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Public Housing Residents Face Loss of Their Community Centers

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Public Housing Residents Face Loss of Their Community Centers

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Ishmael Sylle, 12, focusing on a chess game at Parkside Houses’ community center in the Bronx. After-school programs are popular.

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 Marc Anthony Reyes, 10, left, and Andre Delgado, 9, worked on a computer.

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 Children made Father’s Day cards.

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An average of 200 people of all ages use the center daily at Parkside Houses, where girls recently walked an imaginary fashion runway.

The community center at Parkside Houses, a public housing complex in the Bronx, has one floor, four rooms and many uses.

Adults work on their résumés on one of 10 computers or play Scrabble on Friday nights. Teenagers congregate around the pool tables in the game room or train for competition as part of the Parkside Knights track and field team. But the center, on the ground floor of a red-brick building across from a wooded stretch of the Bronx River Parkway, is really a children’s place.

After school on Thursday, about a dozen children sat in the multipurpose room making Father’s Day cards out of construction paper and buttons while several boys and girls played chess and video games down the hall. They ate turkey and cheese sandwiches. They got help with their homework.

Andre and Giovani Delgado spend their afternoons at the center, waiting for their mother, Ruth Delgado, to pick them up at about 5:30 p.m. Ms. Delgado, a building custodian and single mother, said she trusted the staff and liked the price: $80 a year to enroll Andre, 9, and Giovani, 11, in the center’s after-school program.

But Ms. Delgado and other parents are worried about the fate of the center. The city’s public housing agency, the New York City Housing Authority, announced last month that budget problems could force it to close Parkside and hundreds of other community centers, senior centers and recreational, job-training and educational programs throughout the five boroughs.

Ms. Delgado said that she made $11.10 an hour and could not afford to hire a baby sitter. She would be left with one option if the center closed: “I’m going to have to get my oldest one a key so they can be home by themselves,” she said, shaking her head.

The proposed cuts would affect hundreds of thousands of children, adults and older people who live in the city’s 343 public housing complexes, as well as thousands of others who are not residents but regularly use the centers. The plan has outraged tenants, public housing advocates and City Council members, focusing renewed attention on the New York City Housing Authority’s budget shortfall and its financial dealings with the city.

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Bronx Community Boards schedules

Community Boards are the little City Halls of the city, dealing with local issues involving city agencies, and serving an advisory role in zoning and other land-use issues.

COMMUNITY BOARD 1 (Melrose, Mott Haven) meets at 6:30 p.m., Thursday, March 27, at Lincoln Hospital, Conference Room 6, 234 Morris Ave., at E. 149th St. Call (718) 585-7117.

COMMUNITY BOARD 4 (Highbridge, Mount Eden and Concourse) meets at 6 p.m., Tuesday, March 25, at Bronx Lebanon Hospital, Murray Cohen Auditorium, 1650 Grand Concourse. Call (718) 299-0800.

COMMUNITY BOARD 5 (Morris Heights, Fordham, Bathgate and Mount Hope) meets at 6 p.m., Wednesday, March 26, at St. Simon Stock School, 2195 Valentine Ave. Call (718) 364-2030.

COMMUNITY BOARD 7 (Norwood, Jerome Park, Kingsbridge Heights and University Heights) meets at 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, March 18, at Kittay House, 2550 Webb Ave. Call (718) 933-5650.

COMMUNITY BOARD 9 (Soundview, Clasons Point, Parkchester, Bruckner and Harding Park) meets at 7 p.m., Thursday, March 20, at CB9 Office, 1967 Turnbull Ave. Call (718) 823-3034.

COMMUNITY BOARD 10 (Throgs Neck, City Island, Pelham Bay, Co-op City, Zerega, Westchester Square, Country Club and Edgewater) meets at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, March 13, at American Legion Hall, 550 City Island Ave. Call (718) 892-1161.

COMMUNITY BOARD 12 (Wakefield, Williamsbridge, Woodlawn, Eastchester and Baychester) meets at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, March 27, at CB12 office, 4101 White Plains Road. Call (718) 881-4455.

 

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Group Holds Symbolic Bake Sale

Group Holds Symbolic Bake Sale To Raise Funds For Review Of Toxic School Site?

November 12, 2007

A group of parents, children, and school officials staged a pricey bake sale on the steps of City Hall Monday to raise the funds to pay for an independent environmental review of a toxic site in the Bronx where four schools are being built. The group says the city refused to give them the $11,000 to pay for the review, so they’re trying to raise it themselves with 11 cupcakes, priced at $1,000 each.

“It’s a shame that they put a price tag on our lives,? said P.S. 156 Parents Association member Sara McLaughlind. ?They’re building schools, which is a great thing, and we’re not opposed to that. Schools are great. But if you’re building schools and they’re not going to live to see their future what?s the sense of building schools?”

“If we’re going to have a school site we have to make sure that it is 100 percent safe for our kids. There’s no question about it,? said Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum.

The Department of Education says health and safety are its top priority and that it will continue to provide the Bronx community with reports about testing, construction and management of the site.

Source: NY1 / Bronx

 

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