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One Man’s Mission to Protect the Pigeons
by Erin DeGregorio
The Gowanus Expressway may not be a part of everyone’s commutes, but, for Kelvin Diaz, walking adjacent to and underneath it is part of his routine. The Sunset Park resident walks approximately three miles between 65th Street and 12th Street under the expressway (a total of six miles), “patrolling the area intensively” for pigeons in need of help.
“I’m a bird owner myself and I see pigeons no differently than my own,” said Diaz, who estimates that he has helped rescue at least 200 pigeons over the past two years. “They are just like any other bird. That’s my motivation.” However, when he noticed state-issued construction projects consisting of painting and steel repairs beginning to take place underneath the steel viaduct last summer, Diaz realized a plan needed to be hatched to effectively rescue any pigeons that may be impacted by the changing landscape. Online records indicate that construction is expected to be completed December 2025.
The urgency, Diaz points out, is that portions of the viaduct have holes, or openings where pigeons tend to perch, sleep, and sometimes nest, that have been covered with either construction tarp or pieces of wood.
“As soon as the construction started in August [2022], I started shadowing the company and bought equipment and personal tool gears to protect myself, because [I knew] I’d be in an environment where you’d need to be careful not to injure yourself,” said Diaz, who has carried and climbed a ladder at his own risk to rescue any pigeons that could be saved and possibly relocated. “No trespassing” signs have since been posted near construction areas.
Although he estimates that he has freed more than 100 adult pigeons and fledglings since December 2022, Diaz has found trapped pigeons in different situations during his rounds: scared and alone, huddled together in small groups, starving, injured, or even suffocated. “People really don’t have any idea,” he said. “But, with that being said, I am determined, no matter the circumstances.”
Diaz says he has contacted construction workers regarding this life-and-death situation, hoping to prevent future tragedies by raising awareness of Brooklyn’s avian neighbors. He—along with Valerie Neck, a volunteer at New York City Pigeon Rescue Central (a group dedicated to helping individual urban feral pigeons in New York City)—have also been documenting the reality that is being faced by pigeons underneath the steel viaduct.
“Kelvin is the complete hero of the construction project in the Gowanus [area],” Neck told RHSR. Neck is a documentary filmmaker and mental health therapist who has been involved with rescues for almost two years and has filmed with Diaz at least three times. “His unwavering dedication and vocal advocacy is unparalleled.”
A petition to prevent pigeon deaths also circulated last month on change.org, racking up signatures from 714 individuals in less than a month (as of March 29). Jairus James, the petition’s author who has previously helped Diaz remotely, outlines the difficulties associated with pigeon rescues and why this issue is important.
“Pigeons have been a part of our com-
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