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In S. Bronx, Team Bloomberg Evicts Without Due Process, No Place for the Poor

SOUTH BRONX, November 11 — Mayor Michael Bloomberg, fresh from buying the chance to buy a third term despite the public passage of term limits, now apparently feels free to deploy lawless gangs to evict lower income New Yorker, all in the name of redevelopment.

On November 10, Bloomberg’s housing and buildings Departments converged on a four-story building in Mott Haven in the South Bronx, intent on removing the residents. They never took them to court. Rather, they wrote pretextual vacate orders and called Con Edison to turn off the lights. They stood cackling in the half-light, ridiculing those they were evicting, many of them hard-working immigrants of the type Bloomberg pretends to respect.

From the housing projects across the street, people marveled at the heartlessness of it all. “Wow, they’re throwing all those families out, with their kids and grandmothers,” said one young woman with dangling earrings.

“Yeah, it’s Bloomberg’s New York,” said another. “He thinks only the rich should live here.”

“Dictadura de los ricos,” diagnosed a third, a member of La Prensa del Pueblo / Community on the Move Homesteaders, noting that even when Rudy Giuliani was mayor, this type of eviction did not take place.

Michael Bloomberg speaking high and mightly, lawless evictions not shown Read more..

 

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Bronx Comm. Center Keeps Hope Alive During Downturn

During the past week’s financial meltdown, all eyes were on Wall Street, and few talked about the impact on low-income communities in the Bronx. NY1’s Cheryl Wills filed the following story.

Burnside Avenue in University Heights, Bronx is about 25 miles north of Wall Street, but merchants along this busy thoroughfare are really feeling the pressure as the economy nose dives.

“The economy is really being hit hard here, although we are surviving,” said President Ubaldo Santos of the Merchants Association.

Angel Caballero is doing his best to keep struggling businesses in this area afloat during these tough times.

As the executive director of the Davidson Community Center, Caballero says mom-and-pop stores in the Bronx are basically on life support.

“Oh, they’re having a hard time because things are so expensive. Con Edison bills are number one,” said Caballero.

It may seem odd that a small community center would be the glue holding local commerce together. But for the last 40 years, volunteers have been trying to turn their crime-plagued neighborhood around, but they say the current economy has many residents on the ropes as the foreclosure and jobless rates increase.

“Some of the stores have to let the personnel go,” said Aida Martinez of the Davidson Community Center. “[They say,] ‘I was working around the corner and they had to let me go because no one’s shopping anymore.’”

In the community center, a group of young people are keeping the faith. The community center is a haven for teenagers who resist the lure of the fast life on the streets and it’s paying off.

Next month, a group called “Universal Crew” will perform at Harlem’s Apollo Theater.

Even for young folks, the economy is a hot-button issue. Read more..

 

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Bronx Opera Company Celebrates 40 years

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Michael Spierman, center, is seen with the cast of a 1980s Bronx Opera Company performance in this photographic collage prepared for the organization’s 40th anniversary this year.

Sitting on a comfortable couch in the Bedford Park apartment he has called home nearly all his life, Bronx Opera Company artistic director Michael Spierman mused that since his performing arts venture was launched in 1967, much in the borough has changed and yet much has remained the same.

Spierman, an affable and enthusiastic man in his 60s, who is an adjunct professor of music literature at Hunter College, started the Bronx Opera Company with a group of friends in the fall of 1967. Their intention, he said, was to gather music lovers together and give their neighbors in the borough a bit of culture through performances at community centers. They did that—and more. This Sunday, at a Riverdale fund-raising gala, what has become a cultural institution in the borough will celebrate its 40th anniversary.

“We were all musical devotees and basically had an idea that there was not a huge amount of cultural activity around the borough,” Spierman said, as No. 4 trains came and went outside the window behind him. “The object was to put on an opera or two and to have a good time.”

With an initial investment of $400, Spierman and his friends launched their pioneering 1967-1968 season with a performance of Mozart’s “Cosi fan tutte” on Nov. 24, 1967. Today, as the company prepares for its 40th May season, it relies on an annual budget of $270,000 to provide for a staff of about 120 that includes an orchestra, a chorus, set designers and stage hands.

“It’s peanuts for an opera,” said Spierman, who takes no salary for his work as the company’s artistic director. “I bet the Metropolitan Opera’s Con Edison bill is bigger than our budget.

“There is a certain insanity in doing this. Opera is a phenomenon that involves all of the arts if you think about it.”

Because opera requires so much—an orchestra, performers, sets and more—it’s difficult, Spierman said, when certain funding streams, be they public or private, dry up. Losing 25 percent of the company’s budget is almost insurmountable, he said, because he would have to make the difficult choice of deciding what to cut back. While Spierman said he could chose to make cuts to some of the company’s educational outreach programs, he said he would hate to do so because he’s committed to teaching people about opera.

“It is by nature a more expensive venture and takes a great amount of coordination,” Spierman said, explaining that about 40 percent of the company’s budget comes from corporate donors, foundations and contributions from individuals. Another 40 percent comes from the city and the state, but in these uncertain economic times, he worries that it may become increasingly difficult for the company to survive and thrive.

“What we don’t have is that huge funder who is extremely affluent,” Spierman said. “We have no one we can call and say, ‘We’re $50,000 short. Can you help us out?’”

Still, through the generosity of private donations and the continued support from state and city government, Spierman said, the Bronx Opera is able to mount at least two opera performances each year. The season begins in January with what Spierman calls “more obscure” opera performances and continues in May with more traditional pieces. Read more..

 

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2830 Olinville Carbon Monoxide Reach Dangerous Levels!

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FDNY taking a sample of an apartment of 2830 Olinville where carbon monoxide reach some very dangerous levels.

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Con Edison uncovering manholes to determine the source of the leak.

2830 Olinville Carbon Monoxide Reach Dangerous Levels!

THE BRONX - Residents of 2830 Olinville Ave. were rushed out in the cold Sunday morning due to dangerous carbon monoxide levels.

Tenants say their electricity went out around 7 a.m. shortly before their battery-operated carbon monoxide detectors went off. Con Edison officials say they had problems fighting a manhole fire because a car was parked on top of the spot. The delay caused carbon monoxide to seep into the nearby building.

Firefighters evacuated half of the building, while the other tenants were just advised to open their windows. MTA buses stood by to keep residents warm as they waited.

High levels of carbon monoixde can cause serious headaches and flu-like symptoms, however, no one was injured in the incident.
Con Edison expected to have all residents back in their units sometime Sunday once the building was completely aired out.

SOURCE: News12

Pictures provided by Talk Bronx Team .. See more ..

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14th Annual Bronx Speak Up at Lehman College

14th Annual Bronx Speak Up at Lehman College

Around the City, the Parks Department is listening to communities “Speak Up” about their parks. Today, First Deputy Commissioner Liam Kavanagh and Bronx Borough Commissioner Hector Aponte joined elected officials, community members, volunteer groups, educators and students at the 14th Annual Bronx Speak Up at Lehman College, a free forum dedicated to generating public discussion about open space in the Bronx.

The Bronx Speak Up is a community-led, annual event that has been in existence for 14 years.

This year, the Bronx forum’s theme was “Greening the Bronx” and featured presentations by senior Parks officials, participant workshops, and a panel discussion. Gary Axelbank, host of BronxTalk Ch 67, emceed the event, which was sponsored by Con Edison and hosted by the Bronx Coalition for Parks & Green Spaces.

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