loretta Lynch only Black not have h and effective advoof the and she they soundl reject them. mayor, was and so far we genera shoulders, and by evenhandedly pable Lynch y and the attorney general can that, Loretta fairly the speake as invest lly for t keynote cate such in a sp r. In this address King, Harrie mean people like Dr. enforceUnited States Departmen enforcing the law. She demWhile reflect t Tubman, or references , there were no quotes leaped from the to head its chief law attorney reaextraordinary charof Justice. As the was time to to past preside King, Dinkin ing on the legacy of Sojourner Truth, Rosa Malcolm X, agency. For these no Lincoln of New onstrates turn Parks and s shared the nts— personal hero, judgment and ment I urge the Senate to , FDR, LBJ, general for the state “Six years ago, of wisdom David R. Jones, President and CEO of the Community ServicebitSociety of New York -followi See page JFK, not even that acter, sound the late Percy my Reagan. In sons,Urban Agenda by ng 5 Elinor R. Tatum: Publisher this to serve York, I am confident the clear commitment to the prinEllis ognize that : “It’s important to rec- Sutton, who ran his Luther King’s time when Dr. Martin can troops served confirm Ms. Lynch and Editor in Chief we do not 1977 mayor al campaign for the legacy is being Ms. Lynch will provide equal justice under stan,” he said stand alo with th Member as attorney general cessary ciple of
EDITORIAL
HAVE A LETTER TO THE EDITOR? Was Jimmy Breslin tipped off about Malcolm X’s assassination 50 years ago?
ressional leadership Letter to the cong
Mayor Dink MAIL TO: keynote at ins delivers MLK lunch eon NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS 2340 Frederick Douglass Boulevard New York, New York 10027 Many rivers and bridges to cross OR E-MAIL TO: INFO@AMSTERDAMNEWS.COM We Need Stronger Rent Laws, Not Developer Giveaways Front pages of the New York Amsterdam News following Bloody Sunday in 1965
By HERB BOYD Special to the AmNews
As President Barack Obama prepared to lead marchers across the Edmund Pettus Bridge spanning the Alabama River in Selma to com-
but also marches, too, like the one over the weekend in Madison, Wis. after the police shooting death of an unarmed Black teenager by a white officer. The president said he rejected the notion that nothing’s changed in the country since the historic march.
Such actions of police misconduct may not be sanctioned or as blatant as in the past, but they are no less deadly and we need look no further than the homeless man shot and killed by a police officer in Los Angeles last Sunday. Obama, in reference to the Depart-
Obama’s au dacity
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS O P I N I O N
When prosecutors become politicians DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not represent those of the New York Amsterdam News. We continue to publish a variety of viewpoints so that we may know the opinions of others that may differ from our own.
ARMSTRONG
WILLIAMS
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan recently criticized Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby for her egregious mishandling of cases and her allowing of criminals to return to the streets, unsupervised and unpunished, with the potential to add more victims to Baltimore’s growing list of victims of preventable criminal activity. What is occurring in Baltimore is unilateral justice, and it is wrong for a variety of reasons. Prosecutors are effectively taking the law into their own hands in cases like these, superseding the whims of the legislature that wrote the laws to protect citizens, preventing the courts from delving into the evidence, discovering facts, and doing justice, denying the public the right to know the specific types of crime that occur in their city, as well as the names and faces of those who commit those crimes, and denying the public the right to be aware of the specific types of crime that occur in their city and places and activities to avoid. This isn’t justice; it is politics infiltrating what is meant to be an apolitical part of our system of government. The office of Marylin Mosby has declared that nine distinct sorts of offenses would not be prosecuted. Prostitution, drug possession, attempted drug delivery, and urinating and defecating in public are just a few of them. These kinds of activities are completely deserving of punishment. Drug distributors devastate lives, families, and have contributed to a nationwide overdose crisis in the United States. It is laughable to say that these people aren’t deserving of punishment; it is easy to dismiss drug distribution as a way to make money, but until these people see the devastation that these drug distributors, both big and small, cause in their communities, they’ll never understand how despicable a crime it is. Another frightening subject is prostitution. By neglecting to pursue prostitution, the state is effectively encouraging the degradation of young girls’ morality and putting them at risk by allowing them to work side-by-side with pimps and go home with strangers whose actual intentions are often unknown. Baltimore is now seeing an increase in homicides, to the point that it now ranks second in the “murders per capita” category. What we need to ask today is what kind of ludicrous political leanings one would need to refuse to prosecute the sorts of persons Marilyn Mosby has refused to prosecute. Their far-left political leanings appear to have driven them to utilize race as the major motivator for punishing
or not punishing. The main problem, it appears, is that prosecutors like Marylin Mosby have prosecuted selectively through glasses which only see race. The concept that has persisted in their minds is a combination of the following: colored people commit crime because society has placed them in a precarious position, forcing them to commit the crimes that they do, and colored people are disproportionately targeted by police. All of this contributes to the creation of a climate in which a perceived racial gap is the primary motivating factor in the criminality of people of particular races, if not the only one. Each individual who commits a crime is a human being, regardless of race, and just as we should not condemn others based on the color of their skin, we should not neglect to judge others when they commit heinous crimes based on the color of their skin. It is not difficult to realize that a white man who attacks his wife is equally as blameworthy and deserving of prison as a Black man who does the same. The weight that political prosecutors place on a defendant’s skin is inconceivable. The Rittenhouse trial is an excellent illustration of this; while it did not take place in Baltimore, it demonstrates prosecutors’ propensity to utilize race and politics to thrust themselves into the public eye and further their political careers and objectives. At a riot in which thousands of people looted, ransacked, and destroyed small businesses and terrorized innocent people, Rittenhouse, a white teenager, shot and killed two individuals in self-defense. But who comes to mind now when we think of the riots in Kenosha, Wisconsin? Kyle Rittenhouse, because he was the one who was punished. We need fewer prosecutors who seek to punish others and imprison them for personal gain, and more prosecutors who seek to punish others in the name of justice. People who do horrible things need to be punished in the most appropriate way possible for the crimes they commit; they should not be released back onto the streets to produce new victims and crimes for the courts to deal with and for prosecutors to waste their time on. Citizens, after all, have no ability to punish others; our responsibility is simply to report crimes to those who are in charge of prosecuting individuals for those crimes. How can we trust prosecutors who refuse to effectively discharge their duties in the best interests of the public when ordinary citizens lack the ability to do the same? Armstrong Williams (@ARightSide) is manager / sole owner of Howard Stirk Holdings I & II Broadcast Television Stations and the 2016 Multicultural Media Broadcast Owner of the year. www.armstrongwilliams.co | www. howardstirkholdings.com
January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 11
Happy New Year CHRISTINA GREER PH.D. It’s official…2022 is here and we must embrace new changes and brace ourselves for new challenges. Eric Adams has been sworn in as the 110th mayor of New York City. City Council members are getting to work and Adrienne Adams will be the new speaker of the city council, making her the first African American to serve in this important and prestigious role as the second most powerful person in New York City governance. Mayor Adams is beginning to fill his cabinet with a myriad of women of color, making his administration one of the most diverse cabinets in the city’s history. Adams has said he is ready to work and has already begun to sign executive orders extending some of former Mayor de Blasio’s policies pertaining to COVID protections for New York City residents. With most evaluations of people, I like to wait to see what elected officials actually do before making judgements about them. I am excited for new leadership in the city, largely due to feeling that Mayor de Blasio was disinterested in governance for many years of his tenure. Adams has stated many times that he wants to be the leader and cheerleader for New York City. I am excited to see his approach to COVID, education, public safety, and housing to start. However, I am somewhat concerned about one of Adam’s first policy proposals. Adams has stated that he is going to reinstate solitary confinement on Rikers Island. This proposal is of grave concern to me. Psychologists, political scientists, historians, and sociologists
have all researched solitary confinement and have unequivocally stated that solitary confinement does not work, it does not rehabilitate, and is inhumane for those subjected to it. That Adams would introduce this proposal as one of his first policy interests is of concern to me. What is even more concerning is when Adams was approached about this proposal, his response did not address the issue at hand. Adams essentially stated that if one has not worn a police badge then they could not question his decision to reinstate solitary. First, as citizens of New York City, we can always challenge and ask the mayor questions. Second, being a police officer does not have anything to do with caging a human being for 23 hours a day. And last, Adams’ response does not follow the logic of questioning whether solitary should be reinstated or not. I do hope Mayor Adams will reconsider his decision and I hope some of his new cabinet members will help him rethink this inhumane practice that advocates previously worked so hard to diminish. It’s a new year and I am excited for what 2022 will bring. I am hoping the Adams administration will lead New York City into an era of a more inclusive city for all. Time shall tell. Christina Greer, Ph.D., is an associate professor at Fordham University, the author of “Black Ethnics: Race, Immigration, and the Pursuit of the American Dream,” and the co-host of the podcast FAQ-NYC.
12 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
Caribbean Update
Barbados cabinet seeks new mandate after switch to republican status By BERT WILKINSON Special to the AmNews Last week, Mia Mottley dropped a political bombshell on her cabinet and on Barbados’ opposition parties by calling snap general elections about 18 months before being constitutionally due, saying she wanted the country to unite behind a single leader, to snap out of bickering and to get rid of elections now as the island nation battles economic depression and the COVID pandemic. The January 19 polls will most likely be the first in the 15-nation bloc this year and could be followed by a similar contest in nearby Antigua as Prime Minister Gaston Browne has on more than one occasion talked about calling his political rivals to early battle. Mottley’s surprise announcement came amidst swirling accusations that elements in her cabinet were getting ready to rebel against her for alleged dictatorial tendencies and as the Omicron variant threatens to again derail economic gains wrenched in recent months from the aftermath of last year’s almost global shutdown from the pandemic. Like Barbados, Antigua’s is not due until next year. Without saying it, Mottley, 56, also appears to be capitalizing on the lin-
“Without saying it, Mottley, 56, also appears to be capitalizing on the lingering euphoria from the island’s seamless and globally high-profile transition to a republic at the end of November, dumping Britain’s Queen Elizabeth as its head of state and installing retired justice Sandra Mason as its first indigenous ceremonial president.” gering euphoria from the island’s seamless and globally high-profile transition to a republic at the end of November, dumping Britain’s Queen Elizabeth as its head of state and installing retired justice Sandra Mason as its first indigenous ceremonial president. Mason was the last governor general. Some of her critics, including those in her own Labor Party (BLP) had wanted a referendum organized to properly pronounce on the transition but with her cabinet holding 29 of the 30 seats, a referendum or two thirds parliamentary vote became unnecessary. For some, this has left a bitter political taste. Mottley says the time has come to seek a new mandate, put all the po-
litical hype, divisions and bitterness in the rear-view mirror and “unite around a common cause, unite behind a single government, unite behind a single leader. That is why we should not enter 2022 as a divided nation,” she said in a national address. Nominees for parliament were to be submitted to the elections commission this week as campaigning heats up. The BLP is expected to lose a few seats but will most likely win a decent majority as there was little doubt that the main opposition Democratic Party (DLP) was in a state of rebuilding, having been devastated 30-0 in the 2018 elections amid a massive economic downturn during its years in office. Still DLP Leader Verla De Peiza says
her party is giving the contest its best shot as she urged Bajans to “walk with your sanitizer and go out in your numbers and vote for change, vote for democracy. How do you set an election date when you knew or ought to have known that COVID case numbers were on the rise, that Omicron likely was established in Barbados— and then mandate that persons with COVID will not be allowed to vote?” she asked in a statement. In recent years, the island has had to turn to the dreaded International Monetary Fund to help stabilize and reform its slumping tourism and services-dependent economy with the agency giving the cabinet kudos for meeting most of its austerity and recovery targets. Youth unemployment is reported to be 30% and gun crime is beginning to become a cause of national concern in the tourism paradise. Governing party spokesman Jerome Walcott denies divisions within the cabinet and party, contending at a campaign event at the weekend that “you can see for yourself that we are totally united and we are not disputing at this stage and we are united behind one leader. We are not deciding who is to be president and who is to be a political leader. We are clear, so I discard that.”
My 2022 immigration crystal ball FELICIA PERSAUD
IMMIGRATION KORNER It’s finally 2022 and in this, the Chinese Year of the Water Tiger, many are predicting a good year. But will this forecast of good fortune extend to immigrants? I tried hard to look into my crystal ball of Jan. 1, 2022, and here’s what I’m forecasting: 1: There will be more deportations this year as the Joe Biden administration tries hard to clamp down on the Republican Party talking point that they are for “open borders.” The new Return to Mexico policy that the courts upheld and the administration reimplemented late last year is definitely the beginning of that move. With more and more Central American, African and Hai-
tian migrants still braving the jungles of South America to trek to the U.S. border and try to cross the Rio Grande, the U.S. has no option but to try to keep out as many as possible because of fear of a further deluge. I also expect ramped up use of secretive air “expedited removal” deportations via ICE air flights, such as those to Haiti, Guatemala City and to southern Mexico, which began in August 2021. I also expect Title 42 will also stay in place as well, especially given the spike in cases of COVID-19 in the U.S. again. 2: The U.S. will continue to deny temporary entry for Afghans seeking to enter on a humanitarian basis. The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) has already received more than 35,000 applications for humanitarian parole from Afghans while in the past the program has received fewer than 2,000 requests from all nationalities. It is
why I see the administration fast shutting that door despite the predicament of Afghans. 3: On immigration reform, I see the U.S. congress still struggling to get anything passed into the House this election season. The 2022 United States House of Representatives elections will be held on November 8th and it’s unlikely Republicans will want to give the administration a win on this issue as they see a Red wave coming, even as Joe Manchin continues to hold up the progress in the Senate. I don’t see that changing anytime soon so don’t hold your breath for any breakthrough on this front, not even for the love of DREAMERS. 4: There may be some progress on the H-1B visa program for professional workers. So far it looks like the USCIS will make administrative changes to the H-1B visa program to include redefining the H-1B em-
ployer-employee relationship and establishing new guidelines for employer site visits. The administration’s latest regulatory plans also reveal that it will continue to reform the H-1B visa program for professional workers, including raising the wages of those workers. 5: Those wanting to come to the U.S. and immigrants applying to the USCIS can expect to pay more this year for visas. The Department of State is expected to raise visa application filing fees at consulates while the USCIS plans to increase its petition and application filing fees in March. These increases are to help fully cover the costs of adjudications, as the agency has been operating at a loss of $3 million per business day. Happy New Year? Not for immigrants. The writer is publisher of NewsAmericasNow.
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
Arts & Entertainment Theater page 13 | Film/TV page 15 | Jazz page 19
January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 13
Pg. 16 Your Stars
Jacob Ming-Trent as Falstaff and Joshua Echebiri as Pistol in “Merry Wives,” a hilarious adaptation by Jocelyn Bioh of Shakespeare’s “The Merry Wives of Windsor” (Joan Marcus photo)
2021: The Year in Review in Black theater: reinvention, retrospectives, reflection
By LINDA ARMSTRONG Special to the AmNews
2021 was a year like no other in theater as the pandemic continued to shut down regular theater and had theater companies having to figure out a new normal to present productions. Creative people got more creative and found a different way. It was also a year of reflection on different levels. Jan. 17, 2021 set a mark for a banner year for Woodie King Jr. and his New Federal Theatre as this theatrical treasure marked its 50th anniversary. The New Federal Theatre has been producing plays since 1970 and has presented over 450 mainstage productions. It does and has always served as a vehicle for people of color and women to have the opportunity to create and tell our stories! With COVID raging, theaters had to find a safe way to create and present their works. In February, New Federal Theatre was there as it presented a virtual play reading series to quench the public’s appetite for theatrical fare. It presented “The Meeting” by Jeff Stetson, which
told the story of a meeting between Malcolm X and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in a hotel room. It was powerfully performed by Beethovan Oden as Malcolm X and Joseph L. Edwards as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., along with Tyler Fauntleroy as Rashad. This engaging production utilized split screens to show the actors and was mesmerizing to watch. It also had phenomenal direction by Ajene Washington. Viewers were asked for a donation. The next reading in the series was of Mfundi Vundla’s “Widows” and it featured Zoleka Vundla, Phinki Wilson and Tanya Nomaziko Zondo with direction by Clinton Turner Davis. COVID meant that theaters in general had to reinvent themselves. In February, Manhattan Theatre Club decided to do a virtual Curtain Call Series for free, which spotlighted plays from the past. Richard Wesley’s “The Past Is the Past” was a moving production that featured the riveting Ron Cephas Jones as Earl Davis and Jovan Adepo as Eddie Green. It told the tragic story of a father who meets his son that he abandoned years before. The play focused on the issue of Black men planting seeds in our communities, but
not staying around to be fathers to their children. This production had stunning direction by Oz Scott. February also saw the virtual premiere of “Freedom Summer,” a dramatic production written by Cynthia G. Robinson and brilliantly presented by North Carolina Black Repertory Company under director Jackie Alexander. While other virtual productions showed actors in isolated areas, this production gloriously was done in a theater with full set and costumes. That alone began to warm my heart. This play told the story of two Black sisters in 1964—the younger sister Carrie and older sister Nora. Nora is passing for white and about to marry a white man. The two actresses were spellbindingly captivating and were Nikyla Boxley as Carrie and Mariah Guillmette as Nora. One of the most important aspects of telling our stories is capturing our theatrical history. While this was not presented on a stage, documentary filmmaker Juney Smith—the same man who previously documented Woodie King Jr. in “King of Stage: The Woodie King Jr. Story”—now turned his lens to docu-
menting the journey of theater veterans such as actors Arthur French, Count Stovall and Marie Thomas, along with playwrights Richard Wesley and Dominique Morrisseau, Crossroads Theatre Company founder Ricardo Khan and Black lead Broadway producers—Stephen C. Byrd and Alia Jones-Harvey in his film “King Arthur & The Count,” which came out at the end of March. In April Audible gave audiences a theatrical experience to remember as it recorded and presented Liza Jessie Peterson in her phenomenal one-woman show about the criminal justice system and its mistreatment of Blacks and minorities—“The Peculiar Patriot.” The performance was recorded live at Audible’s Minetta Lane Theater in Manhattan in front of a live audience. This poignant work got its first breath of life at the National Black Theatre in 2018 and three years later it’s on Audible! In May, Woodie King Jr. announced that after 50 years he would retire as producing director of New Federal Theatre. June 30th would be his last day. Then this precious jewel would be in See REVIEW on page 14
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legacy to be honored, admired and cherished! In June, the Broadway Continued from page 13 League’s Multi-Cultural Task Force, headed by Aaliytha Stethe hands of the marvelous vens and Brian Moreland, did Elizabeth Van Dyke! King has a an inaugural outdoor June-
teenth Celebration on Broadway between 43rd and 44th Street. Everyone who attended had proof of vaccination and wore masks. This event spotlighted the great talent of Black actors who are in numer-
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ous Broadway shows including “The Lion King,” “Phantom of the Opera,” “Girl from the North Country,” “Caroline, Or Change,” “Tina: The Tina Turner Musical,” “Moulin Rouge,” and Keenan Scott II performed
from his play “Thoughts of a Colored Man.” Theater legend and Tony Award winner Ben Vereen addressed the crowd and Tony Award winner Lillias White was the host. The See REVIEW on page 17
Inside the “What to Send Up When It Goes Down” rehearsal at the Fishman Space in the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Saturday, June 19, 2021 (Donna Ward photo)
Director Steve Broadnax, honorary press agent Irene Gandy, and playwright Keenan Scott II at the Broadway League’s free Juneteenth outdoor event (Linda Armstrong photo)
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Robert Ri’chard of Amazon’s ‘Harlem’—A single father with his heart on his sleeve By LAPACAZO SANDOVAL Special to the AmNews
on his sleeve.
Robert Ri’chard
(Andre Harris photo)
At the center of Tracy Oliver’s (“Girls’ Trip”) hit 10 episode comedy series “Harlem” (on Amazon Prime) is love, pure and simple. The gifted scribe created relatable characters, all searching for the person that makes their hearts sing. The comedy focuses on Camille (Meagan Good) and her “unbreakable sisterhood” which includes the romantic Quinn (Grace Byers), the masculine-presenting lesbian and up-and-coming tech maven Tye (Jerrie Johnson), and the outspoken, gifted singer, Angie (Shoniqua Shandai). And much like Starz’s “Run the World” (also set in Harlem), and Issa Rae’s masterful work, “Insecure,” it’s men, in three of the women’s lives, who play a significant role. One of the leading men is played by Robert Ri’chard (“One on One”) who plays Shawn, a young, single father who is an exotic dancer and is pursuing a relationship with Quinn (Grace Byers), a corporate fashion boutique owner and budding designer. Robert Ri’chard starred in the Nickelodeon sitcom “Cousin Skeeter,” and has appeared, as himself, on the hit Nickelodeon game show, “Figure It Out.”
He played Samuel on “Touched by an Angel,” a troubled teen whose brother is in prison for shooting a man. He has also appeared in films such as “Coach Carter” and “House ofWax.” His breakout role was in the TV adaptation of Anne Rice’s novel, “The Feast of All Saints,” where he played the young Marcel who becomes a man within society. He has been professionally acting since the age of 13. We caught up with Robert Ri’chard to discuss his role in the hit show “Harlem.”
someone cares about another person.’
Robert Ri’chard: (laughing) Thank AmNews: Great point. It’s a lot to unpack. you. Yes, the way all of the men are represented, in “Harlem,” they do RR: He’s letting Quinn stay with his have their hearts on their sleeve and son. That’s a pretty big step in any relatheir emotions are out there. tionship, it’s a trust factor. I know everybody is home right now if you have kids, AmNews: Robert, tell me about your there’s that moment where it becomes character. actually, ‘Okay, we’re that close? Then, I’ll let you look after my seed.’ And he’s got RR:Well, my character is a man, and this that going for him. And I love Shawn’s is America. And in America, you have to character for that. And we’re going to see get to work and take care of your family. more from Shawn. He puts her on the My character has a son and he has to look spot. He’ll talk to her face to face and say, after his son. And by any means neces- ‘Listen, don’t try and discredit who I am sary. Just like every hard-working Ameri- as a person and our relationship because can, I will do anything for my kid. you have friends who are white-collar.’ AmNews: Tru’ dat.
RR: And second of all, my character is the kind of guy that every girl deserves as a date. Because he is not afraid to fall in love. He’s already fallen in love with Quinn, and you can see that from the moment that they met and the way that he looks at her. If you go back and watch the show, he is enthralled with being like, ‘I love you. I’m B:8.75" going to take care of you. And I underT:8.75"stand we might come from different sides Amsterdam News: What a wonderful surprise. I love how Sean wears his heart S:8.5"of the track, but that doesn’t matter when
AmNews: What do you think his superpowers are? RR: Shawn’s super exciting. I mean, he’s a guy that every girl wants to fall in love with, right? I mean, number one, he’s fun, and he can dance. And he’s fallen in love before too, you know, two feet in [and gotten heartbroken]. He’s fearless. He’s not afraid to fall in love and show his hand, which is sharing that he has a kid. And he wants her to meet his kid. Yeah, that’s pretty brave.
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CHANTÉ ADAMS, JOSHUA BOONE, BRANDON J. DIRDEN, ADESOLA OSAKALUMI, PHYLICIA RASHAD
16 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
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HOROSCOPES BY KNOWYOURNUMB3RS
KYA FRENCH
January 6, 2022 — January 12, 2022 Restore your faith within yourself. Set the tone at the beginning and follow your own rhythm. This is a cycle to fine-tune yourself to search within and appreciate Vinateria your season of change and growth. You’re being guided and called upon to a particular assignment designed to open new doors for you. Don’t worry about what you don’t have. What you need you will attract to you. You’ll notice your finances and relationships turning around slowly yet surely. Go with the ebb and flow of the cosmic universal alignment. Mercury retrograde begins Jan. 14, to engage you in steps to achieve a substantial newfound faith within yourself. It’s a time to absorb more knowledge of lessons learned from the past now in order to rebuild your future.
Capricorn
Romance, finances, career, and investments are hovering over you this month until it all Dec 22 – Jan 21 drops in your hands. Keep the excitement and inspiration going while you’re in the process of rebirthing yourself. Tap into the depths of your body, mind, and soul, and DO YOU. Do what makes you feel phenomenal. You have the wherewithal to adapt to others’ needs, and it’s now time to do it for yourself. Others may point the blame at you, but it really boils down to how they really feel about themselves. Utilize your strengths to build a new foundation. The past is the past. It’s time for you to help yourself out now. The great old days appear to be recycling over Aquarius gain. This year you’re reinventing yourself and Jan 22 – Feb 19 surrounding yourself with a team of people who share the same talent, yet in different ways. There’s a saying, “Birds of a feather flock together.” Revitalize your life from a brand-new perspective. Your team should inspire, motivate, and cheer you on, while all the while everyone is growing together. No child of GOD is left behind when you’re building together. Each person has a God-given talent to bring to the table.
Cancer
Empower yourself to push your buttons to disrupt, repair, and rewire yourself to follow the spark of your ambitions. Don’t knock yourself down. Once you’re standing weeding out whatever pain, fear, or self-imposed thoughts, instead, see the beauty of your life as you imagine. Don’t overlook how a situation plays out to heal itself to reach new horizons. Get into the feeling of the things you desire in your life. Crawl, walk, skip, hop, then run to be present, and feel alive. Get in the game expecting no one to help you, only you for now. June 22–July 23
Partnerships are forming in your life as you expand and surround yourself with people who uplift your spirit and collectively build together. Mentally, your mind is uploading you on plans already existing on how to maneuver throughout your schedule. Follow your heart and rise to the occasion and lay the foundation that’ll advance you to new magnitude in life. Despite everything going on, survival is the number one tactic in all aspects of your life.
Leo
July 24 – Aug 23
This week is about changing your mind to remix the outcome of a situation, product, or service. Sometimes, you have to challenge yourself and go through a breakthrough to advance to the next phase. R. Kelly has a song called, “I believe I can fly,” and that’s the conversation that may be replaying in your mind to shut out all the noise. It’s your mindset that you have to challenge. Reestablish your purpose and mission to rebrand and regenerate the cells in your body that will download for you the next set of instructions to unlock your blessings.
Virgo
What have you been thinking about night and day recently that keeps your motor running in Feb 20 – Mar 20 your sleep? While you’re sleeping, your mind is downloading concepts and ways of proceeding to the next step. These downloads in your mind are too big to sleep on. You have to wake up out of your sleep and write it down or get to work. It’s calling on you, and the cosmic instructions are moving you forward. Now’s the time to position yourself and fly like a bird with your agenda.
Pisces
Aries
When you put forth the effort to make a conscious decision to follow your gut feelings, do it. Mar 21 – Apr 21 Make a move. It may feel silly, unusual, or not even your style, yet you have to try and don’t beat around the bush. Put yourself out there to see what next window of opportunity shows up. Let whatever is holding you back go and seize the moment to will it into your existence. Take the first step. The vision has been given to you in your dreams.
Taurus
You’re coming out of hiding, by breaking the shell from your back, ready to explore a whole new world. The feeling is similar to leaving your parents’ home to begin experiencing things on your own. You may be vulnerable a bit. No one can help you if you’re afraid to leave the mother’s nest. Pressure will arise, as uncomfortable as it may be, yet there’s an inner voice pushing you to shift your perspective. Believe in yourself. Refrain from telling anyone what you’re doing until it happens. Apr 22 – May 21
Gemini
Significant changes are underway. Patience is required, and how you respond shows the atMay 22 – June 21 tributes of your character and also how you feel about a situation. Don’t allow your emotions to take control. Remove yourself to give it time to rethink before you respond. If you spasm out of control, you just may cancel your own subscription, due to the fact you didn’t see your inner flaws. Make the necessary self-improvements to change. Don’t fake the funk.
Aug 24 – Sep 23
Libra
You’re reconstructing the foundation of your family values, tradition, and recipes to keep the legacy strong to pass onto the next generation. Passed down recipes are evolving due to Mother Nature’s changes in the preparation of an agricultural lifestyle. This is where you’re the leader of change, knowing what ingredients are needed to keep the flavor and pass on new methods of tradition with the same texture. Every generation brings a new leader that masters the art and methods as evolution changes. Trust your gut. Sept 24 – Oct 23
The principle of transition is to convert yourself into a new phase of lifestyle, similar to a TV show with new episodes and storylines. What’s your story? The drought period is over and conditions have changed, and you have to press the Play button. Follow your destiny as to what awakens you that drives you in the opposite direction. It’s time to write a new story about your life to live it out. No more being held back.
Scorpio
Oct 24 – Nov 22
Sagittarius
A new agenda is on the horizon as you’re already feeling and sensing the necessary changes. Be the observer of your change and notice the change even more once you begin. Walk towards the light and come out of the darkness to be living proof of your testimony. You’re taking a leap of faith by removing from all the things, places, people, and ideology as this is your journey. Sometimes, we have to travel alone which makes it even more extraordinary. God is your witness to your process. Nov 23 – Dec 21
WWW.KYAFRENCH.COM | CONSULTATIONS: 866-331-5088 JOIN ME JAN 6TH ON CLUBHOUSE (CLUBHOUSE NAME: KNOWYOURNUMB3RS) AT 6AM EST TO WORK ON GRATITUDE, WITH THE BOOK "THE MAGIC" BY RHONDA BYRNE
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performers thrilled the audience with uplifting songs full of heart and passion, including “Someday We’ll All be Free,” “Blowing in the Wind,” “Feeling Good,” “Redemption Song,” “Freedom,” “Keep Your Hand on the Plow-Hold On,” “Fabulous Feet,” “Stay,” “This Land is My Home,” “Higher Ground,” and “You’ll Never Walk Alone.” There was also some incredible dancing. The presentation was directed by Steve Broadnax III, also the director for “Thoughts of a Colored Man,” which was Broadway bound. The superb performers that day included Kimber Elayne Sprawl, Stanley Martin, Andre Jordan, Nick Rashad Burroughs, L. Steven Taylor, Solomon Dumas, Bongi Duma, LaVon Fisher-Wilson, Richard Riaz Yoder, Lawrence Alexander, Anastacia McCleskey, Jacqueline Arnold, Crystal Joy and Britton Smith and The Sting. Press agent of five decades—Irene Gandy—was honored. One of the first productions I was able to experience back in a theater was “What to Send Up When It Goes Down.” This touching, interactive theatrical experience happened in July at BAM. It was present-
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ed by BAM and Playwrights Horizons in association with The Movement Theatre Company. It was a spiritual journey to healing for Black people who are upset about the murders of our people by racist whites and police and need an outlet for their feelings. We all took part in a healing ritual. The cast played multiple roles and included Alana Raquel Bowers, Rachel Christopher, Ugo Chukwu, Kalyne Coleman, Javon Q. Minter and Beau Thom. This piece, beautifully written by Aleshea Harris, had brilliant direction by Whitney White. The experience allowed everyone to speak the names of those murdered into the universe. To say their name and remember. In August we were all ready for the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park to bring on the Shakespeare, but with Black actors and a flair! Audiences got to laugh their butts off as the Public Theatre presented “Merry Wives,” a whimsical comedy from Shakespeare, adapted by Jocelyn Bioh, directed by Saheem Ali and with an all-Black cast. Bioh brought Shakespeare’s work to the 21st century, set it in Harlem and among African families. The comedy tells the story of Falstaff, a man who decides he will charm
two married women with rich husbands. He wants to be taken care of. Of course, it’s not that simple. The ensemble cast was ridiculously funny and included Jacob
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Ming-Trent, Susan Kelechi Watson, Pascale Armand, Gbenga Akinnagbe, Kyle Scatliffe, Joshua Echebiri Abena, MaYaa Boateng, Phillip James Brannon, Angela
Grovey, David Ryan Smith, Julian Rozzell Jr., Brandon E. Burton, Branden Lindsay, Ebony Marshall-Oliver, Jarvis D. Matthews and Jennifer Mogbock.
Woodie King Jr., founder of New Federal Theatre, at the NFT 50th Anniversary celebration (Linda Armstrong photo) Liza Jessie Peterson, creator of the powerful one-woman show, “The Peculiar Patriot”
Pascale Armand and Susan Kelechi Watson in a scene from the Delacorte Theatre production of “Merry Wives” (Joan Marcus photo)
18 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
AmNews FOOD Build a better-for-you menu in 2022 Committing to healthier habits in the new year often starts in the kitchen. Adding better-for-you recipes to your arsenal is the start of a more nutrition-focused lifestyle, and whether you’re a true home chef or just learning the basics, these dishes can be the gateway to a healthier you. From fresh spins on family night and quick solutions in a pinch to homemade lunches and satisfying salads, consider these delicious and nutritious ways to enhance your homemade meals in 2022. Visit Culinary.net to find more healthconscious recipe ideas. A Fresh Take on Family Dinner If your family gets stuck in a dinner routine rut, it can feel like you’re eating the same recipes over and over again. However, this fresh and unique recipe for Cuban Chicken with Salsa Fresca might inspire you to think outside the culinary box and give your family members the satisfactory flavor they desire at dinnertime. With fresh ingredients and a wholesome flavor, this meal is perfect to add to your menu. Find more recipes and family dinner ideas at Culinary.net.
Cuban Chicken with Salsa Fresca Servings: 5 1 cup grapefruit juice 2 tablespoons olive oil 2 teaspoons garlic powder 2 teaspoons cumin 2 teaspoons paprika 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper 1¼ pounds boneless, skinless chicken breasts Salsa Fresca: 1 cup grapefruit segments ½ jicama, cubed ½ red onion, chopped ¾ cup grapefruit juice 4 tablespoons olive oil ½ cup fresh cilantro, chopped 1 jalapeno pepper, chopped Heat oven to 400° F. In large bowl, mix grapefruit juice, oil, garlic powder, cumin, paprika and red pepper until combined. Add chicken to bowl and turn to coat. Refrigerate 30 minutes or longer. To make salsa fresca: In medium bowl, mix grapefruit segments, jicama, red onion, grapefruit juice, olive oil, cilantro and jalapeno pepper until combined. Re-
frigerate until ready to serve. Remove chicken from marinade. Place chicken in baking dish. Bake 25-30 minutes until chicken is cooked through. Serve chicken with salsa fresca. Take Your Salad from Bland to Bold Step aside, boring salads. A new year and a healthier eating plan can include better-for-you greens and dressings that hit the spot. Veggies roasted with aromatic spices served on Fresh Express 5-Lettuce Mix are drizzled with lemon tahini dressing in this Moroccan Roasted Vegetable Salad, a delicious vegetarian way to turn a bland meal into a bona fide delight. With green leaf lettuce, red leaf lettuce, butter lettuce, romaine and radicchio, the mix of greens offers a bold combination of textures and flavors for those who love variety and color. Find more ways to enhance your athome salads at FreshExpress.com.
juice, maple syrup, Dijon mustard and salt. Add cold water; mix well. If dressing thickens, mix in more cold water. Heat oven to 400° F. Spray two baking sheets with nonstick cooking spray. In large bowl, mix olive oil, ras el hanout, salt and pepper. Add sweet potatoes; toss to coat. Transfer to first prepared baking sheet. Add carrots and peppers to leftover oil; toss to coat. Transfer to second prepared baking sheet. Bake 15-20 minutes, or until vegetables are tender. Let cool. Arrange lettuce mix on four plates. Top each with sweet potatoes, carrots, red pepper, chickpeas, apricots and almonds. Drizzle with dressing and sprinkle with parsley. A Lean, Nutritious Lunch
Meal prepping is one of the most common strategies for improving eating habits, however, this tactic is often focused primarily on nutritious breakfasts and family dinners. Don’t let lunch go by the wayside; you can skip the fast food breaks by opting for a recipe you can make quickly at home. Made with nutritious Wisconsin Potatoes loaded with goodness, low in calories, high in fiber and a good source of vitamin B6, potassium, vitamin C and antioxidants, a Turkey-Potato Wrap proMoroccan Roasted Vegetable Salad vides a simple solution for swapping out Prep time: 20 minutes saltier foods for a lean lunch. By making Cook time: 20 minutes four at a time in just half an hour, lunch Servings: 4 is served for most of your work week to help save time on busy mornings while Lemon Tahini Dressing: adding vitamins, nutrients and antioxi¼ cup tahini dants to your afternoon meal. ¼ cup olive oil Find more better-for-you recipe ideas 3 tablespoons lemon juice at eatwisconsinpotatoes.com. 3 teaspoons maple syrup 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard ¼ teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons cold water
nonstick cooking spray 6 tablespoons olive oil Turkey-Potato Wrap 2 teaspoons ras el hanout or garam Recipe courtesy of Wisconsin Potatoes masala ½ teaspoon salt ¾ pound Wisconsin russet pota¼ teaspoon pepper toes, cut into 1/2-inch pieces 4 sweet potatoes, peeled and cut 1 tablespoon water into long wedges 1 tablespoon canola oil 4 whole large carrots, chopped ¾ pound ground lean turkey 2 red bell peppers, cored and cut 1 large carrot, shredded into 1-inch pieces ⅓ cup sliced green onions with tops 2 packages (6 ounces each) Fresh 1 can (8 ounces) tomato sauce Express 5-Lettuce Mix ⅔ cup shredded cheddar cheese 1 can (15 1/2 ounces) chickpeas, 1 teaspoon dried Italian seasoning rinsed and drained or basil ⅓ cup dried apricots, sliced salt, to taste ⅓ cup slivered almonds, toasted pepper, to taste 2 tablespoons Italian parsley, 4 large whole-wheat or high-fiber chopped tortillas light sour cream (optional) To make lemon tahini dressing: In small bowl, whisk tahini, olive oil, lemon Place potatoes in microwave-safe bowl;
sprinkle with water. Cover, venting one corner. Microwave on high 5-8 minutes until potatoes are tender. In large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat, heat oil. Add and break up turkey; cook 5 minutes, tossing occasionally. Mix in carrot; cook 2 minutes. Add potatoes and onions; toss and cook 2 minutes. Reduce heat to medium; mix in tomato sauce, cheese and Italian seasoning. Cook, stirring occasionally, 4-5 minutes until mixture is hot and most sauce is absorbed. Season with salt and pepper, to taste. On work surface, lay out tortillas. Place 3/4 cup hot turkey mixture on each; fold and roll for burritos. Cut in halves. Serve each with sour cream, if desired. Eating Well When You’re Short on Time Committing to a better eating plan doesn’t change the fact there are simply times when a hectic schedule calls for a quick solution. When you need an easy-to-make lunch or dinner, opt for this Loaded Smoked Salmon Rice Bowl that takes just 5 minutes for a satisfying meal. With Minute’s fully cooked Ready to Serve Brown Rice, it’s easy to add whole grains to your diet even when you’re short on time. One cup of cooked brown rice is equal to two servings of whole grains, making it a nutritious option when time is of the essence. Packaged in convenient, singleserve, BPA-free cups, the brown rice cups provide a quick, easy solution for dishes from breakfast to dessert. Ready in just 1 minute, they’re nonGMO, gluten free and cholesterol free with no preservatives. Find more easy-to-assemble recipes at MinuteRice.com.
Loaded Smoked Salmon Rice Bowl Prep time: 4 minutes Cook time: 1 minute Servings: 1 1 cup Minute Ready to Serve Brown Rice 2 ounces smoked salmon ½ cup julienned cucumber 1 teaspoon soy sauce 1 tablespoon everything bagel seasoning mix Heat rice according to package directions. Top rice with smoked salmon and cucumbers. Drizzle with soy sauce and sprinkle with seasoning mix.
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WARREN WOLF MOVING AHEAD IN 2022 Sure, the vibraphonist/multiinstrumentalist, composer and bandleader Warren Wolf loved the extra bonding time with his five children and wife, though he also felt the exuberant vibrations of audience cheers and echoes of live music calling in the wind. Like his fellow musicians around the world he was ready to return to performing live concerts after the surprise attack of the COVID19 pandemic forced a shut-down of all live venues. During that ordeal he was performing livestreams to empty venues like Keystone Korner in Baltimore. In this new era of post-vaccines and now booster shots, musicians like Warren have resumed earning their living performing before live audiences. During a recent mini-tour he performed his project “History of the Vibes” to a live, sold-out audience at Dizzy’s jazz club, in Manhattan. “I thought about this project for two years, 2021 marked the 100th anniversary of the vibraphone,” said Wolf. “I decided to let people know about this instrument and educate them about other musicians who played this instrument like Lionel Hampton, Bobby Hutcherson, Milt Jackson and Terry Gibbs [age 97].” His repertoire at Dizzy’s included the music of these inspirational vibraphonists and music from “Reincarnation” (2020), his fourth CD for Mack Avenue Records. “Reincarnation,” with its ten tracks and the vibraphonist’s eight original compositions, reflects his soulful memories of groups like Mint Condition, D’Angelo and Tupac swinging in the groove, in the jazz tradition. It begins with his composition “For Ma,” an upbeat soulful serenade dedicated to his mom, Celeste Wolf, who passed away in 2015. The “Vahybing” is a hardhittin’ tune with both Wolf and the drummer in an all-out fiery chat. His personnel features veterans and rising stars such as vocalist Imani Grace Cooper, who he discovered while she was a student at Howard University; drummer Carroll “CV” Dashiell III (a rising star on the Washington, D.C. scene), keyboardist Brett Williams (“his strong sense of R&B and gospel is a great combination”); bassist Richie Goods and guitarist Mark Whitfield’s six-strings can be heard on two tracks. This music is as vibrant as a rainbow. “It’s about showcasing all the music I can feel. I am just a musician who likes to explore different things to make the listener or audience feel good,” said Wolf. “Reading the audience is very important, taking myself off the bandstand to see where they are coming
from. Musicians I play with are always ready to play anything.” During his time at Berklee Wolf was an active member of Boston’s jazz scene, playing the vibraphone, drums, and piano, and with his friend, trumpeter Jason Palmer, he co-led a group at Wally’s Cafe, Boston’s main jazz venue, where he was the house drummer. “After graduating from college [Berklee College of Music] all I wanted to do was play straight-ahead jazz, swing beat. But later when I was gigging with Carmen Lundy, she opened everything up,” said Wolf. “She sang funk, R&B and classical and from there I really went out there. I didn’t grow up in jazz, my dad [Warren Wolf Sr.], who was my first teacher, wanted me to play everything from classical, R&B, hip hop, to ragtime. Now, looking forward, I need to bring those aspects back to life.” Wolf says he wasn’t interested in playing music—his goal was to work for NASA, he loved science and space. “My dad was a history teacher and part time musician, and my grandfather, James Nelson Wolf, was a pianist. I began piano lessons at age three and it extended to the vibraphone, marimba, and drums.” His lessons started at 5:30 to 6:30 with piano; from 6:30 to 7:30 on drums and from 7:30 to 8:30 it was vibraphone. “It was like that five days a week from the time I was 5 until I was 17. It was hard, be-
(Roy Cox photo)
Warren Wolf
cause what kid wants to be stuck in the basement practicing when he could be outside playing?” explained Wolf. “But when I played a solo in the seventh grade, people clapped and later came up to say, ‘Warren, you sound really good.’ I got off on that, so I kept practicing. My father told me music will take you around the world and meet a lot of people. I learned control, technique and speed by playing along to violin concertos.” As a youngster his father called him Chano Puzo, in honor of his favorite Cuban jazz percussionist and singer. “My father loved Latin music and percussion and Chano played with Dizzy,” noted Wolf. You can find him playing with bassist, composer, and producer Christian McBride & Inside Straight, and leading his own successful band Wolfpack. He was the pianist for the Rachael Price Group and became the drummer of choice for alto saxophonist Tia Fuller. He is also a member of the Donal Fox Group which includes bassist John Lockwood and drummers Danis Preito and Terri Lyne Carrington and he toured with Bobby Watson’s “Live and Learn.” His recordings as a bandleader and composer which featured such musicians as pianist Mulgrew Miller, drummer Jeff “Tain” Watts, and bassist Vicente Archer have made him a force in the tradition of vibraphonists. His continued creativity and exploratory path earned him an invitation to join
America’s most creative jazz ensemble, the SFJazz Collective. The San Francisco nonprofit jazz institution sponsors a resident collaborative octet (all composers and bandleaders in their own right) that each year records a two-CD, 16-track album devoted to one composer. He says, “I am the utility guy—I can play what’s needed.” For the New Year 2022, Wolf is booked for concerts and international tours until June ending in Paris. He will perform in January at the Tucson Jazz Festival; unfortunately the closest to the Big Apple will be his appearance at the Hudson Jazz Festival in upstate New York on Feb. 18. Other dates will include performances in Germany, Budapest, London, Florida, Chicago, Denver, Denmark, Italy and Spain. He will be performing as a leader with music from his current CD and “History of the Vibes,” as well as a member of McBride’s Inside Straight and with the Dave Stryker Group. Fortunately, despite how difficult his travel schedule is, the 43-year-old Baltimore native (he returned to the Baltimore area in 2004) says he has a daily exercise/weight lifting routine worked out. He says it’s about being flexible. “‘Reincarnation’ is an album about love and feel-good music. At this point in my life, I just wanted to show that I can be versatile in many different styles. I plan to continue to grow and play all the wonderful music that has shaped me as a musician today.”
20 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
IN
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Elise Johnson McDougald—educator, writer, and activist for women’s rights By HERB BOYD Special to the AmNews
lily, the skin of one is brilliant against the star-lit darkness of a racial sister,” she wrote. “From There is a beautiful portrait grace to strength, they vary in of Elise Johnson McDougald by infinite degree, with traces of Winold Reiss in the March 1925 the race’s history left in physedition of Survey Graphic magical and mental outline on azine that would later in part be each. With a discerning mind, reprinted and edited by Alain one catches the multiform Locke with concharm, beauty siderable more and charachistoric importer of Negro tance as The women, and New Negro. Ms. grasps the fact McDougald that their probis rendered in lem cannot be a thoughtful thought of in pose in keeping mass.” with her status A close readat that time and ing of the parait’s clear she graph may is a woman of suggest a hint mixed ancesof autobiogratry. Along with phy, and her the drawing, own mixed her article “The heritage. AlDouble Task: though she is The Struggle of listed as Elise Negro Women Johnson Mcfor Sex and Dougald in the Race Emanarticle, she was cipation,” is born Gertrude featured and Elise Ayer on later includOct. 13, 1884 ed in Margaret in New York Busby’s pheCity. Her father nomenalantholPeter Augusogy “Daughters tus Johnson of Africa.” was the third Busby’s inAfrican Amertroduction to ican to practhe essay captice medicine Gertrude Elise Johnson McDougald Ayer tures and in New York summarizes McDougald’s re- tunity and with Jessie Clark she City and a founder of the Mcmarkable career. “The daugh- co-authored “A New day for the Donough Memorial Hospital. ter of a founder of the National colored woman worker: a study He also was a partner and orgaUrban League, she graduat- of colored women in industry nizer of the Pennsylvania Railed from Columbia University in New York City” in 1919. road Station and a member of and taught in the New York elAt the start of this provocative the founding committee of the ementary school system (1905- treatise, McDougald posits two National Urban League. Cited 1911), resigning to marry and questions—what are the prob- above is a portion of her educaraise a family. She was head of lems that Black women face tional background that should the women’s department of the and how are they solving them. include her attendance to the U.S. Employment Bureau and a “To answer these questions, City College, Hunter College, social investigator and voca- one must have in mind not any New York University, and the tional guidance expert for the one Negro woman, but rather a New York City Training School New York City Board of Edu- colorful pageant of individuals, for Teachers. (It should be cation. She also worked each differently endowed like noted that she taught the red and yellow of the tiger- at P.S.
for a time with the Manhattan Trade School and the New York branch of the Department of Labor. She later became the first Black principal in the New York City public school system, until her retirement in 1954. Her writings were published in the journals Crisis and Oppor-
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24 and James Baldwin was one of her students. Later she would mentor Olivia Pearl Stokes, the first Black woman to receive a doctorate in religion.) Interestingly, she never received a college degree. In 1911, the same year she retired from teaching (though she would become a principal later at two schools in the city) she married Cornelius McDougald, an attorney and the initial counsel for Marcus Garvey during his trial for mail fraud in 1923. Some of her activities beyond the educational realm are mentioned above, but most of her time was devoted to writing and lecturing, particularly as a participant at various symposiums hosted by the National Urban League. And to list her numerous organizations in which she was a member would exhaust the remainder of the space allocated here. She closed her 1925 article with this statement: “We find the Negro woman, figuratively, struck in the face daily by contempt from the world about her. Within her soul, she knows little of peace and happiness. Through it all, she is courageously standing erect, developing within herself the moral strength to rise above and conquer false attitudes. She is maintaining her natural beauty, and charm and improving her mind and opportunity. She is measuring up to the needs and demands of her family, community and race, and radiating from Harlem a hope that is cherished by her sisters in less propitious circumstances throughout the land. The wind of the race’s destiny stirs more briskly because of her striving.” Much of that wind belonged to McDougald by whatever name. She died June 10, 1971.
ACTIVITIES FIND OUT MORE Several anthologies, including Ms. Busby’s, have accounts of her career and activism. DISCUSSION I am still seeking to find the origin of Ayer in her name. PLACE IN CONTEXT She was an ardent teacher and activist throughout her life, particularly during the early years of the century.
THIS WEEK IN BLACK HISTORY Jan. 2, 1915: Famed historian John Hope Franklin was born in Oklahoma. Jan. 3, 1624: William Tucker, the first Black child born in America, was baptized in Jamestown. Jan. 4, 1920: The National Negro Baseball League was organized with Rube Foster as president.
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
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was asleep in his personal vehicle when he was woken by a bullet shattering his window and hitting him in the head. The NYPD stated that it is not known if he was the intended target, nor where the shot came from. The next day across the city, Ynoa and her dog were shot to death. On Sunday, Adams and new Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell hosted a roundtable with families who have lost loved ones to gun violence. As families clutching framed photographs of their loved ones told of their ongoing trauma, Adams vowed to address the bloody gun violence, including bringing back the notorious and controversial AntiCrime Unit. It would be reformed, he said, but critics of the unit disbanded amidst the George Floyd protests in 2021, are not going to be easily persuaded. Memories of Amadou Diallo and Sean Bell and other police killings inform an opinion probably not up for debate, despite Adams’ statement that the unit will be reformed, with no room for rogue cops, transparency, and, “We’re not going to do anything in secret.”
Many are strongly in support of the commission’s proposals. Councilmember Mercedes Narcisse applauded the members of the RJC for their diligence and commitment to eradicating structural racism in New York City, and using the charter as the foundation as a means to repair and move forward. “These carefully considered and constructed initiatives put forth by the RJC must not only be approved, they must also be implemented and fully funded to help eradicate and root out the systemic racism which continues to exist throughout our city’s agencies and institutions,” said Narcisse. But, at least two city council members seemed less than convinced that the commission’s proposals could accomplish that much. “I am glad to see these recommended ballot proposals from the Racial Justice Commission, but it is my sincere hope that both City and State do infinitely more to combat racial inequity by investing directly in Black and Brown neighborhoods and resources,” said Councilmember Rita Joseph in District 40 in a statement. In response, Venkataraman said that there was absolutely more work to do to educate voters on the proposals. She
January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 21
said the commission recommends that the city government reconcile offenses through “deep engagement with communities, clear acknowledgement of harms both past and present, and through employing a reparative frame in decision-making processes whenever possible.” Venkataraman added that the city should support and advocate for a national reparations program run by the federal government. The case for Black peoples reparations, a system of redress for egregious injustices against enslaved Africans, has been made continuously over the years as a viable way to bridge the racial wealth gap and gained new attention in 2020. Similar to Joseph, Councilmember Kristin Richardson Jordan in District 9 said in a statement that the ballot proposals were “a symbolic gesture given white supremacy is literally embedded in the structure of the constitution, the city charter and all laws governing New York City.” Austin pushed back on that idea saying that the changes the proposals present would hold the government accountable. “Recognizing that structural racism pervades all pillars of our society and is deeply embedded in our nation’s laws, beginning with the United States Constitution, Commission members determined at the outset that equity must be a core expectation, function, and responsibility across all of city gov-
ernment,” said Austin. Austin explained that if adopted in the city, the commission’s recommendations would attack the root cause of persistent patterns—such as marginalization, wage segregation, overcriminalization, inequities in health and education—that often disproportionately impact low-income communities and people of color. “Empowered as a charter revision commission, we determined we could not miss the opportunity to put forward proposals to transform the foundation of city government to make equity a central aim and focus, and for which government is accountable,” said Austin. “These proposals are intended to go beyond changing a single city agency’s policy, to changing all of city government to catalyze the sustainable, tangible system’s change our city needs.” New York City residents still have to vote on the three proposals on Nov. 8, 2022 in the general election. To learn more about the proposals, visit nyc. gov/racialjustice. Ariama C. Long is a Report for America Corps member and writes about culture and politics in New York City for the Amsterdam News. Your donation to match our RFA grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting: https://tinyurl.com/fcszwj8w
PUBLIC NOTICE The Nominating Committee of the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone Development Corporation (UMEZ) has commenced the process of reviewing potential candidates for election by its Board of Directors. Persons who live or work in Upper Manhattan may be eligible for consideration by the Committee for nomination to CommunityBased positions on the UMEZ Board. Others may be considered for vacant At-Large seats on our Board. UMEZ is particularly interested in nominees with senior-level skills, knowledge, experience, and relationships in one or more of the following business and not-for-profit areas: (i) economic development, (ii) human resources, (iii) commercial lending, (iv) real estate finance, and (v) technology. Nominations may be made by mailing or hand-delivering a letter together with the nominee’s resume to the Committee at the address below. Alternatively, you may submit the form provided at the bottom of this Notice together with a resume. Please send the completed form and nominee’s resume to the UMEZ Nominating Committee at the address below. Submissions will also be accepted via email at info@umez.org, or by facsimile at (212) 4109083. Address: UMEZ Nominating Committee, 55 West 125 Street, 11 Floor, New York, New York 10027 Deadline: All nominations should be received by Friday, January 31, 2022 The UMEZ Nominating Committee will hold meetings on Tuesday, February 8, and Wednesday, February 16 commencing at 5:30 P.M. to interview nominees. The meetings will be held at: th
th
55 West 125th Street, 11th Floor, New York, New York 10027 For more information, call UMEZ at: (212) 4100030, Ext. 204 ________________________________________________________________________________________ Candidate Nomination Form Your Name: _____________________________________________ Candidate’s Name: ________________________________ Telephone: _______________________ Address _______________________________ City:____________ State:______ Zip code: _______ In which Community Board (CB) district does the candidate reside or work? — CB #9 (West Harlem) — CB #10 (Central Harlem) — CB #11 (East Harlem)
— CB #12 (Washington Heights/Inwood) — Other Community Board — Don’t Know
State why you believe the candidate should be elected to the UMEZ Board:
Invitation to Prequalify and to Bid Rehabilitation and Flood Mitigation of the New York Aquarium, Brooklyn, NY: Turner Construction Company, an EEO Employer, is currently soliciting bids for the Rehabilitation and Flood Mitigation of the New York Aquarium from subcontractors and vendors for the following bid packages: BP #055 – Cleaning/Laborer (Bid, Payment & Performance Bond Required) BP #048 – Misc. Metal & Railing (Bid, Payment & Performance Bond Required) BP #043 –Carpentry (Including Temp Shed & HMW) (Bid, Payment & Performance Bond Required) BP #064 – Spray on Fireproofing (Bid, Payment & Performance Bond Required) BP #046 – Paint (Bid, Payment & Performance Bond Required) BP #054 – Pre-Construction Surveying (Report/Pictures) (Bid, Payment & Performance Bond Required) BP #056 – Surveying (Bid, Payment & Performance Bond Required) BP #045 – Masonry (Bid, Payment & Performance Bond Required) Only bids responsive to the entire scope of work will be considered and, to be successful, bidders must be prequalified by Turner. Certified M/WBE and Small Business (13 CFR part 121) companies are encouraged to submit. In order to receive the bid packages, potential bidders either (1) must initiate the prequalification process by submitting a Subcontractor/Vendor Prequalification Statement to Turner, or (2) must be prequalified based on a prior submission to Turner. (Note: Prior prequalification submissions that remain current will be considered as previously submitted or may be updated at this time.) All bidders must be prequalified by the bid deadline: February 7th, 2022 and initial submission of a prequalification statement not later than February 7th, 2022 is strongly encouraged. All bidders must have an acceptable EMR, and will be subject to government regulations such as 44 CFR and Federal Executive Order 11246. Successful bidders will be required to use LCP Tracker compliance verification software. Note that while this is a New York City prevailing wage project, union affiliation is not required for BP #055, #048, #043, #064, #046, #054, #056 and #045. For BP#055 – Union 79 labor force is required. A Webcast about the above Bid Package/s will be held on January 13, 2021. Attendance is optional for all; the Webcast is designed to assist potential M/WBE subcontractors/vendors. Link: Please join this meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetupjoin/19%3ameeting_NWFmNDViZmQtNzNkZi00M2ZhLWIzYjAtMDdhMTM2ZDQ5YTMy%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%2 2%3a%2220e27700-b670-4553-a27c-d8e2583b3289%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%2281be9e3a-0656-4e94-9245fa214eb20ab2%22%7d
To obtain further information about contracting opportunities and/or the prequalification package and bid solicitation package/s, please contact Dolores Wooden, DWooden@tcco.com 201-954-9092. The date for the virtual public opening at the Turner Construction Company office located at 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York, is February 8th, 2022 1PM.
Please submit via facsimile to (212) 410-9083, or via email at info@umez.org, together with the nominee’s resume, to the UMEZ Nominating Committee, at the above address.
Link: Please join this opening meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetupjoin/19%3ameeting_YzUxYzI4YWEtMGYwYy00MGM1LTg5ZWEtNTkwZDUwNTQ4Yjhj%40thread. https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetupv2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%2220e27700-b670-4553-a27c-d8e2583b3289%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%22732a90ce-24b742ebbf78-d638e2a629ac%22%7d
22 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
Health
Finding strength to continue when the ‘rock’ is no longer there By INDIA BOOKHART Howard University News Service Sandra McGowan-Watts is still stunned at how quickly her life turned upside down. “I go from being married and having a spouse, to being a widowed, single mother in the course of a month,” said McGowan, 47, a doctor with a practice in suburban Chicago. Her husband, Steven Watts, a 51-year-old Chicago bus driver, became sick in early April of 2020 from a disease that didn’t even have a name just 48 days earlier. The coronavirus pandemic was in its initial stages. There was massive confusion and misinformation regarding the disease. Epidemiologists, health care officials and the Centers for Disease and Control were struggling to find answers to a virus that suddenly was killing thousands. How does it spread? How deadly is it? What are the symptoms? How can we protect ourselves? Do masks work? What kinds of masks? Watts had been taking care of his ill mother, who had been experiencing shortness of breath, an incessant dry
cough and other symptoms, McGowanWatts said. He soon began experiencing the same symptoms, she said. “My husband got sick somewhere between visiting his mother and taking her to the hospital,” she said. Watts died from COVID-19 May 8. His mother, Lois Meeks, 68, died of the disease seven days earlier. These days, McGowan-Watts finds herself in a strange new place. A single child, she has no siblings to lean on, though she has two cousins who she said are like sisters. Her parents are dead. For support, she looks to her 13-year-old daughter, Justise, a few friends, relatives and a Facebook support group for widowed Black women. The McGowan-Watts family is one of thousands in the U.S. who have experienced the loss of one or more parents to COVID-19. According to the National Institute of Health, a child loses a parent or guardian in one of every four COVID deaths, a devastating consequence that is affecting the lives of an estimated 140,000 children. McGowan-Watts said the loss of her husband has been extremely difficult for her, but it has been particularly hard on her daughter. The relationship her
daughter had with her father was a special bond, she said. “He was her person,” she said. “He was the person she went to. He would get her off the school bus. He would take her to get snacks after school and he would take her to gymnastics.” The loss of her father has affected Justise in numerous ways, her mother said. She is in counseling to deal with the grief. The counselor advised her to quit her gymnastics classes because they were a consistent reminder to her of the loss of her father. “It’s hard for her to do gymnastics, because she’s looking for him to be there, and she’s looking to see him in the audience,” her mother said. “So, she has now switched to swimming.” Justise said the decision to switch was not hard: “I’ve always been good at swimming, so I decided to give it a try,” she said. She also attended Experience Camp at Camps Lake of the Woods and Greenwoods in Decatur, Michigan, where children talk about their feelings around grief and loss of a loved one. As one escape, Justise now cooks for the family most nights, her mother said, something she often did with her
father. “Cooking has been one way Justise manages her grief,” her mother said. “She chose cooking because that’s something he did a lot. A lot of the times when I wasn’t home, he was cooking.” Justise has created her own cooking show on Facebook, Justise’s Cooking Tutorial. With her braided hair down or in two buns, sometimes wearing her Girl Power t-shirt, sometimes in eyeglasses, Justise walks viewers through her family’s kitchen with a huge smile. Her ingredients are prepped and laid out in front of her. She carefully identifies what is needed for the dish and shows her audience how to make meals from scratch. McGowan-Watts is having her own difficulties dealing with her husband’s death. She always knew that on paper, they were an odd match—a medical doctor with a six-figure salary and a bus driver. She described him as a humorous, loving and supportive provider. She said he had a gregarious, warm personality. Whenever he was around, he had people laughing, she said. For her, she said, he was her “rock.”
To read the full version of this article, visit www.amsterdamnews.com
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January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 23
Religion & Spirituality Remembering Dr. Khalid Abdul Muhammad: The resurrector By AUTODIDACT 17 Special to the AmNews
(Azim Thomas photo)
This track’s music video depicted the crippling effects of the torrential crack epidem“Have you forgotic gripping Black communiten that once we were ties across the country then. brought here, we were It fit most appropriately with robbed of our names, “The Prophets of Rage” social robbed of our lanmessages and introduced guage, we lost our reKhalid’s insightful words to ligion, our culture, our millions of hip hop aficionaGod; and many of us, dos globally, further immorby the way we act, we talizing him. even lost our minds!” “Black people have been assessed Dr. Khalid robbed of a knowledge-ofMuhammad. self, they start to take on Wednesday, Jan. 12 the characteristics and the marks the 74th physinature of their oppressor and cal day anniversary of colonizer and his mind by the undiluted “Truth automatic systematic remote Terrorist,” Dr. Khalid control rule of our people,” Abdul Muhammad. Dr. Khalid noted. For a couple decades, he called Harlem head of the secular New Black Panther During the second half of the 1990s his home and made a significant impact Party (mid-90s to 2001), he motivated the Black History Hitman conducton area youths by nourishing their local youths to be productive leaders in ed many speaking engagements at minds prior to becoming an ancestor their communities. various college campuses and lecon Feb. 17, 2001, at 58 years old. His above quote was sampled on ture halls nationwide, disseminatWhether as minister of the Nation of the intro to progressive hip hop super- ing empowering information rarely Islam’s Temple #7 during the mid-1980s group Public Enemy’s 1989 hit single discussed, and often controversial, til late 1993, then at 2033 Fifth Ave., or as “The Night of the Living Baseheads.” such as, “Who is that mystery God?” Dr. Khalid Abdul Muhammad
Dr. Helen Chavis Othow Dies at 89 Dr. Helen Chavis Othow, the beloved author, college professor and sister of National Newspaper Publishers Association President and CEO Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., died at the age of 89 on Jan. 1, 2022 in Oxford, North Carolina. A lover of reading, writing, and history, Dr. Othow received her Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin in Madison and majored in Black studies and African, African American, and Caribbean literature. She also studied Elizabethan and Medieval literature, and her dissertation, “The New Decorum: Moral Perspectives of Black Literature,” was published in the Library of Congress. Dr. Othow presented “Sundiata: An Epic of Old Mali” by D.T. Niane, that illustrated her appreciation and knowledge of African culture. She expressed a desire to impart knowledge to all citizens of the world. “My sister was also a freedom fighter,” Dr. Chavis remarked. “The Chavis family has been fighting for freedom, justice,
and equality for 250 years in Dr. Helen Chavis Othow America and in Africa.” Born April 21, 1932, in Oxford, North Carolina, Othow was the daughter of Benjamin Franklin Chavis Sr., who was a Prince Hall mason and superintendent of African American child-care institutions, and Elisabeth R. Chavis, a writer and public school teacher for 65 years. A municipal park in Raleigh, North Carolina, bears the name of her ancestor educator, John Chavis (1763-1838). The beloved scholar Dr. Othow also received a bachelor’s degree from St. Augustine’s College, and she earned her master’s at North Carolina Central in the literary and other arts. Othow University. also taught at the following HistoriShe eventually became head of the cally Black Colleges and Universities English Department at St. Augustine’s (HBCUs): Howard University, JohnCollege. son C. Smith University, North Carolina She was also widely acclaimed and Central University, Hampton Universirespected as a conscientious schol- ty, and Jackson State University. ar dedicated to enhancing excellence Othow pushed for the understanding
of African American history, including educating her students and others about John Chavis, who fought in the Revolutionary War and became an educator who taught some of North Carolina’s most influential leaders. Dr. Othow is survived by her daughter, Ajulonyodier Elisabeth Othow, her brother, Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., and her sisters, Dr. La Rhoda Francine Chavis, MD and Carol Faye Paton, and a host of other relatives. Funeral services for Dr. Othow are scheduled for 1 p.m. EST., Saturday, Jan. 8 at the Chavis Family Cemetery in Oxford, North Carolina. Condolences can be sent to Wright Funeral Home, Inc. at wfhoxf@embarqmail.com, or by visiting the funeral home’s website at www.wrightfuneralhomeoxford.com. (Photo courtesy of NNPA)
By STACY M. BROWN NNPA Senior Correspondent
“Is the white man the devil?” as well as religion vs. spirituality, and “the secret relationship between Blacks and Jews,” just to name a few. He fearlessly walked the streets of a pre-gentrified Harlem dolo, without bodyguards, companions, nor much fanfare, always greeting those who recognized him. He made many optimistic that situations would soon improve, regardless how bleak they seemed to be, he’d breathe life into them. “Dr. Khalid was the epitome of Black manhood. An uncompromising Black Nationalist and messiah of our time!” reflected Kem-Neter, NBPP minister of information. “Brother Khalid Muhammad was dedicated and committed to freeing his people from the garnish they were undergoing because he had an undying love for them,” explained documentary photographer Azim Thomas, who initially met Khalid in 1993 at Temple #7. “He dedicated his whole life to the resurrection of his people.” In Khalid’s own immortal words: “One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter!”
24 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
Eric Continued from page 9
according to the nonprofit’s stats, is $1 billion above the country’s most expensive jail system in the country. According to another report by the Vera Institute of Justice, entitled “The Cost of Incarceration in New York State,” a typical New York State county spent more than $225 per night to incarcerate a person, which is $82,000 per year. The nonprofit believes that this money could be directed to funding other services that would build communities and help prevent the need to incarcerate people in the first place. Total state and federal aid for all counties outside of New York City totaled $26.2 billion, made up of $20 billion of county budgets and $1.3 billion spent on county jails. According to the report, the median state county jail budget is $8.2 million. A Pew Charitable Trust report
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS from last January showed that local plainclothes units are no different and spending on jails topped $25 billion in raise serious concerns. Mayor Adams nationwide data. The budget runs op- needs to hold officers accountable and posed to the failing crime rate and fewer ensure that officers who engage in mispeople going to jail. conduct are fired, not double down on According to Pew, between 2007 and dangerous policies from the past.” 2017 there was a 20% decrease in crime According to the U.S. Bureau of Justice and a 19% drop in jail admission, but Statistics, as of April 2021, it spends $81 not a reduction in jail spending. During billion a year incarcerating Americans. the same period, jail expenditures went Part of those arrests and incarnations up 13% while crime went down 20%, jail can be traced to infractions like prostiadmissions decreased by 19% and the tution, resisting arrest, fare evasion and jail population decreased by 4%. marijuana misdemeanors. All are things Kesi Foster, a spokesperson for Com- that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin munities United for Police Reform, said Bragg said in his day-one-policy memo that the mayor needs to act on the com- he wouldn’t prosecute unless they were munity’s demands to reduce the NYPD’s accompanied by another felony. budget size, scope, and power, take that They earn praise and denouncement. money and invest in disadvantaged Praise came courtesy of The Legal Aid communities. Society. “We know that historically new “The Legal Aid Society welcomes mayors come in and attempt to rebrand this memo as a substantive first step failed policing strategies,” said Foster. to reform an office that long resorted “Mayor Adams’ rhetoric around ex- to making excessive bail requests and panding stop-and-frisk and his commit- overcharging our clients,” stated Tina ments to bring back notoriously violent Luongo, attorney-in-charge of the crim-
inal defense practice at The Legal Aid Society. “Meaningful reform demands that these newly announced policies become standard operating procedure officewide, and we urge judges to not stand in the way of these long overdue and necessary reforms.” Denouncement of Bragg’s day-one policy came courtesy of Police Benevolent Association President Pay Lynch. “We continue to have serious concerns about the message these types of policies send to both police officers and criminals on the street,” Lynch stated. “Police officers don’t want to be sent out to enforce laws that the district attorneys won’t prosecute. And there are already too many people who believe that they can commit crimes, resist arrest, interfere with police officers and face zero consequences. We look forward to discussing these issues with District Attorney Bragg, so that our members can do their job safely and effectively. We must all pull together towards one goal: a safer New York City.”
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THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM THE NEW NEWS YORK AMSTERDAM December NEWS 2019 January December 1, 2020 •26, 29 PUB #: ZONE PUB TP -ANNOUNCE RUN ZONE DATES EDT Acct 364 EDT Acct #: 364 PUB ZONE EDTSeptember TP 17, RUN DATES Contact: Ad Descrpt: THIS IS26,7,TO THA 38 January 11,2,2018 38 January 17, 8, 2018 11,2,2018 THE 2018 NEW THE NEWS NEWS January 6, 2021 - January 12, 13,January 2021 • 25 27 7, 26 2021--January September 26 • September 2021 2021--January 8, THE 2021 NEW YORK YORK AMSTERDAM AMSTERDAM THENEW NEWS NEW YORK YORK AMSTERDAM AMSTERDAM NEWS • September NEWS 2022 2022
97 AN S 01/07,14,21, A 97 AN A 97 S 01/06 Phone: (212)360−3230 Given AN by: *A 2340 −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− −−−−−−−−−−−−−−− ANGELA POLITE ANGELA POLITE −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− Fax#: P.O. #: 2G 2G AUTHORIZATION Email: mariela.paulino@hczpromise.o Created: amill 01/04/22 16:13 231 W. 149TH 231 W. 149TH ST Agency: Last Changed: amillSTREET 01/05/22 09:45 Under this Under this rates ar NEW YORK NY 10003 NEW YORK NY agre 100 Under this agreement rates are subject to change with 30agreement days notice. In −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− event ofI aunderstand cancellation event that of abefor canc event of a cancellation before schedule completion, the COMMENTS: rate chargedofwill ratebecharged basedused up wi rate charged will be based upon the rate for Salesperson: the number insertions COPIED from AD 2619 Not Salesperson: Applicable No −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− −−−−−−−−−−−−−−− Contact: Contact: PUB ZONE EDT TP RUN DATES Acct #: 370 Acct #: 370 _____________________________ _______________ Phone: (917)442−3053 Phone: (917) _____________________________________ ___________________________________ AN A 97 S 01/06 Name (print or Name type) (print or Fax#: Fax#: Name (print or type) Name (signature) −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− MORRISON & TENEBAUM MORRISON & TENE Email: Email: AUTHORIZATION87 WALKER STREET 87 WALKER STREE Agency: Agency: NEW YORK NY 10013 NEW YORK NY 100 .101 .101 −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− −−−−−−−−−−−−−−− .100 this agreement rates are subject to change with 30 days notice. In 100 PUBLICNOTICES NOTICE 100 PUBLIC NOTICE 100 101 LEGAL NOTICES 101 101 LEGAL NOTICES NOTICES 101 101 LEGAL LEGAL NOTICES NOTICES 101 LEGAL LEGAL NOTICES NOTICES 101 101 LEGAL LEGAL NOTICES 101PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE 101 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL LEGALNOTICES NOTICE NOTICE 100 PUBLIC NOTICES 100 101 PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICES 101 101LEGAL LEGAL LEGAL NOTICES NOTICES 101 101 LEGAL LEGAL NOTICES NOTICES 101 101 LEGAL LEGAL NOTICES NOTICES 101 101 LEGAL LEGAL NOTICES NOTICES 100PUBLIC PUBLIC NOTICE Under 100 PUBLIC NOTICE 100 PUBLIC NOTICE 100 PUBLIC NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE 101 LEGAL NOTICE PUB 101 LEGAL NOTICE 101 RUN LEGAL NOTICE ZONE EDT PUB TP ZONE DATES EDT event of a cancellation before schedule completion, I understand that the Barreitude, LLC filed Arts. of Notice Notice of Qualification of Notice Notice Notice of of Qual Qualification of BLITSTEIN of AN Notice of Qual of BLITSTEIN C a p i t aof l ofPQualification rFormation e p a r a t o r y of Hof a rSCIl e YORK m Notice CNotice aCITY p i t aof l ofPof rFormation e pQualification a rformation a t o r y of Hof a rSCIl eof m Notice of NEW NEW YORK CITY of NOTICE OF FORMATION Notice ofof HFP Notice of Formation of HFP Notice ofofA formation ATM Formation of CLIFNotice of Formation CLIFNotice BCI Qualification BCI of Qualification of Notice Qualification of AN Notice Qualification of Notice of Formation of NY Yomies Rice Xofof Yogurt Notice of Formation of Notice of Formation of 3235 AFormation 97 S 12/10,17,24,3 97 LUXURY NEST LLC. Arts. LUXURY NEST LLC. Arts. with the Sect'y of State Org. isFOR announce rate will be based the rate the number of insertions used FOR FITNESS, FUND LLC LLC TE LLC, FUND Authority I,for LLC LLC, Authority ENCE ENCE CALIBRANT ASSOCIATES ASSOCIATES CThis h a r te rtoScharged c hFITNESS, o oDEPARTMENT ls B Othat A LLC RAuth. Dthe OOF F TRANSPORTATION CCALIBRANT h a r te r S LLC cOpus hOF oTE oDEPARTMENT lsKENTUCKY, B Ofor AArts. RI, Dupon OOF F TRANSPORTATION NOTICE TO BIDDERS NOTICE TO BIDDERS Empyrean LLC of YUNAVERSE HOLDOFOrg. 13 LLC Arts. of Org. filed 13 LLC of Org. filed with HERE 4Arts. U10/9/19. LLC Arts. of Org. FORD HOUSE DEVELOPFORD HOUSE DEVELOPBRANDS, LLC Appl. for BRANDS, AMTECK Appl. Auth. AMTECK OF KENTUCKY, 1605 BROADWAY LLC Appl. 1605 LLC Appl. TIME COFFEE LLC filed Arts. Of Org. with TIME COFFEE ABOUT ABOUT GRAND CONCOURSE LLC of Org. filed with the SSNY of filed with the SSNY of NYBROADWAY on Office: NY next meeting of hold thewith Harlem Appl. 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NOTICE NOTICE INVITATION BIDS INVITATION BIDS State of Zone NY Promise (SSNY) on FOR of State of of NY NY(SSNY) (SSNY) on on FOR of State ofOffice NY (SSNY) loc: NY on 11/12/2020. loc: NY ofChildren's of cy.State cy. 11/12/2020.
CLASSIFIED CLASSIFIED ADS AD CLASSIFIED CLASSIFIED ADS AD RULES AND REGULATIONS
Pursuant toNY resolution adopted the Pursuant Town toBoard, resolution The Town adopted of by with the Town Board, The Town ofon on meeting on Tuesday, January meeting Tuesday, State on bySecy. nization were filed with the 07/28/21. Office location: 07/28/21. Office on NY (SSNY) on 2/22/21 NY ofwith Secy. of of State ofof NY Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) 08/04/21. Office (SSNY) Secy. ofofon State 08/04/21. of(SSNY) NY January (SSNY) Office of State NY (SSNY) State ofon NY (SSNY) State ofas on with Secy. of State (SSNY) 11/02/2021. Ofwith Secy. of(SSNY) State ofLLC NY filed filed of State ofNY NY (SSNY) on York County. SSNY desigYork County. SSNY desigignated agent of location: the AND Academy I Charter School Office location: NY Office Office location: location: NY NYtheon LLC Office formed in DE on (SSNY) LLC formed in DE on NY 11/09/20. 11/09/20. 12/10/20. 12/10/20. County. County. Babylon, Commissioner of General Services, Babylon, Division Commissioner oflocation: Purchasing, ofOffice General Services, Division of location: Purchasing, 16th atRULES 6:30pm. The meeting willthelocation: 16th at 6:30pm. The meeting will 4/27/21 NY office location NY Hand delivered sealed bidsLLC for Project Hand delivered described sealed below bids will be for Project described below will beNY of State New Secretary 12/21/20. Office NY 12/21/20. location: NY County. SSNY designatCounty. SSNY designatNY fice location NY County. 08/05/21. on 08/05/21. location: NY County. 07/02/21. NY Office County. location: LLC 07/02/21. Office location: on (SSNY) on 12/08/21. fice: NY County. SSNY has (SSNY) 12/08/21. 1 2 /0 5whom /1 .Office O ffic e cofaOffice tio n it: nated as agent of theOffice LLC nated as7on agent of lo the LLC process against upon Board of at Trustees will be of held County. SSNY designated as County. County. SSNY LLC designated formed as in County. 11/02/2020. LLC SSNY formed is desigin 11/02/2020. SSNY is desigwill receive sealed proposals for: will receive sealed proposals for: SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUPREME BRONX COURT COUNTY OF BRONX received by representatives the Contracts received Section, by representatives Office of the Agency of the Contracts Section, Office of the Agency be held 1 East 104th Street be held at 1 East 104th Street County. has been County. formed in ed County. LLC formed in (SSNY) on 10/27/2020. York ed asdesignated agent ofas LLC upon as agent ofand LLC upon SSNY has been designated NY LLC County. Princ. NYLLC County. Princ. formed in Delaware (DE) on formed NY County. inSSNY Delaware LLC formed (DE)deson in NY County. formed in location: location: NY County. SSNY been agents of location: NY County. SSNY REGULATIONS NY County. Princ. office of upon whom process against upon whom process against be served shall mail may remotely onupon Wednesday, ofContracting LLC whom pro- FloorLLC (DE) upon on whom 12/01/20. pro- Flooras (DE) agent on upon 12/01/20. whom as agent upon whom agent agent Delaware Delaware nated nated Chief Officer, Ground Chief Bidof Window Contracting 55 on Water Officer, Street, Ground Bid Window 55 Water Street, 4th Floor New York, NY 10029. 4th Floor New York, NY 10029. ignated as agent upon whom Delaware (DE) on 11/10/20. Delaware (DE) on 11/10/20. Office Location: New York process against it may process against it may whom whom as agent upon whom process office of LLC: 30 Hudson office of LLC: 30 Hudson 08/04/21. SSNY designated 08/04/21. SSNY (KY) designated 11/04/77. (KY) on 11/04/77. 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SSNY shall mail be be against it may be served and Yards, 72nd NY, NY 72nd Fl., NY, NY as agent of LLC whom agent designated of LLC as agent whom of designated as agent of SSNY upon whom process against it against it may be served and upon whom process against c53 o u rST, s e , PHB, 1 A ANY, ,ofBprocess rNY o n x10022. , NtoYit shall mail copy of process to shall mail copy CANCELLATIONS must beproam. The ofopened the meetbids willminutes be publicly and read inserved. Bid bids Room, will be same publicly address opened and read in55th Bid Room, same address REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS FOR REQUEST ARCHITECTURAL, FOR PROPOSALS FOR ARCHITECTURAL, SSNY shall mail St., SSNY NY, shall NYmail proserved. St., NY, SSNY NYshall 10019. mail served. SSNY shall mail served. 55th be be served and shall mail a10019. copy gent Ventures LLC, 551 5th gent Ventures LLC, 551 5th as agent upon whom ignated to c/o Cohen & Coto c/o Cohen & Coprocess process shall mail a copy of any pro10001. SSNY designated as 10001. SSNY designated as process against it may be process LLC upon against whom it may process be LLC upon whom process be served. SSNY shall shall mail process to: The be served. SSNY shall may may 10468. SSNY designated as t h e L L C , 5 W e e h a w k e n t h e L L C , 5 W e e h a w k e n made in writing by 12 Noon Purpose: any lawful act. I, ISAIAH MESSADO TIMOI,SSNY ISAIAH MESSADO TIMOing willto beCorporation posted on our webENGINEERING DESIGN, BID PHASE ENGINEERING SERVICES, CONSTRUCTION DESIGN, BIDproPHASE SERVICES, CONSTRUCTION cess Service cess todesignated Corporation asmail agent Service of against designated to:may The as LLC, agent 777 of agent to: The LLC,#Frnt, 777 hen, SSNY process process On: January 14, 2020 On: January 14, 2020 of any process against the Ave., NY, NY 10176. SSNY Ave., NY, NY SSNY against it LLC, may be process LLP, 767 Third Ave., LLP, 767 Third Ave., hen, cess against the LLC served agent of upon whom of LLC upon whom proserved. SSNY shall mail proserved. SSNY it may shall be served. proitLLC be served. against mail process to the LLC, 213 LLC, 76 Mott Street mail process to10176. the 213 agent of LLC upon w hom Street, Unit 3B, New York, Street, Unit 3B, New York, AGAINST AGAINST Monday. th th th th th THY JOHNSON whose adTHY JOHNSON whose adsiteSt., at OF ADMINISTRATION AND ADMINISTRATION SERVICES FOR ANDNY SERVICES FOR Co., 80 State Albany, NYth, 175 Co., LLC 80 State whom St., Albany, process NY LLC Third upon Ave Ste whom 2503, process NY, Third Ave Ste 2503, NY, NY REHABILITATION EAST 169 REHABILITATION OF EAST 169 and 180 STREET BRIDGES , 175 and 180 STREET BRIDGES designated as agent of PurLLC designated as agent of LLC LLC served upon is C/O the The Post Office adserved. 31st Fl., NY, NY Fl., NY 10017. Purupon is NY, C/O the LLC: Tyece cess against it process may be cess against it 10017. may be 31st cess tois c/o Michael Goldcess SSNY toupon shall c/o mail Michael process GoldtoINSPECTION SSNY shall mail toINSPECTION E. 26th St., NY, NY 10010. NY, NY 10013. Purpose: any E. 26th St., NY, NY 10010. process against it may be NY 10014. NY 10014. d re s s 4 1 9 W e s t 1 2 9 th d re s s is 4 1 9 W e s t 1 2 9 th https://hczpromise.org/comth of BCP OVER METRO-NORTH RAILROAD OVER METRO-NORTH RAILROAD SHORELINE STABILIZATION ROAD SHORELINE ELEVATION STABILIZATION OF ROAD ELEVATION OF 12207. 12207. against against 10017. 10017. Purpose: lawful smith, Purpose: it Cummis may be Any served. lawful Address itAny may be required served. to served. Address required toit pose: Notice of Qualification The forwarding ofAny an&order upon whom process against upon whom process against LLC: Barbara Ellison-Miller dress to which the SSNY pose: Any lawful activity. Any lawful activity. Smith, 143 W 140 Street, the the served. SSNY shall mail proSSNY shall mail prosmith, Sills Cummis Gross KY Sills addr. of LLC: & 1387 Gross E. KY addr. of LLC: 1387 E. Purpose: lawful activity. lawful act#t Purpose: Any lawful activity. euHo-Shing;Audrey r rv pe do.s Se S a itill PROAD uHo-Shing;Audrey r p oHo-Shing s e : AinnDE: y Ho-Shing l 209 a Lawson w fOru l PsSPECIAL : NAYn ys hHo-Shing laallwmf u Lawson Ho-Shing a/k/a Lawson Lawson H. a/k/a Contract HBX1670, activity. HBX1215 and Contract HBX180 Nos. HBX1670, HBX1215 and HBX180 Street, Manhattan NY 10027 Street, Manhattan NYApt 10027 munity/board-meeting-docuthmail process activity. SSNY SSNY be be shall to New maintained mail in DE: process 209 Orto cess maintained CAPTREE ROAD CAPTREE is construed as anNos. acceptmay be Corporation served. SSNY shall H. may be served. SSNY 175 East 112 Street, 2B, mailto aOPPORTUNITIES copy10030. of Michaeanyshall proshall New York, NY Purcess toshall Corporation to Service P.C., 101 Park Ave., 28thP.I.N. Fl., 84118BXBR272 P.C., New 101 Circle Park Rd., Ave.,N.Y.C Ste. 28th 135, Fl., Circle Rd., Ste.Service 135, process Philip J. purpose. purpose. N.Y.C P.I.N. 84118BXBR272 a/k/a Audrey Scarlett-Ho-Shing; a/k/a et al., Audrey Defendant(s) Scarlett-Ho-Shing; et al., Defendant(s) proclaim my Free National proclaim my Free National ments/ Corporation Service Co. Corporation St. Wilmington Service Co. de St. Wilmington de c/o c/o ange ange FUND II GP LP Appl. for Notice of Formation of Bar Liance of all advertising rules mail80process to Albany, theof LLC at Notice mail process to the New York, NY40505. 10029. Purcess against LLC served pose: Any Co., 80 State St., Albany, State St., NY NY, NY 10178. DE addr. NY 10178. addr. Cert. KY 40505. Cert.NY of Lexington, Lexington, Notice of formation Viento ofNformation Viento ls , c /o olawful rtothe n activity. R oof s eLLC u at llNotice of Formation of Co., Na m econditions asubmitted s ISA I A of H T Rof I - NY, N a ecertified asubmitted sKY Icheck S on ADE ISt., A2% H T Rof Iof- FEBRUARY until 10:00 am THURSDAY, until 1,State am 2018 on at THURSDAY, theAlbany, 2018 atof the (CSC), (CSC), 19801. 19801. 80 State Albany, 80 Cert ofwith Formation St., filed Cert of Formation filed Notice of Formation 11E78 Notice of Formation of 11E78 Auth. filed with of F State Each must be accompanied Each bymaAny bid must for be of accompanied the by a 10:00 certified check for 2% ofTown the bations &1,Co. LLC LLC Art. Media the princ. office theTown LLC. the princ. office of West the LLC. and bid under which pose: lawful activity. upon him/her isSecy. 36 47th 12207-2543. Purpose: Any 12207-2543. Purpose: Any Form. LLC: Corporation Service LLC: Corporation filed with Secy. Service of Form. filed Secy. of FEBRUARY LLC Arts. of Org. filed LLCLLP, Arts. of Org. filed Media bright US 1301 Ave. of ABOUT TIME COFFEE FORCE JOHNSON accordFORCE JOHNSON accordHall, 200 East Sunrise Highway, Lindenhurst, Hall, 200 East New Sunrise York, 11757 Highway, at Lindenhurst, New York, 11757 at amount of the proposal, or alternatively, a amount bid bond of not the less proposal, than 10% or alternatively, of the a bid bond not less than 10% of the NY NY with with 12207-2543. DE addr. of 12207-2543. DE Div. of DE Corps, addr. 401 of DE Div. of Corps, 401 REALTY LLC Cert. of by ConREALTY LLC Cert. ofFrankConPursuant toBox a Judgment of Foreclosure Pursuant and to Sale aFJudgment duly dated of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated NY (SSNY) on 11/06/19. of Of Org. filed with SSNY on DE addr. of LLC: Cogency DE addr. of LLC: Cogency Street, W03, New York, NY lawful activity. lawful activity. State, State, Co., 251 Little Dr., Co., 251 P.O. Little Box 1150, Falls Dr., P.O. 1150, Frankadvertising space isFalls sold N o t i c e o f o r m a t i o n o f N o t i c e o f F o r m a t i o n o with with the Secy. of NY (SSNY) the Secy. of NY (SSNY) tNotice he A m e rformation i c a at sNY , public N of Y , One N Yf 110 SERVICES CHAIN 16 LLC Arts. of Org. offiled therules proposal, payable toof the Comptroller amount of of the the proposal, City251 ofand New payable York. toof the Comptroller of2017 the City of New ingamount to the and usage ing toKY the rules usage which time they will be publicly opened whichand time read they inSuite will the be Division publicly of opened and read in the Division of of c/o CSC, Little Falls c/o CSC, St., Little 4,York. Dover, Falls St., Suite 4, Dover, LLC: LLC: Federal Federal Notice of Qualification of 300 version Secy. version filed Secy. May 11, I,251 the undersigned May Referee 11, Inc., 2017 will sell I,NY the at public undersigned Referee will sell location: County. Office 11/29/21. Office Location: NY Global 850 New Burton Global Inc., 850 New Burton The principal busi10036. Wilmington, DEwith 19808. Cert. Wilmington, 40602-1150. DEwith 19808. Cert. PurKY 40602-1150. Purfort, fort, the isNEW YORK AMSTERThis to announce that the PikMyBrain, LLC Arts. of PikMyBrain, LLC Arts. of on 03/26/2021 office locaon 03/26/2021 NY office loca10019. Purpose: Any lawful with Secy. of State of NY filed of THE such TRIFORCE of such ISAIAH TRIFORCE office. Purchasing office. and Only Management Group Dr., Dr., DE DE Wilmington, DE Wilmington, 19901. Purpose: DE 19808. Any 19901. Purpose: Any EXECUTIVE SOLAR LLC ofISAIAH NY (SSNY) of NY (SSNY) on pose: State State auction atQualification the Bronx County Courthouse, auction 851 the Grand Bronx ConCounty Courthouse, 851 Grand ConLP formed in Cayman NYCDOT DIVISION OFSecy. BRIDGES ISPurchasing THE SEEKING NYCDOT QUALIFIED DIVISION BIDDERS/ OF19808. BRIDGES IS SEEKING QUALIFIED BIDDERS/ County. SSNY designated as Rd., NY Ste. 201, Dover, DE Rd., Ste. 201, Dover, DE Notice of of HVS Notice ofat Qualification of State HVS ness address of the LLC is 36 pose: of Form. filed with DE Form. Electrical filed with contracting DE Secy. Electrical contracting next meeting of the Harlem DAM NEWS. Publication is on of Org. filed with Secy. of Org. filed with Secy. ofIslands State County. SSNY has NY County. SSNY has tion tion activity. (SSNY) on CONTRACT. 12/08/21. Office JOHNSON. JOHNSON. LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Cert. Cert. Lawful Lawful of Form. with Secy. of Purpose. Form. filed with Secy. Purpose. Appl. for Auth. filed with Se12/01/20, converting 11 of 12/01/20, converting 11 and course, Room 600, Bronx, New XLII York course, on Room January 600, 27, Bronx, 2020 at New York on January 27, 2020 at CONTRACTORS THEJohn ABOVE REFERENCED CONTRACTORS CONTRACT. FOR THE THIS ABOVE REFERENCED THIS on 02/06/19. Princ. of(C.I.) agent of the LLC upon 19904. Cert. of Form. filed 19904. Cert. of Form. filed XLII LLC Appl. for Auth. filed LLC Appl. for Auth. filed 47th Street, W03, New West of State, Div. of FOR Corps., State, sub-contracting Div. offiled Corps., John work, sub-contracting work, and Children's Zone Promise BEST SATELLITE TV with 2 made and charged according of NY (SSNY) on 12/27/17. of NY (SSNY) on 12/27/17. designated as an whom agent designated as an agent been been NY County. SSNY location: One (1) original and ten (10) copies One of (1) both original technical and and ten (10) cost copies of both technical and cost the Secy. of NY (SSNY) on PROCUREMENT IS SUBJECT TOcy. PARTICIPATION PROCUREMENT GOALS IS SUBJECT FOR TO PARTICIPATION GOALS FOR of State, Div. of Corps., John of State, Div. of Corps., John of State of NY (SSNY) on 78TH STREET CO. to 78TH STREET CO. to EAST EAST 2:00PM, premises known as 1312 2:00PM, Needham premises Avenue, Bronx, as 1312 Needham Avenue, Bronx, fice of LP: 650 Madison Ave., process against itknown may beit with DE Secy. of State, Div. with DE Secy. of State, Div. with Secy. of State of NY with Secy. of State of NY York, NY 10036. Purpose: G. Townsend Bldg., 401 FedG. Townsend all activities Bldg., and 401 purposFedall activities and purposand and Academy II Charter School Year Price Guarantee! to the terms of this card. Office location: NY County. Office location: NY County. whom process against whom process against it upon upon asAND/OR agent ofand LLC proposals. TheAND/OR Technical and Costdesignated proposals. Proposals shall The Technical be in seperate Cost Proposals shall be in seperate MINORITY OWNED LLC. BUSINESS ENTERPRISES MINORITY (MBEs) OWNED BUSINESS WOMEN ENTERPRISES (MBEs) WOMEN 06/08/2021 NY office location G. G. Townsend Bldg., 401 FedTownsend Bldg., 401 Fed11/22/21. Office location: NY 11E78 REALTY Office 11E78 REALTY LLC. Office NY 10469. All that certain plot piece NY 10469. or parcel All of that land, certain with plot the piece or parcel of land, with the NY 10022. Duration of NY, served shall mail of Corps., John G. Townsend of John G. (SSNY) on 08/17/21. Office (SSNY) on 08/17/21. Office any lawful act or activity. essealed related thereto. es related thereto. eral St., Dover, DE 19901. St., Dover, DE 19901. Board of Trustees be held eral $59.99/mo with 190 chanNOTICE OFwill SALE NOTICE OFand SALE N OCorps., TIC E O FSSNY FO RTownsend M ATIO N may beand served shall mail may be served and shall mail SSNY designated asprocess agent SSNY designated as agent OWNED BUSINESS ENTERPRISES OWNED AS REQUIRED BUSINESS BY ENTERPRISES SECTION (WBEs) AS REQUIRED BY SECTION whom process against iterected, upon thand containers may be in hand delivered sealed containers or mailed and to the may above be hand delivered or mailed to the above Notice of formation of Notice of formation of NY County. has been St., Dover, DE 19901. St., Dover, DE 19901. eral eral County. LLC formed RatesAny and regulations subNY County. Princ. (WBEs) NY County. Princ. location: location: buildings and improvements buildings situate, and lying improvements and being erected, situate, lying and being LP is Perpetual. SSNY desigBldg., 401 Federal St., Dover, Bldg., 401 St., Dover, to: 430 E 65 St, Apt 6P, location: NY10:00 County. LLC location: NY County. LLC Purpose: lawful activity. Purpose: Any lawful activity. remotely on Wednesday, and 3Federal months free prenels of 3P Associates, LLC. Arts copy of any process against copy ofupon any process against a a of LLC upon whom process of LLC whom process 6-129 (Local Law 1 of 2013) OF THE NEW 6-129 YORK (Local CITY Law ADMINISTRATIVE 1 of 2013) OF THE NEW YORK CITY ADMINISTRATIVE may be served. SSNY shall address. Proposals will not be accepted address. after Proposals am will on not the be accepted after 10:00 am on the LLC Arts. of Org. LLC Arts. of Org. ScratchFoto ScratchFoto designated as an of agent upon Purpose: Any lawful activity. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Delaware (DE) on 10/13/20. LLC: c/o Friedman of LLC: c/o Friedman office office in the Borough and County of Bronx, in the City Borough and State and County of NY, of Bronx, City and State of NY, ject toofchange without notice. nated as agent LP upon DE 19901. Purpose: Any DE 19901. Purpose: Any New York, NY. Purpose: Any formed in Delaware (DE) on formed in Delaware (DE) on January 19th, 2022 at 7:30 movie channels! Free mium CODE (Target/ Goal for M/WBE can be seen CODE in the (Target/ Schedule Goal B of for the M/WBE Bid Book can be seen in the Schedule B of the Bid Book SUPREME COURT COUNSUPREME COURT COUNof OLLC rgprocess filed wagainst ith Secy. of the LLC is C/O LLC: C/O against itthe mSecy ay be served. against it ism ay bethe served. to the LLC, 213 mail Azimut Kennedy Lewis AcKennedy Lewis Acdate of bid opening. NO of EXCEPTIONS dateprocess of WILL bid BE opening. GRANTED. NO EXCEPTIONS Doof Block: WILL BE GRANTED. Doof the filed filed with the Secy of State with ofthe State whom itLLC: may Notice of Qualification of 3 Notice of Qualification 3 alsoAzimut designated as agent of Management 770 LexManagement Co., 770 LexBlock: 4711 Lot: 75. Approximate amount 4711 judgment Lot: 75. Approximate amount judgment whom process No agreements as position lawful activity. lawful activity. lawful purpose. 04/19/21. SSNY designated 04/19/21. SSNY designated Subject to APPRENTICESHIP Subject to the APPRENTICESHIP 1 of 2).Co., This Contract is alsoSSNY Number 1 the of 2). This Contract is am. The minutes ofto the meetnext installation! Call TYNumber OF BRONX, CITIBANK, TY OF BRONX, CITIBANK, States Corporation Corporation United S t aserved t eday oStates f N Y against (shall S S Nmail Yit) may otona SSNY shall mail process to United SSNY shall mail process Notice of formation of Cielo Notice of formation of Cielo E. 26th St., NY, NY 10010. cess cess Fund III GP LLC Auth. Fund III GP LLC Auth. not remove any pages; all proposals not are remove toLaw be submitted any pages; intact. all proposals For are Premises to be submitted intact. Foron New New York (SSNY) on costs. York (SSNY) be and TIMES SQUARE LEASESQUARE LEASELLC upon whom process ington ington Ave., NY, NY 10065. Ave., NY, NY 10065. $705,125.24 plus interest and $705,125.24 plus will interest be sold Premises will beshall sold served. SSNY be or other than th and costs. th mail PROGRAM and the NYC Comptrollers Labor PROGRAM Law 220 and prevailing the NYC wages ComptrollersAzul Labor 220LLC prevailing wages 107 ADOPTION as agent of upon whom as agent of LLC upon whom ing willregulations, be posted on our web- TIMES TV Internet 888-508-5313 N.A., Plaintiff, vs. ESTATE N.A., Plaintiff, vs. ESTATE Agents, Agents, Inc. 7014 13 AvInc. 7014 13 Av11/17/2017. Office location. the LLC , 1025 Fifth Ave., the LLC , 1025 Fifth Ave., Disaster Operations/LoDisaster Operations/LoAzul Purpose: Any lawful activity. filed filed w/ SSNY 7/29/21. Off. in w/ SSNY 7/29/21. Off. in information (631) 957-3025. The subject Town information reserves call the (631) right 957-3025. to filed reject The subject Town reserves the right to filed reject NY Office locaNY Office loca6/24/2020. 6/24/2020. copy of any process against HOLD LLC Appl. Auth. HOLD LLC Appl. Auth. Notice Formation of against itA call may be served. SSNY SSNY asfor asfor agent of toagainst provisions of Judgment Index# toof provisions 380685-13. of Judgment Index# 380685-13. process to S the at requirements as described inA the Solicitation requirements Materials. as described in Solicitation Materials. those printed this. process it LLC. may be process may be at Phone OF E Ldesignated LSecy. A site Bon R O W Nagent /of A filed O F Eand Ldesignated LCert Bof R O W N Athe /w/ A NY enue, Suite Suite County. SSNY designatA p t .to 3the E against FYork Scertified o202, u t hitwill , Brooklyn, Nfunds YSSNY , acN Y enue, ANY p t .to 3the EF o202, uPartnership tthe h will ,ofBrooklyn, Nthe Y , acN Y gistics gistics Consultants LLC. Consultants Arts NY Co. Form filed Cert of Form filed w/ any all proposals. anyCo. and allYork proposals. tion: New County. SSNY tion: New County. the LLC isReferee C/O LLC: 595 filed with of State of/ KNY with Secy. of State of/ KArts NY ABOUT TIME COFFEE SSNY shall mail process the princ. office LP. upon whom upon whom process LLC LLC Only cash or certified funds payable Only cash Referee or payable Notice of formation ofbe Grits Notice of formation ofbe Grits Single woman looking to build served. SSNY shall mail proSSNY shall mail prohttps://hczpromise.org/comAND WOMEN ENTERPRISES AND WOMEN BUSINESS ENTERPRISES E LMINORITY LTilAforbid Mon AOWNED E07/29/21. B Rcharged O Wprocess N , E T OWNED EofLMINORITY LOrg ABUSINESS Mon AOWNED E07/29/21. Bwith RService O W N , Co., Eto T OWNED NY 11228. Purpose: Any lawNY 11228. Purpose: Any lawed agent upon whom pro10028. Purpose: Any lawful 10028. Purpose: Any lawful filed Secy. of of Org filed with Secy. of served. orders for 7/1/21. SSNY desig. 7/1/21. SSNY desig. SSDE SSDE has has designated as agent designated as agent Baltic Street, Brooklyn, NY (SSNY) Office (SSNY) Office CHAIN 15 LLC Arts. of Org. Notice of formation of Good c/o Corporation and addr. of each genName against it may be served. against it may be served. cepted as a deposit in the amount cepted of ten as percent a deposit of the in the puramount of ten percent of the purEntertainment LLC Arts of Entertainment LLC Arts of her cess to Corporation Service to Corporation Service (M/WBE) will be afforded full opportunity to (M/WBE) submit bids will NY and be afforded the(SSNY) Cityfull ofbeNew opportunity to submit bids andatthe City of munity/board-meeting-docuAL., AL., Defendant(s). ful activity. c11217. eactivity. s sfamily m Purpose: a y by b e adoption. s e rvavailable e dlawful aAny nd activity. activity. of on of NY (SSNY) on cess State State Proposal documents may examined Proposal and obtained documents the may Town beNew Hall examined and obtained at of the Town rateDefendant(s). earned. Increases or as agt. of LLC whom process as agt. of LLC whom process whom process against whom process against it ful upon upon location: NY County. LLC NY County. LLC filed with Secy. State ofHall NY Williamsburg LLC Arts. 80 State St., Albany, NY eral partner SSNY SSNY shall mail process to shall mail process to chase price. chase price. Org filed with the Secy of Org filed with are theAny Secy of ethnicity welcome, York hereby York hereby notifies all bidders that location: it7/29/20. will affirmatively notifies ensure all that bidders any that itDay will (CSC), affirmatively ensure that any Co. 80 State St., Al-it the Co. (CSC), 80 State St., Alments/ shall mail copy of expenses process 7/29/20. Office location: NY Office location: NY Purchasing between the Purchasing hours of 9:00 Department a.m. and between 4:30 hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:30 decreases inthe space take the beinentered served & shall mail be served & shall mail may may may may beNY served. SSNY beof served. SSNY desigactivity. formed Delaware (DE) formed Delaware (DE) (SSNY) on 12/08/21. Office of Org. filed with the Secy. of bany, thecontract the LLCinentered at oftoon its LLC at the addr. its 12207-2543. addr. of from SSNY. C.I. addr. of LP: State NY (SSNY) on NY State of NY (SSNY) on NY paid. Please call (347) 470intoaddr. pursuant this advertisement contract willDepartment beDE into awarded pursuant toofthe toon this advertisement will be awarded todesigthe bany, 12207-2543. DE NY 12207-2543. DE Persuant to a Judgment of Persuant to a Judgment of a g a in s t L L C to : U S C o rp County. County. SSNY designated as SSNY designated as Notice of formation of 560 Notice of formation of 560 p.m. daily except Saturdays, Sundays p.m. and daily Holidays, except on Saturdays, and after Sundays and Holidays, on and after Eliminate gutter cleaning forprocess process to c/o Universal Regto c/o Universal Regrate of a new advertisement. as agent upon whom as agent upon whom nated nated 07/27/21. Princ. office of LLC: 07/27/21. Princ. office of LLC: location: NY lowest office. responsible bidder without discrimination lowest251 on responsible the Little basis bidder of Falls race,without color, discrimination on basis of race, color, State ofthe NY (SSNY) on addr. princ. princ. Purpose: Any office. Purpose: Any LLC: Dr., c/o Corporate SerOffice location: NY County. Office location: NY (800) 5228 Frank D. Lombardi, Esq., Referee Frank D. Lombardi, Esq., Referee addr. of LLC: c/o CSC, 251 LLC: c/o 251 N o t i cof eNECK o f FCounty. oRD rmay mitCSC, aLLC t i oSSNY nArts. o f LITTLE N o t i cMaples eor omy f F7014 oattorney: r the mCounty. aLLC tmost i o Ave., nArts. of F osex, rc loactivity. s u reManagement a n d S a lenational d u ly origin, Fagent o rc loactivity. supon uorAgents, reManagement a whom n d19808. a le d u26 ly Proposal Agents Inc., 13th process upon whom process agent LITTLE NECK RD ever! LeafFilter, adTUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 2018. TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, also 2018. be documents also bebe istered Inc., istered Inc., 26 process against itresidence. may beProposal process against may sexual orientation, sex, age sexual place orientation, of Sresidence. national origin, agedocuments orAgents, place ofmay c/o Rudin Co., c/o Rudin Co., Wilmington, DE Cert. designated as agent of LLC 03/17/21 NY office location lawful lawful SSNY has been designated SSNY has been designated vices Limited, PO Box 309, 582-3678 Little Falls Dr., Wilmington, Little Falls Dr., Wilmington, The New York AMSTERNotice of formation of Ripka T a k a m i c h i B e a u t y R o o m T a k a m i c h i B e a u t y R o o m filed on June 01, 2017 and filed on June 01, 2017 and #202, BK, NY 11228. Prinmay be served and shall mail may be served and shall mail of of Org. filed with the Secy. of Org. filed with the Secy. of vanced debris-blocking gutter ddirected ow n l oto a the dbidder's eE. dAve., aGreenbush, t attention t hNY, e Secy. TNY oiswalso n Carville oNY dfdirected oBCounty. wa nb lyand oto l aothe dnshall e’E. sdrequirements waGreenbush, etmail bthas hs ei proces t eTbeen oa wt n oupon f Ban a whom bagent yand l o nprocess ’upon s w email b against s i proces t e proa t it as Prospective bidder's attention is also Prospective requirements of of Ln, Ln, Carville served served shall Inc., 345 Park Ave., NY, NY Inc., 345 Park of Form. filed with DE 101 LEGAL NOTICES SSNY as whom anLLC agent upon whom proHouse, Grand CayUgland DE 19808. Cert. of Form. filed DE 19808. Cert. ofBarak, Form. filed DAM NEWS reserves Arts Arts. of Org. filed Shapiro, Dicaro & Barak, LLC Shapiro, Dicaro & LLC LLC. Arts. of Org. filed upon with LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with anschedule O rder ppointing S ucan O rder ppointing SLLC uccipal business address: 300 ofparticipation process against ofparticipation process against copy copy "B"AinQualification the proposal the concerning M/WBE schedule "B"AinAdd. the in proposal the contract. concerning M/WBE in the contract. NY NY (SSNY) on 07/14/2021 (SSNY) 07/14/2021 Schedule aCert. FREE protection. www.townofbabylon.com. www.townofbabylon.com. NY 12061. maintained 12061. Add. maintained against the LLC served upon against the LLC served 10154. SSNY designated as SSNY designated as of State, 401 Federal St., #4, may be designated asthe agent cess against may be cess against itoon may be Notice of of 10154. Notice of Qualification of NY man, C.I., of with Secy. of State of upon DE, with Secy. of State of DE, rightschedule to Referee censor, alterM/WBE orNowith the of NY (SSNY) Attorney(s) for Plaintiff Attorney(s) Plaintiff N Y office D e served. plocation tfor . itothe f SSNY SNY t aCounty. tserved eshall o n NY N Y office D e pSecy. tKY1-1104. . estimate f SNY t aNY, tserved etoday. oNY n The of reject, proposed participation The schedule is to be ofSt, submitted proposed by M/WBE the participation is to LLC: be submitted by the cessor dated cessor Referee dated NoE. 74th St., #10A, to to 220 E 60th #3k, NY, NY 220 E 60th St, #3k, NY, NY location County. NY LeafFilter in in DE: Universal Registered DE: Universal Registered C/O the 88 Greenwich C/O the LLC: 88 Greenwich is is agent of LLC upon whom proagent of LLC upon whom proDover, DE 19901. Purpose: mail process to athe LLC, whom process against it may and Mile shallCrossing mail copy of 213 any and shall mail copy of locaany 1711 1711 RETAIL, LLC Appl. for RETAIL, LLC Appl. for filedOffice witha Registrar of LP 06/14/2021 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 401 Federal St., Dover, DE apparent lowadvertisements bidder within seven (7) calendar apparent days after low bidder the date within of opening seven (7) calendar days after the date of opening revise all inunon NY office 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard 175 Boulevard 10/3/17. Office location: NY 10/3/17. location: NY vember 28, 2017, I, the vember 28, 2017, I, the un10021. 10022. 10022. R/A: VB&T Certified R/A: VB&T Certified SSNY has been designated SSNY been designated 15% offhas and 0% Financing for Inc., 300 Creek View Inc., 300 Creek View Agents, Agents, Street, Street, Apt 714, New York, Apt 714, New York, cess against it may be cess against it may be Any lawful activity. process against the LLC to process against the LLC to E. 26th St., NY, NY 10010. served and shall mail a be Auth. Auth. filed with Secy. of State filed with Secy. of State Partnerships C.I., 133 Elgin of bids. The M/WBE for thissell projectdersigned isSPECIAL 24 of bids. %. The M/WBE goal for this projectshall is 24 %. 19901. Purpose: Any lawful 19901. Purpose: Any lawful NOTE: These projects SPECIAL be funded NOTE: inNewark, These part through projects be agent funded in York part through tion County. SSNY has Rochester, New York 14624 Rochester, New 14624 C ounty. Princ. bus. addr.: C ounty. Princ. bus. addr.: accordance with itsgoal rules govdersigned Referee will Referee will sell 110 SERVICES Purpose: any lawful act. Public Accountants, PLLC, Public Accountants, PLLC, as an upon whom pro- as anNY agent upon whom prowho qualify. PLUS Sethose Rd, Ste. 209, Newark, DE Rd, Ste. 209, DE shall NY NY 10006. Purpose: Any law10006. Purpose: Any lawserved. SSNY shall mail pro- served. SSNY shall mail proC/O the LLC Angela Polite C/O the LLC Angela Polite Purpose: Any lawful activity. copy of any process against NY (SSNY) on 11/23/20. NY (SSNY) on 11/23/20. of of Ave., Box 123, Grand Cayth th activity. activity. been designated asbe anserved agent York State Governor’s the Office New of York Storm State Recovery Governor’s Office of Storm Recovery (877)430-4792 (877)430-4792 283 Decatur St., Brooklyn, 283 Decatur St., Brooklyn, erning the oft h e requirement, a t Non-compliance p utoblocation: l iGoldfarb c a acceptance uwith c tNY i o& n7 day a tsubmittal a250 tthe pW uNew lthe iGoldfarb cQualification a uwith tadd. i oof n1632, a tNY, h e requirement, 57 St, W 57 St,&Ste NY, 250 the Non-compliance stipulations the 7 Schedule day the stipulations of1632, Schedule Notice oftsubmittal 500 against may be served against itKY1-9000. may cess nior w. & Military Discounts. Call 19711. 19711. Name &cSte of auth. Name add. of auth. ful activity. ful activity. cess Fleece cess tobof & Fleece 231 w. 149thit St. 2G NY, NY cess 231 149th St. 2G NY, PurNY LLC served upon C/O the Office County. Office location: NY County. man, VIAGRA CIALIS! pills upon Disaster Recovery and Federal Disaster Funds through Recovery Com and misunity Federal Funds N Y shall 1 1 2through 3mail 3 . S eaCom ccopy . Documenom f unity S ta te and N Y shall 1 whom 1 2C.I. 3mail 3&. process S eaccopy . Documenoagainst f 60 S ta teit "B" orAttn: submittal of bids in whichno any of the prices "B"1017. orAttn: for submittal lump sum ofwhere bids or unit inany which items any are of theofficer prices forinlump sumwhere or unit items are advertising and accepts Bronx County Courthouse, Bronx County Courthouse, NY NY Purpose: lawful 1017. Purpose: any lawful EXECUTIVE SOLAR LLC and of any of any 1-877-763-2379 officer in DE Cert of DE Cert of LLP, Partner-in-charge LLP, Partner-in-charge 10003 Purpose: 10003 Purpose: the LLC: 169 Bowery, Apt 3B, LLC LLC formed in Delaware (DE)detriment formed in Block Delaware (DE) pose: Any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of ETERNotice of Formation of ETER$99. 100 pills for $150. for significantly unbalanced to the potential significantly of the Department unbalanced may to the be cause potential detriment of the Department may be cause may be served and shall mail Development Grants. A project Development funded by Block and conceived Grants. A project funded by and conceived d e s ig n a te d a g e n t o f L L C d e s ig n a te d a g e n t o f L C Notice of Form ation of act. act. Room 600, 851 Grand ConRoom 600, 851 Grand Conliability matters, for its failure to Lexinginsert Appl. for Auth. filed with Se- Form against the 2019 LLC is process against the LLCL44 is process Dated: November 18,of2019 #98015 Dated: November 18, #98015 Form filed: DE Sec. of State, filed: DE Sec. State, of 560 of Rudin matters, 560 LexingNotice of Qualification of 525 tary. tary. NY, NY 10002. Purpose: Any 11/17/20. SSNY designat11/17/20. SSNY designatonRudin on for a determination ofNY non-responsiveness and for the a rejection determination ofofthe of bid. non-responsiveness and the rejection of the bid. NIS FINE CHEMICALS USA NIS FINE CHEMICALS USA FREE shipping. Money back a copy of any process against through the NY Rising Community through Reconstruction the NY Rising program Community of Reconstruction program of upon whom process against upon whom process against EAST 75TH STREET, LLC course, Bronx, on Janucourse, Bronx, NY on Januan advertisement for any cy. of State NY (SSNY) on C/O the LLC: 620 W 42nd St C/O the LLC: 620 W 42nd St Notice of Formation of SIGNotice of Formation of SIGDiv. ofof Corp, John G. Div. ofof formation Corp, John G. EXECUTIVE SOLAR LLC ton Ave., 6th of Fl.,LLC NY, upon NY ton Ave., 6th Fl.,LLC NY, NY lawful activity. ed as agent ed as agent of upon Notice formation of Jess Notice of Jess LLC Arts. of Org. filed with LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Formation of BRG WESTguaranteed! 1-855-579-8907 the LLC is served C/O theYork, LLC: 175 the Governor’s Office of Storm the Recovery. Governor’s Proposers Office m offor ust Storm Proposers mshall ust it Recovery. may served and itArts. may and shall ofbe Org. filed with Secy. arySolicitation 29,process 2018 at ary 29, 2018 2:00 p.m., documents (Specifications Solicitation ONLY) will documents beatof available (Specifications ONLY) will be5, available for 11/22/21. Office location: NY Apt 21A, New York, NY 21A, New NY cause. Credit forof2:00 errors in SP LLC Arts. of Appl. SP 5,filed LLC Arts. of Apt NATURE NATURE Townsend Townsend Bldg., PO Box Bldg., POArts. Box 10022. DE addr. LLC: Cor10022. DE addr. LLC: Corforbe Auth. with Seth against itp.m., may process against itfunding may whom whom Interiors LLC of Trayah LLC of agency Secy. ofInteriors State NY (SSNY) Secy. of State of (SSNY) SIDE LLC with the Secy. West 12 Street, Apt.lawful 4B, download download for of the full duration starting of5in December 9,Dover, 2019 forany theof full duration ofas comply with and comply requirements, with and asallof well funding requirements, as well as mail process to:NY 263 Bowmail process to: 263 Bowof State offiled NY (SSNY) on p re m is eService sfree kSSNY nofo charge w n shall a starting s only 1 mail 5Lit5December 0 poration pTrayah re m9,Dover, is2019 eService sfree kSSNY nany o charge wCo., n19903. aall s Arts. 1 mail 5Any 0 agency County. LLC formed 10036. Purpose: Any lawful Purpose: Any Org. Org. filed with Secy. State with Secy. of State advertisements allowed DE DE 19903. Any 898, 898, poration Co., 251 251 Litcy. offiled State ofOffice NY (SSNY) on 10036. Notice ofof with Qualification of 79 Notice of of 79 Notice Qualification of 980 Notice of Qualification of 980 be served. be served. shall Get DIRECTV! ONLY DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Org Org filed with the Secy. of filed the Secy. Notice Qualification of on 08/02/21. Office location: on 08/02/21. location: the Solicitation Time from the City Record the Solicitation Website at City Time Record from the OnCity Record Website at City Record Onof State of NY (SSNY) on New York, NY 10011. PurNotice is hereby given that a Notice is hereby given that any other State, County, Town or any local other government State, County, or agency Town or local government or agency ery, 2nd Fl., NY, NY 10002. ery, 2nd Fl., NY, NY 10002. 1 2 /0 4 /1 7 . O ffic e lo c a tio na: U nionport R oad, U nit N o. U nionport R oad, U nit N o. Delaware (DE) on 10/13/20. activity. activity. of NYpurpose. (SSNY) on 11/19/20. of NY PROPERTY (SSNY) on 11/19/20. for first insertion. lawful purpose. lawful tle Falls Dr., Wilmington, DE tle Falls Dr., Wilmington, DE 11/22/21. Office location: NY PLACE OWNER PLACE OWNER CLIFTON CLIFTON RAIL LLC Appl. RAIL PROPERTY LLC Appl. process process to c/o Anbau Enterto c/o Anbau Enter$69.99/month! 155 Channels + $14.95 High Channels State State of regulations. NY (SSNY) on of NY (SSNY) on Line (https://mspwvw-dcscpfvp.nyc.gov/CROLPublicFacingWeb/) Line (https://mspwvw-dcscpfvp.nyc.gov/CROLPublicFacingWeb/) HVPG Spring Valley PreserNY County. SSNY designatNY County. SSNY designat11/21/19. Office loc.: NY license, number 1324834 for license, number 1324834 for pose: Any lawful activity. rules and A goal of 15% rules for and New regulations. York State Certified A goal of 15% for New York State Certified Purpose: any lawful activity. Purpose: any lawful activity. NY County. SSNY designat6A, Bronx, NY. All that cer6A, Bronx, NY. All that cerSSNY designated as agent of location: NY County. location: NY County. Office Office 19808. Cert. of Form. Cert. of Form. filed County. LLC formed in LLCas LLC Appl. forNY Auth. filedupon with ed Appl. for Auth. filed with for for Auth. filed with Secy. of Auth. filed with Secy. of prises, prises, 11 E. 26th St., NY,filed NY 19808. 11 E. 26th St., NY, NY & 1000s of Shows/Movies On Speed Internet. Free InstallaNY office locaoffice loca11/12/2020. 11/12/2020. CLASSIFIED vation, LLC. Authority filed ed agent of LLC as agent of LLC upon SSNY designated as County. liquor license, hasasCertified been apliquor has been apMinority Businesses and for Minority New York Businesses State and Newof York State A15% A15% Drawings areofnotState available download Drawings and MUST are not beState purchased. available for download anddesignated MUST be purchased. ed as license, agent of LLC upon tain plot, or of tain plot, piece or parcel of LLC upon process SSNY SSNY asCertified agent of for designated agent of Notice Notice of formation of 68of formation ofAll 68with Secy. of for the with Secy. ofwhom of the Delaware (DE) Secy. Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) State ofon NY10/13/20. (SSNY) State State of NY (SSNY) on NYupon (SSNY) on DEpiece addr. of parcel LLC: 251 DE addr. of LLC: 251 10010. 10010. Demand (w/SELECT InSmart DVR Includtion, Notice of Formation ofserved. CLIFNotice Formation of tion: NY County. has tion: NY County. has Sec. State ofitCLIFNY has with whom process against may whom process against it this may agent ofof LLC proplied for Marilyn 18 Rest Inc. plied Rest printed copy the of the solicitation and drawing set printed can copy beitO purchased of thebuildings solicitation at:SSNY New and York drawing set can beestablished purchased New York W om en w ned B usinesses has W been om en O wof ned Bat:SSNY usinesses for this been established for w h o mfor pMarilyn rformation o c HD e s LLC s18 awhom gof a in sInc. tNY it land, with buildings and land, with the and against may be LLC upon whom process LLC upon whom process 1509 1509 ESTATE LLC Arts. ESTATE Arts. of • Classified advertisements State of DE, John G. State of DE, John G. SSNY designated as agent of Notice of RIGHT on 11/06/19. Office location: on 11/06/19. Office location: Office location: NY Office location: 11/04/19. 11/04/19. Little Little Falls Dr., Wilmington, Falls Dr., Wilmington, Package.) PLUS cluded ed, Fee Voice Remote. Some FORD FORD HOUSE PRESERVAdesignated designated as agent been (SSNY) on 12/2/21. Office lo- be be SSNY shall mail SSNY mail oft sTransportation, City of Department Agency Chief oftPRESERVAContracting of served. the Agency Chief Contracting against itSSNY may be cess d/b/a Don Risd/b/a Don RisN Oserved. TIC E O F Giovanni FO Rshall M ATIO N Org. N O TIC O F Giovanni FO RM ATIO N must demonstrate project. their Proposers must efforts demonstrate to their efforts toin may beE served. shall i mCity p19808. r Department othe v eregular m e nearned t hrate e r of efiled o nOffice ibeen mproject. p19808. rthe o shall vHOUSE eProposers m email n sTransportation, tas hFederal e ragent efiled oto nOffice SSNY process itgood-faith may be served. itgood-faith may be served. against against Org. filed with the Secy. of filed with the Secy. of take Townsend Bldg., 401 Federal Townsend Bldg., 401 LLC upon whom process WAY LAUNDRY County. LLC formed in County. LLC formed NY NY County. LLC formed in OF County. LLC formed in DE DE Cert. of Form. Cert. of Form. Stream on Up toGROUP FIVE apply. 1-888-609restrictions TION, TION, L.P. Cert. of LPYork, L.P. of LP filed upon whom process against it Water upon whom process against it process Officer/Contract Management Unit, 55 Water Officer/Contract Street, Ground Management Floor, New Unit, 55 Street, Ground Floor, New York, New York County. cation: process to Cert. c/o Corporation to c/o Corporation served. The address SSNY torante to sell liquor at retail torante to sell liquor at retail OF A P. LEE PRODUCT A P. LEE PRODUCT achieve these goals. achieve these goals. m ail process to c/o P eter erected, situate, lying and erected, situate, lying and c/o Corporation Service Co., SSNY shall mail process to SSNY shall mail process to (SSNY) onon 12/03/2019 (SSNY) on NY NY their classification. Four9:00 line St., Dover, DE 19901. PurSt., Dover, DE 19901. Puragainst it (DE) may be served. LLC Arts. ofprocess Org. filed with Delaware (DE) on 10/23/19. Delaware 10/23/19. (DE) on 10/31/19. (DE) on12/03/2019 10/31/19. Delaware Delaware with with Secy. of between State, Div. of - 3:00 Secy. of State, Div. of - 3:00 New York 10041 a.m. New p.m., York Monday 10041 to between Friday, excludes 9:00 a.m. p.m., Monday Friday, excludes Screens Simultaneously at 9405 Secy. of State NY Secy. ofto State of NY may be served and shall mail be served and LLC registered in shall DE on Service Co., 80 State St.,mail AlCo., 80 State St., Alshall mail to Benin aoffice restaurant under thewith Alin aoffice restaurant under thewith AlLLC Arts. of Org. filed LLC Arts. of Org. filed Low, 44 E. 75th St., NY, NY b eholidays. i n gAny i401 nThe t hentrance eall B o risoexcept u g hSte. o fthepose: bmay eholidays. i nState gSide i401 n tthe hentrance eBuilding B o risofacing uof g hthe o fthewith 80 St., Albany, NY Corporation Service Co., 80 Service Corporation Service Co., 80 NY location NY County. location NY County. minimum on ads pose: lawful activity. Any activity. SSNY shall mail process to NY the (SSNY) on Princ. office of LLC: 1120 Princ. office LLC: 1120 designated as agent as agent off Corps., Federal St., Corps., Federal St., located on South The oflawful located on South Side of the Building facing the Additional Call No (SSNY) 08/05/21. Office on 08/05/21. Office copy ofon any process toSte. the copy of any process to the a a 3/29/21. designated bany, NY 12207-2543. Purbany, NY 12207-2543. Sinanaj, Madison jamin The Town will not reimburse any (SSNY) individual The Town orSSNY will firm not withreimburse any12207costs any individual firm any coholic Control coholic Control tSSNY h eCorporation SSt., eorcBeverage y been . of owith fService S ta tcosts ePurooff SSNY tSSNY h e Secy. S designated e DIRECTV! cBeverage yofbeen . NY oCost. f425 S ta t ONLY e oDI10021. Bronx, County of Bronx,(14 City Bronx, County of Bronx, City 12207-2543. DE addr. of St., Albany, NY Albany, NY 12207State State Get has designated has designated SSNY ndthe ndtheAmericas, Vietnam Veterans Memorial. You will not be Vietnam allowed Veterans in building Memorial. without You will not be allowed in building without spirituals and horoscopes c/o Co., 07/13/2021 NY office location of the Ste. of the Americas, Ste. Ave. Ave. LLC upon whom process LLC upon whom process 4, 4, Dover, DE 19901. PurDover, DE 19901. PurRECTV 1-888-534-6918 location: location: NY County. 520 Ave, Suite LLC: 520 2lawful Ave, SuitePrinc. 20B, of LLC upon whom pro-of their agent pose: Any pose: Any lawful Ave., Ste. 1001, New York, Law atagent 358 W activity. 44th Street, Law 358 Wlawful 44th Street, associated with associated proposal. with theactivity. preparation proposal. NY(SSNY) has been desigNY(SSNY) has been desigNotice Qualification Qualification Purpose: activity. LLC: 251 Little Falls Dr., a ngovernment d SAny t of a t lawful eissued o f identification N e w Y o(driver's rof k , Notice aLLC: n d S t of aNY t2 eissued oCounty. f the N epreparation w YPrinc. o20B, rof k ,of their 2543. 2543. Purpose: Any lawful Purpose: Any lawful 155 Channels & $35/month! license, government passport, etc.). (driver's license, passport, etc.). as an upon whom proanatagent upon whom pro80 State St., Albany, NY as lines). Bronx County. SSNY has 1803, NY, NY 10036. SSNY NY, 10036. SSNY itsAny may pose: activity. pose: Any activity. of lawful LP: 30 Hudson of LP: 30 office office New New York, NY identification 10016. PurYork, NY 10016. Pur- 1803, cess against it may beHudson served New NY New NY NY Any nagainst a t e against dYork, a its NY amay afor gbe ebe npremises tserved. u p oofn cess nagainst a t e10017. dYork, aof aPurpose: afor gbe ebe npremises tserved. u plawoOn n MONTICELLO STRUCMONTICELLO STRUCWilmington, DE 19808. Cert. Block 3943 and Lot 2867 toBlock 3943 and Lot 2867 toactivity. activity. 1000s Shows/Movies cess itn may served against itn may served 12207-2543. DE addr. been designated as an agent as agent of LLC as agent of LLC designated designated SSNY SSNY shall mail process to shall mail process to A deposit of $50.00 is required for the specification A deposit of books $50.00 and is required a deposit for the specification books and a deposit Yards, 72nd Fl., NY, NY Yards, 72nd Fl., NY, NY pose: Any lawful activity. pose: Any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of HAN Notice of Formation of HAN and shall mail process to: c/o consumption. consumption. ful activity. The Town of awith Babylon encourages The m inority Town and of Babylon wom en encourages owned moinority and wom eng aowned w h m p r o c e s s a in s t it w h o m p r o c e s s a g a in s t it TURED PRODUCTS MSPTURED PRODUCTS MSPof Form. filed DE Secy. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY g e th e r w ith a n u n d iv id e d g e th e r w ith n u n d iv id e d Demand (w/SELECT All Inshall mail a copy of any shall mail a copy of any and and LLC: 251 Little Falls Dr., of $50.00 isFormation required for each drawing Notice setofin$50.00 the of form isFormation required of a date certified foron each check drawing 10001. set in Corporation the form of a date certified check upon whom process against it upon upon whom process against it DYNASTY whom process against it m c/o c/o Service Co. Corporation Service Co. Notice ofAppl. of filed THE of THE Latest which Latest on which 10001. DYNASTY LLC Arts. of KU LLC Arts. of CT System, 28 businesses to participate all businesses toKU participate all bids. N otice of Form ation of Am ay Corporation be against served. The Post ay be served. The Post 16, for interest Auth. LLC Appl. for Auth. of State, 401 Federal St., #4, 0.0133 percent 0.0133 interest inbids. DISH TV $64.99 For 190 Package.) PLUS cluded process the LLC is process against the LLC is Notice ofpercent Formation ofinfiled SIGNotice of served. Formation ofinState SIGorLLC money order or money order payable tointhe16, New York City Department payable of to New LP York City Department of is Wilmington, DESecy. 19808. Cert. may be served and mail may may beStreet, SSNY shall beaddress served. SSNY shall 80 State St., Albany, 80 State Albany, (CSC), (CSC), BIG RED UMBRELLA, LLC BIG RED UMBRELLA, LLC the LP may dissolve isthe the may dissolve Org. filed with Secy. of filed with ofof State New York, NY Org. Liberty th th S QU Ais RLLC: E+ DUp DSt., Oshall M I FIVE N O Office to which the Office address to which the with Secy. of State ofPersonal NY with Secy. of No State of NY Notice of SP Formation of THE Notice of filed Formation THE Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: • Common Classified Display (boarder theTransportation. Elements. Apthe Common Elements. Ap$14.95 High Channels Notice here by given, purNo Cash or Checks Transportation. Accepted. Cash or Personal Checks Accepted. Stream on toaddr. the LLC: 155 W 68 the 155 W 68 C/O C/O SP 4, LLC Arts. of 4, LLC Arts. of NATURE NATURE of Form. with DE Secy. a copy of any process against mail process to c/o Corporamail process to c/o CorporaNY 12207-2543. DE addr. of NY 12207-2543. DE of Arts. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of Org. filed with Secy. 12/31/2119. 12/31/2119. SSNY designatSSNY designatThelawful Town reserves the right to reject The any Town or(SSNY) all reserves bids. rightLLC: to reject any all bids.mail of NY onthe08/18/21. of NYor(SSNY) on NY 10005. DE address of OPPORTUNITY II, LP Cert. (SSNY) on amount 08/02/21. Office (SSNY) onwith 08/02/21. Office SSNY shall a08/18/21. copy of Street, SSNY shall mail a the copy ofat BOROUGHS GOLF, LLC BOROUGHS GOLF, LLC Any activity. orPre-Bid picture) advertisements proximate of judgeproximate amount of Speed Internet. Free Installasuant to law, that the NYC Screens Simultaneously Street, New York, 10023. New York, NY 10023. Org. Org. filed Secy. ofjudgeState filed Secy. of State of State, 401Co., Federal St., #4, the LLC is C/O LLC: tion tion Service Co., 80LP State St., Office LLC: Service 80Little State St., LLC: CSC, 251 Falls CSC, 251 Little of of NY (SSNY) of of NY (SSNY) AState meeting (Optional) hason scheduled AState Pre-Bid for meeting December (Optional) 16, 2019 hason scheduled forwith December 16, 2019 ed ed as agent of LP upon as agent ofNY upon Office location: County. NY County. c/o The Corporation Trust o f Lprocess P file d HD w ith S eCall cIncludyFalls . Rd, of location: NY County. LLCbeen location: NY County. LLCbeen Arts. Arts. Org. filed with Secy. oflocation: Org. filed with Secy. any against the LLC any against the LLC take the earned rate Chief of Smart DVR tion, m ent is regular $119,173.75 plus m ent is $119,173.75 plus Department of Consumer AfAdditional Cost. DINo Purpose: Any lawful activity. Purpose: Any lawful activity. ofTheresa (SSNY) on 11/19/20. of NYof (SSNY) onOrange 11/19/20. Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: at 10:00 AM in the Agency Contracting atNY 10:00 Officer AM Bid in the Room, Agency Ground Contracting Officer Bid Room, Ground Albany, Albany, Dr., process Dr., NY1209 12207-2543. DE NY 12207-2543. DE Wilmington, DE 19808. Wilmington, DE 19808. 1604 Williamsbridge Office location: NY Office location: NY 11/06/20. 11/06/20. Sabatino Theresa Sabatino process against itChief may process against it may whom whom Company, St, 110 SERVICES 110 SERVICES Princ. office of LLC: 307 W. Princ. office of LLC: 307 W. S t a t e o f N Y ( S S N Y ) o formed in Delaware (DE) on formed in Delaware (DE) on of State of NY (SSNY) on of State of NY (SSNY) on s e r v e d . S S N Y s h a ll m a il s e r v e d . S S N Y s h a ll m a iln ed, Fee Voice Remote. Some interest and costs. Premises interest and costs. Premises their classification. Display fairs willForm. hold a Public HearRECTV 1-888-534-6918 Office location: NY County. Office location: NY County. Floor, 55 Water Street, NYC. All Floor, 55 bidders Water are Street, requested NYC. toAll bidders are requested to Any activity. addr. of LLC: Little Falls addr. LLC: 251 Little Falls Cert. Cert.lawful of Form. filed with Secy. of filed with Secy. Bronx, NY 10461. Purpose: County. SSNY designated as prospective County. SSNY as prospective Commissioner ofdesignated General Services Commissioner of251 General Services be served. SSNY shall mail be served. SSNY shall mail Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. 38th St., NY, NY 10018. 38th St., NY, NY 10018. 07/29/21. Princ. office of LLC: 07/29/21. Princ. office of LLC: 1 2 /1 5 /1 7 . O ffic e lo c a tio n5: Office location: NY Office location: NY 11/23/20. 11/23/20. process to 660 Nereid Ave process to 660 Nereid Ave apply. Promo Exrestrictions will be sold subject to proviwill be sold subject to provion of Wednesday, January ingState, attend. Seats are limited. In this connection, attend. please Seats limit are the limited. number In this of of connection, please limit the as number of of Dr., (boarder or picture) advertisedesignated as agent designated agent SSNY SSNY Notice of Formation of 5 Notice Formation of Dr., Wilmington, DE 19808. of Wilmington, DE 19808. of State, Div. of Corps., 401 Div. of Corps., 401 Any lawful activity. of LLC upon whom proof LLC upon whom proagent agent process process to Corporation Serto Corporation Serof Form. filed with DE Sec of SSNY designated as agent of SSNY agent 600 Third Ave., 21st Fl., NY, 600 Third Ave., 21st Fl., NY, County. Princ. office ofSecy. LLC: County. Princ. office of NY Princ. of, #Federal 1 , of Bdesignated rForm. oSt. n NYC x-,filed N eas w4, YDover, oLLC: r of kof, FRANKLIN #Federal 1 , County. B r07/21/21. oSt. natNYC x-,2:00 N LLC e p.m. w YDover, oatr kof attendees tocolumn maximum ofmust two personnel attendees perof firm. to Please maximum submit of two the personnel per firm. Please submit the 1-888-609pires sions of filed Judgment Insions filed Judgment In08, 2020 42 ments one LLC upon whom process LLC upon whom process LLC Arts. Arts. FRANKLIN of Form. filed with with Secy. Cert. Cert. Ste. Ste. 4,office cess against it wide may be cess against it designated may be Date: January 9,State 2018 Date: January 9, 2018 vice vice Co., St., AlCo., State St., 401 Federal St, Ste 4, LLC State, LLC upon whom process upon whom process NY SSNY SSNY 56 Leonard St., Apt. 39W, 56 Leonard St., Apt. 39W, LBroadway, P :19901. c / o with APurpose: e n d AAny m eState ica attendees to name(s) no80 attendees later to Manager no80 later than two (2)Al10470. 10470. 9405 d ename(s) x10016. #14SSNY 3 of 8lines 0 2 4shall 6deep; / designated 2 0mail 1 2the . proNProject o NY dagainst eManager x10016. #NY 3 itof 8 0 2 4shall 6 than /2 0mail 1two 2the . (2) NProject o bany, 5sthcFloor, on arlawperFREE! FREE! may be served. it may be served. against be two Org. filedit John with Secy. of State filed Secy. of of State, John G. Townsend of G. Townsend 19901. Purpose: Any law- Org. DEState, DE served. served. SSNY probany, 12207-2543. Name NY 12207-2543. Name Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: against it may be served. against may be served. business days prior to the pre-bid meeting business date. days prior to the pre-bid meeting date. Savings Includelawful anSSNY American Savings Include andAmerican Walk-In Tubs as agent of LLC upon whom as agent of LLC upon whom NY 10013. SSNY desigNY 10013. desigNY, NY, L L C , 6 3 5 M a i s o n A v e ., Notice of Formation Purpose: Any activity Purpose: Any lawful activity Cash willFredda be Cash will beofmail Accepted. 110 SERVICES tition for CASA on AZUL. INC of to SSNY shall process to and SSNY shall process columns, 28 Accepted. lines deep; 3 (SSNY) onprocess 08/12/21. NY (SSNY) of Bldg., Bldg., 401 Federal St.,general Ste. to 4, SSNY ful NY activity. 401 Federal St., Ste. to 4, of ful activity. cess to Herz Brown, cess to Fredda Herz Brown, Standard Right Height Toilet Standard Right Height Toilet08/12/21. and addr. each general addr. ofmail each any lawful activity. SSNY shall mail to shall mail process against may bewriting process against may be nated as agent ofprocess LLC upon nated agent of upon-INOffice STERNBUCH FAMILY Ste. 1300, NY, NY 10022. FREE! ($500 Value) FREE! ($500 Value) WALK BATHTUB SALE! SAVE $1,500 WALK All questions shall beitsubmitted in to Allthe questions designated shall person beitsubmitted indicated in writing to the designated person indicated establish, maintain, and oper-Corporation Service Co., 80 Corporation Service Co., 80 columns, 56 lines deep. Office as location: NYLLC County. location: NY County. DE 19901. Purpose: DE 19901. Purpose: Dover, Dover, 450 E. 83rd St., Apt. 16A, 450 E. 83rd St., Apt. 16A, are available from are available from partner partner DeFoe Corp. invites all inDeFoe Corp. invites all inDeFoe Corp. invites all inDeFoe Corp. invites all inCorporation Service Co., 80 Corporation Service Co., 80 served. SSNY shall SSNY shall mail proprocess it may Any process against it may whom whom PROPERTIES LLC Arts. of Latest date on which the LP of below. isrDecember Deadline for 2019. submission of questions is lawful December 20,against 2019. L abelow. u NY r a Deadline C . Display B r for o wsubmission n email , E or sproq questions . , served. LtState asSt., C Ba r20, w nAny eu ,a 12207E unenclosed sidewalk ate andesignated NY Albany, as agent asyears agent of SSNY SSNY Classified (boarder activity. lawful activity. NY, NY, 10028. Any 10028. Purpose: Purpose: lawful Any SSNY. ea rueNY tthe e d.Albany, nod lprinc. i sfAny iqe.d, SSNY. tState ee rr ee ssSt., tof ee ddFormation aaSSNY nn dd q uu aa12207lllawful iiffimail State St., Albany, NY 1220712207tAny tPurpose: qNY iee dd State tbe tdesignated eo d nr md a q loi ff mail i2✔ e4of d th Backed by cess to the LLCPurpose: at the princ. cess LLC atq the be served. shall served. shall Neorte i csSt., eupon fAlbany, FaSSNY o whom tNY i ou naprocess 6 LLC Nmay o tAmerican i c filed eupon F o whom rm a140 t iAve o nprocess f State 2✔the 4Bac 6 Org. with ofoof dissolve is 12/12/2117. Notice of Dulce cafe' ato fStandard’s 369 7Secy. in Referee Referee 2543.toactivity. 2543. Purpose: Any lawful Purpose: Any lawful Mr. Hari Velkur, LLC picture) placed as close Mr. to Hari Velkur, lawful activity. lawful experience exp activity. activity. MWBE firms to DE submit proMWBE firms to submit pro2543. Purpose: Operations of 2543. Purpose: Operations of MWBE firms to submit proMWBE firms to submit prooffice of the LLC. DE addr. of office of the LLC. addr. of process process to Sarika Singh at to Sarika Singh at SPRING STREET CONDOMINISPRING STREET CONDOMINIof NY (SSNY) on 07/12/21. SSNY designated as agent & Development, Consultant Borough Brooklyn for a Director ofas Engineering Director Programs, Engineering ACCO, and Construction Programs, ACCO, activity. activity. against toit the may be served. against it of may classifications rules andand Construction ✔ Ultra low entry for easy entering &be exitingserved. ✔ Ultr posals for theofFinance, following NYS& Program posals for following restaurants. restaurants. posals to Of the NYS posals following NYS LLC: c/o Corporation Service LLC: c/o Corporation Service the princ. office of filed the NYS LLC. the princ. office of the LLC. Office location: NY County. UM (NEW YORK) BORROWER, UM (NEW YORK) BORROWER, LLC Art. Org. with of LP upon whom process Finance, Contracts & Program Management Contracts Management of two years. term K n u c k l e s , K o m o s i n s k i & K n u c k l e s , K o m o s i n s k i & ® mail process✔to shall mail process✔to SSNY shall SSNY Technology Patented Quick Drain Pat Notice of permit. Formation of BIONotice of ent Formation of BIOmakeup Departm ofFORMATION: TransportaDepartm ent of TransportaDepartm ent of TransportaDepartm ent of TransportaNOTICE OF NOTICE OF FORMATION: Co., 251 Little Falls Dr., Co., 251 Little Falls Dr., A124TH golf simulation A golf simulation Purpose: Purpose: Princ. office of LLC: 276 LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. SSNY on 09/06/21. Office Loagainst it m ay be served. New York City Department ofnTransportation New York City Department of Transportation 122-124 W 124TH ST LLC, 122-124 W ST LLC, M a n fr o , L L P , 5 6 5 T a x te r M a fr o , L L P , 5 6 5 T a x te r Barbara Gutman, 4ofproject: Bryant Barbara 4 Bryant ✔ Lifetime Warrantyof onGutman, the bath AND installation, ✔ Life PROTECTORS, LLC Arts. of Wilmington, PROTECTORS, LLC Arts. of tion Qualification of Qualification of Notice of Formation ofproject: CLIF- Notice of Formation CLIFtion project: project: tion -golf Best Value Bidwith tion Mental Health CounMental Health CounAbbott Abbott 55DE Water Street, 8th Floor, New York, New York 55DE Water 10041 Street, 8th Floor, York, New York 10041 Wilmington, 19808. Cert. 19808. Cert. and related retailer. and Riverside NY, oNotice f S-golf t Best a9th tof erelated oValue f NNY, Yretailer. (Bid SNY S N10018. Y ) ALoINCLUDING n Park, oNotice f Slabor t a9th t shall e Fl., oDr., f byNmail YSte. ( SNY S2-G, N10018. Y ) ALoINC n NY County. SSNY cation: SSNY process to Arts. of Org. filed with the New Arts. of Org. filed the FORD backed American Standard Road, Ste. 590, Elm sford, Road, Ste. 590, Elm sford, Fl., NY, Park, Org. Org. filed with Secy. of212-839-9403, State of filed with Secy. ofof State LLC ApLLC ApFORD HOUSE PRESERVACLASSIFICATIONS Telephone No. Fax No. 212-839-4241 Telephone No. 212-839-9403, Fax No. 212-839-4241 seling, seling, PLLC. Articles Org. PLLC. ofof Org. of Secy. Form. filed with DE Secy. NY SSNY 1TOUR 2 /1 2 / 1HOUSE 7HOLDINGS, . Any O fficlawful e PRESERVAlo c aactivity. tio n : ✔ N44 Y Hydrotherapy 1TOUR 2 /1 210025. / 1jets 7HOLDINGS, . Any O ffic e lo635 cdesignated aactivity. tio nMadi:✔ NreYH asArticles agent the Purpose: designated the Partnership, SSNY SSNY on 08/19/2021. Office on 08/19/2021. Office for ancopies invigorating massage 44 Request for of the N YForm. 1 0 (SSNY) 5 2filed 3 , Awith t on t o rDE n e y s f o r N Y 1 0 5 2 3 , A t t o r n e y s f o r Purpose: lawful NY 12/03/19. NY (SSNY) on 12/03/19. of of pl. pl. for Auth. filed with Secy. of for Auth. filed with Secy. of TION GP, LLC Arts. of Org. TION GP, LLC Arts. of Org. hvelkur@dot.nyc.gov hvelkur@dot.nyc.gov C o nNY tra c t Federal # D 2SSNY 6Email: 3St. 6 3Ste. 4 of- loc. C ttupon rr a cc tt whom ## D 66 33State 66 33has 40 ofth -- C C oo nnNY aCounty. D 22SSNY o n t r Princ. a c t office # D 2 of 6 3LLC: 6 3 0246 - County. filed w/ Secretary of State filed w/ Secretary of of State, 401 FederalEmail: St. Ste. of State, 401 as agent of LLC upon whom LLC process County. Princ. office of LLC: 246 son A ve., S te. 1300, N Y , County. has loc. th vocable consent agreement Plaintiff Plaintiff All advertisement accepted Office location: NY County. Office location: NY County. State NY on State of against NY (SSNY) on Notice of Qualification 80 Notice ofof Qualification 80 filed with Secy. of at State ofLLC, NY filed with Secy. of (SSNY) State ofSSNY NY Bridge Replacement, I-84 been Bridge Replacement, I-84 Bridge 3 of LocaBridge Repairs at 3 of LocaYES(SSNY) MAMA CREATIVE YES MAMA CREATIVE LLC, (SSNY) Office 9/9/2020. Office NYDover, NY 4, Dover, DE 19901. Pur- 4, DE9/9/2020. 19901. Purprocess itto: may be itRepairs may be served and against Spring St., NY, NY 10013. Spring St., NY, NY location: 10013. SSNY NY 10022. Name and addr. been designated as agent designated as agent may be addressed DepartBill de Blasio, Mayor Bill de Blasio, Mayor for publication is classified office of LLC: 1305 Fuloffice of&LLC: 1305 FulPrinc. Princ. Office location: NY Office NY 11/07/19. 11/07/19. STREET REALTY LLC Appl. STREET REALTY LLC Appl. Notice of Qualification of Notice of Qualification of (SSNY) on 08/05/21. Office (SSNY) on 08/05/21. Office Limited Time Offer! Call Today! Eastbound W estbound Eastbound & W estbound PWRcell, Generac’s fully-integrated t i o n s i n L o n g I s l a n d t i o n s i n L o n g I s l a n d of Org. filed with the of Org. filed with the Arts. Arts. location: New York County. location: New York County. pose: Any lawful activity. pose: Any lawful activity. served. shall mail upon proshall mail process to:against Hilda designated as agent of LLC upon designated as agent ofAppl. LLC of each general partner are upon whom process against upon whom process ment of SSNY Consumer Affairs, Trottenberg, Commissioner Trottenberg, tonaccording St., Rahway, NJ 07065. ton NJ 07065. to the Polly standard County. LLC formed in SoulCycle County. LLC formed in for for filed with Auth. filed with Secy. of SoulCycle LLC Appl. for LLC for location: NY County. Princ. solar +of battery storage system, stores o v eSt., rLLC MRahway, e tmay r o Nbe oPolly r t agent h R a of i l Commissioner o v Vives-Vasquez, eAuth. rLLC Mon eNY tmay r oCounty. N oas r tSecy. h R a of iof l location: Towns of Babylon & Princ. HunTowns Babylon HunSSNY SSNY 06/10/2020. Office on 06/10/2020. Office SSNY designated as SSNY designated agent cess to Jacob M.SSNY. Weinreb at 1611 Park C. whom process against it& be Auth. whom process against itofmay be served. be served. the available from PurATTN: Foil Officer, 42 BroadSSNY designated SSNY designated as Fishkill, agent of the Notice Qual KING PENDelaware (DE) on 08/21/17. Delaware (DE) on 08/21/17. of6D, NY (SSNY) on office of NY (SSNY) on State State Auth. filed with ofmay State filed with Secy. State office of LLC: 30 Hudson of LLC: 30 Hudson c l a of s sQual i f i cofa KING tas i oagent n PENs . of Notice solar energy thatSecy. can power your whole Road -upon Tow nof of Road -upon Tow n City of Fishkill, tington & the of Glen tington &County. the City of Glen loc: NY County. SSNY has loc: NY SSNY has Orserved. visit: www.walkintubinfo.com/nypress whom process whom process PLLC of PLLC the princ. office of the LLC. New York, NY Avenue served. SSNY shall mail process SSNY shall mail process SSNY shall mail process to: SSNY shall mail process to: pose: Any lawful activity. way, New York, NY 10004. upon whom process upon whom process LLC LLC home during utility power outages and of GUIN OPPORTUNITY FUND GUIN OPPORTUNITY FUND office of LLC: 1270 office of LLC: 1270 Princ. Princ. 11/08/19. Office location: NY 11/08/19. Office location: NY NY (SSNY) on 08/16/21. NY (SSNY) on 08/16/21. of Yards, 72nd Fl., NY, NY Yards, 72nd Fl., NY, NY Misclassification is not permitNY NY been designated as agent been designated as agent Cove, NY Cove, NY against it271 may beYork served. against it271 may be served. Purpose: 10029. Purpose: Any lawful to T save h of e location: Byou o aLLC rd odesignated fonM a n aelectric g e rsas o f Office to T h of e location: Bthe oAny a rd olawful f M a nactivity. aCounty. g e rs NY of The LLC,itAuthority New Av- The LLC, New York Avmoney your bill. against may befiled served. against may befiled served. III LLC,axitAuthority with III LLC, Ave. the Americas, NY, NY Ave. Americas, NY, LLC formed in 10001. formed in County. County. Office NY County. NY 10001. SSNY designated as SSNY ted. process against whom process against upon whom upon shallprofessional mail copy ofwith pro- enue, shall mail copy of proSSNY SSNY Carem professional Carem ax serTrump Hotel Condominium Trump SoHo Hotel Condominium Brooklyn, NY 11213. Brooklyn, NY 11213. enue, shall mail processserto the shall mail process to purpose. SSNY SSNY the SSNY onArts. 07/27/2021. OfSSNY on 07/27/2021. OfSSNY designated as LLC Notice SSNY of designated formation as of 10020. 10020. (DE) on 05/05/99. (DE) on 05/05/99. Delaware Delaware LLC formed in Delaware (DE) formed in Delaware (DE) agent of LLC upon whom proagent ofSoHo LLC upon whom proAdditional inform ation m ay Additional inform ation m ay the LLC may be served. the LLC may be served. Additional inform ation m ay Additional inform ation m ay cess to: 315 Madison Ave cess to: 315 Madison Ave N O TIC E O F FO R M ATIO N vices LLC. of org. filed vices LLC. Arts. of org. filed Purpose: Any Lawful PurPurpose: Any Lawful PurNY at the princ. office of the LLC. NY at the princ. office of the LLC. BASIS CHARGE NOTICE OF FORMATION OF FORMATION Corporation Corporation Service Co.,LLC 80 fice Service Co.,LLC 80 NOTICE fice loc:OFNY County. loc: NY County. agent of LLCfrom upon whom proagent Celebrity ofthe LLC Advisors upon whom LLC proSSNY designated as agent of cess SSNY designated as agent of on Notice qualification ofAppl. Re03/25/11. SSNY designat03/25/11. SSNY designaton cess against it York, may be against it process may be be obtained from David Ambe obtained from David Amshall mail process to: shall mail to: SSNY SSNY be obtained from David Ambe obtained David Am#1501B, #1501B, New York, NY New NY OF BPBB Media, LLC. Arts with the SSNY on 10/19/17. with the SSNY on 10/19/17. pose. pose. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Notice of formation of Viento OF AMERIGO HOLDINGS OF St., Albany, NY point 12207. formed St., Albany, State State formed in DE on 04/16/2015. inPurpose: on cess cess for O may Auth. filed with it LLC the may Secy be of upon whom upon whom LLC LLC source Energy Systems, LLC ed as agent of LLC asrgagainst agent of upon served. SSNY probased a 9DE -Y6o04/16/2015. 9rNY - 12207. a tt oo AMERIGO aaLLC, ttSSNY 99 11 44 --shall 66 HOLDINGS 99any 99mail --process 77lawful 44pro4 The 299 West 12 The 299 12 a 4 00th served. a t oREQUEST aLLC, tagainst 914 6it9West 9mail -process 7 4upon 4be 0th ed A-shall FREE QUOTE! 10017. any lawful 10017. Purpose: of filed w ith Secy. of O f f iCharges c eis: designated N eare w lawful YFORMATION o r kon . Sagent S N Y SSNY O ftfoi cArticles eais: t designated N e1w4 k9activity. .filed S7agent S4with N4 Y0 LLC Films Arts. of Org. filed LLC of Org. Articles of NY, Org. filed with NOTICE OF NOTICE OF FORMATION Purpose: Any activity. Purpose: Any lawful SSNY as as served. SSNY shall mail proserved. State of SSNY shall (SSNY) proagainst against itdefoecorp.com may be served. it defoecorp.com may be served. Application for of process against it may it )may whom cess toLLC Corporation Service toApt Corporation Service and line. damato@ or damato@ or Street Apt 3J, NY 10014. Street 3J, NY, NY 10014. damato@ defoecorp.com or cess damato@ or whom activity. activity. S t a t eprocess o f NNY Y against (Certificate S Smail NY oon n d esize s ALLTID i gwhom n a tcharacters e dprocess a g e per n tagainst uLLC. p o n upon dthe e s Secretary i gwhom nof a tdefoecorp.com e dprocess a gState e n tagainst uof p277 o n Notice with the Secy. of NY (SSNY) of NY Secretary of State of NY the SPIRITS ALLTID SPIRITS LLC. OF OF Notice Formation of of Formation of 277 upon to c/o Corporation Serto c/o N.Y. Corporation Office location: Sercess cess 10/29/19 SSNY shall mail process to SSNY shall mail process to Authority filed with the Secy be served. SSNY shall mail be served. SSNY shall mail Co., 80 State St., Albany, Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY Upon process reaching 15against lines thethe whom bids@ defoecorp.com bids@ defoecorp.com Purpose: Any lawful purpose. Purpose: lawful purpose. bids@ defoecorp.com bids@ 1 2 / 1 9 / of 1 7 .Formation O f f i c e l oof c : 319 NY Noticedefoecorp.com ofAny Formation of 319 Notice whom process against the 03/26/2021 NY office locaon (SSNY) on 11/5/2019. Office (SSNY) on 11/5/2019. Office Arts Arts of Org filed with Secy of of Org filed with Secy of 35A LLC Arts. of Org. 35A LLC Arts. of Org. FIFTH FIFTH the LLC may be served. the LLC may be served. FEYNMAN POINT LLC, Arts. FEYNMAN Notice of formation POINT LLC, of Signs Arts. Notice of formation of Signs vice vice New York County. SSNY has Co. (CSC), 80 State St., Co. (CSC), 80 State St., Gideon Gideon Rothschild, Moses & Rothschild, Moses & of State of New York (SSNY) process to c/o Corporation process to c/o Corporation 12207-2543. Purpose: Any 12207-2543. Purpose: Any converts column C ounty. SSN Y W e s tactivity. 10 6 t h12207-2543. S t r e e t , L LDE C W est 10 6 t h12207-2543. S t designated r e e t , L LDE C L Lrate C m afiled y NY bmail eto s eprocess rthe v e inch. dSSNY a to: n d SSNY Llocation: LC mshall afiled yNY bmail ewith sArts eprocess rthe v e of dSSNY aOrg n d filed tion NY County. SSNY has County. NY County. location: Albany, Albany, NY NY State of on State of NY (SSNY) on filed with Secy. of State of NY with Secy. ofArts State of NY lawful lawful activity. SSNY shall to: Org. with Org. LLC. LLC. ofSSNY Org of of Candles Candles designated as agent been LLP, 405 Lexington LLP, 405with Lexington Singer Singer on 05/18/2021. NY office loService Co. (CSC), 80 State Co. (CSC), 80 State Bid Date: January 25,SSNY 2018 Bid Date: 25, 2018 Any deviation from(SSNY) solid comBid Date: January 24, 2018 Bid Date: 24, 2018 agent upon whom process Art. of12 filed Sec. of Service Art. ofof Org. filed with Sec. ofit shall mail process against to The shall mailon process against to (SSNY) th January th January been designated an agent designated as agent of designated as agent of LLC ofOrg. LLC: CSC, 251 Little LLC: CSC, 251 Little addr. addr. 11/7/19. Office location: NY 11/7/19. Office location: NY (SSNY) 08/02/21. Office on 08/02/21. Office The LLC, 369asOffice West 126th LLC, 369 West 126th on on filed filed 09/22/2020. loc: 09/22/2020. with Secy. Office of State loc: ofLLC NY with Secy. ofas State of NY upon whom process against Ave., 12is Fl., NY, NY 10174. Ave., Fl.,NY NY, NY 10174. cation NY County. SSNY has Albany, 12207-2543. Albany, NY 12207-2543. St., St., Notice hereby given that a Notice is hereby given that a position such indentation, m a y b e s e rv e d a n d s h a ll State of NY (SSNY) on SepState of NY (SSNY) on SepLegal Corp Solutions LLC, Legal Corp Solutions LLC, whom process against it upon upon whom process against it location: upon whom process against it Notice ison hereby thatloa Notice is hereby given that a DE Falls Falls SSNY SSNY Dr., Wilmington, DE Dr., Wilmington, DE County. County. NY County. NY County. Princ. location: Street, Suite, NY, NY Street, Mgmt Suite, NY,Princ. NY SSNY hasdesignated been des(SSNY) SSNY on 5/29/20. hasdesignated been Office deslo(SSNY) Office mayaddr. be served. The Post OfDE DE addr. of5/29/20. LLC:given c/o Corpoaddr. ofof LLC: c/o been designated asc/o an agent addr. LLC: c/oCorpoCSC, of LLC: CSC, license, number 1331331 for license, number 1331331 for A $300 SPECIAL use ofMgmt white space, bold type, mail copy ofprocess process against tember 15, 2017. Office in 251 tember 15, 2017. Office init 11Broadway Sterequired 615 New 11Broadway Sterequired 615 New may be served and shall mail be served. SSNY shall be served. SSNY shall may may license, serial #1338366 for license, serial #1338366 for rate rate agent upon whom process agent upon whom process 19808. Cert. of Form. filed 19808. Cert. of Form. filed Service Co., 251 Little Service Co., 251 Little office of LLC: 277 Fifth Ave., office of LLC: 277 Fifth Ave., 10027. Address to 10027. Address to as agent upon whom as NY agent County. upon whom SSNY NY County. SSNY ignated ignated cation: cation: address to which the fice upon whom against 251 Little Falls Dr., WilmingLittle Falls Dr., Wilmingliquor license, has been apliquor license, has been apetc., New will incur a premium. LLC to: Corp. Agents, N Y OFFER!* C owine uSecy. n t yWilmington, . has S Y d sapi g . ton, N Y DE CDE o 19808. userved nUS t y . mail S Y d smail i gof . York, York 10004. York, New York 10004. copy of any process against a mail process to: Justin L. Galmail process to: Justin L. Galbeer & wine has been apbeer & been ton, be served and shall be served and shall mail DE ofS N State, Div. Secy. ofS N State, Div. may may with with Dr., Wilmington, DE Dr., DE Falls Falls NY, NY 10016. SSNY NY, NY 10016. SSNY #35A, #35A, DE 19808. Cert. of Form. Cert. of Form. be maintained in DE: 108 be maintained in DE: 108 process against the LLC mail may process designated against as the agent LLC upon may designated as agent upon SSNY shall ashall copy may be and The New York Amsterdam The New News York Amsterdam News plied for Kem Rest Inc. d/b/a plied for Kem Rest Inc. Inc. 7014 13th Ave., agent of LLC upon wd/b/a hom agent of LLC upon w#202, hom Purpose: Any lawful activity. Purpose: Any activity. the isas C/O the In Case ofSSNY error, notify the 52 Downs Avenue, 52Cert. Downs Avenue, letti, letti, plied for by the undersigned for by the undersigned copy of process against LLC copy of13th process against Of Corps., Of John G. Townsend Corps., John G. 19808. 19808. of Form. filed Cert. ofRistorante Form. filed as agent of LLC agent of LLC: LLC designated filed with Jeffrey W. Bullock, filed with Jeffrey W.Townsend Bullock, West 13th St., Wilmington, St.,lawful Wilmington, be served. shall mail West be whom served. process SSNY shall may mail be designated whom process may be process against the LLC aany copy of any process against Don LLC Giovanni Ristorante to plied Don Giovanni to (888) 871-0194 B K , N Y 1 1 2 2 8 . P r in c ip a p r o c e s s m a y b e s e r v e d . p r o c e s s m a y b e s e r v e d United States Corporation Stamford, Stamford, CT 06902. PurCT 06902. PurDE 19801. of 212-932Formation 19801. Formation to sell beer &of wine retail in sell beer &of wine at in to principal business to principal business address: Bldg., 401 St., 4, Secy. Bldg., 401 Federal St.,State Ste. 4,.l with Secy. State of DE, with Secy. State ofSte. DE, upon whom process it upon whom process against it to Secy. of State of the State of of State the of will be closed Monday, January will be closed 15, 2018 Monday, in January 15, 2018 in Amsterdam News to: Cert Daniel L.address: Kesten, DE and to: Cert Daniel shallof mail L.against Kesten, copy of and shall mail of process process served served served upon isof C/O the LLC the LLC served upon is C/O sell liquor at retail inat acopy restausell atFederal acretail th business 562 W S S Nliquor YDept., sDE h llretail mthe ain il ABC orestaup y G. o f DE, S S NLLC: Y sDE hCT ll19901. m#3305, a il cPurpose: o pMiami ySyso f. th th Agents, Inc. 7014 13 Av- aCorp. Any lawful activity. The may Any lawful activity. The pose: pose: filed with Div. 27D, of Corps, with DE Div.LLC of Corps, aCorp. bakery under the ABC Law bakery under Law W. 57DE Street, New filed W. 57 Street, 27D, New 601 601 Dover, 19901. Purpose: Dover, Dept., Townsend Townsend Bldg., may be served. SSNY shall be served. SSNY shall Div. ofathe Corps., John Div. ofaaddress: Corps., John G. DE, ESQ. C/O Pryor Cashman ESQ. process C/O against Pryor Cashman to 2010 process against LLC to Bldg., 2010 Alton Rd, 450 the Corporation 7440 rant under the Alcoholic Bevrant under Alcoholic BevTo7400 advertise your To advertise your 1 4 8legal th tBldg., . ,163 # 2 W. 6401 , specificalNPurpose: Y , New NY process to: 163 W. 74th St., Townsend process 74th St., Suite 202, Brooklyn, enue, observance ofSuite Martin Luther observance King Jr. ofSt., Martin Day King Jr. Day $0 DOWN FINANCING OPTIONS!** LLC is to be managed by one LLC is to be managed by one at 115 Delancey NYC at Delancey St., NYC 401 St., Suite 4, 401 Federal St., 4, York, York, NY 10019. Purpose: NY 10019. Purpose: legal purposes, specificalpurposes, All 115 All Dover, Dover, process to the LLC at mail process DE 19901. to Law the Purpose: LLC at Luther DE 19901. Purpose: mail Townsend Bldg., 401 Federal Federal LLP, 7and Times Square, NY, LLP, Grand 7and Ave, Times Apt Square, 1C, Bronx, NY, Grand Ave, Apt 1C, Bronx, Beach, FL 33139. tem, 28Sto: Liberty Street, erage Control at 214 erage Control publicFederal legal notices, public legal notices, 10031. Purpose: any lawful N , lawful N for Y 0Dover, 0 2 3Law . DE P uat rp o214 s e : St. N Ytravel NY 0Dover, 0 2 3 . DE Pu rp ose: NY 11228. Purpose: Any lawor managers. or more managers. 10002 for on-premises conon-premises conDover, DEact. 19901. Purpose: DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful any any lawful act. lyYtravel ly related. the Any lawful Any addr. ofPurpose: its princ. office. addr. ofactivity. its princ. office. St. -*Off Ste. 4,1activity. 19901. -, Ste. 4,1 activity. 19901. 10036. Purpose: Any Dover, 10453. 10036. Purpose: any Any law- the 10453. Purpose: any lawNY lawful NY NYmore NY York, NY 10005. Purpose: er valuerelated. when purchased at retail. 10th Ave, New York, NY for 10002 10th Ave, New York, NY for any act. any lawful activity. lawful activity. call Lawful 212-932-7435 call 212-932-7435 **Financing available through authorized Generac partners. ful activity. sumption; Salon Sucre LLC. sumption; Salon Sucre LLC. Any Purpose. Any Lawful Purpose. Any lawful activity. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Purpose: lawful activity. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Lawful Purpose Lawful ful act. Purpose ful act. Any premises consumption. premises consumption. Solar panels sold separately.
Contact: Contact: ___________________________________ Phone: (212)620−0938 Phone:this (212) Under this agreement Under rates agre are Name (signature) Fax#: Fax#: event of a cancellation event of abefore canc Email: Email: rate charged will rate becharged based upo wi Agency: Agency: −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− −−−−−−−−−−−−−−− PUB ZONE EDT PUB TP RUN ZONE DATES EDT A AMNEWS CORPORAT ______________________________ _______________ AN A 97 AN S 01/07,14 A 97 FREDERICK DOUG Name (print2340 or Name type) (print2340 or −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− −−−−−−−−−−−−−−− NEW YORK NY 10 (212)932−740 . . Under this agreement Under CONFIRMAT this ratesagre arO ORDER event of a cancellation event of abefor canc rate charged Not will rate becharged based up wi Salesperson: Not Salesperson: Applicable Applicable Print −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− Acct #: 370 Acct #: 370 Ad #: _____________________________ _______________ Name (print or Name type)(print or MORRISON & TENEBAUM MORRISON & TENEBAUM Start 87 WALKER STREET 87 WALKER STREET Times NEW YORK NY 10013 NEW YORK NY 10013 STD 1 . . Total Class Rate:
_____________________________________ CANCELLATIONS must be Name (print or type) made in writing by 12 Noon rdam News Amsterdam News Monday. x 7.5”The forwarding of an2order col x 7.5” is construed as an accept. ance of all advertising rules and conditions under which advertising space is sold by the NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. Publication is made and charged according to the terms of this card. Rates and regulations subject to change without notice. No agreements as to position or regulations, other than those printed on this. Til forbid orders charged for rate earned. Increases or decreases in space take the rate of a new advertisement. The New York AMSTERDAM NEWS reserves the right to censor, reject, alter or revise all advertisements in accordance with its rules governing the acceptance of advertising and accepts no liability for its failure to insert an advertisement for any cause. Credit for errors in advertisements allowed only for first insertion. CLASSIFIED • Classified advertisements take the regular earned rate of their classification. Four line minimum on all ads except spirituals and horoscopes (14 lines). CLASSIFIED DISPLAY • Classified Display (boarder or picture) advertisements take the regular earned rate of their classification. Display (boarder or picture) advertisements one column wide must be 14 lines deep; two columns, 28 lines deep; 3 columns, 56 lines deep. Classified Display (boarder or picture) placed as close to classifications as rules and makeup permit. CLASSIFICATIONS All advertisement accepted for publication is classified according to the standard c l a s s i f i c a t i o n s . Misclassification is not permitted. BASIS OF CHARGE Charges are based on point size and characters per line. Upon reaching 15 lines the rate converts to column inch. Any deviation from solid composition such as indentation, use of white space, bold type, etc., will incur a premium. In Case of error, notify the Amsterdam News 212-9327440 7400
Contact: Contact: Ad De Phone: (212)620−0938 Phone: (212)620−0938 Given Fax#: Fax#: P.O. Email: Email: Creat Agency: Agency: Last −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− PUB ZONE EDT PUB TP RUN ZONE DATES EDT TP RUN DATES AN A 97 AN S 12/31 A 01/07 97 S 12/31 01/07 −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− AUTHORIZATIO
Under this agreement Under this rates agreement are subject rates to are ch Prepare for event of a cancellation event of a before cancellation schedule before comp Power Outages rate charged will rate charged based upon will the be based rate for upo &be Save Money
101 LEGAL NOTICE
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26 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
Public Hearing
101 LEGAL NOTICES
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
101 LEGAL NOTICES
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CAPITAL PROJECTS PUBLIC HEARING The Metropolitan Transportation Authority, on behalf of MTA New York City Transit and its subsidiaries; MTA Long Island Rail Road; MTA Metro-North Railroad; MTA Construction and Development; and MTA Bus Company (collectively “MTA”), will hold a public hearing to solicit comments on MTA’s federal grant proposals for Federal Fiscal Year 2022. The hearing will be held in a hybrid format with options to participate in-person, as well as virtually via Zoom’s online platform and conference call feature, with a livestream available on the MTA 2022 Capital Projects hearing website. The MTA receives federal funds pursuant to the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) of the U.S. Department of Transportation Section 5307, Sections 5309, 5337 and 5339 of Title 49, United States Code, 5300 et seq. (the Code), Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (surface transportation act and other federal appropriations). The Governor of the State of New York, local officials, and publicly owned operators of mass transportation services have designated the MTA to receive such grants. The requested funds are for categories of capital projects listed below and more fully described in the MTA Program of Projects. MTA’s Program of Projects is available for review at https://new.mta. info/transparency/public-hearings or by calling the number shown below. The MTA solicits and encourages the comments of private transportation providers. Capital improvements under this Program generally take place within the MTA network or on State or city-owned property. Property acquisitions or relocations will be carried out in accordance with the appropriate provisions of law and regulatory requirements. The projects included in this hearing are part of the approved 2010-2014, 2015-2019 or 2020-2024 Capital Programs. The capital projects have been or will be endorsed by the Metropolitan Planning Organizations for the New York metropolitan region and conform with the State Implementation Plan (SIP) as required by the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. The projects are not anticipated to have any significant adverse environmental impact. If the FTA prepares a formal environmental impact statement on any of the proposed projects, the MTA will issue a public notice to make the statement available. All legal requirements related to senior citizens and customers/people with disabilities will be met. It is anticipated that any difference between the projects’ cost and the federal grant amount will be satisfied through funds that are made available by any one or a combination of state, local, affiliated agency credits for non-federal project share generated from toll revenues in accordance with federal statute (23 USC 120 (i)), or sales of property or program income. In Federal Fiscal Year 2020, MTA received $684.2 million of Section 5307 funds, $734.6 million of Section 5337 State of Good Repair funds, and $29.8 million Section 5339 of Bus and Bus Facilities funds. Apportionments of Federal Fiscal Year 2021 and FY 2022 are not yet available. Federal funds must generally be matched by a local share contribution for capital assistance of 20 percent for most funding categories.
PROJECT CATEGORIES / ESTIMATED FEDERAL REQUEST (Dollars in Millions) Project Categories Stations Track Line Structures Communications and Signals Shops and Yards Power TranTech Total LIRR Project Categories Ferries Rolling Stock Stations Track and Structures Communication and Signals Shops and Yards Miscellaneous Total MNR Project Categories Penn Station Access Total MTA CC
LONG ISLAND RAIL ROAD
METRO-NORTH RAILROAD
CAPITAL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
$M $289.26 $399.01 $1.40 $15.94 $48.13 $6.40 $0.40 $760.54 $M $12.56 $484.64 $479.28 $1,106.38 $259.89 $24.23 $68.70 $2,592.60 $M $1,249.31 $1,249.31
Project Categories Subway Car Bus Replacement Stations Track Line Equipment Line Structures Signals and Communications Power Shops Depots Miscellaneous Staten Island Railway Total NYCT Project Categories Miscellaneous Bus Replacement Facilities Total MTA BUS
NEW YORK CITY TRANSIT
MTA BUS
MTA GRAND TOTAL
$M $2,080.00 $1,173.60 $2,246.21 $178.20 $95.60 $261.63 $655.60 $630.30 $150.00 $195.10 $83.40 $137.00 $7,886.64 $M $1.20 $150.71 $21.20 $173.11 $12,662.19
DATE AND TIME OF THE PUBLIC HEARING 2022 CAPITAL PROJECTS PUBLIC HEARING Tuesday, February 8, 2022 • Hearing begins at 6:00 P.M. • Hybrid Public Hearing will include both in person and virtual platforms. Public Hearing Format This will be a hybrid hearing with in-person participation as well as via Zoom’s online platform and conference call feature, with a livestream available on the MTA 2022 Capital Projects hearing website https://new.mta.info/2022-capital-projects-hearing. Those interested in speaking must pre-register to speak at the public hearing. Each registered speaker will have three (3) minutes to speak. Registering for the Public Hearing To register to speak at the hybrid public hearing, please sign up to comment either in-person, online at https://new.mta.info/2022-capital-projects-hearing or call the Public Hearing Hotline at (646) 252-6777. Registration for the public hearing will open on January 3, 2022. All comments will be transcribed and made part of the permanent record of this hearing. Joining the Public Hearing If you are registered to speak, you may join the Zoom webinar either online, in-person or by phone following these instructions: Join Zoom Webinar Online: To access the Zoom webinar online, visit the website: https://new.mta.info/2022-capital-projects-hearing. You can also go to https://mta.zoom.us/j/85820298982 Join by PC/Tablet/Smartphone: Join Link: https://mta.zoom.us/j/85820298982 • Webinar ID: 858 2029 8982 Join Zoom Webinar by Telephone: To access the Zoom webinar by telephone, please call 1-877-853-5247 (toll-free). Then enter Webinar ID: 858 2029 8982, followed by the pound (#) sign. View Only Online: Members of the public who wish only to view the hearings may access the event live at https://new.mta.info/2022-capital-projects-hearing To Submit Comments All written comments must be submitted by 6:00 p.m. on February 8, 2022. Comments received after that date and time will not be considered. To View a Copy of the Complete MTA Program Projects A complete list of projects eligible for funding under this proposal is available onsite and on the MTA Website at https://new.mta.info/2022-capital-projects-hearing or by scanning the QR Code below. Information on public viewing locations and on the projects eligible for funding can be found on the MTA website or by contacting the MTA at the address below. The MTA will also make the final program of projects available on its website https://new.mta.info/transparency/grant-management for Section 5307 funded projects when the FTA awards the Federal Fiscal Year 2022 grants. Additional Ways to Comment or Request Information For More Information, to Pre-Register to Speak, or to Submit Comments Those wishing to be heard at the Public Hearing must register in advance. Email comments will be accepted online on the MTA website https://new.mta.info/2022-capital-projects-hearing or in person at the hearing or by dialing (646) 252-6777. Telephone agents are available from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. Verbal presentations will be limited to three (3) minutes. You may present verbal testimony or submit written statements in lieu of or to supplement oral testimony concerning the proposed projects. To submit comments, for additional information, or to request copies of the applications and final program of projects to be submitted to the FTA, letters should be addressed to: MTA Capital Program Funding / Grants Management, RE: 2022 Capital Projects Public Hearing, 2 Broadway, B4.01, New York, NY 10004. All letters must be postmarked by February 8, 2022. Comments received after that date will not be considered. Accessibility and Language Assistance Services At the public hearing, CART Captioning and American Sign Language services will be available. Members of the public who are deaf or hard of hearing can use their preferred relay service or the free 711 relay service, and then request to be connected to the Public Hearing Hotline at (646) 252-6777 to connect with an agent. Members of the public who are blind or have low vision can request accommodations on or before February 1, 2022, by submitting a request online at https://new.mta.info/2022-capital-projects-hearing or by calling the Public Hearing Hotline at (646) 252-6777. Members of the public who do not have access to a computer or to the Internet, can dial in to the hearing by calling the Zoom webinar at 1-877-853-5247 (toll-free) then enter Webinar ID: 858 2029 8982, followed by the pound (#) sign. If language assistance or any other accommodations are required, please submit a request at least three business days before the hearing date in one of the following ways: online at https://new.mta.info/2022-capital-projects-hearing or by calling the Public Hearing Hotline at (646) 252-6777, or by sending a letter to: MTA Capital Program Funding / Grants Management, RE: 2022 Capital Projects Public Hearing, 2 Broadway, B4.01, New York, NY 10004
Metropolitan Transportation Authority
Going your way
www.mta.info
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
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January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 27
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28 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
Affordable Housing for Rent
SENDERO VERDE PHASE I 324 NEWLY CONSTRUCTED UNITS AT 60 EAST 112TH STREET & 75 EAST 111TH STREET, EAST HARLEM, MANHATTAN Amenities: Outdoor terrace, fitness center, community room, computer room, Free secure in-unit access to broadband internet for all households, bicycle storage, package lockers, on-site laundry room* (*additional fees apply). Transit: 2, 3, 4, 6 Trains, M1/M2/M3/M4/M101/M102/M103 Buses
No fee to apply • No broker’s fee • Smoke-free building • More information: www.senderoverdelottery.com This building is being constructed through the Extremely Low & Low-Income Affordability (ELLA) program of the New York City Housing Development Corporation (HDC) and the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) and the Mandatory Inclusionary Housing (MIH) Program of HPD. Who Should
Individuals or households who meet the income and household size requirements listed in the table below may apply. Qualified applicants will be required to meet additional selection criteria. Applicants who live in New York City receive a general preference for apartments.
Apply?
A percentage of units is set aside for: o Mobility–disabled applicants (5%) o Vision/Hearing–disabled applicants (2%) Preference for a percentage of units goes to: o Residents of Manhattan CB 11 (50%) o Municipal employees (5%)
• •
AVAILABLE UNITS AND INCOME REQUIREMENTS
3 bedroom
Monthly Rent1
2 bedroom
50% AREA MEDIAN INCOME (AMI) UNITS
1 bedroom
$582
$662
Unit Size
Studio
$492
3 bedroom
$729
$919
$1,094
$1,253
20
27
17
8
12
13
8
3
Studio
$1,241
18
2 bedroom
3 bedroom
80% AREA MEDIAN INCOME (AMI) UNITS
Unit Size
Units Available
$1,559
$1,862
$2,140
→
→
→
Units Available
Monthly Rent1
1 bedroom
→
25
20
9
→
→
→
→
→
→
→
→
Annual Household Income3
1 person
$ 15,806 - $ 25,080
Monthly Rent1
Minimum – Maximum4
40% AREA MEDIAN INCOME (AMI) UNITS
2 bedroom
$388
Household Size2
$558
Units Available 9
→
Household Size2
Annual Household Income3
1 person
$ 21,635 - $ 33,440
2 people
$ 21,635 - $ 38,200
Minimum – Maximum4
2 people
$ 15,806 - $ 28,650
1 person
$ 19,715 - $ 25,080
2 people
$ 19,715 - $ 28,650
3 people
$ 19,715 - $ 32,220
2 people
$ 23,692 - $ 28,650
3 people
$ 23,692 - $ 32,220
4 people
$ 23,692 - $ 35,790
5 people
$ 23,692 - $ 38,670
3 people
$ 27,360 - $ 32,220
4 people
$ 27,360 - $ 35,790
5 people
$ 27,360 - $ 38,670
6 people
$ 27,360 - $ 41,520
7 people
$ 27,360 - $ 44,400
7 people
$ 37,475 - $ 59,200
Household Size2
Annual Household Income3
Household Size2
Annual Household Income3
1 person
$ 27,498 - $ 41,800
1 person
$ 34,972 - $ 50,160
2 people
$ 27,498 - $ 47,750 $ 34,355 - $ 41,800
2 people
$ 34,355 - $ 47,750
3 people
$ 34,355 - $ 53,700
2 people
$ 41,246 - $ 47,750
3 people
$ 41,246 - $ 53,700
4 people
$ 41,246 - $ 59,650
5 people
$ 41,246 - $ 64,450
3 people
$ 47,623 - $ 53,700
4 people
$ 47,623 - $ 59,650
5 people
$ 47,623 - $ 64,450
6 people
$838
Monthly Rent1
Minimum – Maximum4
1 person
$706
$957
60% AREA MEDIAN INCOME (AMI) UNITS
1 bedroom
30% AREA MEDIAN INCOME (AMI) UNITS
Studio
Units Available
$947
$1,193
13
11
3
→
→
→
Units Available 10
13
→
→
1 person
$ 27,052 - $ 33,440
2 people
$ 27,052 - $ 38,200
3 people
$ 27,052 - $ 42,960
2 people
$ 32,469 - $ 38,200
3 people
$ 32,469 - $ 42,960
4 people
$ 32,469 - $ 47,720
5 people
$ 32,469 - $ 51,560
3 people
$ 37,475 - $ 42,960
4 people
$ 37,475 - $ 47,720
5 people
$ 37,475 - $ 51,560
6 people
$ 37,475 - $ 55,360
2 people
$ 34,972 - $ 57,300
1 person
$ 43,749 - $ 50,160
2 people
$ 43,749 - $ 57,300 $ 43,749 - $ 64,440
2 people
$ 52,458 - $ 57,300
3 people
$ 52,458 - $ 64,440
4 people
$ 52,458 - $ 71,580
5 people
$ 52,458 - $ 77,340
3 people
$ 60,618 - $ 64,440
4 people
$ 60,618 - $ 71,580
5 people
$ 60,618 - $ 77,340
$ 47,623 - $ 69,200
6 people
$ 60,618 - $ 83,040
7 people
$ 47,623 - $ 74,000
7 people
$ 60,618 - $ 88,800
Household Size2
Annual Household Income3
Household Size2
Annual Household Income3
1 person
$ 45,052 - $ 66,880
1 person
$ 52,663 - $ 91,960
$1,421
$1,632
Minimum – Maximum4
9
4
Monthly Rent1
Units Available
$1,463
19
→
→
→
Minimum – Maximum4
2 people
$ 45,052 - $ 76,400
1 person
$ 56,298 - $ 66,880
2 people $ 52,663 - $ 105,050
2 people
$ 56,298 - $ 76,400
3 people
$ 56,298 - $ 85,920
2 people
$ 67,578 - $ 76,400
3 people
$ 67,578 - $ 85,920
4 people
$ 67,578 - $ 95,440
5 people
$ 67,578 - $ 103,120
3 people
$ 78,035 - $ 85,920
4 people
$ 78,035 - $ 95,440
5 people
$ 78,035 - $ 103,120
6 people
$ 78,035 - $ 110,720
6 people $ 91,200 - $ 152,240
7 people
$ 78,035 - $ 118,400
7 people $ 91,200 - $ 162,800
1 person $1,836
24
→
2 people $ 65,795 - $ 105,050 3 people $ 65,795 - $ 118,140
20
→
3 people $ 78,995 - $ 118,140 4 people $ 78,995 - $ 131,230 5 people $ 78,995 - $ 141,790 3 people $ 91,200 - $ 118,140 4 people $ 91,200 - $ 131,230
$2,524
9
→
Get the AmNews delivered to your door for less than the newsstand price! YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER FEATURES: • The latest news affecting your community • Fashion, Arts & Entertainment • Editorials and Op-eds by local and national leaders • Community Calendar of Events • Latest Union News YES, I would like to subscr ibe to The Amsterdam News.
$ 65,795 - $ 91,960
2 people $ 78,995 - $ 105,050 $2,195
Give the Gift of Knowledge
Minimum – Maximum4
3 people
110% AREA MEDIAN INCOME (AMI) UNITS
Monthly Rent1
Unit Size
5 people $ 91,200 - $ 141,790
1
Rent includes secure in-unit access to broadband internet Tenant is responsible for electricity, including cooking range. Household size includes everyone who will live with you, including parents and children. Subject to occupancy criteria. Household earnings includes salary, hourly wages, tips, Social Security, child support, and other income. Income guidelines subject to change. 4 Minimum income listed may not apply to applicants with Section 8 or other qualifying rental subsidies. Asset limits also apply. 2 3
How Do You Apply? Apply online or through mail. To apply online, please go to https://housingconnect.nyc.gov/PublicWeb/. To request an application by mail, send a self-addressed envelope to: Sendero Verde Phase I / Triborough Finance New Station, P.O. Box 2011, New York, NY 10035. Only send one application per development. Do not submit duplicate applications. Do not apply online and also send in a paper application. Applicants who submit more than one application may be disqualified. When is the Deadline? Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than February 25, 2022. Late applications will not be considered. What Happens After You Submit an Application? After the deadline, applications are selected for review through a lottery process. If yours is selected and you appear to qualify, you will be invited to an appointment of eligibility to continue the process of determining your eligibility. Appointments are usually scheduled from 2 to 10 months after the application deadline. You will be asked to bring documents that verify your household size, identity of members of your household, and your household income. Español
Presente una solicitud en línea en https://housingconnect.nyc.gov/PublicWeb/. Para recibir una traducción de español de este anuncio y la solicitud impresa, envíe un sobre con la dirección a: Sendero Verde Phase I / Triborough Finance New Station, P.O. Box 2011, New York, NY 10035. En el reverso del sobre, escriba en inglés la palabra “SPANISH.” Las solicitudes se deben enviar en línea o con sello postal antes de 25 de febrero 2022
简体中文
访问 https://housingconnect.nyc.gov/PublicWeb/ 在线申请。如要获取本广告及书面申请表的简体中文版,请将您的回邮信封寄送至:Sendero
1 year $49.99 - U.S 2 Year $79.99 - U.S 6 month $34.99 - U.S ALL FOREIGN SUBSCRIPTIONS adds $10.00
Name Address City State Daytime phone E-mail Check or Money Order enclosed Credit Card No. Expiration Date
Zip
C ID
Verde Phase I / Triborough Finance New Station, P.O. Box 2011, New York, NY 10035. 信封背面请用英语注明“CHINESE”。必须在以下日 期之前在线提交申请或邮寄书面申请 2022 年 2 月 25 日 Русский
Чтобы подать заявление через интернет, зайдите на сайт: https://housingconnect.nyc.gov/PublicWeb/. Для получения данного объявления и заявления на русском языке отправьте конверт с обратным адресом по адресу Sendero Verde Phase I / Triborough Finance New Station, P.O. Box 2011, New York, NY 10035. На задней стороне конверта напишите слово “RUSSIAN” на английском языке. Заявки должны быть поданы онлайн или отправлены по почте (согласно дате на почтовом штемпеле) не позднее 25 февраль 2022.
한국어
https://housingconnect.nyc.gov/PublicWeb/ 에서 온라인으로 신청하십시오. 이 광고문과 신청서에 대한 한국어 번역본을 받아보시려면 반송용 봉투를 Sendero Verde Phase I / Triborough Finance New Station, P.O. Box 2011, New York, NY 10035 으로 보내주십시오. 봉투 뒷면에 “KOREAN” 이라고 영어로 적어주십시오. 2022 년 2 월 25 일온라인 신청서를 제출하거나 소인이 찍힌 신청서를 보내야 합니다.
Kreyòl Ayisyien
اﻟﻌرﺑﯾﺔ
Aplike sou entènèt sou sitwèb https://housingconnect.nyc.gov/PublicWeb/. Pou resevwa yon tradiksyon anons sa a nan lang Kreyòl Ayisyen ak aplikasyon an sou papye, voye anvlòp ki gen adrès pou retounen li nan: Sendero Verde Phase I / Triborough Finance New Station, P.O. Box 2011, New York, NY 10035. Nan dèyè anvlòp la, ekri mo “HATIAN CREOLE” an Anglè. Ou dwe remèt aplikasyon yo sou entènèt oswa ou dwe tenbre yo anvan dat fevriye 25, 2022. ﺗﻘدم ﺑطﻠب ﻋن طرﯾﻖ اﻹﻧﺗرﻧت ﻋﻠﻰ اﻟﻣوﻗﻊ اﻹﻟﻛﺗروﻧﻲhttps://housingconnect.nyc.gov/PublicWeb/. أرﺳل،ﻟﻠﺣﺻول ﻋﻠﻰ ﺗرﺟﻣﺔ ﺑﺎﻟﻠﻐﺔ اﻟﻌرﺑﯾﺔ ﻟﮭذا اﻹﻋﻼن وﻟﻧﻣوذج اﻟطﻠب اﻟورﻗﻲ ﻣظروف ﯾﺣﻣل اﺳﻣك وﻋﻧواﻧك إﻟﻰ: Sendero Verde Phase I / Triborough Finance New Station, P.O. Box 2011, New York, NY 10035. ﻋﻠﻰ اﻟﺟﮭﺔ اﻟﺧﻠﻔﯾﺔ اﻛﺗب ﺑﺎﻟﻠﻐﺔ اﻹﻧﺟﻠﯾزﯾﺔ ﻛﻠﻣﺔ،" ﻟﻠﻣظروفARABIC". ﯾﺟب إرﺳﺎل ﻧﻣﺎذج اﻟطﻠﺑﺎت ﻋن طرﯾﻖ اﻹﻧﺗرﻧت أو ﺧﺗﻣﮭﺎ ﺑﺧﺗم اﻟﺑرﯾد ﻗﺑل2022 ،ﻓﺑراﯾر25.
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THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS S P O R T S
January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 29
New Jersey’s Division I teams keep plugging despite Omicron distractions By LOIS ELFMAN Special to the AmNews
NJIT The NJIT Highlanders, 7–6 overall and 2–0 in conference play, have thus far avoided any game postponements. Next up is an America East game vs Binghamton on Sunday. The leading scorer is junior guard Kenna Squier at 11 points per game.
(Seton Hall Athletics photo)
After an enthusiastic start to college basketball season, team schedules are again in turmoil with COVID-19-driven postponements. Some athletic programs are opting to not have spectators at games. Players and coaches remain resolute, following protocols and continuing to practice and play when possible. Here we look at New Jersey’s Division I women’s teams. Seton Hall University Seton Hall has started Big East Conference play 1–3. In non-conference action, the Pirates scored wins over Princeton and Wagner. Graduate student Andra Espinoza-HuntLauren Park-Lane continues to be a petite powerhouse for Seton Hall er and junior Lauren Park-Lane are leading the offense with 17.6 and 17.3 points per game respectively. Saint Peter’s University Rider University Saint Peter’s is 5–6 and hoping to get After COVID-driven postponeRutgers University back in action tonight with MAAC play ments within the program, Rider, Rutgers is 7–8 overall and 0–3 in Big against Fairfield University after the last currently 3–8, is scheduled to be Ten Conference play. None of the Scar- two games were postponed due to COVID back in action tonight with a conlet Knights are averaging in double fig- protocols with the opposing teams. The ference game against MAAC oppoures on scoring, but graduate student leading scorer and rebounder is junior nent Wagner. Senior guard Lenaejha forward Osh Brown is leading with 8.5 center Kassondra Brown, averaging 15 Evans is the leading scorer for the points and 9.1 rebounds per game. points and 9.6 rebounds per game. Broncs at 15.5 points per game.
Monmouth University Monmouth is scheduled for a MAAC game tonight against Quinnipiac after its last game was postponed. The Hawks, currently 6–4 overall and 1–0 in conference play, are led by graduate student guard Stella Clark, who is averaging 11.3 points and 6.3 rebounds per game.
Fairleigh Dickinson University The FDU Knights, 5–7 overall and 2–0 in conference play, take on Merrimack this afternoon in NEC action. Sophomore forward Chloe Wilson leads the offense at 11 points per game.
Princeton University Grateful to be back in action after the Ivy League cancelled the entire 2020– ’21 season, Princeton amassed a 7–4 record in non-conference action. The Tigers opened conference play with a win over Harvard. The leading scorer is senior guard Abby Meyers, averaging 17.7 points per game.
The 114th Millrose Games adds to a stellar field By JAIME C. HARRIS AmNews Sports Editor
((Team USA photo)
The 114th staging of the venerable Millrose Games will take place Jan. 29 at The New Balance Track & Field Center at the Armory in Washington Heights after being canceled last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Many of last summer’s Tokyo Olympics competitors will take to the stateof-the-art track in Upper Manhattan as track & field hope to see new marks in what has become customary at the many events held at the Armory during the indoor season. On Tuesday, meet organizers, led by director Ray Flynn, announced that 100-meter hurdles world record holder Keni Harrison, who won a silver medal in Tokyo, would headline an elite group in the women’s 60m hurdles. The 29-year-old Harrison, a University of Kentucky alum, established the outdoor standard in July of 2016, blazing 12.20 at the London Muller Anniversary Games. She will enter this year’s Millrose as the defending champion, edging Nia Ali in the event two years ago. “I had such a great time competing at Millrose in 2020,” said the five-time U.S. national champion. Among the women who will try to dethrone Harrison are American Gabbi Cunningham. The former North Carolina State standout had a
2020 Millrose Games women’s 60-meters hurdles champion Keni Harrison will be back at the Armory later this month to defend her title
seventh place showing in Tokyo in the 100-meter hurdles. Jamaica’s Britany Anderson will also be in the blocks with the accomplishments of being the world junior 100meter hurdles record holder and eighth place finisher in the 2020 Olympic final on her resume. Devynne Charlton of the Bahamas, a seven-time All-American at Purdue who was sixth in Tokyo, will join them as one of six Olympians
facing off in the event. The sensational Athing Mu, who introduced herself to the world last summer by capturing the women’s 800-meters at the Olympics, is set to electrify track & field enthusiasts once again. Mu won two-gold medals in Tokyo. The 19-year-old Trenton, N.J. native broke the American women’s 800-meters record in a time of 1:55:21. By doing so Mu became the first
American woman to win Olympic gold in the 800 in 53 years. She was also part of the women’s gold medal earning 4x400 meters relay team, along with Queens and erstwhile Cardozo High School luminary Dalilah Muhammad, track & field icon Allyson Felix, and Dunellen, N.J. reared superstar Sydney McLaughlin, the women’s 400-meters hurdles world record holder (51.46) and 2020 Olympic titlist in the race.
30 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS S P O R T S
NBA veteran Etan Thomas pens another powerful book
By LOIS ELFMAN Special to the AmNews As a follow-up to his 2018 book, “We Matter: Athletes and Activism,” NBA veteran Etan Thomas tackles a pressing issue of the day with “Police Brutality and White Supremacy: The Fight Against American Traditions,” which will be available Jan. 11. The book includes both personal reflections as well as extensive interviews with people such as Rodney King’s daughter, Lora Dene King, and exonerated Central Park Five survivor Raymond Santana. “There has been so much consistently going on in the area of police brutality,” said Thomas. “From when I wrote ‘We Matter,’ I wanted to capture the reasons that so many athletes were now having this resurgence of athlete activism. Using their voices, and it all centered around police brutality and what was being shown. With the invention of social media and cell phones, now you’re seeing it on a recurring reel. I wanted to dig a little bit deeper into the origins of it.” Thomas reflects on his first memories of police brutality and how the Rodney King beating affected him. King died in 2012, so Thomas reached out to his daughter to understand how this traumatic event in her father’s life impacted not only him, but his whole family. “I wanted to go back to those [events] from my time frame and look at solution-oriented possibilities, so I interviewed police officers,” said Thomas, who played 11 years in the NBA. “I’ve been doing this work for a while, and I’ve involved police officers in this work. A lot of the things that I’ve heard them say…are common sense things that should have been implemented a long time ago. “The whole goal of [the book] was to be able to see solution-oriented possibilities towards police accountability,” he added. Writing has become a vital part of Thomas’ activism and he appreciates interviewing others to hear their perspectives. For “Police Brutality and White Supremacy,” he interweaves
his thoughts and opinions with those of people such as Steph Curry, Chuck D., Isiah Thomas, Sue Bird, Breanna Stewart, Jake Tapper, Jemele Hill,
Stan Van Gundy, Kyle Korver, Mark Cuban, Rick Strom and more. “Hearing people’s perspectives and the way that they’re navigating through multiple, non-stop cases of police brutality and the impact of white supremacy, I wanted it to be eye-opening for everyone who reads it,” said Thomas. “I include my opinions, my stories and my interactions with my children and the impact
they have from it. Having to talk with light what they’re trying to do to not our children, which all Black parents see what happened to their family have to do, and the questions that member happen to another family. they ask. Thomas was born in Harlem, raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and spent summers in New York City, which included playing basketball at the Boys’ Club. A lot of his early writing was about what he saw in the summers in New York. Thomas makes it clear that Black athletes and entertainers are not immune from police brutality. When he was traveling and speaking on college campuses about “We Matter,” that conversation always came up. At some predominantly white institutions, there were only a few people of color in the audience. Sometimes people were shocked that superstars such as Carmelo Anthony and Dwyane Wade had had encounters with police. “They thought we were in this protective bubble,” Thomas said. “Hearing athletes talk about the fear that we have for our children every time we see a case of police brutality, the same way that every Black family in this country has the same fear for their children, made it resonate a bit more.” A long-time athlete activist, Thomas joined with other Syracuse University alumni to form a group called the Black Oranges (Syracuse athletics is known as the Orange) to support current student-athletes of color. They met with the Syracuse police chief and plan to have other meetings and events in the future. For now, he looks forward to seeing how Mayor Eric Adams works with the NYPD. Thomas also hopes people will read his book and un“The group that you don’t really derstand the narrative. He addresses hear a lot from is how the family white allyship, which became much members are impacted,” he added. more prevalent after the murder of “That’s why I really wanted to lean George Floyd. heavy on that. … Hearing from them “I want people to come away not is a different level of impact.” saying that it’s a Black problem or The chapter Sisters of the Move- a people of color problem,” Thomas ment features the sisters of Botham said. “I want them to see this is a Jean, Atatiana Jefferson and Sean problem in America that has been a Monterrosa. He wanted them to not problem for a long time and someonly tell their stories, but also high- thing needs to change.”
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS S P O R T S
January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022 • 31
Another losing campaign will lead to more significant changes for the Giants (Bill Moore photo)
By JAIME C. HARRIS fully aggravated AmNews Sports Editor and distrust ful home crowd Embarrassing! with a two-year For a franchise that record of 10-22. prides itself on tradi“You buy a tion and is perhaps ticket to come overly obsessed with in the stadium, optics, the Giants’ you have every performance in their right to boo season’s penultimate me going into game last Sunday the stadium. was a stain on their That’s the way brand. it is. That’s what It’s not just that we sign up for, they lost 29-3 to the right?” ranted 6-10 Chicago Bears, Judge. “So you being thoroughly sign up for a job, outplayed by anothyou say you like er of the NFL’s stoNew York, you ried franchises that expect to have has also had issues this. I don’t shy stringing togethaway from that. er winning seasons I don’t worry over the past decade, about that at the Giants were deall. But when monstrably inept and you talk internon-competitive. nally, you look Giants third-year quarterback Daniel Jones will end this season on Sunday under Their fifth consecat a lot of things utive losing season, head coach Joe Judge having been sidelined for six games due to injuries moving in the and eighth in the last right direction.” nine years, is an alarming indict- a psychoanalytic viewpoint classic Given that Giants third-year quarment of a wide swath of the organi- projection of guilt. terback Daniel Jones remains suszation, starting with the ownership. The 40-year-old Judge, now in his pect as the team’s long-term answer But Sunday’s listless outing falls di- second season as the Giants head at the position in a quarterback-cenrectly at the feet of Joe Judge, who coach, will take his 4-12 team into tric league, Judge’s assessment that after the defeat delivered an 11 their final game of this season versus the program is making progress is minute diatribe that was at times in- the 6-10 Washington Football Team acutely peculiar and troubling. Jones decipherable, unbearable and from at MetLife Stadium in front of a right- will end this season having played in
only 11 of the Giants’ 17 games due to injury. The 24-year-old has passed for just 10 touchdowns and 7 interceptions. “I talk to the players all the time, guys. I talk to them very openly and transparently, all right? We don’t have captain meetings anymore because the majority of our captains are no longer playing this late in the season,” disclosed the former New England Patriots special teams coordinator. “So we do a leadership meeting now, all right? I looked at the guys the other day in the eye and said, ‘Listen: This is your time to talk to me. You speak for the team. You tell me what’s going on. You tell me: How’s the beat of the team? What do I gotta do and where? What’s something I don’t know?’ “Because everyone always tells me what I want to hear, right? So when I ask someone individually, I ask a player, they’re going to tell me whatever I want to hear. I ask a coach, the same type of thing. I have a group of players that are going to look me in the eye and they know: I can tell Joe exactly what the hell is going on. I’ve got that core group of guys right there, all right.” What the hell is going on is the Giants have not been able to reverse a losing trend for 10 years. Judge logically won’t be afforded more time beyond next season to develop a successful formula.
With the season counting down, the Jets get a lesson from Tom Brady For much of last Sunday’s game, the New York Jets played the way the defending Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers were expected to play. The Jets were 4-11 coming into the early afternoon matchup while the Buccaneers were 11-4 and had already clinched the NFC South division. It was the first meeting between Jets rookie quarterback Zach Wilson and Tom Brady. Wilson and Brady were both born on Aug. 3. Brady in 1977 and Wilson 1999, a difference of 22 years, 21 seasons, 7 Super Bowls, and 4 points. The 4 points being Tampa Bay’s 28-24 win. But there was a role reversal for the teams for nearly four full quarters. The Jets led 17-10 at halftime and 24-17 going into the fourth quarter. Then Brady did what Brady does. Up 24-21, the Jets attempted a quarterback sneak with Wilson late in the final quarter on fourth-and-2 for no gain on the Buccaneers’ 7-yard line giving the ball back to Brady. He then took his team on a 9-play, 93-yard drive, ending with a 33-
yard pass to wide receiver Cyril Grayson. Wilson battled Tampa’s defense, led by former Jets head coach Todd Bowles, going 19-of33 for 234 yards and a touchdown. Bra dy went 34-50 for 410 yards, 3 touchdowns and 1 interception. Brady’s third touchdown pass on Sunday was his 40th of the season, the second consecutive regular season he has reached that mark. He finished with exactly 40 a year ago. It came on a day when Jets rookie quarterback Zach Wilson and the Jets lost to seven-time time Super Bowl Tampa Bay’s ultra winning QB Tom Brady and the defending NFL champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers 28-24 at MetLife Stadium last Sunday talented but troubled wide receiver, Antonio Brown, shockingly took waving his arms to the crowd. “I thought our guys were outstandoff his jersey and shoulder pads late “It’s unfortunate that we’re going ing today. They deserved better.” in the third quarter while standing to be talking about the last sequence The Jets play their final game of on the Buccaneers sideline, threw of events there,” said Jet head coach the season on the road Sunday afparts of his uniform into the MetLife Robert Saleh, back on the sidelines ternoon versus the AFC East leadStadium stands, and inexplicably this week after sitting out last week’s ing Buffalo Bills, concluding the jogged off of the field into the tunnel game due to COVID protocols. league’s first 17-game season. (Bill Moore photo)
By VINCENT DAVIS Special to the AmNews
32 • January 6, 2022 - January 12, 2022
THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS
Sports With Kyrie Irving back, the Brooklyn Nets must manage expectations Coming into this season, the Brooklyn Nets were the betting favorite to win the NBA title. But Kyrie Ir ving ’s long and divisive absence due to his COVID vaccination status changed the odds. Still unvaccinated, he is back with the team, unable to play games in New York where there is a mandate requiring proof of vaccination to enter indoor arenas. The Nets were able to stay at or near the top of the Eastern Conference without him. Entering last night’s game versus the Indiana Pacers on the road, they were 23-12, in second place behind the Chicago Bulls, who were 25-10. Expectations for the Nets’ title hopes have increased with the seven-time All-Star rejoining Kevin Durant and James Harden to form one of, if not
(Bill Moore photo)
By VINCENT DAVIS Special to the AmNews
With the return of Kyrie Irving to the Brooklyn Nets’ lineup, head coach Steve Nash’s and the fans’ hopes for an NBA title have risen.
the best, trio in the league. Tuesday’s 118-104 home loss to the Memphis Grizzlies showed how much the Nets need Ir ving to help counter some of the NBA’s other top backcourt playmakers. Ja Morant torched them for 36 points, 6 rebounds and 8 assists at the Barclays Center, handing Brooklyn its first three-game losing streak of the season. All of them at home. “He’s special,” said Morant’s teammate Desmond Bane, who had 29 points for the Grizzlies. Memphis improved to 24-14 and No. 4 in the West after the win. “People debate whether or not he should be an AllStar,” added Bane, “but I think we should be debating whether he’s the best point guard in the league. “I don’t think it’s any
question he’s an All-Star. The real conversation is, ‘Is he the best point guard in the league?’” Harden said t he Net s had n o t pu t u p en ough resist an ce d ur ing th eir l osing st retch. “We’ re letting teams d o what t he y want, g et sh o t s t hat t he y want,” he explaine d. Hard en had 19 fo r t he Nets while Durant s co re d a tea m-h igh 26. “We can’t panic. It’s been a crazy period,” noted Nets head coach Steve Nash. “We gotta rebound better, make less mistakes defensively.” How smoothly Irving melds into the rotation will be a wait and see action. “He’s got to get his rhythm, and figure out how to play,” said Durant after Monday’s defeat. “He’s an efficient player that can put pressure on the defense.” The Nets will host the Milwaukee Bucks tomorrow and the San Antonio Spurs on Sunday before road games against the Portland Trailblazers on Monday and the Bulls next Wednesday.
Home court can be key to the Knicks climbing in the standings on Dec. 22 and hasn’t played a game since Dec. 16. He is not expected to play again until the middle of next month. Kemba Walker, who was the Eastern Conference Player of the Week for the week of Dec. 20-26, has not suited up for the last two games as he was hampered by knee soreness. The COVID and injury circumstances have provided young players such as rookie guard Quentin Grimes valuable minutes. With COVID-19 and injuries impacting the Knicks’ Tuesday began a lineup, rookie guard Quentin Grimes has been stretch in which AM NEWS afforded valuable minutes of playing time the Knicks will 01/06/22 be at the Garden for eight out of 10 games, continu- Their only road dates are this Saturing tonight versus the Boston Celtics. day in a rematch with the Celtics and (Bill Moore photo)
By JAIME C. HARRIS AmNews Sports Editor After having much of their roster miss multiple games over the past three-plus weeks, being placed in the NBA’s Health and Safety Protocols as a result of a surge in global COVID-19 cases, the Knicks had several of their core group back on Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden, where they defeated the Indiana Pacers by 104-94 to improve 18-20. Julius Randle returned following a twogame absence. He was placed in the health and safety protocols prior to the Knicks’ New Year’s Eve 95-80 road loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder. Randle’s 30 points and 16 rebounds against the Pacers was a much needed production infusion for the Knicks, who had lost their previous two games. As was RJ Barrett’s team-high 32 points. Barrett was placed in protocols on Dec. 12 and returned to the lineup on Christmas Day. “I think that the aggressiveness of RJ attacking the rim, and then for Julius to do what he did today was just remarkable,” said Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau. Injuries have also been a contributing factor to players being out, including point guard Derrick Rose, who underwent surgery on his right ankle
Saturday, Jan. 15 versus the Atlanta Hawks. It could be an opportune 19-day span for the Knicks to make up ground in the Eastern Conference race. They were in the 11th spot when the league’s schedule tipped off last night, a half game behind the 18-19 Celtics. Ten teams in each conference will play beyond their final regular season game, with the 7, 8, 9 and 10 seeds taking part in the Play-In Tournament, with two of those four moving on to the playoffs. What may be a disadvantage for the Knicks over the next 17 days is they have labored at MSG this season. The Knicks will go into tonight’s contest just 8-11 in their own building thus far with a negative point differential of -2.3. They finished last year’s regular season 25-11 at the Garden, holding a positive scoring margin of +3.6. Overall, the Knicks haven’t been at the even mark since Dec. 7 when they were 12-12 and have not been above .500 since Nov. 30 at 11-10.
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