C M SQ page 1 Y K SOUTH QUEENS EDITION Serving Howard Beach, Ozone Park, Woodhaven, Richmond Hill, South Ozone Park, City Line and JFK Airport
YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER VOL. XLIII
NO. 46
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2020
QCHRON.COM
Our 42 nd Anniversary Edition
TRIUMPH OVER TRAGEDY SUPPLEMENT INSIDE
RICHMOND HILL RISING
AIMING FOR RESILIENCY City hopes to rezone Old Howard Beach
PHOTO BY HVESNA / PIXABAY
PAGE 6
UNDER THE LENS Queens Museum shows decades of Bruce Davidson’s penetrating photography
PAGE 4
After Department of Health data showed that Richmond Hill was second from the top of the COVID positivity heap early in the week, the city finally announced that it would be opening up a testing site in the neighborhood. That comes after weeks of electeds and advocates asking for more testing in the area.
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Cuomo places curfew on major spreaders Statewide crackdown on gyms, restaurants, parties as cases rise by Katherine Donlevy Associate Editor
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ars, restaurants and gyms are under curfew. Gov. Cuomo announced Nov. 11 that beginning Friday all food establishments will be required to shut their doors to indoor or outdoor dining at 10 p.m. They will be allowed to continue curbside pickup past that point, however. Gyms must close at 10 p.m., too, and no gatherings of 10 people or more will be allowed anywhere. “States surrounding us have done something that I think is intelligent and we’re going to follow suit,” Cuomo said at the Wednesday press conference. He pointed to Connecticut, which enacted a similar policy on Nov. 6 and New Jersey, which will put theirs into effect Nov. 12. — food establishments must close their indoor premises at 10 p.m. and cannot open until at least 5 a.m. the following day. “I don’t want people in Connecticut saying, ‘We can’t meet in my house, so we’ll meet at yours in New York,’” Cuomo explained. “We don’t want the traffic steered in our direction.” New York State reported 3,964 positive COVID-19 cases Nov. 10, the highest number since early May. That same day, the country clocked in 139,855 cases, setting a new record for highest number in a single day that beat the previous one that had been
Food establishments have invested in heaters, tents, shields and other amenities to make outdoor dining more comfortable since expanded indoor dining does not seem to be on the way as PHOTO BY KATHERINE DONLEVY the weather gets colder. set just four days earlier. The curfew will not affect indoor dining capacities at this time, the governor said. New York City food establishments can continue to serve indoors at 25 percent, but capacity will not be raised to 50 percent in the near future, smashing small eateries’ hopes to move more business inside.
“Do we want to? Yes, we’d welcome this opportunity, but in the case of community security it’s better not to,” Downtown Flushing Business Improvement District Executive Director Dian Yu said in the hours leading up to Cuomo’s announcement. “They’re more focused on outdoor dining, which I think is a good thing. We’re
trying to avoid a second wave.” In anticipation of delayed indoor dining, food establishments have been investing in heaters, wind shields and other amenities to create a more comfortable outdoor dining experience as the cold weather creeps in. “Food establishments are on shaky ground,” he explained. “They’re willing to make the investment so they at least have a fighting chance.” Indoor dining capacities will only be reduced if the curfews prove ineffective — if cases continue to rise, food establishments could be shut down. Cuomo said food establishments and gyms are two of the top three coronavirus spreaders as recognized by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the third being house parties. To combat gatherings of 10 people or more, he said he needs the support of local law enforcement. “You can make rules, the rules are only as good as the enforcement. Period. Local governments are in charge of enforcement. There are only two fundamental truths in this situation — It’s individual discipline and it’s government enforcement. Period. End of sentence,” Cuomo said. “We went through this with bars and restaurants once before, we put rules in place. There was widespread Q lack of compliance.”
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Page 3 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
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QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020 Page 4
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COVID warning signs hit Richmond Hill Neighborhood has second-highest seven-day COVID positivity in city by Max Parrott Associate Editor
The rate of positive COVID test results has increased in Queens over the past week as officials have begun to warn that it could mark the beginning of a second wave. After Gov. Cuomo designated Ozone Park as part of a yellow zone at the end of October, South Queens has continued to have warning signs of higher infection. When the city Department of Health updated its website to show real-time data on COVID positivity rates by ZIP code, it showed that Richmond Hill had the second-highest seven-day COVID test positivity rates in all of New York City as of Monday, at 4.43 percent. The increase is not isolated to Richmond Hill. Farther south, Arverne and Broad Channel had the fifth-highest seven-day positivity rate in the city. That data came to light shortly after Cuomo removed Far Rockaway’s yellow zone designation at the end of last week, based on state data. The seven-day rolling average for the entire Queens yellow zone has increased from 2.68 percent positive Monday Nov. 2 to 3.12 percent Nov. 9, with daily rates of
City Department of Health data shows that Richmond Hill had the second-highest rate of positive COVID results out all those tested for the last seven-day period. Neighborhood advocates have fought to bring more testing to the GOOGLE MAPS IMAGE neighborhood in recent weeks. positivity shooting up in the last couple days of this week, according to the state data. Asked about the high positivity rate in Richmond Hill at a press event Monday, Mayor de Blasio said that he doesn’t believe it to be caused by any one thing or superspreader event.
“New York City has not seen major sites driving spread as you’ve seen in some other parts of the countr y where you really could identify a major outbreak to a specific site, whether it was a bar, a restaurant, a rally, something like that. We have not had that so much here. I think it’s
much more diffuse. It’s smaller family gatherings. It’s, you know, much more individual, if you will,” he said. C o u n c i l wo m a n A d r i e n n e Adams (D-Jamaica) announced on Tuesday that NYC Health + Hospitals would be opening up a new rapid COVID testing site at
the Lefferts branch of the Queens Public Library at 103-34 Lefferts Blvd. Free testing will be available at the location daily from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Adams recently told the Chronicle that she has had to push the city to get more testing in the area. Though five neighboring ZIP codes in South Queens were among the 10 areas with the lowest rates of COVID testing in the whole city as of the end of October, Adams and other community leaders said their efforts to set up more testing sites in the area have met bureaucratic resistance. As of Monday, the closest citysponsored testing center was either on 164th Street in Jamaica or Beach 39th Street in Rockaway, as City Council candidate Felicia Singh pointed out on Twitter. “But, certainly, as we work with community partners, as we identify local leaders to continue to make sure that we’re getting the message out… [we are] making sure that individuals are getting tested and avoiding gatherings as much as possible,” said Health Department First Deputy Commissioner and Chief Equity Officer Torian Easterling at the Q press event.
CB 9 considers surge of license requests Several businesses shot down for having incomplete applications by Max Parrott
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Associate Editor
Community Board 9’s stated meeting on Tuesday night presented a mixed bag of applications for beer, wine and liquor licenses. First CB 9 voted on a liquor license application for Tandoori Hut, a restaurant at 119-08 94 Ave. in Richmond Hill, which it unanimously approved. Then the board voted on a beer and wine license application for Brisas Del Mar Sea Food Market II at 76-15 Jamaica Ave. in Woodhaven. Previously the board had voted to oppose the application because the owner was asking for a license that extended to 2 a.m. and the only one that was available only went until 1 a.m. In the public comment section of the meeting Joshua Deras, speak-
ing on behalf of the restaurant’s owner, said that the business had come back because it was looking for whatever edge it could get. “We don’t mind the time. If it’s 1 o’clock, 2 o’clock, we don’t mind. Unfortunately the business is struggling,” said Deras. After the business agreed not to serve any alcohol after 1 a.m. even if it is open, the board approved the application Up next, it voted on a beer and cider license application for New Little Town Coffee Shop at 90-17 130 St. in Richmond Hill. The board unanimously voted against it because it had not received all the paperwork for the application. The board then voted unanimously in favor of a renewal of a wine, beer and cider license application for Tipsy’s Bar & Lounge
at 106-07 Jamaica Ave. in Richmond Hill. Ross Code Lounge at 117-15 101 Ave. in Richmond Hill had applied to stay open until 4 a.m. The board unanimously approved that request too. Lastly, 3 in 1 Deli Grocery at 131-11 Jamaica Ave. in Richmond Hill applied to renew its beer and cider license. Daniel Pollack, cochairman of the Public Safety and Consumer Affairs Committee, reported that according to the NYPD, the business had three violations for unauthorized alcoholic beverages on the premises, drug activity and violation of COVID restrictions. The business had also requested to put up a deck, which it had not submitted paperwork for. For all those reasons, the boa rd voted agai nst the
Community Board 9 considered a series of five business applications and ZOOM SCREENSHOT one street renaming on Tuesday night. application. The last action the board took was to unanimously vote to co-
name the southwest corner of 78th Street and 88th Avenue in WoodQ haven as Neir’s Tavern Way.
C M SQ page 5 Y K Mon. thru Sat. 10:00 AM-5:30 PM Sun. 10:00 AM-4:30 PM
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WE ARE ENFORCING SOCIAL DISTANCING IN THE STORE For the people that would like to come into the store, we are open. We kindly ask that you practice social distancing. The CDC recommends standing at a distance of six (6) feet apart. We have put tape lines on the floor around the entire store to designate the six (6) foot distance between patrons.
WE ARE SANITIZING ALL PUBLIC CONTACT AREAS For the people that would like to come into the store, we are sanitizing all door handles, all shopping basket handles, all shopping cart handles, all freezer door handles and spraying the air with Lysol disinfectant. (Please excuse the strong disinfectant scent that is extremely noticeable.)
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City pitches rezoning to Old Howard Beach The neighborhood plan is a part of an effort to improve resiliency citywide by Max Parrott Associate Editor
Howard Beach is one of several neighborhoods that the city is targeting in an effort to help prepare for the next Hurricane Sandy. The Department of City Planning presented a new rezoning plan to Community Board 10 last Thursday. The presentation pertained to both a citywide initiative and a neighborhood rezoning. The DCP is embarking on a citywide process that will make it easier for homeowners across the city to retrofit their residences and reduce damage from future flood events and save on insurance costs. As a part of that effort, the agency has proposed neighborhood-specific zoning text and map changes for Old Howard Beach in addition to Gerritsen Beach and Sheepshead Bay in Brooklyn. The specific changes to the neighborhood will primarily involve changing the zoning map so that new buildings must be detached because standalone houses are easier to elevate and retrofit with flooding protection measures than those that share walls. As an added benefit, the DCP said the rezoning will reinforce the neighborhood character of small, detached homes. There is one block on Huron Street in the northern part of the neighborhood where the rezoning would allow for duplexes in addition
The Department of City Planning presented to Community Board 10 rezoning portions of Old Howard Beach. The changes to the zoning map, right, would primarily make it so that new residences would be constructed as standalone DEPARTMENT OF CITY PLANNING IMAGES buildings. to detached homes. “This rezoning is just seeking to make it a little bit more flexible in terms of allowing future development to be more easily retrofitted,” Joy Resor, a Queens borough planner with DCP, told community board members during the meeting. The zoning of Old Howard Beach, which consists of mostly low-rise residential buildings,
has remained largely unchanged since 1961. The new zoning would affect 48 blocks total, containing 1,037 buildings. The citywide effort that Old Howard Beach is a part of is the Zoning for Coastal Flood Resiliency, a plan aimed at improving homeowners’ and business owners’ ability to withstand and recover from future storms and natural disasters.
In the wake of Hurricane Sandy in 2012, the city adopted temporary emergency zoning rules that made it easier for New Yorkers to rebuild. The ZCFR plan would update those rules with lessons that the DCP learned through community outreach and make them permanent. The proposal would allow homeowners, business owners, architects and others to design resilient buildings that are better protected from flood risk and reduce flood insurance costs. It would protect and support public access to waterfront sites through resilient open-space design. The only member of the community board to ask questions about the neighborhood rezoning after the presentation was John Calcagnile, the board’s land use chairman. Calcagnile suggested that the DCP allow for a larger floor-area ratio in the newly rezoned areas than the city’s standard designation. The change would allow residents to build slightly higher, he said, which would make up for the fact that buildings can’t have cellars in the neighborhood. Over the next month the community board will have a Land Use Committee meeting, in addition to sending out a mailing to impacted residents. In its December full meeting, it will hold a public hearing on the zoning, and vote on its Q recommendation.
HB Dads host holiday donation “This time of the year some people are down on their luck. COVID put a lot of people out of work. Let’s help those that need help.” Local donation sites are as follows: Food Emporium, 82-35 153 Ave., Howard Beach; Key Food, 163-30 Cross Bay Blvd., Howard Beach; DiVino’s Pizzeria, 164-02 Cross Bay Blvd., Howard Beach; Natural Body, 135-26 Cross Bay Blvd., Ozone Park; Limitless Fitness, 157-05 Cross Bay Blvd., Howard Beach; or Trackside Collision and Tire, 90-09 Q Liberty Ave., Ozone Park. PHOTO BY RICHARD DAVID
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The Howard Beach Dads are holding a Thanksgiving Food drive. The group has set up donation bins around the neighborhood to collect nonperishable foods to deliver for distribution at Our Lady of Grace Food Pantry. The group is also collecting taxdeductible monetary donations. To make one, send a message to the group’s Facebook Page or its email at HowardBeachDads@gmail.com. “You can either schedule a pick-up with us or visit the donation bin on the way out,” said organizer PJ Marcel.
Heroic Queens cop honored Police Officer Jason Maharaj, center, a hero who potentially saved the life of a convenience store worker in Ozone Park, was honored Saturday. Two weeks ago, a disgruntled homeless man allegedly shot Mohmediyan Tarwala, a 26-year-old clerk at an Ozone Park smoke shop. He later died from his injuries.
Maharaj, off-duty, happened to be at the scene of the crime, where he intervened to wrestle the gunman down and disarm him before he could take a second victim’s life. Dozens of people honored Maharaj’s bravery at the event outside the Deshi Senior Center, about a mile away from the store.
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A salute to service for Veterans Day
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PHOTOS BY WALTER KARLING
Masked up and socially distant, state Sen. Leroy Comrie’s office, veterans groups and a variety of supporters held a Veterans Day Parade and event last Saturday at Roy Wilkins Park in St. Albans and along Merrick Boulevard, wrapping it up with an open house at Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 483 in Rosedale. Clockwise from top right: a lone soldier standing watch; the U.S. Customs Border Patrol, JFK Unit; NYPD Explorers; Boy Scout Troop 144; Cista Girls marching; participants commemorating the
event with the help of the NYPD; Rep. Gregory Meeks and City Councilmember Adrienne Adams marching with their respective staffs; a vintage Rolls Royce that along with other classic cars made up the rear of the parade; Neil Jordan, commander of the area VFW post, mustering up the color guard; the St. Albans civic marching along; Officer Justin Davis, left, and Det. Tanya Duhaney, center, posing with veterans; and members of VFW Post 5298 Reggie Fordham and Jackie Wilson standing proudly.
C M SQ page 9 Y K Page 9 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
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QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020 Page 10
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P Triumph over Tragedy
EDITORIAL
H
ow fitting for 2020 — the Queens Chronicle is celebrating our 42nd anniversary with a special history supplement reliving some of the worst events ever to happen here — from devastating transportation accidents to natural disasters, from the ravages of AIDS to the impacts of the Sept. 11 attacks. But here’s the catch: Just about all of these events led to some improvement in society that made life better for those who survived and those yet to be. Hence the special edition’s name: Triumph over Tragedy. And so we hope it will be — the sooner the better, no question about it — with the ongoing crisis caused by this once-in-a-hundred-years novel coronavirus. The chapter of human history dealing with the impact of COVID-19 is obviously still being written. Are halfway through it? More? Less? No one knows for sure. Nor does anyone know exactly what life will look like afterward, which of the changes we’ve undergone will stick around and which will suddenly disappear.
AGE
Fight COVID or face disaster
We do know those things, at least for the most part, about the select disasters in Queens and New York City history we chose to include in Triumph over Tragedy. We know that the General Slocum ship fire in 1904, which killed more than 1,300 people, helped lead the way toward stronger safety regulations, but not alone — it took other events such as the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire and the sinking of the Titanic to cumulatively bring about change. The attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 led to countless changes across society; we focus on individuals here in Queens, in the police and fire services. The AIDS crisis led, eventually, to the development of miraculous drug treatments, but also to the growing acceptance of gay people. These are just some of the stories you’ll find in Triumph over Tragedy. You’ll also get a couple curve balls — one tragedy averted and one that, well, we call the ’62 Mets. They eventually triumphed. So will we today. As this project reminds us, we always have, after a long road.
W
e can’t say we weren’t warned. As COVID infection rates dropped in the late spring and early summer, we enjoyed some of our newfound freedom after the horrors of March, April and early May. That was only natural, and we could do it, because we largely did it outdoors. But the virus kept spreading, especially in those areas it hadn’t hit hard yet, and cases climbed. And when the cold drove us back indoors more often, many people let their guard down. Whether it was COVID fatigue, a teenage-like rebellion against common sense and authority or a genuine belief that the worst was behind us, people got sloppy. And now we’re beginning to pay the price, with a rise in cases that seems inexorable. Gov. Cuomo on Wednesday ordered more restrictions on businesses, specifically ordering bars and restaurants to cease any table service at 10 p.m.; for gyms to close at that time too; and for people to not gather in groups of 10 or more. Just in time for Thanksgiving. And our positive test rate is closing in on the number that would shut down the schools, another nightmare. We can only have a hope of staving off unbearable increases in death and disease, along with a return to soul-crushing and socially destructive lockdowns, if we get much better very quickly at stemming COVID’s spread. Wear the mask — not a bandanna but an actual surgical mask, or better. Stay the hell away from people. Wash your hands, constantly. If we all do this, maybe winter won’t be too bad. Otherwise, it’s going to be hideous.
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A reckless writer Dear Editor: I find Larry Penner’s Nov. 5 letter “How to Save Eateries” reckless, irresponsible, and dangerous. Yes, the economic devastation to restaurants wrought by COVID is horrific. I vividly recall visiting the unemployment office with my father as a teenager in the 1970s. But I find the author’s cavalier attitude toward COVID even more horrific. In one letter to another newspaper the author compared restrictions imposed by Mayor de Blasio and Gov. Cuomo to occupied Poland during World War II. In this letter he mentions the importance of face coverings and social distancing almost as a casual afterthought. I lost one of my best friends in April to COVID. I miss him terribly. I myself had COVID (the positive test came the day after my 58th birthday, also in April). I was fortunately asymptomatic, but I wish the author knew the anguish of suffering from a potentially lifethreatening disease, wondering when you go to sleep if you’ll wake up the next morning. My then-18-year-old son who tested presumed positive sounded for a week as if he belonged in a tuberculosis ward, although he suddenly recovered and has been fine ever since. I wish the author understood what it’s like to hear your offspring hacking up a lung. The author proposes opening restaurants at 50 percent capacity, then pausing to see if there © Copyright 2020 by MARK I PUBLICATIONS, INC. All rights reserved. Neither this newspaper nor any part thereof may be reproduced, copied, or transmitted in any form, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, microfilming, recording or by any information retrieval system without the express written permission of the publishers. This copyright is extended to the design and text created for advertisements. Reproduction of said advertisement or any part thereof without the express written permission of MARK I PUBLICATIONS, INC. is strictly prohibited. This publication will not be responsiblefor errors in advertising beyond the cost of the space occupied by the error. Bylined articles represent the sole opinion of the writer and are not necessarily in accordance with the views of the QUEENS CHRONICLE. This Publication reserves the right to limit or refuse advertising it deems objectionable. The Queens Chronicle is published weekly by Mark I Publications, Inc.at a subscription rate of $19 per year and out of state, $25 per year. Periodicals Postage Paid (USPS0013-572) at Flushing, N.Y. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Mark I Publications, Inc., 71-19 80th St., Suite 8-201, Glendale, NY 11385.
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is “no significant spike in COVID-19 cases.” Exactly what does the author define as “a significant spike”? Because to me, even one person suffering from COVID is “significant.” Does he not understand the devastation even one carrier can cause? The disease is resurging, and mightily, because of the populace’s utterly irresponsible behavior and attitudes toward COVID as cavalier as the author’s. Why doesn’t the author draw upon his selfperceived bottomless fountain of wisdom to advocate wearing masks, social distancing and a vaccine being developed to combat this nightmare? Nat Weiner Bronx
Vote low-tech, with ID Dear Editor: It’s been said we’ve come a long way now with technology, but when it comes to voting, we beg to differ. To our surprise, that giant ledger book you had to sign was gone, replaced by a small com-
puter that you signed to show you voted. Are you kidding? The man before us could have been anyone other than himself, his signature was so bad! At least with the book, the signature had to match up. What an opportunity for fraud! Our vote is too precious to be compromised in this way. And we still support showing ID. In this day and age, it is unthinkable that anyone would not have ID. It is comparable to not having medical insurance. Reader input would be appreciated! Thomas and Constance Dowd Oakland Gardens
Ranked choice may rankle Dear Editor: The ranked-choice voting approved in 2019 will be a sure bet to be a major problem at the primaries in 2021. The voter education programs that are supposed to be put in place would have to be in English, Bengali, Chinese, Korean and Spanish.
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This applies mostly to Queens, where the most diverse neighborhoods are located. Candidates would need more money to get in front of the voters and actually say why they are better than their opponents. A special monitor would have in place at the early voting sites to explain the procedures. Hopefully, this idea to make elections fairer does not backfire. Ray Hackinson Ozone Park
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Teachers’ aides suffer Dear Editor: As New York opened up during the pandemic, the schools also opened. It was declared for the schools to have all the windows opened throughout the buildings. The reasoning is that ventilation in the buildings is mandatory to prevent COVID-19 from coming in. As a result of this regulation, the children, teachers, teachers’ aides and office personnel are forced to wear heavy jackets and sweaters, as the wind circulates throughout the building and classrooms. Some absentees among chil-
dren have escalated; e.g., they’re getting sick from the wind coming in despite heavy outerwear. It is worse when it rains. Then if a vaccine is not in place, when it starts snowing, and heavily, it will be even worse. With this regulation, the teachers’ aides are monitoring the restrooms on each floor. There is only one teachers’ aide per floor. They are required to stay at these posts throughout the day. They can walk up and down the hallway, but are being denied a lunch break, though by law, every job has to give an employee at least a 15-minute lunch break. There are no coffee breaks. Even when one has to use the restroom, it is in and out as fast as possible, as the children’s restroom cannot be left unattended. The idea is to make sure when children are using the restroom, there are only three at a time, and the teachers’ aide has to check to make sure the children have washed their hands before returning to their classroom. What is being told to the teachers’ aides is, there isn’t anyone available to give them relief, aka a lunch break or coffee break. This is atrocious. Something needs to be done as soon as possible to eradicate this horrible situation. Eloise Ockert Astoria
Take on Con Ed, Rory Dear Editor: Re Michael Gannon’s Nov. 5 report “Lancman appointed ratepayer watchdog” (multiple editions): As one of Rory Lancman’s Kew Gardens Hills constituents, I congratulate him on his new post as special counsel for New York State utility ratepayers. While I disagreed with his City Council agenda on criminal justice, as noted in my letters to the Chronicle, we have some things in common. We each have lived in Queens for several decades, reside in rent-regulated apartments, have strong ties to PS 164 and Queens College, and served in the military. I hope he brings the same tenacity to his new job as he did while chairing the City Council’s Justice System Committee. One of his key goals, I feel, should be to end Con Ed’s double standard for electricity distribution. The utility’s power lines are buried underground for 39 square miles in Manhattan, while 561 square miles of overhead power lines serve clients in the outer boroughs and Westchester (The New York Times, Feb. 10, 2017). Tropical Storm Isaias spotlighted this dangerous disparity. While relatively few Manhattan customers suffered power disruption, several hundred thousand outerborough residents were without electricity for over a week. A study ordered by then-Mayor Mike Bloomberg in 2013, after Superstorm Sandy, indicated that it would cost Con Ed $18.5 billion to place its outerborough power lines below ground. That cost may have risen over the past seven years, but it’s still essential (info source: Wikipedia). Your article noted that Lancman is responsible for ensuring that utilities make “required investments” to adequately serve their customers. This is certainly a required investment. I hope he holds Con Ed’s feet to the fire. Richard Reif Kew Gardens Hills
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Dear Editor: Congratulations on your 42nd anniversary of publication. I have been a faithful reader for 36 years. How fortunate we are to live in one of the few remaining free societies, with a wealth of information sources available. Many cities, suburbs and small towns are down to one local daily or weekly newspaper. Newspapers and magazines have to deal with increasing costs for newsprint, delivery and distribution along with reduced advertising revenues due to COVID-19 and declining readership due to competition from the internet and other news information sources. Queens residents have many daily newspapers to select from including the Daily News, Post, Times, Newsday, USA Today, Wall Street Journal and along with freebies such as AM Metro New York. Decades ago we had our own daily Long Island Star Journal and Long Island Press. Daily newspapers concentrate on international, Washington, Albany, City Hall, business and sports stories. They have few reporters assigned to cover local neighborhood news and miss significant news and political stories from local Queens neighborhoods. Weekly newspapers such as our own Queens Chronicle and others fill the void for coverage of local community news. I’m grateful that you have afforded me the opportunity to express my views via letters to the editor along with others who may have different opinions on the issues of the day. We need to continue supporting weekly community newspapers. Patronize their advertisers; they provide the revenues to help keep them in business. Let them know you saw their ad. This helps keep our neighbors employed and the local economy growing. In the marketplace of ideas, let us hope there continues to be room for everyone including the Queens Chronicle and others. Larry Penner Great Neck, LI
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Diwali lights up South Queens The annual Diwali motorcade, the spectacular nighttime parade in Richmond Hill, couldn’t escape the list of events that had to be canceled this year due to the coronavirus. But the parade’s longtime organizer, Lakshmee Singh, refused to let the sacred holiday, one of the most important days on the Hindu calendar, pass without notice. In a little less than two weeks, Singh and a group of volunteers put together a scaleddown celebration of the Hindu Festival of Lights for last Saturday night, including a special display of light on Liberty Avenue. “We did it eight days actually,” said Singh, who hosts a popular IndoCarribean TV show, “thanks to the Queens Arts Council and Queens Economic Development Corp.”
Diwali serves as both a New Year’s celebration and a spiritual holiday honoring the goddess of prosperity, Lakshmi, and will be marked Nov. 14 this year. The annual parade down Liberty Avenue, the heart of the IndoCarribbean community in New York, draws up to 10,000 spectators to see a mile-long motorcade of homemade floats and marchers dressed elaborately as Hindu gods. The 2020 version of Diwali was confined to the triangle at Liberty and 103rd Avenue, in front of Sybil’s Bakery. Steffinie Komala Karamchand, a Lehman College student, portrayed the goddess Lakshmi presiding over the ceremony. — Michael Shain
Ozone Park Thanksgiving drive The Ozone Park Residents Block Association, the Cityline Ozone Park Civilian Patrol and the Kiwanis Club of Ozone Park have stepped up to try and reduce food insecurity for the harvest holiday. The groups are working together to provide an opportunity for residents to “host” a family for Thanksgiving. A $40 donation supplies one family with an essential food box. Families in need can fill out the online fo r m a t t i ny u r l.c o m / y 63a r qf y t o participate. As of Tuesday, 25 families had already
applied for t he food box for Thanksgiving. Donations will be accepted through Nov. 23. Those looking to donate can pay through Ve n m o to @ ozpkrba-copcp-kiwanis. Checks will also be accepted to City Line Ozone Park Civilian Patrol, Inc. Cash donations are also accepted at the OZPKRBA’s office at 83-10 Rockaway Blvd. For more information, call (718) 641Q 0405.
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Class grades will take bigger role in college admissions by Max Parrott Associate Editor
The January New York Regents exams will be canceled as a result of the COVID19 pandemic, announced interim state Education Commissioner Betty Rosa last Thursday. Normally most students have to pass at least five Regents exams to earn a high school diploma. But the state Education Department’s announcement clarified that the exam will not be required in order to attain high school diplomas. “Throughout the pandemic our priority has been the health and well-being of our students and educators,” said Rosa in a statement. “We determined the January Regents Exams could not be safely, equitably and fairly administered across the State given where the pandemic currently stands.” There are two levels of diplomas for graduating high school in New York state: a Regents diploma and an Advanced Regents diploma. The latter requires a score of 65 or higher on five exams. The type of diploma a student earns winds up on his or her academic transcript to be viewed by colleges, although parents say that it plays a more important role at state schools than elsewhere.
Interim state Education Commissioner Betty Rosa announced that the January New York Regents exams will be canceled due to the STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION PHOTO pandemic. CUNY and SUNY colleges normally look at the Regents to deter mine the course level that college students start with
in general education programs. Some specialized programs will take the tests into consideration to see whether students who are applying have demonstrated the necessary skills on the tests. Now college admissions will hinge more on a student’s grades, college advisors say. “The class grades are basically the beall-end-all. That improves the graduation rate. It’s controversial. It’s good, but some people say that the kids are not prepared,” said John Castellano, a college application tutor based in Oakland Gardens. “Some people say this proves kids don’t need Regents and others are saying the jury’s out, let’s see what happens when these kids leave college.” Even before the announcement, CUNY schools did not require the Regents as part of the admission process. The schools used students’ high school academic records as a basis for admission, but ACT or SAT scores could be used to prove proficiency in certain subjects like math and English in place of the state exams. “The general consensus from college advisors is your grades and your essay mean more nowadays than ever, and the main thing colleges want to see with your essay is what you’ve been doing during Q coronavirus,” Castellano said.
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Century 21 real estate and Flatbush Moving Van Co. are partnering with nonprofit Move for Hunger to hold a Thanksgiving food drive on Sat., Nov. 14. Citing the fact that one in six Americans will face hunger during the pandemic, the groups will be gathering in front of Food Emporium, at 82-35 153 Ave. in Howard Beach, to collect items to donate to the food pantry at Our Lady of Grace Church. Move for Hunger is a network of socially responsible relocation companies that provide their clients with the opportunity to host a food donation when they move. The most-needed items are canned vegetables (yams, corn, carrots and beans), pumpkin stuffing, cornbread mix, gravy, cranberry sauce, boxed stuffing, soups, instant mashed potatoes, applesauces and canned turkey, chicken, stews and chilis. The Flatbush Moving Van Co. will deliver the food to the pantry. The drive will go from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more information, go online to Q visit MoveForHunger.org.
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Page 13 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
Century 21 food drive in Howard Beach
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020 Page 14
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Illegal car dealers taking up space Precinct boss says residents told him Corona streets look like sales lots by David Russell Associate Editor
Councilman Francisco Moya (D-Corona) helped crack down on “curbstoning” when he was in the Assembly five years ago, with tougher penalties for unlicensed car dealing. But curbstoning, when a dealer poses as a private seller to sell a car parked on the street, is still common in Corona. “In some of these streets the residents were saying it was like a used car lot on a public street,” said Capt. Jonathan Cermeli, commanding officer of the 110th Precinct. Moya wants it seen as a top priority. “I’m always disappointed when I see that the quality-of-life issues that happen in my community don’t happen in more of the affluent areas,” he said, adding that the precinct has been extremely responsive. Parking spots are being taken up on residential blocks by auto body shops, mechanic shops and secondhand used car dealers. “We noticed a spike in vehicles being put in parking spots all over
residential neighborhoods in Corona with ‘for sale’ signs on them,” Cermeli said Monday. The commander said it’s hard to determine if the business owner or employees are usually responsible for curbstoning. He believes a lot of people trying to sell their vehicles now may have been in an accident or don’t have the money to maintain it. The owner of an auto body shop on 47th Avenue was given a ticket in late October, according to Moya’s office. Reached Wednesday by the Queens Chronicle, someone who picked up the phone after the owner was requested said he had not gotten a ticket and that the boss was not there, before hanging up. To sell more than five vehicles per year in New York, a dealer’s license is needed. “Most of these folks don’t have that,” Moya said. Secondhand auto dealers must have a valid Department of Consumer Affairs license and all printed handouts to customers must include the license number. Vehicles cannot be parked, stored, displayed or left standing partially or completely on
Curbstoning, when a dealer poses as a private seller to sell a car, has caused problems in Corona, with space being taken by the illegal activity. 110TH PRECINCT PHOTO / FACEBOOK
the sidewalk or street. That’s where one problem lies. Safety activist and cyclist Peter Beadle said there is no lack of examples of cars being parked on sidewalks in industrial areas, near not just car dealerships but police precincts. “You increase the risk that somebody is going to step off the curb into traffic to get around the parked cars,” he said. Beadle says there has been a nor-
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malization of seeing cars habitually violate space where they are not allowed. “It becomes, ‘Well, you know, what are you going to do? We’re living in a busy city.’ No. There are other cities that actually enforce their rules,” Beadle said. Cermeli said many of the cars recently towed were not allowed to be parked where they were and didn’t even have the proper registration or license plates to legally
be on the street. Paper plates were often distributed as temporary licenses with the Department of Motor Vehicles not being open for in-person service during the pandemic. “But a lot of people were manufacturing their own license plates illegally,” Cermeli said. He said a vehicle in an accident with no insurance or registration “would present a whole host of inconveniences, a lot of problems for other people that are being affected by this.” The precinct has been doing random car stops at different locations to check the legality of vehicles. Around 20 have been towed in the last month. “If someone loses their car and it gets towed, they’re out a significant amount of money so I think that the message definitely is being driven home,” Cermeli said. The 2015 curbstoning bill sponsored by Moya and Sen. Jeffrey Klein (D-Bronx), and signed into law by Gov. Cuomo, quadrupled penalties for operating as an unlicontinued on page 22
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Elected officials, commerce leaders concerned about small businesses by David Russell Associate Editor
The relationship between small business and government during the pandemic has been an uneasy one. “It was bad before. Now it’s worse,” said Councilman Mark Gjonaj (D-Bronx), during last Thursday’s tour of businesses on Fresh Pond Road in Glendale. “The city is not listening. They’re hearing the issues. They have not addressed the concern.” Gjonaj, chairman of the Council’s Committee on Small Business, visited stores with Councilman Bob Holden (D-Middle Village), Myrtle Avenue Business Improvement District President Ted Renz, Queens Chamber of Commerce President Tom Grech and Small Businesses Commissioner Jonnel Doris. “For us, we’re here to help small business. That’s our job,” Doris said. “While we’re the government, we’re still their advocates.” He said about 30 walking tours have been done around the city and though some changes in policy have been implemented because of feedback, Doris acknowledged “we have to rebuild their trust, too.” Among the problems raised by elected officials and business owners around the city are the fines being imposed, sometimes with contradicting advice from city agencies. “I don’t like when the government descends
Councilman Bob Holden, left, Councilman Mark Gjonaj, Queens Chamber of Commerce President Tom Grech and Small Business Services Commissioner Jonnel Doris, right, speak to a resPHOTO BY DAVID RUSSELL taurant owner on Fresh Pond Road last Thursday. on businesses that were closed for so long and then they start fining them instead of warning them,” Holden said. Grech believes one person needs to oversee everything, “kind of like a COVID czar.” Gjonaj said store owners can be fined if a customer is not wearing a mask but believes that is unfair to the owner, saying that there have been attacks on people who are demand-
ing masks be worn. “They’re not policemen. They’re business people,” he said. “They’re working behind the counter. They’re sweating. They’re not supposed to act as enforcement. You can’t hold them reliable. You go tell someone with mental illness that they can’t enter because they don’t have a face mask. Let’s see how far that gets you.”
Grech said as he’s handed out masks around the borough, he’s been pleasantly surprised that, for the most part, everybody in and outside the stores are wearing them. “There was sanitizer everywhere. People are following the rules and regulations but at the end of the day if we wait much longer to open some of these places ... there will be nothing to reopen come January,” he said. Gjonaj noted a city comptroller report that said nearly one-third of the city’s small businesses may never reopen. “We’re not doing anything more than making sure that we help them shutter their doors forever,” he said, adding, “The one concept that this city is not embracing right now is every dollar that you put into a small business will yield you a return on your investment through tax dollars, through jobs, through income tax, through sales tax — and when they’re gone, they’re gone.” Holden wants to see the ropening progress and said he isn’t worried about noise or quality-of-life complaints rising from bars and restaurants. The lawmaker said concerns often come from Forest Park and other hangouts, but outdoor dining hasn’t led to any complaints. “You’re probably going to get it but I don’t think we have as many in my district as they have in Manhattan, obviously,” Holden said. Q
Page 15 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
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Meeks calls Spigner ‘my Jackie Robinson’ Mayor sees ‘divine intervention’ by political icon in U.S. election by Michael Shain Chronicle Contributor
Not surprisingly, the funeral of Archie Spigner — a political animal to the end — this week became a celebration of the end of Donald Trump’s presidency. The dean of Southeast Queens civic life died Oct. 29 at age 92, five days before the election, and was eulogized Tuesday as a pioneer for black empowerment by some of the most powerful political figures in the city. Most of the funeral speeches took note that Spigner’s passing came at the same moment that Democrats are set to take back the W h it e Hou s e a f t e r a bit t e r campaign. “To win this election, we needed divine intervention and we sent the right man to arrange it,” said Mayor de Blasio. “We’ve gotten rid of Donald Trump, praise God,” invoked U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY), who appeared from Washington, DC, via video. The influence that Spigner, the
first African-American elected to the City Council from Queens, won and wielded during his long career was also celebrated during a three-hour “homegoing” at the Greater Bethel Ministries church in Queens Village. “He was my Jackie Robinson,” said Re p. G regor y Meek s (D-Queens, Nassau), the head of the Queens Democratic Par ty organization. “It’s easy for us,” he said, gesturing toward a half a dozen off iceholders f rom Southeast Queens sitting in the church’s first pew. “That’s because the path was paved, everything was chopped down. Archie Spigner did this for us.” “I wouldn’t be here without Archie Spigner,” Schumer told the 150 people in the church, recounting how Spigner’s backing helped h i m d efe a t fo r me r S e n . A l D’Amato in 1998. “Every one of us owes everything to Archie.” “There would be no Donovan
Rep. Gregory Meeks speaks at the funeral for Southeast Queens political icon Archie Spigner, who was lauded as a trailblazer. Former Rep. Charles Rangel came from Harlem to pay his respects, left, while U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer PHOTOS BY MICHAEL SHAIN spoke from Washington. Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz also spoke at the event. Richards without Archie Spigner,” said the borough president-elect. “No Leroy Comrie, no Adrienne Adams, no I. Daneek Miller, no Alicia Hyndman. We stand on his shoulders.’’ Former Rep. Charles Rangel,
90, came from his home in Harlem to recall how state political leaders, before signing onto a new initiative, would ask, “Did you check with Archie on this?” Rangel lamented that “every time someone in Harlem got a lit-
tle money, they moved to Queens” and into Spigner’s sphere. One his way back to the pews, the 23-term congressman stopped at the open casket where Spigner’s body lay at rest, placed a hand on the edge and whispered goodbye. Q
Stringer rips city on business, education by David Russell Associate Editor
In February, the city had 3.4 percent unemployment but within 30 days of COVID hitting, it jumped to 20 percent. “It went from the lowest to the highest in our history,” city Comptroller Scott Stringer said during a virtual town hall Monday, adding, “This is the greatest economic challenge our city ever faced.” In the past few months, 2,800 businesses have closed and 520,000 small business employees have lost their jobs in the city, according to Stringer, who is running for
mayor in 2021. “This economy had never been in this kind of freefall,” he said. The city is of little help, Stringer said. “I think we all agree city government is a problem when it comes to small business,” he said. Stringer recalled ribbon cuttings he would attend as Manhattan borough president for new businesses but said the “problem is that for all of us elected officials would celebrate the small business, the city agencies would come in and they would attack the business.”
Stringer, who in August unveiled a 25-point plan to help small businesses, said from 2007 to 2017, the city went from 5 million square feet of vacant storefront space to 11 million. Now, according to the comptroller, it’s around 16 to 17 million. “In many of our communities we’ve lost whole commercial corridors,” he said, adding that the vacant streets are “like somet h i ng out of t he 1980 s a nd t h at’s dangerous.” Stringer also discussed issues about the Department of Education with state Sen. Toby Ann Stavisky (D-Whitestone) saying
there has not been “any kind of guidance” in terms of Gifted and Talented programs. Stringer criticized Mayor de Blasio and Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza on not being more transparent with the diversity plan for District 28 middle schools, and also ripped the newly restricted deadline for parents to opt in for blended learning. “Now we’re grappling with these decisions and they’re being dictated by a bureaucrat who’s embarrassed that he doesn’t have enough kids in the school by Friday,” Stringer said. “Shame on him. Shame on Carranza. It’s a total lack of leadership.” Q
C M SQ page 17 Y K Page 17 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
This College is Adjusting to COVID-times to Help You Overcome COVID-times the virtual environment with synchronous classes whereby students log in from home but still benefit from real-time instruction and interaction with professors.
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Feeding tummies and minds The Queens County Farm Museum has started up its annual food drive to support CUNY Queens College students and is asking for donations “be as diverse as the borough of Queens.” “No one should go hungry. CUNY students represent the future of New York City. Together, Queens Farm and Queens College can feed tummies and feed minds,” said
Queens Farm Executive Director Jennifer Walden Weprin, second from right, here with Anthony Ogata of Knights Table Food Pantry, left, Vice President for Communications and Marketing at Queens College Jay Hershenson, Jessica Arroyo of Queens Farm and Shanequa Terry of Queens College. Donations can be made at the Farm Store weekdays 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. until Dec. 31.
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AD 26, CD 3 victors remain unclear by Katherine Donlevy
yet-to-be counted absentee ballots, over 50 percent of which were sent in by registered Democrats, could change the fate of the election. Santos, claiming voter fraud, has referred to NY 3 as “his” district in a series of tweets and has assumed victory despite the ongoing counts. “To my supporters: I will not back down until every #ILLEGALVOTE is exposed and discarded,” Santos tweeted on Nov. 9 in a series tagged #VoterSupression, #StopTheSteal. Similarly in the 26th Assembly District, unofficial election night results show a potential upset of incumbent Ed Braunstein (D-Bayside), with Republican insurgent John-Alexander Sakelos holding a nearly 5 percent lead. The district, however, began counting the nearly 15,700 returned ballots on Tuesday, 63 percent of which were sent in by registered Democrats. Neither Braunstein nor Sakelos have claimed victory or offered concessions on Q the race.
Associate Editor
“We will win. It will take 2 weeks,” Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-Suffolk, Nassau, Queens) emphasized in a Monday email to supporters. The incumbent congressman is trailing behind Republican challenger George Santos by 1.42 percent of the votes as of Nov. 10. Suozzi, however, remains confident that absentee ballot counting, which began Tuesday, would deliver him a win. New York State election law restricts counting mail-in ballots until at least one week after Election Day to allow all eligible votes to arrive. Absentee ballots must be postmarked by Nov. 3 and received by Nov. 10, according to the state Board of Elections. Though Queens and Nassau counties began counting the mailed votes Monday, Suffolk won’t begin counting until Nov. 16, Suozzi said. Though Suozzi leads in unofficial votes by Queens voters, large support for Santos by Long Islanders offset the percentage in Santos’ favor. Nearly 98,000
by MIchael Gannon Editor
Mayor de Blasio has designated Feb. 2 as the date for a special election to fill the seat of former Councilman Rory Lancman (D-Fresh Meadows) in the 24th District. The vacancy was created back on Wednesday when Lancman formally resigned to begin his new post as special counsel for ratepayer protection. The newly created position oversees state-regulated utilities and telecommunications firms. “I am declaring Tuesday, February 2, 2021 as the date for the 24th City Council District special election to elect a Council Member to serve until December 31st, 2021,” de Blasio said in a statement issued by his office at 4:35 p.m. on Friday. “This date, within the window allowed by the City Charter, will facilitate maximum voter participation,” the mayor said. “I encourage all eligible Queens residents to vote early, in person, or by absentee ballot in the upcoming special election.” The district covers all or portions of Kew Gardens Hills, Pomonok, Electchester, Fresh Meadows, Hillcrest, Jamaica Estates, Briarwood, Parkway Village,
Jamaica Hills and Jamaica. L a n c m a n would have been term-limited out of off ice in 14 months. Records at the city’s Campaign Fi n a nce Boa rd v iewe d Fr id ay after noon show that there already Eight are running to are eight candi- replace Councilman dates who have Rory Lancman. FILE PHOTO notified the city of their intention to run for the office. They include Moumita Ahmed; Stanley Arden; James Gennaro, who held the seat prior to Lancman from 2002 to 2013; Neeta Jain; Dilip Nath; Deepti Sharma; Soma Syed; and Mohammed Uddin. Cuomo announced Lancman’s appointment on Oct. 30. All the candidates listed on the CFB on Friday also were listed in a file downloaded by the Chronicle on Oct. 22, apparently in anticipation of Lancman’s Q impending term limit.
Page 19 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
Ballot counting could Special election for last another week Lancman seat Feb. 2
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New citizens could return to Jamaica King Manor Museum has long hosted naturalization ceremonies by Michael Gannon Editor
With Citizenship Day and Constitution Day both falling on Sept. 17, it had become a tradition for brand-new Americans to take their oath of citizenship in Jamaica at the King Manor Museum. King helped craft the U.S. Constitution and was one of the country’s first leaders to take a prominent role in the slavery abolitionist movement. Dozens, if not scores of people from around the world typically gathered beneath tents every Sept. 17 and were greeted by speakers, often area politicians, and finally were sworn in by a federal judge who often has been an immigrant or the child of immigrants. The last two years have seen an interruption — one caused by logistics and the other by COVID-19, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. But it is not necessarily a permanent interruption. “There’s never a dry eye in the house on citizenship days,” Kelsey Brow, executive director of King Manor, told the Chronicle. “And it’s so meaningful to bring in new citizens to this country at the home of one of our Founding Fathers, especially Rufus King, who worked for a more equitable soci-
Some of the country’s newest Americans in September 2015 show off their citizenship certificates on the back porch at King Manor. Circumstances have interrupted the annual tradition in FILE PHOTO BY VICTORIA ZUNITCH Jamaica for two years, but it could come back in the future. ety regardless of race. We’ve been holding the ceremonies for decades and I was heartbroken to not have one last year, especially in my first year as executive director. I already had my speech written!” Each year, immediately following the ceremony, longtime King Manor Caretaker Roy Fox has welcomed the new citizens
inside at a large table on which he unfurls a giant copy of the Constitution. Each participant is invited to sign his or her name along with New York delegate Alexander Hamilton — King was a member of the Massachusetts delegation at the time — as well as George Washington, Benjamin Franklin and James Madison
In an email, USCIS Public Affairs Officer Katie Tichacek said K ing Manor remains a very viable option in the future. “[The] USCIS Queens field office, along with the U.S. District Court, Eastern District of NY, has had the privilege of hosting naturalization ceremonies on Citizenship Day (Sept. 17) at historic Rufus King Manor in the past, most recently in 2018,” she wrote. “We declined to host a ceremony in Fiscal Year 2019 due to limited employee resources — we hosted two other ceremonies that day, one at the U.S. District Court in Brooklyn and one at Rockefeller Plaza. “This year, in accordance with CDC health and safety guidelines, we are not holding large naturalization ceremonies at external venues due to the COVID-19 pandemic. We hope to resume them again at some point in the future as safety measures and resources allow — at that point, we would welcome an invitation to return to Rufus King Manor and other venues wishing to host a ceremony.” The museum is located on Jamaica Avenue within Rufus King Park. The park sits between 150th and 153rd streets, and is bounded to the north by 89th Avenue. “We just really want to host them again. Our whole staff and board loves hosting the Q swearings-in,” Brow said.
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Front office talks ‘shopping in the gourmet section’ for top players by David Russell Associate Editor
Steve Cohen is the richest owner in Major League Baseball and it sounds as if he wants to spend some money. He does not want to wait around to turn his newly acquired Mets into winners. “If I don’t win a World Series in the next three to five years — I’d like to make it sooner — I would consider that slightly disappointing,” he said at an online press conference Tuesday. “We now can emphasize the acquisition rather than the cost,” new team president Sandy Alderson agreed. Alderson was the general manager from 2011 to July 2018, before stepping away due to health concerns. The Wilpon family had run the team since 2002 after buying out Nelson Doubleday. Fans often bashed the owners, or the “Coupons,” for their seeming unwillingness to spend big in free agency on the top players in the game. Alderson’s comments made it sound like he may have shared some of the frustrations of the fans. “We’re gonna make sure we’ve got enough meat and potatoes,” he said. “But we’re going to be shopping in the gourmet section as well.”
Alderson was asked about doing so after not being able to in his previous tenure. “I’ve gotta find out where it is,” he answered. Reports over the years had the Wilpons extremely involved in baseball decisions, to the detriment of the club. Cohen said how involved he would be with those decisions. “I played Little League once. That’s about it though, right? I’m going to let the professionals — Sandy and the people we bring in — let them run baseball,” he said. Alderson, who said that he wants to turn the Mets into an iconic franchise, said, “There’s no question that ownership styles will be different. There’s no question that there will be differences in the way we operate. There will be differences in our emphasis and overall capacity to do things.” Alderson said it’s likely Luis Rojas will return as manager. Rojas led the team to a 26-34 record in his first season as Mets skipper. Rojas was hired by recently fired general manager Brodie Van Wagenen but managed in the Mets’ minor league system during Alderson’s tenure. Alderson added that whoever is hired as president of baseball operations will also have input. Cohen’s bid to buy the Mets fell through in February, reportedly over disagreements
Page 21 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
Meet the Met: new owner wants to win
Steve Cohen is looking to lead the team back to the World Series for the first time since 2015 and win it all for the first time since 1986. FILE PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHER BARCA; INSET, METS.COM SCREENSHOT about the Wilpons’ continued control after Cohen would take over. With the Wilpons still looking to sell the team, they came to an agreement with Cohen in mid-September. League owners officially approved the sale in late October.
Cohen was asked Tuesday about other bidders, which included a group led by Alex Rodriguez and Jennifer Lopez. “Who are the other bidders? I don’t remember,” Cohen said, adding that he had not heard from them but “I certainly wish them well.” Q
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Breathing clearly
Curbstoning
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Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, we have all been paying close attention to our respiratory and lung health. With flu season fast approaching, it’s especially important to look after your lungs and pay attention to the quality of the air around you. Asthma and COPD can be especially difficult to manage in colder weather and make those who suffer more susceptible to the flu and COVID-19. Many of us are on high alert for respiratory symptoms that may be linked to the flu or COVID-19 but may also be flare ups from asthma or COVID-19. Although there may be symptom overlap, there are also distinct differences, and it’s important to check in with your doctor regularly to manage your condition. For more than 80 years, EmblemHealth has worked to make quality health benefits accessible and affordable to all New Yorkers. Along with our physician partners, AdvantageCare Physicians (ACPNY), we offer a wide range of services and resources to our community members, including care management programs for those with asthma and COPD. If you or someone you know has a respiratory condition, here are recommendations to keep you healthy during the flu season: s Stay on top of your chronic condition. For those with asthma, monitoring your daily health is critical to staying safe during this time. You should also continue your
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QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020 Page 22
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asthma routine to help control your symptoms. For those with COPD, in addition to protecting yourself from COVID-19, it is important to take your medications as prescribed to maintain optimal health. Poorly managed COPD can lead to serious consequences if you were to contract COVID-19. s Protect yourself from common allergies. In addition to asthma and COPD, many New Yorkers may also suffer from fall allergies. The best way to protect yourself from allergy flare-ups is to reduce your exposure to pollen. During high pollen days, try to limit your time outdoors and seek indoor spaces with clean air. s Don’t forget that basic precautions are critical: Wear masks in public, wash your hands frequently and practice social distancing. For more COVID-19 resources, visit EmblemHealth’s dedicated resource page at Q emblemhealth.com/healthyathome.
continued from page 14 censed dealer from $1,000 to $4,010. “The only way that this works is when you hit them in their wallet,” Moya said. A 2015 report by the two politicians said dealers operating illegally without a license cost the state as much as $56.4 million annually in lost sales tax revenue. Some experts have said that 80 percent of cars in classified ads are not being sold by individuals. The councilman said another problem is if there is a functioning problem with the vehicle. “You can just drive away and if that car breaks down you have no ability to get your money back,” Moya said. The lawmaker said the reason more aren’t towed is because dealers warn others when they see cars being taken away. “Here, it’s word of mouth,” Moya said. “The moment they see one car going, they’re calling each other on their burner phones, ‘You’ve gotta move the cars.’ I’ve seen it because I’ve gone on these tow operations with them.” The report from Moya and Klein found most curbstoners use prepaid, untraceable burner phones to operate. The investigation found that 85 percent of identified curbstoners posted a cell number as their contact information. Many were provided by companies notorious for supporting burner Q phones.
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– ADVERTORIAL –
Bill de Blasio Mayor Dave A. Chokshi, MD, MSc Commissioner
Bill for quicker absentee count State Sen. Mike Gianaris (D-Astoria) wants to see absentee ballots in New York counted on Election Day. “There is no good excuse for election results to continue to be up in the air weeks and months after people have already cast their votes,” said Gianaris, who introduced bill S9089 Tuesday. Absentee ballots wait nearly a week to be canvassed. The first day of ballots being opened and canvassed in many areas of the state was Tuesday, one week after Election Day. Gianaris’ proposal would allow absentee ballots to begin being canvassed three hours before polls close on Election Day, meaning 6 p.m. Absentee ballot envelopes would be examined for validity at the time of their arrival at their board of elections. More than 713,000 absentee ballots have been received by the city BOE. Though most races have been decided, a few hang in the balance and could take weeks to decide. Some of June’s primary elections took until August to be called. It is unclear yet if there is a companQ ion bill in the Assembly. — David Russell
lens
Queens Museum shows decades of Bruce Davidson’s penetrating photography
by Jordana Landres
young Martin Luther King stands at a podium in one image. Another young man in the center of a demonstration crowd, with all faces gazing forward, breaks the direction, looking directly at Davidson with a pained expression. The NYC subway system could be dangerous to ride when Davidson was photographing it. His Subway 1980 series features one color portrait of two men on a train. They stand facing away from him, enveloped in a backdrop of thick yellow graffiti sprayed across the train walls and windows, Strikingly, the shot reveals them somehow more connected for ignoring and avoiding each other than they might have been if speaking. continued on page 25
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Chronicling over 40 years of social change in NYC, the Deep South and around the country, renowned photographer Bruce Davidson’s photos have one powerful constant: the visceral emotion radiating from his subjects. It was often so intense it not only paralleled but could even transcend the historical events inducing it. Battling poverty, racism and unrelenting strife, the people in Davidson’s photos often seem to steal a show they never asked for or wanted to be part of, not only through their pain but also their determination to overcome it. Showing at the Queens Museum through Jan. 17, “Outsider on the Inside” is a com-
pilation of Davidson’s industry-changing photo essays, revealing the day-to-day and inner lives of people on the edges of society from NYC street gangs at the end of the 1950s, to the civil rights movement, to the severe economic struggles of residents of Spanish Harlem in the late 1960s. “It’s the humanistic element that photography is about that I’m attracted to,” Davidson said during during a KCRW radio broadcast in 2013. The exhibit’s Time of Change section (1961-1965) delves deeply into the civil rights movement. White men link arms with a black priest in a powerful show of solidarity, united by the desire to see people of all races given the same respect, privileges and opportunities. A passionate
ARTS, CULTURE & LIVING
Page 23 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
Under the
November 12, 2020
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King Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Witticism 4 Out of danger 8 “Price Is Right” guesses 12 Exist 13 Vacation 14 Traditional tales 15 Scout festival 17 Black gem 18 Woolly beast 19 Kanga’s kid 21 Firmament 22 Cavort 26 Wander off 29 Potent stick 30 Inventor Whitney 31 Implement 32 “Gosh!” 33 Small combo 34 In times past 35 Support system? 36 Dud on wheels 37 Panda’s lunch 39 Neely of hockey fame 40 Debtor’s letters 41 Current measure 45 Goad on 48 Angkor Wat locale 50 Roster 51 Hastened 52 Egos’ counterparts 53 “Why not?” 54 -- podrida 55 Ball-bearing item
THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME! DOWN 1 Naked Goya subject 2 Exam format 3 Sub for a vacationer 4 Thickset 5 Impressive grouping 6 “A pox on thee!” 7 Ornate centerpiece 8 Become a flower 9 Tiny bit 10 Parch 11 Gender
16 -- metabolism 20 Feedbag morsel 23 Highway shoulder 24 Hodgepodge 25 MGM mascot 26 Impale 27 Frat party garb 28 Leeway 29 Afternoon social 32 Julius Marx 33 Beat 35 Halloween cry
36 11th Greek letter 38 Product of one’s labor? 39 Ship of the desert 42 Rewrite 43 Carousel, e.g. 44 Relaxation 45 Crafty 46 Chart format 47 Dos Passos trilogy 49 Have a bug
Answers on next page
I HAVE OFTEN WALKED
Stempel, the quiz show whistleblower, lived in FoHi
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Chronicle Contributor
Herbert Stempel was born in 1926. He was blessed with a photographic mind for retaining information. After serving in World War II, he went to City College under the GI Bill. He married Toby Mantell in September 1954, the daughter of a wealthy hosiery manufacturer from Riverside Drive in Manhattan. They moved to Queens and set up home at 105-10 66 Ave. in Forest Hills, Apt 3G. Stempel’s photographic memory The home of “Quiz Show” whistleblower Herbert Stemgot him a spot on television as a pel for 66 years, at 105-10 66 Ave. in Forest Hills, as GOOGLE MAPS IMAGE; contestant on quiz show “Twenty- the building appears today. INSET BLACKWOODCOMPANY VIA YOUTUBE One.” After winning $69,500, the producers felt he had hit his plateau and had to take a dive. He agreed and was with John Turturro playing Stempel. After the scandal he became a high promised more work in television in return. But when Stempel was refused any future school social studies teacher. He lost his work he went public with the corruption of wife, Toby, in 1980, and later married Ethel the show giving answers in advance to the Feinblum. He passed away at age 93 in April questions. A huge scandal followed and was 2020 after living in the same apartment for Q the basis of the 1994 movie “Quiz Show,” 66 years.
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by Max Parrott Associate Editor
This fall the Queens County Farm Museum has become a draw for social media influencers. A fall-themed floral installation called “The Fall Escape” created by an event decoration company has brought in thousands of visitors searching for Instagram-able moments in its intricate arrangements. When the farm museum’s administrators realized that they were going to have to reduce their capacity due to COVID restrictions, they began looking to unused parts of the property for another attraction. They found Azizan Ali and Laila Ahmed, two decorators with Design House Decor, a company that usually puts on weddings, corporate events and parties. The result is a field of large-scale floral objects within a fall
‘The Fall Escape’ When: Through Sun., Nov. 29 Where: Queens County Farm Museum, 73-50 Little Neck Pkwy., Floral Park Entry: $8-$20. (718) 347-3276, queensfarm.org
theme. The installations include a beflowered apple shed, a “cornfessional” podium with cornstalks jutting out of it and the world’s la rge s t f l or a l latte — a 13-foot-tall simulacr um of a pumpkin spice Stephanie Rivera smiles for the camera in front of an oversized rose latte, with white installation at the Queens County Farm Museum. The installation flowers spilling includes a giant latte made of flowers, right. PHOTOS BY MAX PARROTT from the top like foam. It also contains an apple. Beyond during quarantine. “They had no school pictures this year. the fall theme, the idea is to create a series of massive flower arrangements that func- So I was like, I need to take some pictures tion as sets for visitors to snap a selfie or a of them,” said Pisapia. Brianna Torres, a college student who family portrait. On Sunday, the visitors were split came to take photos with two friends, runs between young millennials and zoomers @adventurezbybri, an Instagram account looking to bolster their social media pres- that lists and documents ideas for weekend ence and parents with young children who trips. “I just post places that I go to and advise wanted a fall photo shoot. Whitestone resident Denise Pisapia, who [followers] where to go,” Torres said. Ines Solis, who came with her two came with her two daughters, said she had to make up for lost photo opportunities friends after they saw friends tagging the
installation on Instagram, insisted that she was not an influencer as she and her crew posed and strutted around a patch of oversized roses. “I’m a boring nurse,” she said laughing. “We have regular jobs.” The viral approach to the outdoors attraction is working. Ahmed said that the installation had reached its capacity both days of the past weekend when it sold over 1,000 tickets. The daily capacity is about 1,000 to 1,100 visitors, but hourly only about 125 people are allowed inside the space at one time. Right as it opened at 10 a.m. on Sunday, a line of eager visitors materialized outside the installation. It’s open daily until Nov. 29, weather permitting, from 12 to 5 p.m. during the week and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekends. Q
Page 25 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
Farm museum goes viral with ‘Fall Escape’
Finding a window into the emotions of history
Crossword Answers
Davidson’s Central Park in the city in 1959, it saw collection (1990s) highlights Bruce entering the world of different people from differa teenage gang called The ent walks of life and cultures Jokers. He accompanied interacting and reacting to them to Coney Island each other. An instructor where they hung out and leading a group of birdmade out on the beach, watchers points upwards to and under the boardwalk caution them about a group with their girlfriends. Riding causing trouble overhead. the subway and bus with Other images show the refthem, he became their uge the park provided, a archivist and shadow. sprawling space for people Robert “Bengie” Powto be their authentic selves ers, the leader of the gang whether they were young and primary focus of the couples lying entwined in series, star ted drinking each other’s arms, a homealcohol when he was 8 less man wrapped in a blanyears old and had stabbed someone at 13. A photo from Bruce Davidson’s Time of Change series shows racial solidar- ket standing on the grass, or He later said when he ity in the civil rights era. On the cover: An image from the Brooklyn Gang a woman with a snake looked at Davidson’s photos series shows a young girl, Cathy, fixing her hair at Coney Island, next to wrapped around her body, solemnly acknowledging the of himself, “I see a kid who her boyfriend, Junior. PHOTOS BY BRUCE DAVIDSON VIA MAGNUM PHOTOS camera. wished he was dead a milDavidson’s juxtaposing of private human lion times.” Although some managed to photographed her at Coney Island holding up carve out better lives for themselves, a num- her hair while gazing into a mirror on a ciga- moments against a backdrop of profound ber of The Jokers’ members didn’t make it to rette machine, her gang member boyfriend in social upheaval and change creates an effect adulthood or died otherwise untimely deaths, the foreground. He became a detective, as that allows a viewer to not just see history Q but also feel it. one of them a girl named Cathy. Davidson did Bengie Powers. She committed suicide.
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continued from page 23 Davidson’s compassion for the difficulties many of those he photographed faced and respect for them as human beings allowed him to gain the trust of his subjects even when he sometimes feared their simmering wrath at their plight might be turned in his direction. His gift for unearthing the loneliness behind a menacing exterior, the anguish behind the anger, comes to the fore in Brooklyn Gangs. Created over a few months
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020 Page 26
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*Reg. price quoted Lic. # 0859173
(Installed & Repaired)
Interior & Exterior Paint
45
REPAIRS
Get Ready for Fall!
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d Floor Speciali e Woo sts h T
SIDING, ROOFING & WINDOWS
J&R
Waterproofing, Gutters, Soffit & Fascia Repair, and more!
1991
FENCES, DECKS, AWNINGS
INSTALLATION • RESTORATION • REFINISHING Serving New York For Over 27 Years 100% Customer Satisfaction 47 FULLY INSURED & LICENSED
Wood, Cedar, PVC, Stainless Steel, Chain Link, etc. Pressure Treated and Composite Decking
thewoodfloorspecialist.com
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4 EVERY SEASON MAINTENANCE MA AI Inc.
INTERIOR FLOORING & PAINTING
• Low Voltage Landscape Lighting • New Installaton & Repairs • Shrink Wrapping For All Outdoor Needs (Outdoor Furniture, Kitchens, Etc.) • Gutter Cleaning
Call Now for FREE Estimates John Miller 917-642-0195
NEWHEIGHTSCONSTRUCTIONLLC.com
AlexStewartRoofingandWaterproofing.com Lic #1406876 46
718-968-5987
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Call Joe
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FREE ESTIMATES
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Flat Roof Specialists
• New Roofs of all Types • Roofing Repairs • Chimney Caps • Waterproofing • Basements Waterproofing
Special
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10%
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Reasonably Priced - Licensed & Insured Free Estimates! Save Big - Call Today!
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25 Years Experience
Over 30 Years Experience
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Alex Stewart Roof Repairs, Gutters
44
FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED 4 GENERATIONS
- Video Camera Inspections - Hydro Jetting - High Pressure Sewer Cleaning 48 - Sewage Cleanup
ROOFING & WATERPROOFING
ROOFING & SIDING
Licensed/Insured
Call 917-755-2507
All Work 100% Guaranteed!
ALL WORK IS GUARANTEED • FREE ESTIMATES - Sewer & Drain Cleaning RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL - Plumbing Repairs Phone: - Plumbing Replacements - Water Pumping - Toilets
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Any Drain
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INSURED
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For the latest news visit qchron.com
Call Russo Electric Honest & Reliable Your Neighborhood Electrician Since 1946
Reasonable Prices - Free Estimates No Job Too Big or Too Small 45
Lic. #1398018 & 1310043
MAINTENANCE & REPAIRS
3rd Generation 220V Services, Outlets, Security Lights, Fixtures, Etc.
718-827-8175
Lic. #1069538
WE SERVICE YOUR COMMUNITY
ALL PRO HOME IMPROVEMENT GROUP INC.
Licensed
ELECTRICIAN
Carpentry, Sheetrock, Framing, Windows, Siding, Painting, Bathrooms, Kitchens, Finished Basements, Tiling, Iron Works, Plumbing, Wood Floors
718-641-4164 • 516-244-3799 LICENSED
www.classicaliron.nyc
45
GARY RYAN HOME SPECIALIST, INC.
FREE ESTIMATES
CLASSICAL IRON, INC.
47
917 208-6804
917-407-1141 718-713-8020
45
Senior Discount HIC Lic. #1443031
ALLSTATE SEWER SERVICE COMMERCIAL – RESIDENTIAL – INDUSTRIAL
- Sewers - Showers - Toilets - Yard Drains - Stack Lines - Sinks
- Tubs - Roof Drains - Leaders - Pools Pumped
*NO CHARGE IF WE FAIL* *NO EXTRA CHARGE for Sundays & Holidays for any drainage problem*
EMERGENCY 24-HR SERVICE 7 DAYS PER WEEK - 1 Year Guarantee on Sewers & 6 Months on drains - NO CHARGE for additional cleaning if sewers or drains become clogged within the above specified periods.
20% Off SPECIAL
– SERVING ALL BOROS –
718- 444 -6555
C M SQ page 27 Y K
J&B HOME IMPROVEMENTS, INC. Same Name, Same Owner Since 1981 - Replacement Windows Installation/Service - Garage Doors - Soffit Trim - Vinyl Siding - Gutters & Leaders - Roofing - Doors
We will Not be Undersold! • • • •
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ONE DAY INSTALLATION FOR SIDING, WINDOWS, ROOFING & DOORS
1-800-599-1150 44
Manhattan Roofing A+ Better Business Bureau Rating
All Waterproofing Work Guaranteed! • Sidewalk Violation Removal and Replacement • Licensed, Bonded & Insured! • Free Estimates FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED FOR 3 GENERATIONS!
20% OFF
Vinyl Siding SALE!
www.jbhomeimprovementsinc.com
• Basement Waterproofing • Exterior & Interior Foundation Waterproofing
• • • • • • • • • •
Call For FREE Estimates or Visit Our Showroom
Page 27 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
MY WAY CONSTRUCTION
References Upon Request
with this ad
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Professional PAINTER 46
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• High Quality Work • Virtually Always Work On My Own • Low Prices • References • Handyman
Free Estimates Serving: Ozone Park/Howard Beach and more! WORK GUARANTEED 49 Ask for Osvaldo
800.590.1309 212-495-9840
Manny & Karl Construction FATHER AND SON - WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE - LICENSED & FULLY INSURED • Roofing • Basements • Cement • Siding • Kitchens • Pointing • Gutters & Leaders • Sidewalk Violations • Pavers • Bathrooms Removed
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THE QUEENS CHRONICLE IN PRINT
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Gets Read. Gets Remembered. Gets Results! To advertise, call today
718-205-8000
50
qchron.com
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Notice of formation of NEWANG LLC. Arts of Org filed with Secy of State of NY (SSNY) on 11/3//20. Office location: Queens County. SSNY designated as agent upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy of process against LLC to: The LLC, 3-35 Cresthaven Lane, Whitestone, NY 11357. Purpose: any lawful act.
NURIDE GGR, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 10/5/2020. Office in Queens Co. SSNY desig. agent of LLC whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to 33-24 Northern Blvd., 5th Fl., Long Island City, NY 11101, which is also the principal business location. Purpose: Any lawful purpose.
Optimum Concrete Laboratories LLC filed w/ SSNY on 10/5/20. Office: Queens Co. SSNY designated as agent for process & shall mail to: 201-03 Northern Blvd., 2nd FL., Bayside, NY 11361. Purpose: any lawful.
Notice of Formation of RiverRock Consulting LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 10/23/20. Office location: Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: PO Box 940603, Rockaway Park, NY 11694. Purpose: any lawful activities.
Notice of Formation of Wine Queen LLC Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 10/07/2020. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: WINE QUEEN LLC, 4029 27TH ST., LONG ISLAND CITY, NY 11101. Purpose: For any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of Wonderful Kids Boutique LLC Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 09/14/2020. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: XIAOMING SHI, 5307 211TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY, NY 11364. Purpose: For any lawful purpose.
p
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Call 1-718-205-8000 Deadline to place, correct or cancel ads: Tuesday noon, before Thursday publication Fax 1-718-205-1957
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Queens Chronicle 62-33 Woodhaven Boulevard Rego Park, NY 11374
For the latest news visit qchron.com
Legal Notices
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020 Page 28
C M SQ page 28 Y K To Advertise Call 718-205-8000
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
CEO – NYCHH Elmhurst Hospital
TRUCK DRIVERS WANTED Routes available at:
Elder Care Services, Inc.
Responsibilities include making operational decisions that align with long-term goals and performance expectations; achieving financial sustainability by successfully managing the facility’s annual budget. Minimum Qualifications include A Master’s degree from an accredited college or university in Health Care Administration.
CALL-A-HEAD Corp.
MEDICAID PROFESSIONALS
Salary Range $300,000.00 / $340,000.00 Contact Lina Hurston at
hurstona@nychhc.org
CEO – NYCHH Queens Hospital Responsibilities include making operational decisions that align with long-term goals and performance expectations; achieving financial sustainability by successfully managing the facility’s annual budget. Minimum Qualifications include A Master’s degree from an accredited college or university in Health Care Administration.
Salary Range $300,000.00 / $340,000.00 Contact Lina Hurston at
hurstona@nychhc.org
NO CDL required, 4 DAY WORK WEEK (enjoy 3 days off ) . Run your own route. Year round. No layoffs! 100% medical, dental, uniforms, 2 weeks paid vacation. 401K plus over time. Will train ! 4:00am-2:30pm. $700.00 per week, plus $100.00 weekly bonus program. Apply in person Monday-Friday 9:00am-7:00pm
at: 304 Crossbay Blvd., Broad Channel Queens No phone calls, apply in person.
HANDYMAN WANTED Must have clean driver’s license. Must be able to do light plumbing and carpentry. 4-day work week. $700 per week. 100% Medical & Dental, 401K, Uniforms, Paid Vacations, Sick and Holidays. Apply in person: Monday-Friday between 9 am & 7 pm at:
Call-A-Head Corp. 304 Crossbay Blvd., Queens, NY 11693
Services
Services
For the latest news visit qchron.com
Full Time, Must Be Detail Oriented, Have Computer Skills, Responsible, And Ready To Learn New Skills. Callahead Offers: Paid Vacation, Holidays, 401K, and Health and Dental Benefits. Please Apply In Person Monday - Friday 9:00 AM - 7:00 PM At 304 CROSSBAY BLVD., QUEENS, NY 11693
INSIDE SALES POSITION AVAILABLE AT CALLAHEAD CORP. Seeking Female and Male alike. $36,000.00 base pay, medical and dental 100% covered, 401K, 2 weeks paid vacation. Will train, no experience necessary. Come work for NY’s largest Portable Sanitation Company and make between: $50,000.00 and $125,000.00 by being on the phone with our customers.
Jack Lippmann
FREE Consultation - 718-575-5700 www.eldercareservicesny.com
108-18 Queens Blvd., Suite 801, Forest Hills, NY 11375
Merchandise For Sale Merchandise For Sale
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Help Wanted
Stock Room Clerk W/Experience
SCHOOL BUS/VAN DRIVERS
FULL TIME MUST HAVE COMPUTER SKILLS
Best Pay Package in the Industry! Start at $25.19* (Bus), $21.97* (Van) Equal Opportunity Employer Free CDL Training 25 Hrs. a week minimum FULL BENEFIT PACKAGE
Duties and Responsibilities:
at 304 Crossbay Blvd., Broad Channel, Queens
718-995-0172/0171
Call 718-205-8000
DENTAL Insurance
Help Wanted
APPLY IN PERSON Monday - Friday between 2:00PM and 7:00PM
Pay for 3 weeks and the 4th week is FREE!
For a FREE brochure call:
Offer valid August 24, 2020 - December 31, 2020
Record inventory on a computer Maintain accurate records of packing slips, purchase orders Distribute products or materials to store shelves, co-workers Process shipping requests or purchase orders etc. $700 per work week
Classified Ad Special
Saving a Life EVERY 11 MINUTES
I’m never
Prepare for power outages with a Generac home standby generator
Call for interview
HUNTINGTON COACH 631-271-8931 *Attendance Bonus Included
Career Training
COMPUTER & IT TRAINING PROGRAM! Train ONLINE to get the skills to become a Computer & Help Desk Professional now! Grants and Scholarships availHaving a garage sale? Let every- able for certain programs for one know about it by advertising qualified applicants. Call CTI for in the Queens Classifieds. Call details! (844) 947-0192 (M-F 718-205-8000 and place the ad! 8am-6pm ET) Mon. –Fri. between 8:00 am & 3:30 pm.
Help Wanted. JOB OPPORTUNITY: $18.50 P/H NYC—$16.00 P/H LI up to $13.50 P/H UPSTATE NY CDPAP Caregiver Hourly Pay Rate! Under NYS CDPAP Medicaid program you can hire your family or friends for your care. Phone: 347-713-3553.
Health Services
Over 18 years experience filing Medicaid Home Care and Nursing Home applications Protect your income, home, life savings • Apply for Medicaid, medical assistance
*Terms & Conditions Apply
SEEKING DATA ENTRY
Health Services
Sunriseground01@aol.com 149-19 Guy R. Brewer Blvd. Jamaica, NY 11434
Physicians Mutual Insurance Company
A less expensive way to help get the dental care you deserve! CALL NOW!
FREE Information Kit
1-855-225-1434
Get help paying dental bills and keep more money in your pocket This is real dental insurance — NOT just a discount plan You can get coverage before your next checkup
Don’t wait! Call now and we’ll rush you a FREE Information Kit with all the details.
1-855-225-1434 Visit us online at
www.dental50plus.com/nypress
Insurance Policy P150NY 6129
MB17-NM003Ec
Merchandise For Sale Merchandise For Sale FREE!
Savings Include an American Standard Right Height Toilet FREE! ($500 Value)
Walk-In Tubs
WALK-IN BATHTUB SALE! SAVE $1,500 Backed by American Standard’s 140 years of experience Ultra low entry for easy entering & exiting Patented Quick Drain® Technology Lifetime Warranty on the bath AND installation, INCLUDING labor backed by American Standard 44 Hydrotherapy jets for an invigorating massage Limited Time Offer! Call Today!
888-609-0248
Or visit: www.walkintubinfo.com/nypress
C M SQ page 29 Y K
Career Training
Health Services
TRAIN AT HOME TO DO MEDICAL BILLING! Become a Medical Office Professional online at CTI! Get trained, certified & ready to work in months! Call 855-543-6440. (M-F 8am-6pm ET)
HEARING AIDS!! Buy one/get one FREE! High-quality rechargeable Nano hearing aids priced 90% less than competitors. Nearly invisible! 45-day money back guarantee! 833-448-0751
Tutoring
Legal Notices
Certified Teacher will tutor remotely or in person, in Math, Science, Social Studies & SATs, very reasonable, 718-763-6524
AT&T Mobility, LLC is proposing to modify an existing wireless telecommunications facility on an existing building located at 97-102 150th Street, Jamaica, Queens County, New York 11435 (N40° 41’ 53.5” and W73° 48’ 10.3”). AT&T Mobility, LLC invites comments from any interested party on the impact the proposed undertaking may have on any districts, sites, buildings, structures, or objects significant in American history, archaeology, engineering, or culture that are listed or determined to be eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places under National Historic Preservation Action Section 106. Comments pertaining specifically to historic resources may be sent to Impact7g, Inc., Attention Ms. Casey Radke at 9550 Hickman Road, Suite 105, Clive, IA 50325 or call 515473-6256. Comments must be received within 30 days of the date of this notice. NE 844/CR
Car Donations Auto Donations. Drive Out Breast Cancer: Donate a car today! The benefits of donating your car or boat: Fast Free Pickup—24hr Response Tax Deduction—Easy To Do! Call 24/7: 855-905-4755
Merchandise For Sale DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Call 1-888-609-9405 Get DIRECTV! ONLY $35/month! 155 Channels & 1000s of Shows/ Movies On Demand (w/SELECT All Included Package.) PLUS Stream on Up to FIVE Screens Simultaneously at No Additional Cost. Call DIRECTV 1-888-534-6918
Merchandise Wanted LOOKING TO BUY Estates, gold, costume jewelry, old & mod furn, records, silver, coins, art, toys, comics, action figures, oriental items. Call George, 718-386-1104 or 917-775-3048
Services Responsible, honest, reliable cleaning lady. I will clean your apt or house. I have exp. Call anytime, 718-460-6779
Health Services Certified Home Health Aide. Loving, caring, trustworthy. Over 10 yrs exp working all shifts. Reasonable rates. Lisa 732-791-6402 VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. Money back guaranteed! 1-855-579-8907
Legal Service
Steinberg & Associates, Esqs. ATTORNEYS and COUNSELORS at LAW • Bankruptcy Low fees • Real Estate • Divorce - Custody Support • Personal Injury No fee unless successful FREE CONSULTATION • REASONABLE RATES
NOTICE is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, Queens County on 10-09-2019, bearing Index Number NC-001038-19/QU, a copy of which may be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 89-17 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica, NY 11435, grants me (us) the right to: Assume the name of (First) DERRICK (Last) PETTIFORD. My present name is (First) DERRICK (Last) JONES AKA DERRICK WILLIAM JONES JR. AKA DERRICK PETTIFORD AKA. The city and state of my present address are East Elmhurst, NY. My place of birth is QUEENS, NEW YORK. The month and year of my birth are July 2000.
Notice of Formation of 19525 Woodhull Avenue LLC Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 10/13/2020. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: BENIDA ALEXANDER-STOKES, 18 MISTAIRE PLACE, HOWELL, NJ 07731. Purpose: For any lawful purpose.
40
Years Experience
Call (718) 263-2922 80-02 Kew Gardens d Road, d Suite 307, Kew Gardens, d NY 11415 Conveniently located above Union Turnpike subway E & F trains
HEARING NOTICE The New York City Board of Standards and Appeals has scheduled a teleconference public hearing on the following application on November 30 or December 1, 2020: BSA Cal. No. 2020-14-BZ Premises: 34-10 12th Street, Queens, Block 326, Lot(s) 29 Applicant: Akerman LLP Variance (§72-21) to permit the enlargement of a one-story, non-conforming manufacturing establishment (UG 17) contrary to ZR §§22-10 and 52-41. R5 zoning district. An agenda listing the specific session (including the final date and time) with call-in details will be posted as an announcement on the front page of the Board’s website (www.nyc.gov/bsa) the Friday before. The teleconference public hearing will be livestreamed on the Board’s website and on YouTube. Interested persons or associations may watch online and call in to present testimony during the public hearing. They may also submit a written statement by email to submit@bsa.nyc.gov. For any communication, please include BSA Calendar No. 2020-14-BZ and the property address 34-10 12th Street, Queens, New York. The Board’s physical office is currently closed, but please direct questions to (212) 386-0009
Public Notice In accordance with their traditional policy on nondiscrimination and applicable Federal and State statutory provisions, the New Franklin Center for Rehabilitation and Nursing, 142-27 Franklin Avenue, Flushing, New York 11355, declares that this institution declares that this institution operates to serve all persons without regard to race, creed, color, national origin, age, sex, sexual preference, handicap or source of payment.
Notice of Formation of 6507 COOPER REALTY, LLC Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 09/22/2020. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: 6507 COOPER REALTY, LLC, 2562 HYLAN BLVD. #61657, STATEN ISLAND, NY 10306. Purpose: For any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of AGS Business Partners LLC Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 09/30/2020. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: AGS BUSINESS PARTNERS LLC, 8409 118TH STREET, KEW GARDENS, NY 11415. Purpose: For any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of ATLANTIC GLOBAL MANAGEMENT, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 11/04/20. Office location: Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207-2543. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of CASELLA FUNERAL SERVICE LLC Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 09/23/2020. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: THE LLC, 494 SENECA AVE., RIDGEWOOD, NY 11385. Purpose: For any lawful purpose.
Real Estate Misc.
Real Estate Misc.
Tax Foreclosed Real Estate Auction Saratoga County • Online Only 40+ parcels available: Lots, Acreage, Homes, Commercial Properties Due to COVID-19 mandates and regulations, this auction will be conducted 100% online.
Online Auction Start: November 17TH, 10AM Online Auction Closing Begins: December 2ND, 10AM
**Action Required** To participate in this online only auction, please visit our website and complete the “Online Bidder Registration Packet”. Originals must be received at our office no later than 11/27.
For complete information, visit www.auctionsinternational.com/liveauctions or call 800-536-1401, Ext. 110 “Selling Surplus Assets 7 Days a Week Online”
Real Estate EQUAL HOUSING. Federal, New York State and local laws prohibit discrimination because of race, color, sex, religion, age, national origin, marital status, familial status or disability in connection with the sale or rental of residential real estate. Queens Chronicle does not knowingly accept advertising in violation of these laws. When you suspect housing discrimination call the Open Housing Center (the Fair Housing Agency for the five boroughs of New York) at 212941-6101, or the New York City Commission of Human Rights Hotline at 718-722-3131. The Queens Chronicle reserves the right to alter wording in ads to conform with Federal Fair Housing regulations.
Apts. For Rent Howard Beach/Lindenwood, 3 BR 1 1/2 baths. Leave a message. By owner. 917-855-7390. Lindenwood, 84 St & 149 Ave. 3 BR, 1.5 bath. $2,350/mo. Beautiful renov apt. Heat, gas, hot water incl. Avail now. Call Stellina Napolitano, 646-372-7145, Capri Jet Realty Williamsburg, 905 Metropolitan Ave, apt 3R. 2 BR railroad, $1,999 /mo. Ex-lg apt. HWF, high ceilings. Avail Dec 1. Call Agata Labda 914-255-7284 Capri Jet Realty
Furn. Rm. For Rent South Richmond Hill, pvt house, 2nd fl. Working female preferred. Non-smoker. No pets, owner has a dog. Close to trans. Quiet house. $800/mo. 718-683-6761
Condos For Sale
750 W Broadway Unit 5R Long Beach Realty Connect USA Stunning Oceanfront Duplex Penthouse 2 Bedrooms, 3 Baths. Beautiful Ocean Views! Master Suite includes Sitting Area, Office Space and Custom Master Bathroom. Terrace, Heated Salt Water Pool, Heated Garage w/1 Parking Space, Gym and so much more! $1,395,000
Listing Agent Grace Connors 516-880-3428 Co-Listing Agent Kathy Weitzman 516-439-8411
Open House
OPEN HOUSE HOWARD BEACH 160-35 96th Street Sun. 11/15 1pm-4pm or by appt.
2 Family 5 rms over 6 rms, 3.5 baths. Finished basement, private dvwy w/2 car garage. Call Richard DelGrosso
718-501-5609 Douglas Elliman Real Estate
Real Estate Misc.
We are looking for Licensed Real Estate Agents. Recruiting/Career Seminar via Zoom on 11/20 @ Email Ozone Park, Det 1 fam, 3 BR/2 11:30am-2:30pm. baths, basement, pty drwy & 1 car info@CapriJetRealty.com for a link or gar. Asking $610K. Connexion RE, call 347-450-3577. Capri Jet Realty 718-845-1136
Houses For Sale
Comm. Space For Rent Howard Beach, Cross Bay Blvd., 2nd fl., 350 sq. ft., $1,500/mo., plus heat & electric, all new tiles, new bathroom. Also in same bldg, 2nd fl, 850 sq. ft., all new tiles, new bathroom, $2,400/mo., plus heat & electric. Connexion Real Estate, 718-845-1136
Building For Sale
Ozone Park, commercial building (101st Ave) 2 blocks off Cross Bay Blvd, 25x100 lot, 25x46 building. 2nd fl, dental office, $2,200/ mo. 1st fl gutted to studs & vacant, bsmnt clean with new furnace, zoning R6B, building K2. Reduced $798K, owner mortgage. Connexion RE, 718-845-1136
For the latest news visit qchron.com
PLEASE CALL LORI, 1-929-361-0643 (Cell Phone). I PAY THE BEST, MOST HONEST PRICES FOR ESTATES, FURNITURE, CHANDELIERS, LAMPS, COSTUME JEWELRY, WATCHES (WORKING OR NOT WORKING), FURS, COINS, POCKETBOOKS, CHINA, VASES, GLASSWARE, STERLING SILVERWARE, FIGURINES, CANDLESTICKS, PAINTINGS, PRINTS, RUGS, PIANOS, GUITARS, VIOLINS, FLUTES, TAG SALES, CLEANOUTS, CARS
Legal Service
To Advertise Call 718-205-8000
Page 29 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
To Advertise Call 718-205-8000
To Advertise Call 718-205-8000
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020 Page 30
C M SQ page 30 Y K
Located in WILLIAMSBURG, Brooklyn’s hottest neighborhood. We have Qualified International Buyers.
• OPEN HOUSE • Saturday, Nov. 14th 12-1;30 pm
• OPEN HOUSE • Saturday, Nov. 14th 1:30-3 pm
391 Graham Ave., Williamsburg Renovated Single Family + Store! Delivered Vacant! $1,775,000
78-57 81st St., Glendale Gorgeously Renovated 3 Fam. w/Backyard & Pvt Dwy! $1,149,000
• OPEN HOUSE • Sunday, Nov. 15th 1:30-2:30 pm
• OPEN HOUSE • Saturday, Nov. 14th 1-2:30 pm
97-06 161st Ave., Howard Beach Luxurious New Construction House 3 Levels + Attic $1,375,000
261 St. Nicholas Ave., Ridgewood Corner 2 Family + Store & Full Basement! Projec. CAP Rate 8% $1,749,000
• OPEN HOUSE • Sunday, Nov. 15th 3-4 pm
13 Stuyvesant Ave., Bed-Stuy VACANT Renovated 2 Family Brick Building in Bedford Stuyvesant! $1,150,000
180 Russell St., Greenpoint Charming 2 Family (3 Levels) w/Backyard! Delivered Vacant! $1,585,000
63-23 60th Pl., Ridgewood Brick 2 Family w/2 Car Garage! and Full Finished Basement! $1,150,000
16 Devoe St., Williamsburg Vacant 2 Family (4 Levels) w/Backyard! $1,799,000
745 Flushing Ave., Williamsburg VACANT Mixed-Use 2 Family + Store Development Site! $1,849,000
162-14 97th St., Howard Beach Gorgeous Cape Cod 2 Family (3 Levels) w/ Private Driveway! $899,000
549 Metropolitan Ave., Williamsburg 2 Fam. + Store! Owner Financing! $2,999,000
69 Devoe St., Williamsburg Rare 4 Family in Prime Williamsburg! Delivered VACANT! $1,999,000
WE ARE HIRING LICENSED REAL ESTATE AGENTS!
72-04 Forest Ave., Ridgewood Corner Brick 5 Family + Store w/Garage! 5.7% CAP Rate! $2,425,000
60-81 67th Ave., Ridgewood Gorgeous Brick 2 Family (3 Levels)! Delivered Vacant! $999,000
For more properties for sale and apartments for rent, please visit our website www.CapriJetRealty.com
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533 Metropolitan Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11211
O: 347-450-3577 info@CapriJetRealty.com
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BEAT
CENTURY 21 AMIABLE II 82-17 153 RD Ave., Suite 202, Howard Beach, NY 11414
Bye Bye Brodie by Lloyd Carroll Chronicle Contributor
Everyone knew new Mets owner Steve Cohen and team president Sandy Alderson would make changes, but hardly anyone expected they would come as fast as they did. The Mets sent out a press release last Friday afternoon confirming Cohen had officially purchased the ballclub from the Wilpon family. That was widely expected. What was unexpected, however, was the press release issued two hours later announcing the departure of general manager Brodie Van Wagenen and nearly all of his staff as well as senior advisor Omar Minaya. These moves were carried out by Alderson but clearly made with Cohen’s blessing. Alderson’s actions recalled the end of “The Godfather,” when Michael Corleone “settled all family business.” Alderson was the Mets general manager from 2011 through the summer of 2018, when a recurrence of cancer forced him to take a leave of absence. The Mets were struggling at the time, and Alderson, apparently tired of working under Mets chief operating officer Jeff Wilpon decided to resign when the 2018 season ended. Wilpon hired his golf buddy, baseball player agent Brodie Van Wagenen, to be Alderson’s replacement. Van Wagenen’s first major trade was to ship Alderson’s top pick in the 2018 amateur draft, outfielder Jarred Kelenic, to the Seat-
tle Mariners in a deal that brought back aging second baseman Robinson Cano and relief pitcher Edwin Diaz. Both acquisitions were disastrous for the Mets in 2019, although Cano played very well this past summer and Diaz was reliable after a shaky start. BVW’s other signature trade was dealing two pitching prospects who were drafted under Alderson, Anthony Kay and Simeon Woods Richardson, to the Toronto Blue Jays for starting pitcher and Long Island native Marcus Stroman at the 2019 trade deadline. Stroman started 11 games but didn’t distinguish himself. He opted out of the 2020 season due to COVID concerns. What had to have ticked off both Alderson and Cohen, however, is Van Wagenen’s decision to tender Stroman a contract for over $18 million in the hopes of delaying his decision to become a free agent just prior to the ownership change. Stroman has done little to justify that kind of investment. Van Wagenen is hoping he’ll have a good season as a way of validating why he made another deal that sacrificed future assets. Minaya, who grew up in Corona, was the Mets general manager from 2005 through 2010 before being fired and replaced by Alderson, who rehired him as an assistant in 2017. Minaya may return if a new GM seeks his expertise in scouting and player evaluation. Q See the extended version of Sports Beat every week at qchron.com.
Connexion REAL ESTATE
Get Your House SOLD!
161-14A Crossbay Blvd., Howard Beach (Brother’s Shopping Ctr.)
ARLENE PACCHIANO Broker/Owner
718-845-1136 FREE MARKET EVALUATION
CONNEXIONREALESTATE.COM OZONE PARK
Reduced $798K Owner Mortgage
OZONE PARK HOWARD BEACH
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HOWARD BEACH CO-OPS FOR SALE
69-39 Myrtle Ave., Glendale, NY 11385
718-628-4700
• Staten Island • • Lindenwood • Completely and beautifully renovated studio with terrace. Features open floor plan, stainless steel appliances, porcelain floors, walk-in closet, fi replace. Condo has soundproof walls. Near transportation, shopping and restaurants.
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HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK Pristine/Stucco unique contemporary Colonial, 3/4 BRs, 3 full baths, 2 half baths, open floor concept on first floor & winding S.S staircase to second floor master bedroom en suite w/ Jacuzzi and bidet, 2 other BRs & full bath, fin. bsmnt, storage rm. den, ping, pong rm or 4th BR, fences front & backyard has I.G. saltwater heated pool, Jacuzzi (seats 8) Cabana, full bath, storage rm, S.S. gates, Asking $1.298 Mil 2nd flr balcony granite & awning.
BROAD CHANNEL
SED
HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK Mint Hi-Ranch on 40x100 lot, 4 BRs/3 full baths, Vinyl siding with brick front, Andersen windows, Hi-Hats, tiled floors, new carpeting in BRs, security cameras, alarm system, freshly painted, mechanics all updated, heated spa & inground pool, brick patio, CAC, rollout awning Asking $889K
OZONE PARK
MIDDLE VILLAGE
Det. 1 Family, 3 BRs, 2 baths, basement, pty driveway and 1 car garage
Mint Detached Colonial, pvt dvwy & 2 car garage, 3 BRs, 2 full baths, completely renovated throughout within 7 years, windows, roof, gas boiler, hotwater heater, stoop, wood doors, porcelain tiles on 1st flr, hardwood flrs upstairs, lg living rm, lg formal dining rm. lg kitchen with cherry cabinets, S.S. appl, island, Beautiful.
Asking $229K
Asking $163,900
Det 1 Fam, 3 BRs, 2 Baths, House is Totally Updated, Oversize Country Kitchen, W/Office Area & Laundry Closet, Patio Doors Lead to Trex Deck, Pool, Marble Baths Has Hickory Wood Flrs Throughout, 4 Ductless A/Cs & Heat Units, New Windows, Siding, Roof, Walls, Insulation & Cement, Home Has Elevation Certificate, No Flooding, Turn Key Charming Colonial, Front Porch & Pvt Driveway.
RICHMOND HILL SOUTH
RICHMOND HILL
Large 1 BR Co-op in Hi-Rise Building, Freshly Painted in the Beautiful Fairfield Arms
Asking $779K
$610K
HOWARD BEACH COMMERCIAL SPACE FOR RENT
Lovely Colonial in heart of Richmond Hill South. Updated Kitchen, 3 BR’s, 2 Full Baths, Full Finished Basement, Garage.
Asking $575K
• Rockwood Park • Ranch Style 1 Family home located in Rockwood Park / New Howard Beach. Home has 3 BRs 2.5 baths, living room, Eat-in-kit., dining room, full basement & pvt dvwy. This home is a great opportunity for someone who wants to create their own space. Conveniently located near shopping and transportation. Home is Selling “as is.”
©2020 M1P • CAMI-078419
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• Lindenwood • Welcome home to this spacious Co-op in Howard Beach. This move in ready unit features 1000 square feet of living space with a modern kitchen that includes custom Thomasville cabinets, stainless steel appliances & granite counters. There are 2 large bedrooms, 2 full renovated baths and spacious closets for lots of storage. There’s also an extra large terrace, perfect for relaxing in your own private space. Conveniently located near shopping, stores, schools, highways, Q41, Q21 & express bus to Midtown Manhattan. Maint. includes heat, water, gas and taxes. Electric & cable separate.
Hi-Rise, 2 BR, 2 Baths
HOWARD BEACH/ LINDENWOOD
• Lindenwood • Lovely legal 2 family home with full fi nished basement. Near all shopping, transportation to Manhattan, Must see, lots of updates!
• Brooklyn • Welcome to this unique & beautiful 2 fam. home with a fi n. bsmnt, a spacious backyard & central A/C. This recently-renovated property was updated with top-of-the-line fi xtures & fi nishes. The 2nd apt has a custom kit. made from recycled wood imported from France. The Mediterranean bathroom is breathtaking, with spa fixtures such as a rain shower, Jacuzzi, jet massage & heated floor. The apt has beautiful wood fl rs, new noise reducing windows and a charming terrace. The 1st apt is a true gem with unique moldings, French doors, beautiful wood fl rs, an updated kit., patio & stunning bathroom. The bsmnt is fully renovated with marble fl rs, large mirrors throughout & exposed brick. The bohemian style backyard, accessible from either apt, is perfect for a private relaxation session yet spacious enough to entertain family & friends. The property boasts parking & is conveniently located right on the border of Greenpoint & Williamsburg.
HOWARD BEACH
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WELCOME TO LUXURY LIVING At The Tides in Charleston, Staten Island. This breathtaking home features a 1st fl r master BR suite with 2 walk in closets, pvt bath with jacuzzi tub, sep shower & radiant heat. Upgraded custom EIK with SS appliances, dining room & formal living room with cathedral ceilings that lead you to a pvt patio area. First fl r also features bath, laundry room & direct access to the oversized 2 car gar. Second fl r showcases a huge open loft area which overlooks 1st floor, 2nd master BR with huge closets and adjacent bath. The open loft can easily be converted to a 3rd BR. This spectacular home features central air and radiant heat, custom window treatments & much, much more! Enjoy adult living in a community that includes, tennis, full gym, pool, clubhouse, game room & bocce court. Close to shopping & transportation. A must see!
1 Fam Colonial 3 BR/ 2 full bath, 20x100 lot, 9 ft ceilings, skylight in bath, tall kitchen wood cabs, basement inc LG storage room, LG patio off kit w/entry. Asking $588K
Howard Beach / Cross Bay Blvd. 2nd floor 350 sq. ft. $1,500 per mo. Plus heat & electric, all new tiles, new bathroom, - Also same building 2nd floor 850 sq. ft. All new tiles, new bathroom, $2,400 per mo. Plus heat & electric.
Asking $968K
FREE Market Evaluation 718-845-1136 Call us for an interview! Together we can make it happen!
For the latest news visit qchron.com
Commercial Building (101st Ave.) 2 blocks off Cross Bay Blvd./25x100 lot, 25x46 building/ 2nd flr., Dental Office $2,200 per mo./ 1st floor gutted to studs & vacant / basement clean with new furnace / zoning R6B / building K2
718-835-4700
Page 31 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020
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Your neighborhood market since 1937
Sale Dates
KEYF-078409
For the latest news visit qchron.com
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, November 12, 2020 Page 32
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