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MTA President Byford to answer Clark Street Station questions at Brooklyn Heights meeting

After four months of rampant rumors, MTA President Andy Byford (inset) will be meeting with people affected by the closure of the Clark Street subway station in Brooklyn Brooklyn Heights Press ďŹ le photo of Clark Street Station by Mary Frost/ MTA president Photo by Marc A. Hermann / MTA New York City Transit Heights on Sept. 16. SEE PAGE 3.

Councilmember Stephen Levin Heights Press ďŹ le photo by Mary Frost

In closed-door meeting, Councilmember Levin reminds colleagues of ‘member deference’ on jail plan

Six bas-reliefs by Italian sculptor Clemente Spampinato, one shown at right, which were removed from the facade of the former Brooklyn Heights Library before it was demolished, will be reinstalled at two different Brooklyn libraries. SEE PAGE 2.

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Brooklyn Heights Press file photo by Mary Frost

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Beloved art from former Brooklyn Heights Library will be coming back — to two different libraries The bas-reliefs by Italian sculptor Clemente Spampinato, seen here on the facade of the former Brooklyn Heights Public Library before it was demolished. Heights Press photo by Mary Frost

By Mary Frost Brooklyn Heights Press

Six bas-reliefs by Italian sculptor Clemente Spampinato (1912-1993), which were removed from the front facade of the former Brooklyn Heights Library before it was demolished, will be enjoying a second artistic life.

The classic carvings — which depict industry and businesses, crafts, sciences, knowledge, literature, and the arts — will be split up and displayed at two different libraries, according to Brooklyn Public Library. “Two of six sets will go into meeting rooms in the new Brooklyn Heights Library. The other four will go into a new garden which will be created outside the Walt Whitman Library,”

Fritzi Bodenheimer, Brooklyn Public Library spokesperson, told the Brooklyn Heights Press. The Brooklyn Heights Library will be rebuilt at 280 Cadman Plaza West at the base of a luxury tower, currently in construction. The Walt Whitman Library is located at 93 St Edwards St. in Fort Greene. Bodenheimer said that the developer (Hudson Companies) is storing the 10 by 11-foot panels. This was part of the agreement negotiated when the Brooklyn Heights Library site was sold. The library’s sale was approved by the City Council in December 2015 and the Brooklyn Borough Board in March 2016 after three years of vocal community opposition and a series of raucous ULURP (Uniform Land Use Review Procedure) hearings. Councilmember Stephen Levin, who brokered the deal, called the library sale “the most controversial issue I’ve seen in my district since being elected in 2009.” Many library supporters voiced concern about the fate of the carvings. Once the artwork was hidden away in storage, they worried, reinstalling it would be given low priority by the city. Some pushed for the pieces to be displayed at the Brooklyn Museum in the interim, keeping them in the public eye and alContinued on PAGE 3

2 • Brooklyn Heights Press • Thursday, September 5, 2019


MTA President Byford to answer Clark Street questions at meeting

Heights Press file photo by Mary Frost

The Clark Street Station of the No. 2 and 3 trains.

By Mary Frost Brooklyn Heights Press

The MTA is finally breaking its silence about the upcoming closure of the Clark Street subway station in Brooklyn Heights. After four months of rumors, MTA President Andy Byford will be bringing the public up to date at a town hall at St. Francis College on Monday, Sept. 16 from 6-8 p.m. Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon’s office announced the meeting, which arose after officials including Simon, state Sen. Brian Kavanagh, City Councilmember Stephen Levin and Borough President Eric Adams had a briefing with the MTA. “We were pretty clear we wanted the community to be fully informed,” Simon told the Brooklyn Heights Press. “Andy Byford offered to be there, discus the renovations and field questions.” Since April, rumors swirled about a yearlong closure to fix the station’s decrepit elevators. MTA refused to answer questions, however, about whether a full closure of the station was planned or whether it would entail a partial closure. The Clark Street subway station serves the 2 and 3 lines. Several of the businesses operating out of the arcade at the St. George Tower, at the corner of Henry and Clark streets, said a prolonged closure would force them out of business. “They didn’t tell us anything,” Fernando Castano, who has worked for Brooklyn Heights Shoe Master for more than 18 years,

“We were pretty clear we wanted the community to be fully informed ... Andy Byford offered to be there, discus the renovations and field questions.” —ASSEMBLYMEMBER JO ANNE SIMON told the Heights Press in April. “We won’t make the rent” without foot traffic, he said. Andrew Sabba, owner and operator of Cafécito To Go, said that 80 percent of his business comes from commuters. “Without the train it’s pretty much done.” Brooklyn Heights resident Marty Feuerman told the Heights Press in April that he heard the rumor from a station clerk, who told him that “the plan is to shut down the station 24/7 from around January 2020 to January 2021.”

BHA issues ‘Call to Action’ In May, after MTA remained mum despite requests for information from numerous stakeholders, the Brooklyn Heights Association sent a “Call to Action” to its members, asking them to demand that the Clark Street subway station remain open while the station’s elevators are being replaced. Last week BHA said via email, “While there is no doubt that the station and the community would benefit from new elevators, a complete closure would have a severe impact on the small business which operate within the station and along Clark and Henry Street, in addition to causing undue hardship for seniors and others who may be less mobile.”

RFP coming out soon “Like a lot of things, the job is more complicated than it might appear,” Simon said. “How the elevators work or don’t work, the physical challenges of the space. And there’s only one way in or out.” There are three elevators in operation at the station, one of the deepest in the subway system. A 10-story flight of stairs at Clark Street station is used only in emergencies. “We wanted MTA to hear from the community before the RFP [Request for Proposals] comes out. We also wanted the community to hear from MTA before the RFP,” Simon said. “If the RFP is written a certain way, it will guide the responses.” The elevator work “will have all kinds of impacts” on local businesses, she added. “On the other hand, the elevator outages are only going to get worse.” MTA told the Brooklyn Heights Association in May that the agency would issue an RFP concerning the elevators in July, award a contract later this summer and start the project early next year. That schedule appears to have been pushed back. NYC’s amended 2019 budget shows the replacement of two hydraulic elevators at Clark Street at the cost of $15.1 million.

MTA President Andy Byford. Photo by Marc A. Hermann / MTA New York City Transit

Beloved art from former Heights Library Continued from PAGE 2

lowing museum-goers to enjoy Spampinato’s work. Other works by the artist are on display at Annapolis, the World Golf Hall of Fame and other venues. The $470 million, 36-story project at 280 Cadman Plaza West which is replacing the two-story library was designed by Marvel Architects. It will include a new 26,620-squarefoot library, 134 market-rate condominium units, and a 9,000-square-foot STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) lab operated by the NYC Department of Education. The condos will include a mix of one- to five-bedroom units and underground parking.

The site will also house two retail spaces on Clinton Street: one to be leased by Brooklyn Roasting Company and the other to feature rotating pop-up food vendors curated by Smorgasburg. As part of the deal, Hudson has also built 114 units of affordable housing on two privately owned sites in Clinton Hill. The city’s affordable housing lottery opened on Aug. 14 for these units. Bodenheimer said that BPL has not decided if an installation ceremony will be held when the pieces are back on display. “We have not decided about ceremonies and celebrations quite yet,” she said.

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Thursday, September 5, 2019 • Brooklyn Heights Press • 3


—Podcast Alert— Placard and Special Parking privileges in Heights Area: A Sensitive Topic in Forum By Borough President Adams

Brooklyn Heights Press photo by Kelly Mena

A car with a city-issued permit parked illegaly. Brooklyn Heights Press New York can regularly make more than $500 million in parking tickets a year. Yet many city officials have been allowed to park illegally simply by displaying a city-issued parking placard. Many call this placard abuse.

A Twitter account even exists dedicated to exposing instances of it. It’s a citywide issue, but here in Brooklyn, Borough President Eric Adams addressed it at a town hall on Tuesday, where he gave out his cell phone number to collect complaints from residents. “We can’t surrender to dysfunctionality. Dysfunctionality

4 • Brooklyn Heights Press • Thursday, September 5, 2019

must surrender to us,” Adams said. “I believe government must be like the old-fashioned medical doctor. We need to be on the ground.” Blythe Austin, a volunteer with Families for Safe Streets who attended the meeting, said she was not satisfied with Adams’ messages and actions. Adams allows several Borough

Hall staffers to park illegally in the plaza outside their office, and said he cannot currently change this practice. “I thought it was a very frustrating meeting, quite frankly. I thought that the borough president was defensive and offered excuses, and really wanted to point fingers at other people being responsible for

this, including members of the public,” Austin said. “The public does not just want to be heard. We want to be responded to.” Check out the BrooklynEagle.com Podcast episode of “Brooklyn This Week” to hear the full conversations: • Interview with Kelly Mena at 1:19

• Interview with Blythe Austin at 4:43 • Interview with Eric Adams at 9:46 Our host Lawrence Madsen is a native New Yorker. He graduated from Columbia University with a B.A. in History. He is a volunteer leader with the disaster relief group Team Rubicon.


A Special Section of the Brooklyn Eagle

Your Key to the Borough

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INBrooklyn photo by Arthur De Gaeta

Full coverage of the West Indian Day Parade starts on page 14INB.

Week of—September 2019 •of INBROOKLYN — A Eagle/Brooklyn Special Section ofEagle/Heights Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/GreenpointGazette Gazette••1INB 1INB Week of September 5–11, 2019 • INBROOKLYN A Special5-11, Section Brooklyn Daily Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint


BROOKLYN AND ITS COMMUNITY BOARDS Community Board #1 435 GRAHAM AVE., Brooklyn, NY 11211 Phone: 718-389-0009 Fax:718-389-0098 Email:bk01@cb.nyc.gov Flushing Ave., Willamsburg, Greenpoint, Northside, Southside Chairperson: none District Manager:Gerald Esposito Regular monthly board meetings held the 2nd Tuesday of the month/ 6:30pm.

Community Board #6 250 BALTIC ST., Brooklyn, NY 11201 Phone:718-643-3027 Fax: 718-624-8401 Email:info@brooklyncb6.org Red Hook, Carroll Gardens, Park Slope, Gowanus, Cobble Hill Chairperson: Peter Fleming District Manager: Michael Racioppo Regular monthly board meetings held the 2nd Wednesday of the month/6:30p.m.

Community Board #2 350 JAY ST., 8THFLOOR Brooklyn, NY 11201 Phone: 718-596-5410 Fax:718-852-1461 Email:cb2k@nyc.rr.com Brooklyn Heights, Fulton Mall, Boerum Hill, Ft.Greene, BK Navy Yard, Clinton Hill Chairperson: Lenue H. Singletary, III District Manager:Robert Perris Regular monthly board meetings held the 2nd Wednesday of the month/ 6:00pm.

Community Board #7 4201 4THAVE., Brooklyn, NY 11232 Phone:718-854-0003 Fax: 718-436-1142 Email:bk07@cb.nyc.gov Sunset Park, Windsor Terrace Chairperson: Cesar Zuniga District Manager: Jeremy Laufer Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Wednesday of the month! 6:30p.m.

Community Board #3 1360 FULTON ST. Brooklyn, NY 11216 Phone:718-622-6601 Fax:718-857-5774 Email:bk03@cb.nyc.gov Bedford-Stuyvesant, Stuyvesant Heights, Ocean Hill Chairperson: none District Manager:Henry Butler Regular monthly board meetings held the 1st Monday of the month! 7:00pm. Community Board #4 1420 BUSHWICK AVE., SUITE 370 Brooklyn, NY 11207-1422 Phone: 718-628-8400 Fax:718-628-8619 Email:bk04@cb.nyc.gov Bushwick Chairperson: none District Manager:Celestina Leon Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Wednesday of the month! 6:00pm. Community Board #5 404 PINE STREET, Brooklyn, NY 11208, 3RD FLOOR Phone: 929-221-8261 Fax:718-345-0501 Email:bk05@cb.nyc.gov East New York, Cypress Hills, Highland Park, New Lots, City Line, Starrett City Chairperson: Andre T Mitchell District Manager:Melinda Perkins Regular monthly board meetings held the 4th Wednesday of the month! 6:30pm.

Communi Board #8 1291 ST.MARKS AVE., Brooklyn, NY 11213 Phone: 718-467-5574 Community Board #11 Fax: 718-778-2979 2214 BATH AVE., Email:info@brooklyncb8.org Brooklyn, NY 11214 North Crown Heights, Prospect Heights, Phone:718-266-8800 Weeksville Fax: 718-266-8821 Chairperson: Ethel Tyus Email: info@brooklyncb11.org District Manager: Michelle George Bath Beach, Gravesend, Mapleton, Regular monthly board meetings held the Bensonhurst Chairperson: William Guarinello 2nd Thursday of the month/ 7:00pm. District Manager: Marnee Elias-Pavia Regular monthly board meetings held Community Board #9 2nd Thursday of the month/7:30p.m. 890 NOSTRAND AVE., Communi Board #12 Brooklyn, NY 11225 5910 13THAVE., Phone: 718-778-9279 Brooklyn, NY 11219 Fax:718-467-0994 Phone:718-851-0800 Email: bk09@cb.nyc.gov Fax: 718-851-4140 South Crown Heights, Prospect Lefferts Email: bk12@cb.nyc.gov Boro Park, Kensington, Ocean Parkway, Gardens, Wingate Midwood Chairperson: Fred Baptiste Chairperson: none District Manager: Currently Vacant Regular monthly board meetings held the District Manager: Barry Spitzer Regular monthly board meetings held the 4th Tuesday of the month! 7:00pm. 4th Tuesday of the month/ 7:00pm. Community Board #10 8119 5THAVE., Brooklyn, NY 11209 Phone: 718-745-6827 Fax: 718-836-2447 Email:bk01O@cb.nyc.gov Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, Fort Hamilton Chairperson: Lori Willis District Manager: Josephine Beckmann Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Monday of the month! 7pm. Except during January and February

CommuniJy Board #13 1201 SURF AVE., 3RD FLOOR Brooklyn, NY 11224 Phone:718-266-3001 Fax: 718-266-3920 Email: edmark@cb.nyc.gov Coney Island, Brighton Beach, Bensonhurst, Gravesend, Seagate Chairperson: Joann Weiss District Manager: Eddie Mark Regular monthly board meetings held the 4th Wednesday of the month! 7:00pm.

t Commun· Board #14 810 EAST 16TH ST., Brooklyn, NY 11214 Phone: 718-859-6357 Fax: 718-421-6077 Email: info@brooklyncb14.org Flatbush, Midwood, Kensington, Ocean Parkway Chairperson: Ed Powell District Manager: Shawn Campbell Regular monthly board meetings held the 2nd Monday of the month/ 7:30pm. Community Board #15 KINGSBORO COMMUNITY COLLEGE 2001 Oriental Blvd., Cluster Room C124 Brooklyn, NY 11235 Phone: 718-332-3008 Fax: 718-648-7232 Email: bklcb15@verizon.net Sheepshead Bay, Manhattan Beach, Kings Bay, Gerritsen Beach, Kings Highway, Madison, East Gravesend Chairperson: none District Manager: Laura Singer Regular monthly board meetings held the last Tuesday of the month/ 7:00pm. Communi Board #16 444 THOMAS BOYLAND ST., ROOM 103 Brooklyn, NY 11212 Phone: 718-385-0323 Fax: 718-342-6714 Email: bk16@cb.nyc.gov Brownsville, Ocean Hill Chairperson: none District Manager: Viola D. Greene-Walker Regular monthly board meetings held the 4th Tuesday of the month! 7:00pm.

Community Board #17 4112 FARRAGUT ROAD Brooklyn, NY 11210 Phone: 718-434-3072 Fax:718-434-3801 Email: bk17@cb.nyc.gov East Flatbush, Remsen Village, Farrgut, Rugby, Eramus, Ditmas Village Chairperson: Aaron Ampaw District Manager: Sherif Fraser Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Wednesday of the month/ 7:00pm. Community Board #18 1097 BERGEN AVE., Brooklyn, NY 11234-4841 Phone: 718-241-0422 Fax:718-531-3199 Email:bkbrd18@ogtonline.net Canarsie, Bergen Beach, Mill Basin, Flatlands, Marine Park, Georgetown, Mill Island Chairperson: Gardy Brazela District Manager: Dorothy Turano Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Wednesday of the month/ 7:00pm.

UPDATED SUMMER 2019

xxx • August, 2019 2INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of September 5–11, 2019


News From Your Neighborhood WILLIAMSBURG STREET DANGEROUS FOR DRIVERS

WILLIAMSBURG — Driving down South Fifth Street has become dangerous because painted street markers are missing, according to CBSNewYork. A parked car lane is in the middle of the street, with bikes on one side and car traffic on the other. At least one confused driver was about to line up behind the parked cars until he realized that they were stationary. A spokesperson for the city Department of Transportation said that crews will be painting markings on the street this month, weather permitting. 

CONSTRUCTION PROJECT FLOODS SLOPE ROWHOUSES

PARK SLOPE — A massive city construction project has resulted in the routine flooding of several Park Slope brownstones, according to the Brooklyn Paper. “People have had anywhere from 2 to 16 inches of sewer water and stormwater in their homes,” Michael Saunders, who lives near Sixth Avenue and St. Johns Place, told the Brooklyn Paper. “It’s cost me thousands of dollars to deal with the damage.” The project requires workers to dig a massive trench along Sixth Avenue between Union Street and Park Place in an effort to replace underground water mains and install sewers, catch basins, and manholes. 

LAWSUIT: RED-LIGHT CAMERAS ARE ILLEGAL

CITYWIDE — A Brooklyn man is suing the city Department of Transportation, claiming that red-light cameras are illegal, according to the New York Post. The plaintiff, whose name is Monroe Street, filed his lawsuit in Manhattan Supreme Court on Thursday after he was issued a $50 fine for going through a red light in Brooklyn. He claims his ticket’s accompanying “Technician’s Certificate,” which is designed to ensure that a worker double-checked the red-light camera, is illegal because it wasn’t notarized. Street’s lawsuit wants any red-light camera tickets issued to drivers since August 2013 to be voided, since most of them haven’t been notarized. 

CITY AGENCY COULD BUY EX-CATHOLIC SCHOOL SITE

KENSINGTON — Brooklyn Catholic leaders are in the process of demolishing a rundown former school building on Fort Hamilton Parkway between 40th and 41st streets and are also looking to sell the site, according to the Brooklyn Paper. When asked whether they were in the process of purchasing the property, a spokesperson for the city’s School Construction Authority suggested that they are. “We are very early in the process,” said spokesperson Kevin Ortiz. “The [School Construction Authority] is always looking at diocese buildings as viable locations for new public school space,” Ortiz added. The building was formerly occupied by St. Catherine of Alexandria School, which the diocese closed in 2005 due to declining enrollment. 

FORMER REPUBLICAN POL MAY HAVE A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY

BAY RIDGE — Former Republican State Sen. Marty Golden is considering a run against Democratic State Sen. Andrew Gounardes, according to Kings County Politics. Gounardes lost to Golden in the 2012 Senate race but defeated him last year by a little more than 1,000 votes. Gounardes’ win was part of the “Blue Wave” that also enabled Democrat U.S Rep. Max Rose (Southern Brooklyn-Staten Island) to defeat Republican incumbent U.S. Rep. Dan Donovan, Kings County Politics said. State Conservative Party Chair Jerry Kassar, Golden’s former chief of staff, said, “Marty has not made a decision yet. We’ve been taking to him, and he’s not sure yet, as he has a very good job with the Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn and Queens.” 

STREET COVERED WITH RAW CHICKEN PARTS

BOERUM HILL — A stretch of Bond Street in Boerum Hill was covered with raw chicken parts last Friday morning, according to The New York Times. “Every car and truck that pushed through the scattered parts unleashed a series of pops, snaps and cracks,” the Times reported. The parts were mainly thighs and wings, and there may have been some turkey parts as well, onlookers said. Neighborhood residents believed the parts fell off a truck, as there are several butchers nearby. 

SUMMER GUEST HOUSES ON GOVERNORS ISLAND

GOVERNORS ISLAND — Governors Island now has “outlook shelters,” or luxurious trailer-type structures where guests can stay overnight, according to Gothamist. They are now open for business and will remain until Oct. 31, when Governors Island closes for the season. Each unit has landscaped decks, 10-foot ceilings, whitewashed pine walls and a “luxurious soaking tub.” You also get a private library and “luxury

The Brooklyn Cyclones are overjoyed at MCU Park on Monday afternoon after locking up the New York-Penn League’s McNamara Division title. Photo courtesy of Brooklyn Cyclones

BOERUM HILL MAN CHARGED WITH THREATS

dio Gallos is listed as the architect of record. The building will have 35 residences, which will most likely be rentals, as well as 17 enclosed parking spots. The site is currently occupied by a two-story private home, and demolition permits have not yet been filed. 

ANOTHER ANTI-HASIDIC ATTACK IN CROWN HEIGHTS

BEDFORD-STUYVESANT — A man has been arrested after police said he mowed down a cyclist in Bedford-Stuyvesant, according to NY1 News. Police said Korey Johnson, who is facing murder and manslaughter charges, saw the cyclist trying to break into his car on Marcus Garvey Boulevard. Johnson apparently confronted the man, and it quickly turned physical. Police say the cyclist hit a woman with a screwdriver, then tried to get away on his bike. Johnson get into his car, then followed the cyclist. The victim suffered severe head trauma and was pronounced dead at the scene, said NY1. 

bath products.” The shelters are provided by Collective Retreats, which also offers a group of furnished tents positioned around a lodge.  BOERUM HILL — Police arrested a Boerum Hill man on felony robbery charges because he allegedly threatened to beat a worker at a Downtown Brooklyn Starbucks in order to steal a coffee mug on Thursday, the Brooklyn Paper said. The victim told police he was serving customers at the chain’s location on Jay Street near Myrtle Avenue when the suspect threatened to hit him in the face in a bid to steal the coffee cup. Police charged the man with third-degree robbery, third-degree menacing and petit larceny.  CROWN HEIGHTS — A group of teens threw ice at a truck stopped a traffic light in Crown Heights on Thursday evening, according to PIX11. A 34-year-old Hasidic man was in the truck when it was stopped at Prospect Place and Brooklyn Avenue and was hit in the head by the ice. After the incident, he saw a group of teens running away from the scene. Police are investigating the incident as a bias attack. 

ARCHITECTS’ BOAT TOUR EYES WATERFRONT

CITYWIDE — For 10 years, the American Institute of Architects’ New York Chapter has been sponsoring a boat tour around the city for an architectural view of skyscrapers, bridges, infrastructure and more, according to NY1. The tour, led by architect Arthur Platt, leaves from Chelsea Piers, moves along the West Side, then turns around for a look at the changing waterfronts of Brooklyn and Queens. “One of the main themes at the forefront has been, how do you build an urban waterfront in an age of rising sea levels and frequent storm events,” Platt told NY1. 

MAN PUNCHES TRAIN CONDUCTOR

DOWNTOWN BROOKYN — A man asked a subway train conductor for directions, then punched her when she told him he was on the wrong platform, according to Patch. The man approached the conductor’s window as the southbound D train pulled into the DeKalb Avenue station, police said. After the man became upset and punched her through the window, he flicked his lit cigarette at her and ran away, police said. 

NOT A GOOD WAY TO PLAY POST OFFICE

EAST FLATBUSH — One person has been injured after a car slammed into a post office on East 94th Street and Church Avenue, according to CBSNewYork. The incident happened on Saturday afternoon. Witnesses looked on as the vehicle crashed through the East Flatbush post office’s metal security gate. There was no word on what caused the accident. 

NEW 7-STORY BUILDING GOING UP ON OCEAN AVE.

MIDWOOD — Permits have been filed for a seven-story residential building at 1730 Ocean Ave. in Midwood between Avenue L and Avenue M, according to New York YIMBY. Eddie Yair, operating under the name of Ocean Avenue Development LLC, is listed as the owner, while Francisco Nunez of Stu-

DRIVER-CYCLIST BRAWL ENDS IN DEATH, ARREST

SYNAGOGUE ATTACK IN FLATBUSH

FLATBUSH — An Orthodox Jewish man was verbally and physically attacked in front of a synagogue in Flatbush, according to the Forward. In the attack, which took place on the Sabbath, two men who may have been drunk hit the Jewish man in the face with a belt and yelled anti-Jewish racial slurs. The victim told police that he had not spoken to the men before the attack. The NYPD is treated the incident as a hate crime. 

EX-CON THREATENS TO KILL HIS EX-WIFE

BOROUGHWIDE — Scott Smith, a Brooklyn ex-con who was out on parole last month after half a decade in a Missouri prison, said during an Aug. 3 phone call that he still wanted to kill his wife, and he’d “happily live in a cell and await the needle” after killing her, according to the New York Daily News. He even said he’d kill her in front of her 5-year-old daughter. “I just want to tell you, you’re about to die,” said the defendant. He also texted his former prosecutor that he’d kill the victim from the 2014 federal case, the Daily News said. “Five years, I’ve been waiting for what’s about to happen. I’ve fantasized about it every night.” 

CO-OP FOR SALE IN 1940 B’KLYN COLLEGE-AREA BLD’G

FLATBUSH — A one-bedroom co-op in a 1940 elevator building in Flatbush near Brooklyn College is currently being offered for $329,000, according to Brownstoner. The building at 2601 Glenwood Road, says Brownstoner, “features characteristic period elements of preview apartments, such as parquet floors, shelves in a niche, arched doorways and coved ceilings. The building was built by Abraham Fox, a pioneer Brooklyn builder, and his son Milton. It was originally called the Rutledge and featured a Colonial-style entranceway, which has since been covered up. 

QUEER AND TRANS YOGA AT BUSHWICK STUDIO

BUSHWICK — To serve the LGBT population, Sasha Sigel has developed Queer and Trans Yoga at Daya Yoga Studio at 360 Jefferson St. in Bushwick, according to Bushwick Daily. At the core of the program, which is also known as QT, is Sigel’s trauma-sensitive training, and yogis can design their own regimen. Another unique element of QT yoga is its commitment to the LGBT community. “This class is for trans and queer folk to simply be in our own community without navigating other dynamics,” said Sigel.

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BROWN BUTTER SHRIMP WITH SPICY BROCCOLI RABE If you’re searching for a delicious dinner entrée, look no further than Three Guys from Brooklyn’s mouth-watering recipe for Brown Butter Shrimp with Spicy Broccoli Rabe. Three Guys sells only the freshest fruits and vegetables and it has the perfect broccoli rabe to make this incredible entrée. Just mix 1 lb. of broccoli rabe, with 1 lb. shrimp, and add 4 tbs. unsalted butter, 3 garlic cloves, ¼ cup chopped parsley, extra virgin olive oil, crushed red pepper flakes, salt and pepper and you have all the ingredients you need for this palate-pleasing dish. For the complete recipe visit the website. https://www.3guysfrombrooklyn.com/recipes/brown-butter-shrimp-spicy-broccoli-rabe/

Week of September 5–11, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 5INB


FACES BEHIND

THE BIZ By John Alexander

DAMASCUSBAKERY.COM

BROOKLYNBRED.COM

Damascus Bakeries 56 Gold St. Brooklyn, NY 11201 718-855-1456 If you’re looking for some of the best tasting comfort food you’ve ever had, look no further than Damascus Bakeries’ recipe for Pizza Crust Grilled Cheese Italiano. It’s a delicious take on grilled cheese using Brooklyn Bred Pizza Crust. Just take 1 Brooklyn Bred Original, Traditional or Ancient Grain Pizza Crust, 1 tablespoon olive oil, 4 oz. fresh mozzarella sliced thin, 1 medium tomato sliced thin, 1 tablespoon grated Parmesan or Romano cheese and ½ cup fresh arugula. It’s perfect for lunch, dinner or just to snack on. To find the complete recipe and to learn more about Damascus Bakeries’ delicious products, just go the website. www.brooklynbred.com

Three Guys from Brooklyn 6502 Fort Hamilton Parkway Brooklyn, NY 718-748-8340 If you’re searching for a delicious dinner entrée, look no further than Three Guys from Brooklyn’s mouthwatering recipe for Brown Butter Shrimp with Spicy Broccoli Rabe. Three Guys sells only the freshest fruits and vegetables, and it has the perfect broccoli rabe to make this incredible entrée. Just mix 1 lb. of broccoli rabe with 1 lb. shrimp, and add 4 Tbs. unsalted butter, 3 garlic cloves, ¼ cup chopped parsley, extra virgin olive oil, crushed red pepper flakes, salt and pepper, and you have all the ingredients you need for this palate-pleasing dish. For the complete recipe visit the website. www.3guysfrombrooklyn.com

South Brooklyn to host multiple 9/11 memorial events BY VICTOR PORCELLI EDITORIAL@ BROOKLYNREPORTER.COM

On September 11, 2001, when terrorists hijacked commercial jetliners and flew them into the World Trade Center, Brooklyn residents were among uniformed service member, first responders and financial sector victims. Now, 18 years after the horrific attack, Brooklyn residents will hold a host of memorials for those who died on that terrible day. At 10 p.m. on Friday Sept. 6, the U.S. Army Garrison at Fort Hamilton will hold its annual 9/11 Commemorative Memorial Ceremony. Fort Hamilton is the only active military base in New York City. Its ceremony often includes a moment of silence and a bugle performance of “Retreat.” The Night Before Candlelight Ceremony will take place at MCU Park’s Wall of Remembrance at 7 p.m. on Sept. 10. The wall is engraved with images of 346 firefighters, 37 Port Authority officers, 23 New York City police officers, three New York State officers, one member of the New York Fire Patrol and one rescue dog. This year, the ceremony will use electric candles and will have Fire Department chaplains present. “It’s hard to realize that it’s been 18 years since 9/11,” Sol Moglen, honorary deputy chief with the FDNY and founder of the Brooklyn Wall of Remembrance, told this paper. “This is the 18th anniversary, and a

lot of the families don’t feel comfortable going down to Ground Zero because it’s a very sad place. But in Coney Island, at the Brooklyn Wall of Remembrance, they come to celebrate them and that’s the nice part: we’ve made it a celebration.” Those interested can meet at the memorial at 1904 Surf Ave. at 7 p.m. On Sept. 11 itself, Brooklyn State Sen. Andrew Gounardes will be continuing the tradition of his predecessor, Marty Golden, by holding two vigils: one in Marine Park and one in Bay Ridge. First, the senator will mark the anniversary at Marine Park ebrooklyn media/file photo in front of the Carmine Carro Community Center at 6 p.m. A A scene from last year’s memorial on the 69th Street Pier. second vigil will be held at the 69th Street Pier at Bay Ridge committee, explained. “So, Commemoration Ceremony Mychal Judge, a Franciscan Avenue and Shore Road at 7:30 one day out of the year, the at 4 p.m. This year’s cere- priest, was also killed. The p.m. Both include a 21-gun handball court is given to us mony is dedicated to the 18th mass will also honor Fr. Judge. salute and a candle-lighting. by the Parks Department and anniversary of the tragedy, and The Brooklyn Heights “Our community comes we remember the people that will include candle-lighting, a Interfaith Clergy Association together each year to mark we lost and we honor the first laying-the-flowers ceremony, a will hold its annual evening the events of September 11,” responders in our area, just to Color Guard presentation and prayer service on the Brooklyn Gounardes said. “Together, let them know that we appreci- speeches from 9/11 family Heights Promenade. The event we mourn those we lost on that ate everything they do.” members, major supporters of will take place at Montague Attendees will meet at the the memorial and clergy. The Street, on the 11th, from 6:30day, and recommit ourselves to keeping their memories alive. handball court on the corner September 11 Family Group is 7:30 p.m. As the years pass, it remains of Avenue X and Bedford Av- a nonprofit organization that Also in Brooklyn Heights, essential to remember and re- enue. The court is home to a unites families of the victims. the Brooklyn Historical Soflect on the events of that day mural painted by Brooklynite At 8 a.m. on the 11th, As- ciety, 128 Pierrepont St., will and how it forever shaped our Ray Fiore after he spent three sumption Roman Catholic mark the anniversary with lives, our city and our nation.” days volunteering at Ground Church, 55 Cranberry St., will a screening, in real time, of Also on the 11th, the Zero. It includes the names hold its Mass of Remembrance Wolfgange Staehle’s work, Brooklyn/Bedford Park 9/11 of over 400 South Brooklyn for the firefighters from the “2001,” a visual recording of Memorial Committee will host residents lost in the attacks Engine Co. 205/Hook and Lad- the events of Sept. 11, 2001. a candlelit vigil at Bill Brown as well as a painting of the der 118 firehouse on Middagh Staehle had set up cameras in Park from 6:30-8:30 p.m. American flag. Street in Brooklyn Heights. All Brooklyn to record a day in the “We were created because On Sept. 11, at the Memorial eight firefighters who were on life of New York City; instead, we felt, as just regular people, Square in Brooklyn’s Asser duty the day of the attacks lost they recorded the attacks and that we can’t let people forget,” Levy Park, the September 11 their lives. While administer- their aftermath. The screening Tina Gray, a member of the Family Group will hold its ing last rites to victims, Fr. will begin at 8:30 a.m. and

continue till 7 p.m. Following the screening, there will be a discussion, beginning at 7 p.m., moderated by Jessica Chen, senior director of public and professional programs at the 9/11 Memorial & Museum, with a panel of writers, Garrett Graff, Giannina Braschi and Lorem Ipsum. In Dyker Heights, St. Ephrem’s Church at Fort Hamilton Parkway and Bay Ridge Parkway will also hold its annual ceremony, in which participants will attend a Mass before heading outside, where the church has installed a statue of Jesus holding the Twin Towers. Finally, the 18th Annual Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers 5k Run & Walk will take place on Sunday, Sept. 29 beginning at 9:30 a.m. Siller was an FDNY firefighter who died trying to rescue survivors. The run retraces his final footsteps, beginning at the Brooklyn entrance to the Hugh L. Carey Tunnel and finishing across from the World Trade Center at West and Murray streets. The run will be followed by a barbecue and concert; 30,000 participants are expected to attend. The event honors all first responders, and this year will for the first time also include tributes to service men and women killed in the line of duty since 9/11; their faces will be displayed on banners held by ROTC Cadets. For information on participating, go to tunnel2towers.org. Noah Singer contributed reporting to this article.

6INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of September 5–11, 2019


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Week of September 5–11, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 11INB


Eye on REAL

ESTATE

Red Hook’s S.W. Bowne Grain Storehouse has been torn down

INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan

The big hunk of junk at the center of the picture is the remains of the S.W. Bowne Grain Storehouse’s roof.

The building is ‘a casualty of a system that does not work,’ an activist says. By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn

I saw the death blow that brought down the Bowne building. It happened on Labor Day — Monday, Sept. 2, 2019. Construction workers all over America had the day off. But a demolition crew was on the job at the Red Hook property where entrepreneur Samuel Winter Bowne built a four-story brick grain storehouse for Gowanus Canal commerce in 1886. At 10:23 a.m., an excavator with a rope attached to it backed over debris-strewn ground — and with a single yank, tore the roof right off the historic S.W. Bowne Grain Storehouse at 595 Smith St. Mighty timbers that had held up the roof since Grover Cleveland was President snapped like toothpicks.

A long, flat panel of roofing material, which was ribbed with a row of wood beams, twisted as it plummeted earthwards. A torrent of brown dust cascaded to the ground.

At 10:40 a.m., when I left my sidewalk vigil for the S.W. Bowne Grain Storehouse, the excavator was using a pair of giant jaws to pick up broken bits of the building and toss them into a pile.

‘PROJECT MAYHEM’

RUBBLE IN THE RAIN

Workers at the site cheered so loudly that I heard them on the other side of the Gowanus Canal, where I stood on the sidewalk of the Hamilton Avenue Bridge as noisy traffic rushed by. The S.W. Bowne Grain Storehouse, which belongs to the Chetrit Group, is the Gowanus Canal-side industrial building that preservation advocates and elected officials tried to save from demolition. The roof the workers ripped off was the last thing that held together what remained of the north half of the building.

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An excavator is hard at work at the S.W. Bowne Grain Storehouse even as rain falls on Labor Day afternoon. By early morning on Labor Day, a large portion of the brick wall on the side of the building facing the Gowanus Canal had already been knocked down. An interior wall that had divided the north and south sides of the grain storehouse was exposed to the open air. When I stood on the sidewalk on Smith Street, I could see graffiti murals on it. One of them was labeled “Project Mayhem” in big letters. The demolition crew was working although the city Buildings Department had issued a Partial Stop Work Order for the property on Aug. 29. On Monday, I asked agency spokesperson Andrew Rudansky if what they were doing was legal under the order’s provisions. He said the order solely banned “scaffold work.”

Buildings Department inspectors who checked up on the crew at 595 Smith St. early Monday afternoon “determined that no scaffold work was ongoing, and the active demolition work did not violate the Partial Stop Work Order,” Rudansky told me. A few days earlier, the demolition crew had obliterated the south half of the building. That’s the part of the historic property where a two-alarm fire was “deliberately set” — those are the words of FDNY spokesperson Jim Long — in June 2018. As a Bureau of Fire Investigation report obtained by City Councilmember Carlos Menchaca says, on the night of that fire, a nearby hydrant that didn’t work properly had a brick and screws stuffed inside it.

After I left the doomed building, it rained a lot. When a huge mid-afternoon downpour subsided somewhat, I returned to the Bowne building and discovered the workers had done lots more demolition in my absence. The very northernmost corner of the structure was still standing. Just about everything else was gone, gone, gone, reduced to mammoth mounds of rubble in the rain. As thunder cracked in the distance and light rain fell, workers walked on wet piles

of lumber. They don’t appear very clearly in my photos, but they were easy for me to see because they were wearing bright yellow vests. The rain stopped for a few minutes, and the excavator got to work, tossing around torn-up timbers once again. It started raining lightly, but the machine kept right on rumbling.

‘SOMETHING IS WRONG WITH THE PERMITTING PROCESS’ In 2018, before there was a fire at the Bowne building, the Gowanus Landmarking Coalition asked the Landmarks Preservation Commission to put the property on its calendar to consider designating it as a landmark. That didn’t happen.

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Eye on REAL ESTATE

Red Hook’s S.W. Bowne Grain Storehouse has been torn down In the afternoon on Labor Day, everything but the north corner of the Bowne building has been reduced to rubble. — Continued from page 12INB — “The Bowne Storehouse is the Empire State Building of the Gowanus Canal,” Simeon Bankoff, the executive director of the Historic Districts Council, told me in July. It was the waterway’s most visible 19th century industrial building. The Chetrit Group didn’t respond to a request for comment about what it plans to construct on the Bowne building site. Earlier this year, Menchaca revealed that during his first term as councilmember, the developer showed him a design with residential towers. In the wake of the S.W. Bowne Grain Storehouse’s demise, preservationists and community activists think city regulations governing demolition permits should be changed — in particular, permits for buildings with ongoing fire investigations.

INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan

“Something is wrong with the permitting process,” Bankoff said. “On the one hand, you have the city recognizing that this is a worthy historic resource which has been damaged under suspicious circumstances; on the other, permits are issued to demolish the building and once issued, trump everything else,” he explained.

‘THE LAW NEEDS TO BE CHANGED TO STOP BAD ACTORS’ “If there is an ongoing fire and/or police investigation of a site, the Buildings Department needs to bar issuance of demolition permits for the site until such time as the investigation has been completed,” Gowanus Landmarking Coalition member Brad Vogel said. Artist Ken Rush shows me his painting needs to be an automatic red of the S.W. Bowne Grain Storehouse flag“This in the Department of Buildings’ sysafter a June 2018 fire at the building. tem — it should not be subject to the whim of the investigating agency as to whether it decides to inform DOB of the investigation or not,” he added. “The historic Bowne Storehouse is a casualty of a system that does not work and an unethical developer who knew where all the cracks in the system are and who committed lots of violations along the way,” said Carolina Salguero, founder and president of PortSide NewYork, which operates a museum and floating cultural center on the Mary A. Whalen tanker.

The inside of the Bowne building’s northernmost wall is visible to passersby on Labor Day afternoon. Week of September—5,A2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle/HeightsPress/Home Press/HomeReporter/Brooklyn Reporter/BrooklynSpectator/Brooklyn Spectator/BrooklynRecord/Greenpoint Record/Greenpoint Gazette Gazette •• 13INB 13INB Week of September 5–11, 2019 • INBROOKLYN Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights


Plenty of fun in the rain and the sun By Paul Frangipane, Jimin Kim and Mark Davis

INBrooklyn photo by Mark Davis

Monday was Labor Day, which means the West Indian Day Parade and preceding J’Ouvert celebration turned the neighborhood of Crown Heights into a massive celebration of Caribbean culture. The combined events drew thousands of spectators as the neighborhood was decorated with people dressed in colorful costumes and traditional attire. J’Ouvert, the pre-dawn observance that ramps up to the West Indian Day Parade, is celebrated with steel pan drumming, dancing and reveling (which includes motor oil, paint and baby powder body painting). The name means daybreak, but starting last year and continuing this year, the celebration began at 6 a.m. as a way to help curb violence by pushing the beginning of the parade into the morning light. Several thousand police officers also accompanied participants as they made their way across Empire Boulevard and down Nostrand Avenue. The West Indian Day Parade, which has been held in Crown Heights since 1969, was full of traditional Caribbean head dresses, dancing and flags. The parade kicked off at Ralph Avenue and made its way across Eastern Parkway to Grand Army Plaza.

INBrooklyn photo by Paul Frangipane

INBrooklyn photo by Mark Davis

INBrooklyn photo by Jimin Kim

INBrooklyn photo by Mark Davis

14INB —— A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Eagle/Heights Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of September 5-11,Gazette 2019 • Week of September 5–11, 2019 14INB• •INBROOKLYN INBROOKLYN A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint


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BACK TO SCHOOL Reaching-Out gives kids backpacks to start school year in style BY PAULA KATINAS PAULA@BROOKLYNEAGLE.COM

Hundreds of children will be ready when school opens on Sept. 5, thanks to Reaching-Out Community Services Inc., which distributed free backpacks and school supplies at a late summer event outside its Bensonhurst headquarters on Thursday morning. Tom Neve, founder and

executive director of Reaching-Out, a non-profit organization that assists low-income residents, said more than 700 families signed up for the backto-school event. “It went wonderfully,” Neve told this paper. Neve and an army of volunteers handed out backpacks, notebooks, pens, pencils, crayons and other school supplies to the happy and eager kids. Tents

were set up on the sidewalk outside Reaching-Out’s offices at 7708 New Utrecht Ave. and children and their parents patiently lined up to have the opportunity to stop at each booth to collect

Yusuf Sharofiddinov showed off his new backpack.

Excited kids filled their backpacks with school supplies.

George Power displayed his overflowing backpack.

It was dinosaurs all the way for Pedro Asitimbom.

ebrooklyn media/Photos by Arthur De Gaeta

The crowd waited to get their goodies outside ReachingOut’s headquarters.

school supplies they needed. Reaching-Out, which Neve, a retired New York City sanitation worker, founded more than 25 years ago, operates a

food pantry for underprivileged families and Neve said he sees the back-to-school backpack giveaway as an extension of the organization’s mission. “We feed the body, so we think it’s important to feed the mind,” he said. “It’s another way we like to give back to the community.” Reaching-Out conducts a back-to-school drive every year. Neve credited the event’s sponsors and volunteers with its success.

The volunteers who helped Neve hand out the school supplies included several members of Midwood High School’s Key Club. The sponsors who donated funds to help Reaching-Out purchase hundreds of backpacks and school supplies included the Verrazano Rotary Club, Ben-Bay Kiwanis Club, Dime Community Bank, Bensonhurst Center for Health and Rehabilitation and J.L. HVac Inc. Councilmember Justin Brannan, a Democrat representing Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights and parts of Bensonhurst, secured city funding to help Neve with the event. “These are the people who

Tom Neve posed with an excited Melisa Chanash. make it happen. If not for them, I couldn’t do it,” Neve said of Brannan and the sponsors.

NYU Langone preps students with supplies, vaccines in back-to-school event BY VICTOR PORCELLI EDITORIAL@ BROOKLYNREPORTER.COM

Sunset Park residents received free school supplies, dental screenings and face paintings from NYU Langone Health at a back-to-school event on Wednesday. At Martin Luther Playground, right across from NYU Langone Hospital–Brooklyn, hundreds of families flocked to receive everything they need before the school year starts. The event was timed to occur during National Health Center Week, which celebrates federally qualified health centers across the country. With around 60 sites in New York City, NYU Langone’s Family Health Centers serve most of southwest Brooklyn. The centers run more than 40 school-based programs and eight primary care sites, according to Executive

Director of the centers Larry McReynolds. With the mission of increasing access to care in marginalized or hard-to-reach populations, the centers partnered with Empire BlueCross BlueShield HealthPlus and a variety of community programs on Wednesday. More than 1,600 backpacks filled with pens, pencils, a notebook, a folder and more were handed out. Dental screenings, a tooth-brushing presentation and vaccinations were also provided by the health center. “We want to make sure that kids are ready to go back to school physically, mentally, financially and also have the supplies to be successful when the new school year starts,” McReynolds told this newspaper. McReynolds said that National Health Center Week is held purposefully around the

same time as kids get ready to head back to school because children are required to complete physicals anyway at the beginning of the school year. Cynthia Felix, a board member of the Family Health Centers at NYU Langone, said that she feels the timing couldn’t be better. “It’s a great week to do it because a lot of parents are anxious about back-to-school and how to pay for their supplies,” Felix told the Brooklyn Reporter. “This gives them the opportunity to get everything done before school begins and they don’t have that anxiety. Their kids go back to school confident that they have their supplies and the parents go back to school confident that their kids are healthy and ready to conquer school.” This year, in particular, there have been policy changes that may affect the communities the centers serve, McReynolds

ebrooklyn media/Photo by Victor Porcell

Senior Vice President and Vice Dean of Human Resources and Organizational Development and Learning Nancy Sanchez and Executive Director of NYU Langone’s Family Health Centers Larry McReynolds (back left) posed with community members and Empire representatives at the event. said. He cited cuts to Medicaid, immigration policies and the recent removal of the religious exemption for vaccinations. He said that the back-toschool event was meant not only to inform community

members and guide them … the health center is here for through the changes, but also you regardless,” McReynolds serve as a reminder of the said. “Regardless of ability to resources the health center pay, regardless of language, provides. regardless of insurance cover“Given all of the things that age, we’re here for you over the are going on in the community long haul.”

16INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of September 5–11, 2019


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Photo by Bess Adler

Amy Cunningham.

Writing a condolence letter: Do’s and don’ts with Amy Cunningham It’s difficult to know what to say when someone close to you has lost a loved one. The best intentioned of us get caught up in finding the right words, leaving that message unwritten and unsent. But it’s the act of sending that’s important, suggests licensed funeral director and death educator Amy Cunningham, stressing, “Take excellence off your list of objectives.” On March 30 of this year, Cunningham led a step-by-step guide to the Art of the Condolence Letter in the Green-Wood Cemetery’s Modern Chapel. Drawing on letters written by some of history’s greatest luminaries, Cunningham encouraged a frank discussion on the lost art, delving deeply into conversations on grief, loss and, ultimately, the human experience.

The writing of a condolence letter, Cunningham emphasizes, is about practice, not perfection. She urges one to consider it as a meditative exercise rather than focusing on the final result. “Condolence notes are in essence always failures, but that’s okay,” she says. “The act of writing them is the point. The act of comforting is secondary.” Wondering where to begin? Cunningham has a few pointers. She recommends a letter sent by mail, even better if it’s handwritten. She stresses that it’s the personal touch that makes all the difference. (Cunningham presented her personal writing kit during the program, inspired by Victorian stationery boxes, to illustrate this point.) Let them know you are there and thinking of them. Share a memory or story. She

also pointed out a few common blunders to avoid. Say “died,” not “passed away.” Don’t say, “I know how you feel.” You may not have the words of Emily Dickinson or Ernest Hemingway, but you’re forging human connection, and that’s what really matters. Lastly, Cunningham stresses that it’s not only about the recipient. It is also a deeply personal experience for the writer, who in the act of writing is forced to reflect upon his or her own experience and understanding of life and death. This discussion, and other death education programming, including the Death Café, hosted by Cunningham at GreenWood since 2017, are just some of the ways that Green-Wood continues to engage its audiences in conversations on death and dying in the 21st century.

Keep sharing. Keep loving. Keep living. Here’s the essential truth about hospice: it’s more about living, than dying. In fact, studies show that patients who receive hospice care actually live longer than those who do not. MJHS Hospice provides the clinical, emotional and spiritual support that patients and their families need to help make the most of the precious time they have together, so they can relive old memories, share stories and keep on laughing. To learn how MJHS Hospice can help you or a loved one, call 855-388-5257 or visit mjhshospice.org.

MJHS is a not-for-profit health care organization. To lend your support, visit mjhsfoundation.org. Photo courtesy of Green-Wood Cemetery

Amy Cunningham’s personal writing kit. Week of September 5–11, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 19INB


Why wills matter Everyone needs and should have a will. A will is a legal declaration of how a person wishes his or her possessions to be disposed of after death. Wills make sure that the antique jewelry which belonged to a beloved grandmother will be passed on to a daughter or that college will be possible for a grandson or that one’s favorite charity will receive funds to continue its good work. If you die without a will, your possessions and property will be distributed only among your family members; perhaps not exactly the way you want. New York State law will make these determinations – not you. No charities or friends would benefit. Many other legal complications may arise after a person dies “intestate” or without a will. Some of them can be costly and lead to an unnecessary tax burden on your estate or family. Many people believe that a will is only necessary when there is a significant amount of money, valuables and property to be distributed after death to loved ones, children, families, friends and charities. Nothing could be further from the truth. Even a person with a limited amount of money or property should have a will. How does one go about making a will? The first thing to do is to list all your assets and then decide whom you want to share these assets. You will also need to think about a “personal representative” or “executor” who will carry out the provisions of your will. Most experts caution against drafting your own will without using professional legal advice. Even though the “will” forms available on the internet or at an office supply store look

impressive, they may omit an essential requirement. It is all right to use these forms for a draft of your will, but it is best to call an attorney and make an appointment to discuss the final draft of your will. Many attorneys are willing to quote prices over the telephone so be sure to discuss fees in advance. Many offer a free or low-cost first consultation. A copy of your will along with any funeral arrangements you have made should be kept in a safe place where family or a close friend can have access to the information when needed. A safe deposit box is sealed immediately after the death notice is published, so it is not recommended for storing instructions for funeral arrangements, wills or insurance documents. If you do not have a personal attorney, call the New York State Bar Association’s Lawyer Referral Service at 1-800-342-3661. You can request a comprehensive report on Wills and Living Trusts by writing: AARP, 601 E Street, NW, Washington, DC 20049. Reprinted with the permission of the New York State Funeral Directors Association

20INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of September 5–11, 2019


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Week of September 5–11, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 21INB


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Obituary: DONALD T. FORCE

Donald T. Force, age 87 of St. James formerly of Greenpoint, Brooklyn passed away July 29th. Mr. Force was the beloved husband of Cecilia, loving father of Donald, Tommy (Michele), Ricky (deceased), Joanna (Anthony), cherished grandfather of Matthew, Bianca, Stephen, Nicolette, Tommy, Anthony and Jonothan and dear brother to Joan. He is survived by many other family members and friends. Funeral mass was celebrated at Sts. Phillip and James RC Church, St. James Interment at Greenwood Cemetery. Arrangements were handled by the Branch Funeral Home.

Obituary

SHERI LYNN JOSEPHS

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(February 13, 1956 - August 24, 2019)

heri is survived by her three siblings, Laurie Josephs (husband Josh Brain) of Greenwich, CT, Jason Josephs (wife Barbara Tobias) of Huntersville, NC, and Scott Josephs (wife Lisa Josephs) of Durham, NC, her eight nephews and nieces (Daniel, Logan, Bennett, Tim, Matthew, Lindsay, Anya and Aaron), and her stepmother Linda Josephs. Sheri was predeceased by her parents Tom and Judith Josephs. Her death is also deeply felt by the many devoted friends she made throughout her life, including childhood friends, college and law school classmates, and the community residents who shared her passion for Brooklyn. Sheri was a proud alumna of Vassar College and Brooklyn Law School. An expert in bankruptcy law, Sheri especially enjoyed the several years she clerked for the late Judge John Connelly in the Bankruptcy Court, SDNY. Sheri was very active in her Boerum Hill community, and will always be remembered by her friends and family for her exceptional warmth and intelligence. Sheri was buried on August 28 at the Ahavath Sholom Cemetery in Great Barrington near her beloved father, Tom. In lieu of flowers, please consider donating to Autism after 18, https://autismafter18.org. Remembrances may be sent to the family through Finnerty and Stevens at www.finnertyandstevens.com

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ARMSTRONG, Geneve (nee Fallon) — On September 2, 2019. Beloved wife of the late John. Loving mother of Marianne Trabulsi, Liam Armstrong (Christine) and the late Loretta Pizzi (the late Robert). Cherished grandmother of seven and proud great grandmother of six. Mass of Christian Burial Friday, Sept. 6, 10:30 a.m. at Our Lady of Angels R.C. Church in Bay Ridge. All arrangements handled by Clavin Funeral Home.

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SANTIAGO, Jose Luis, Jr. — Passed away on August 20 in Sandy Ridge, N.C. Born

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(718) 745-1600 in New York City, he was the son of Jose Luis and Carmen Santiago. He graduated from Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, and proudly went to serve the United States Army immediately after his high school graduation. He served in the U.S. Army from 1977 to 1986. He is survived by his father, Jose Luis Santiago, his only brother Alberto Santiago and his only sister, Evelyn Blanks. Jose Luis joins his mother and beloved dog “Smokey” as he rests in peace. Memorial visitation Saturday, Sept. 7, 8 a.m.-10 a.m. at Clavin Funeral Home, 7722 Fourth Ave. Memorial mass Saturday, Sept. 7, 10:30 a.m. at Our Lady of Angels R.C. Church in Bay Ridge.

Remember a loved one in our paper To place an In Memoriam

Call the Home Reporter and Brooklyn Spectator at 718-238-6600

PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN

PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN

(Never known to fail) O, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, Splendor of Heaven Blessed Mother, of the Son of God. Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. O, Star of the Sea help me and show me, herein you are my mother. O, Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth! I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity. (Make Request) There are none that can withstand your power. O, show me herein you are my mother. O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (3X). O Holy Mary I place this cause in your hands (3X). Sweet Mother, I place this cause in your hands (3X). Thank you for your mercy to me and mine. Amen. This prayer must be said for three days and after three days your request will be granted and the prayer must be published. Grateful thanks.

(Never known to fail) O, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, Splendor of Heaven Blessed Mother, of the Son of God. Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. O, Star of the Sea help me and show me, herein you are my mother. O, Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth! I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity. (Make Request) There are none that can withstand your power. O, show me herein you are my mother. O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (3X). O Holy Mary I place this cause in your hands (3X). Sweet Mother, I place this cause in your hands (3X). Thank you for your mercy to me and mine. Amen. This prayer must be said for three days and after three days your request will be granted and the prayer must be published. Grateful thanks.

B.C.

P.J.D.

22INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of September 5–11, 2019


YOU SHOULD KNOW THIS ‘HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS’ (something about 'sense of place'...'no place like home'.... home is where the heart is, but sometimes home is where the hearth is...) ‘There’s no place like home’ is the line spoken by Dorothy, played by Judy Garland, in the film The Wizard of Oz at the end when Dorothy has defeated the Wicked Witch of the West and revealed the true nature

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Week of September 5–11, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 23INB


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Jimmy Doolittle, center, wins the Thompson trophy race at the National Air Races in Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 5, 1932. He is shown with Charles Thompson, sponsor of the race, and Mrs. Thompson. AP Photo ON SEPT. 4, 1932, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported, “Cleveland (AP) — A new land plane speed king was crowned today at the National Air Races as Major James H. Doolittle blistered over a three-kilometer course at an average of 296.287 miles an hour. Eclipsing the eight-year-old record of Warrant Officer Bonnett, France, by 17.807 miles an hour, the St. Louis flier blazed his snub-nosed plane six times over the straightaway and took the best four consecutive laps for his high average. He carried a sealed baro-graph and his only doubt of not making an official record lay in a pull-up from the course at the beginning of his runs when a forma-tion of army planes crossed his path to land. His record may only be stamped as official after the instrument is calibrated in Washington and the flight report homologated by the Federation Aeronautique Internationale, world governing aviation sport body in Paris.”

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ON AUG. 23, 1935, the Eagle reported, “Dazzy Vance, veteran right-handed pitcher, was today unconditionally released by the Dodgers. Vance was signed as a free agent last spring. The Cardinals had turned him loose a few days before he signed his Dodger contract. Vance was used only as a relief pitcher this Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher Dazzy Vance, season, and his record left, signs 1924 contract as manager was three victories Wilbert Robinson looks on. Brooklyn Daily Eagle photographs, against two defeats. Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn Collection He broke into the National League as a member of the Dodgers in 1922 and remained with them until the fall of 1931, when he was traded to the CarYOUyear SHOULD KNOW dinals … His greatest was in 1924 whenTHIS he won 28 games. He led the National League in strikeouts in seven consecutive seasons. In hisusing National League won 197 games • When a hammer, likecareer a claw Vance hammer, for home repair,and never it was his ambition to register 200 triumphs. He is now 42 years hit nails with the side or head of a hammer as the metal is not old.” Vance was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1955. as hard as the metal of the striking face and could be damaged. • If you get chewing gum stains on your clothing, place a newspaper (like the Brooklyn Eagle) over the top and give it a quick iron to save the day! • Nothing is permanent! Even if your babies used a marker on the walls, toothpaste is a fine abrasive that will remove pretty much anything it touches!

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Review & Comment Addressing lead pollution in U.S. drinking water to make it safe for all By Qi Bing and Maura C. Allaire The Conversation

Since the Flint drinking water crisis erupted five years ago, Americans have realized that many cities and towns struggle to ensure safe water. Currently residents of Newark, New Jersey are drinking bottled water after the city realized lead filters it handed out had failed. While most water systems in the United States provide reliable, high-quality drinking water, our research has shown that as of a few years ago, 21 million people in the United States relied on water from utilities with health violations. Why? Infrastructures are aging, environmental hazards are evolving and cities lack the funds to make fixes. No amount of lead in the body is safe, and children under age five are especially at risk. Lead poisoning can damage the central nervous system, reduce IQ, delay growth and cause behavior and learning problems. Nearly half a million children in the U.S. have elevated blood lead levels. Exposure comes primarily from lead paint, but lead in drinking water also contributes. Our research group studies long-term trends in drinking-water quality and what factors cause unsafe water. Our studies have shown that this public health crisis can be corrected through better enforcement, stricter sampling protocols, revised federal regulations and more funding for state agencies. Lead contamination in water is widespread Since it began regulating lead in 1991, the Environmental Protection Agency has reported nearly 7,000 violations of the federal Lead and Copper Rule, which sets maximum levels of these metals in drinking water. Of these violations, 4,110 occurred in community water systems, which serve people yearround. Another 2,639 were recorded in non-community water systems that serve places like schools. The violations have fluctuated over two decades, showing no clear downward trend. Between 2014 and 2018 the EPA reported 740 violations of the Lead and Copper Rule at community water systems. Montgomery and Harris counties in Texas had the highest number of violations. Several counties in the Northeast violated the rule multiple times, including Baltimore and Worcester, Massachusetts. Although violations in cities are rare, six communities with populations of 100,000 people or more had water with too much lead and copper, including Portland, Oregon; Providence, Rhode Island; and systems in northern New Jersey, Mississippi and Wisconsin. Very high lead levels tend to appear in very small communities. Three towns with fewer than 3,000 people – two in Michigan and one in Utah — experienced levels over 100 times the regulatory limit. Lead accumulates as water travels through pipes At treatment plants, lead levels often are acceptable — but then they rise as water flows through service lines. Acidic water can corrode lead pipes and carry lead that leaches from them to the tap. Utilities can’t fully control the problem because property owners usually own the pipes that connect homes to the water mains. Until the 1950s, lead pipes to houses were common. By 1986 they were banned, but old lead pipes remain — and are corroding — across the country, especially in the Northeast, Midwest and older urban areas. Nearly one-third of water systems in the U.S. report that at least some of their service lines contain lead. The exact number of lead service lines is estimated at 7 to 11 million — more than 50,000 miles of lead pipes. This would mean that service lines to the homes of about 15 to 22 million people, or 7 percent of those served by a community water system, could contain lead. More than one in five utilities do not know whether lead service lines exist for the homes they serve. Addressing this problem will require the federal government to update regulations, while states improve monitoring and enforcement. The EPA does not require lead testing in schools, and sampling procedures at community water systems can be inconsistent. Lead is one of the few water contaminants that utilities are required to measure at a customer’s home, and utilities do not always follow EPA sampling procedures in practice. A violation is incurred only if 10 percent or more of samples have concentrations above the action level for lead, which is 15 parts per billion. Some utilities take many more samples than required and discard those with high lead levels, a 2016 investigation found.

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Another hurdle is reduced funding for enforcement activities. State funding declined by 26 percent from 2001 to 2011, while workloads have increased due to new rules. Controlling corrosion and replacing pipes Water system managers must inform the public when they find elevated lead levels. They may need to reduce pipe corrosion or replace service lines made of lead. Water treatments to adjust pH and lessen corrosion can be effective in reducing exposure to lead. They are required in cities of more than 50,000 and in smaller systems with violations. Flint’s system lacked proper corrosion control, which would have cost only about $100 per day. Replacing lead pipes nationwide, which would permanently solve the corrosion problem, would cost $16 billion to $80 billion. Utilities that cannot reduce lead levels through corrosion control are legally required to replace pipes at a rate of 7 percent yearly. However, they only have to pay for replacing pipes they own. Many homeowners decline to pay for their portion, which can cost between $1,000 and $12,000. Partial replacements can worsen conditions by disrupting pipelines and dislodging lead. Nonetheless, some cities have launched replacement programs. Others, including Detroit, Den-

ver and Newark, have taken steps to identify and inventory lead pipes in their service areas. Stricter rules Revised federal and state guidelines could limit oversampling by utilities and improve water testing in people’s houses. New regulations could prohibit the practice of “pre-flushing,” or running water for several minutes before drawing a sample, which some engineers use to clear lead from pipes prior to testing. Another strategy would be for regional EPA offices to conduct random sampling of tap water quality. The EPA currently is considering long-term revisions to the Lead and Copper Rule. In our view, an updated rule should require corrosion control, identification and replacement of lead lines, specific sampling procedures and better public education. We believe that lead contamination can be eliminated through better enforcement, more funding for state agencies, stricter sampling and proactive efforts to control corrosion. These actions will pay off by improving children’s health nationwide. Qi Bing is a Ph.D. Student in Urban and Environmental Planning and Policy, University of California, Irvine Maura C. Allaire is an Assistant Professor of Water Economics and Policy, University of California, Irvine

Name ChaNge NAME CHANGE ESTRADA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN ORDER ENTERED BY THE CIVIL COURT, KINGS COUNTY ON THE 28TH DAY OF AUGUST, 2019, BEARING THE INDEX NUMBER NC-001264-19/KI, A COPY OF WHICH MAY BE EXAMINED AT THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK LOCATED AT CIVIL COURT, KINGS COUNTY, 141 LIVINGSTON STREET, BROOKLYN, NEW YORK, 11201, GRANTS ME (US)

THE RIGHT TO: ASSUME THE NAME OF (FIRST) DANIELA (LAST) ESTRADA. MY PRESENT NAME IS (FIRST) NATALIA (MIDDLE) DANIELA (LAST) ESTRADA (INFANT). THE CITY AND STATE OF MY CURRENT ADDRESS ARE BROOKLYN, NY. MY PLACE OF BIRTH IS BROOKLYN, NY. THE MONTH AND YEAR OF MY BIRTH IS JUNE 2007. #173254

NAME CHANGE PAMPALONE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN ORDER ENTERED BY THE CIVIL COURT, KINGS COUNTY ON THE 27TH DAY OF AUGUST, 2019, BEARING THE INDEX NUMBER NC-000850-19/KI, A COPY OF WHICH MAY BE EXAMINED AT THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK LOCATED AT CIVIL COURT, KINGS COUNTY, 141 LIVINGSTON STREET, BROOKLYN, NEW YORK, 11201, GRANTS ME (US)

THE RIGHT TO: ASSUME THE NAME OF (FIRST) GRAZIA (LAST) PAMPALONE. MY PRESENT NAME IS (FIRST) GRAZIA (LAST) PAMPALONE FKA GRACE ARNONE AKA GRACE PAMPALONE AKA GRAZIA ARNONE. THE CITY AND STATE OF MY CURRENT ADDRESS ARE BROOKLYN, NY. MY PLACE OF BIRTH IS SICILY. THE MONTH AND YEAR OF MY BIRTH IS JUNE 1955. #173144

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Celebrate the women New York (should be) named for at the Transit Museum By Alex Williamson

O

The JOURNAL

n the street signs, subway stations, neighborhoods and buildings of New York, the names of historically significant men are everywhere. Bleecker Street. Astor Place. Lincoln Center. Even Downtown Brooklyn’s Schermerhorn Street is named for 18th-century Dutchman Peter Schermerhorn, best remembered for having owned a large rope factory. What would it be like to live in a city where everything was named for notable women instead?

That’s the question posed by the City of Women map, currently on display at the Transit Museum’s “Navigating New York” exhibit. The map was co-created by geographer and writer Joshua Jelly-Schapiro and prominent feminist critic and essayist Rebecca Solnit, author of “Men Explain Things to Me.” Together, Solnit and Jelly-Schapiro wrote “Nonstop Metropolis,” a book of imaginative essays and maps, including the City of Women map, that won the Municipal Art Society’s pres-tigious Brendan Gill Prize in 2017. The museum will unveil an updated version of the map Sept. 19 during a conversation with Jelly-Schapiro and New York Times contributor Julie Scelfo. The discussion will explore the significance of place names and

challenge the status-quo of the world’s overwhelmingly male toponyms. The City of Women map re-imagines the city’s subway system as a landscape devoted to its Great Women, where Lorimer Street is replaced with Barbra Streisand Street, Astoria Boulevard becomes Ethel Merman Boulevard and 18th-century attorney John Chambers is ousted from Lower Manhattan by Beyoncé. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Emma Lazarus and Zora Neal Hurston get an overdue shoutout as well. The project was intended to pay “homage to some of the great and significant women of New York City in the places where they lived, worked, competed, went to

school, danced, painted, wrote, rebelled, organized, philos-ophized, taught and made names for them-selves,” Solnit said in a statement. The updated version of the City of Women map will add more than 80 names and take into account some of the subway system’s major changes in recent years, including the extension of the 7 line to Hudson Yards and the opening of the Second Avenue Subway. The conversation between Scelfo and Jel-ly-Schapiro and the map unveiling will take place at the Transit Museum on Sept. 19 at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $15, or $10 for museum mem-bers. For tickets and info, go to http://bit.ly/2lX-3cRD.

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Thursday, September 5, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette • INSIDE BACK PAGE


BACK PAGE • Thursday, September 5, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette


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