Showing posts with label 2013 NYC MAYORAL RACE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2013 NYC MAYORAL RACE. Show all posts

February 21, 2014

New York Is Removing Over 400 Children From 2 Homeless Shelters



The Auburn Family Residence has been cited for over 400 violations. Ruth Fremson/The New York Times

N.Y. TIMES

In the face of New York’s mounting homeless crisis, Mayor Bill de Blasio will announce on Friday that his administration is removing hundreds of children from two city-owned homeless shelters that inspectors have repeatedly cited for deplorable conditions over the last decade, officials said.

The city has begun transferring over 400 children and their families out of the Auburn Family Residence in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, and from the Catherine Street shelter in Lower Manhattan, while vowing to improve services for the swelling population of 22,000 homeless children, Mr. de Blasio and other officials said in interviews this week.
The administration is trying to find either subsidized permanent housing or suitable temporary shelter for the families and will be converting the Auburn and Catherine Street facilities into adult family shelters, the officials said.
 
For nearly three decades, thousands of children passed through Auburn and Catherine Street, living with cockroaches, spoiled food, violence and insufficient heat, even as inspectors warned that the shelters were unfit for children.
State and city inspectors have cited Auburn for over 400 violations — many of them repeated — for a range of hazards, including vermin, mold, lead exposure, an inoperable fire safety system, insufficient child care and the presence of sexual predators, among them, a caseworker.
“We just weren’t going to allow this to happen on our watch,” the mayor said.
 
The Catherine Street shelter in Lower Manhattan. Ruth Fremson/The New York Times
 
 
The conditions at Auburn, which were detailed in a recent series in The New York Times, prompted the City Council to schedule hearings next week on family shelters. Records and interviews show that similar lapses have dogged Catherine Street, which, like Auburn, is an aging residence with communal bathrooms that children share with strangers. Families live in rooms without kitchens or running water, preventing them from cooking their own meals or washing baby bottles.
Since 2006, the state agency responsible for overseeing homeless shelters has routinely ordered the city to remove all infants and toddlers from Catherine Street, citing at least 150 violations in that time.
That agency, the Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance, could have sanctioned Auburn and Catherine Street by withholding state funding, but chose not to because that “would have meant defunding services that help tens of thousands of New Yorkers in need at a time when New York City had the highest number of homeless residents in its history,” the office’s commissioner, Kristin M. Proud, said in an email.
In the fall, a resident at Catherine Street took five children and two caseworkers hostage, barricading them in a room on the second floor, according to police records. In August 2012, a group of teenage boys took “over the building,” threatening children in bathrooms and assaulting others on the street, according to state records.
 
In a somewhat surreal twist, the city is exploring a plan to convert part of Auburn’s ground floor — the site of a cafeteria notorious for its mice and rancid food — into a “culinary arts” training program for adult residents. In the meantime, the city has added six more microwaves to the cafeteria, where people used to wait in lines to heat food that was sometimes served cold.
Both Auburn and Catherine Street were converted into family shelters in 1985 and, in the intervening decades, have remained a thorn in the side of homeless advocates.
“Until today, no mayor was willing to say no children should be treated this way, and that’s a historic breakthrough,” said Steven Banks, the attorney in chief at the Legal Aid Society, which has battled the city in court over shelter conditions.
Yet only a small fraction of the city’s homeless children live at Auburn and Catherine Street. Its temporary housing system includes 151 family facilities of varying quality, and it remains to be seen whether the administration will address complaints about conditions at other shelters.
 
 
Advocates for the homeless have pressed Mr. de Blasio to reinstate several policies that ended under Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. From 1990 until 2005, the city placed more than 53,000 homeless families in permanent housing by giving them priority referrals to federal subsidy programs, according to an analysis of city data by Patrick Markee of the Coalition for the Homeless. 
 
The Bloomberg administration canceled that policy and in its place created a short-term rent subsidy program that ended in 2011 when the state withdrew its portion of the funding. By the time Mr. Bloomberg left office at the end of last year, the homeless population had peaked at more than 52,000 — the highest number on record since the Great Depression.
 
“There are major American cities that have the same population as we have people in shelter,” Mr. de Blasio said. “We have to look this in the face. This is literally an unacceptable dynamic, and we have to reverse it.”
In interviews, Mr. de Blasio, his deputy mayor for health and human services, Lilliam Barrios-Paoli, and the newly appointed homeless services commissioner, Gilbert Taylor, laid out the broad outlines of a still-evolving plan to address homelessness.
 
A homeless man in New York
A homeless man sleeps on stairs in Grand Central Station, on Christmas Eve in New York. Photograph: Carlo Allegri/Reuters
 
The de Blasio administration is also exploring a plan to enhance anti-eviction legal services for families, and an “aftercare” support program intended to prevent newly housed families from becoming homeless again.
The city is less likely to depend on federal housing programs as a solution because of the dwindling supply, Mr. de Blasio said. “It will be a tool we use as needed, but I think the central thrust has to be getting at the root causes,” he said. “Greater supply of affordable housing. Pushing up wages and benefits. More preventative efforts.”
 
The family’s room is the scene of debilitating chaos: stacks of dirty laundry, shoes stuffed under a mattress, bicycles and coats piled high.
 
To the left of the door, beneath a decrepit sink where Baby Lele is bathed, the wall has rotted through, leaving a long, dark gap where mice congregate.
 
The subject of the series in The Times, Dasani Coates, 12, spent three years at Auburn, sharing one room with her parents and seven siblings before the family was transferred to a shelter in Harlem, where they have remained since October. The Department of Homeless Services is trying to place the family in one of the city’s few supportive housing programs, which provide affordable apartments with on-site services for vulnerable families.

August 9, 2013

Christine Quinn Leads Mayoral Polls but Remains Vulnerable in a Run-off

New York mayoral candidate Christine Quinn


THE GUARDIAN

A New York Times/Siena College poll this week confirmed Quinn's position as frontrunner to become the Democratic candidate in November's mayoral election. That in turn makes favourite to replace the current incumbent, Michael Bloomberg, as resident of Gracie Mansion.
A Quinn victory would make her New York's first woman, and lesbian, mayor. On a more political note her mayoralty would mark the return of the Democratic party as the natural leaders of this predominantly liberal city, following almost 20 years of Republican/Independent stewardship under Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg.
In some regards, the tea leaves look good for "Mayor Quinn". Her main rival, Anthony Weiner, has all but combusted into a puff of smoke following the revelation that his digital indiscretions with women were more than a one-off blip. Though Weiner is bucking sense and sticking in the race, his poll numbers are now down to a moribund 10% of Democratic voters in the Siena College poll....

But despite the frontrunner status, Quinn's position remains precarious. With the clock ticking on the Democratic primary election on 10 September, her 25% backing among registered Democratic voters lags far behind the 40% she needs to become her party's outright choice, first time around....

A closer look at the poll figures shows that Weiner's self-implosion has been to the advantage not of Quinn, who has actually fallen three points since Siena's previous poll in July, but of the "two Bills" – Bill Thompson and Bill de Blasio – who are vying for second place if the race goes to a runoff. Thompson has sucked up much of Weiner's declining support, rising five points to 19% in the Siena College poll, while De Blasio has gained three points to 14%.
Quinn's inability to establish a convincing lead over her opponents is partly explained by her reputation, garnered over seven years as speaker of New York City council, for being a career politician who can be abrasive and scheming in her pursuit of power. It is also partly explained by the elephant in the room of this year's mayoral race: Bloomberg.



After more than 11 years in the job, the billionaire has recast the mayoralty very much in his own mould. With his vast fortune, Wall Street confidence, celebrity status and a track record of visionary reforms that have put New York back at the forefront of global cities – the smoking ban, transformation of the waterfront, revitalisation of the city's skyline, bike lanes, a plummeting murder rate, the list goes on – Bloomberg is a formidable act to follow...
Bloomberg's spectral figure looming over the mayoral race is a problem for Quinn, who is caricatured by her opponents as a Mini-Me. Her help relaxing term limits to allow Bloomberg to serve a third term as mayor in 2008 is used as a stick to beat her.

The 2013 race has become to some degree a post-mortem on Bloomberg's era and a referendum on the kind of sparkling, modern but highly unequal city that has emerged under him. Quinn is polling well among households earning more than $100,000 in Manhattan, the Siena College poll shows, but over in the outer boroughs the electorate is unsettled and seething.
As the Nation magazine pointed out about what it dubbed the "gilded city", the richest 1% of New Yorkers now earns 39% of the total city income, up from 27% when Bloomberg became mayor. The population of homeless people during his epoch increased by 61% and, in the most contentious aspect of his reign, largely black and Hispanic people were stopped and frisked on the street some five million times.



Thompson, lost to Bloomberg in the mayoral race four years ago. [N.Y. Times:] His team is telling would-be supporters he will create a modernized Dinkins-like mosaic, carrying still-ardent African-Americans and attracting the ascendant Latino voting bloc, even as he builds a bridge to the city’s corporate crowd. (One example: his measured approach to the polarizing police tactic called stop and frisk. He is proposing to hire 2000 additional police officers. ) By zeroing in on their needs, he has quietly established allies within the Orthodox Jewish community, a prized slice of the electoral pie. He is trying to convince skeptical donors that he has fire in the belly despite a sometimes retiring style. But rather than turning up the energy, lately he has been turning up the volume, shouting zingers and pounding tables. [Guardian, (Cont'd):] As a result he has eaten into Quinn's numbers by drawing 24% support among black voters, above her 18%.

In reply, as Friday's event showed, Quinn has courted the city's large and growing Hispanic community who may make up as many as one in five of the electorate in November. But as they scrap for every last vote, the three remaining serious Democratic candidates in the race know that their coffers are limited.

July 25, 2013

FOR ANTHONY WEINER, NOT JUST ANOTHER DAY ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL




Anthony D. Weiner, the embattled candidate for mayor of New York City, acknowledged on Thursday that he had engaged in inappropriate online communications with up to three women since leaving Congress two years ago, as his campaign entered a troubled and circuslike phase.
The remarks were his most detailed yet on his actions in the months after he resigned from office, in June 2011. Mr. Weiner had left many voters with the impression that his lewd behavior had ceased after his resignation, but after another episode became widely known on Tuesday, he acknowledged that his habit of sending messages to young women he met online had continued.
Mr. Weiner, a Democrat, said he was still seeking professional help for his online behavior, which he did not believe was an addiction.
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The blog called The Dirty posted what it said were uncensored photographs of his penis, taken from various angles, and said Mr. Weiner had sent the pictures to a woman, [who] publicly identified herself for the first time  The images quickly zoomed across social media sites.



The woman, 22-year-old Sydney Leathers, ...in an interview with “Inside Edition,” a television show, which released excerpts from its report. “I’m disgusted by him,” she told the show. “He’s not who I thought he was.”
During the interview, Ms. Leathers was asked whether she told Mr. Weiner that she loved him. “Yes,” she replied. Asked if Mr. Weiner had said he loved her, she replied, “Yes.”
Asked what advice she would now give Mr. Weiner, she said, “Stop lying, stop embarrassing his wife and get help.”
Read it at THE N.Y. TIMES
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....people close to the woman, ...have begun to talk. “God help New York if he gets elected,” said her mother, who lives in Illinois. A childhood friend said Leathers told her last summer she was texting with Weiner. “I go, ‘Really? THE Anthony Weiner, Mr. Penis Guy?’” the friend said. “I said, ‘Doesn’t he have a wife?’ She said, ‘Oh yeah.’ She just kind of brushed it off like it was nothing.” The friend said Leathers likely tried to get to Weiner on purpose. “He was so stupid to get involved with someone like her.” Other high school friends (who of course may no longer be friends) said her “main goal” was to become famous.
July 25, 2013 8:13 AM

Anthony Weiner, a leading candidate for New York City mayor, answers questions during a press conference on July 23, 2013 in New York City.


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 [Meanwhile] he just couldn't keep it up. ....A new poll from NBC and The Wall Street Journal shows his support has plummeted 14 percentage points. City Council Speaker Christine Quinn now leads with 25 percent of Democratic support compared to 16 percent for Weiner. It's the first poll conducted since the new revelations came to light.... 
If Weiner dropped out, Quinn’s support would rise to 30 percent, according to a Marist poll, taken immediately before his latest sexual twitter admissions.  [But the poll indicated] she would lose to Thompson in a runoff.
 Read it at USA Today
July 25, 2013 12:43 PM
“This kind of behavior is very bad,” said Kishore Belani, the owner of a video company in Queens who recently donated to Mr. Weiner’s campaign after attending a fund-raiser for him. “I don’t think that he deserves another chance.”
“I have children,” he added. “For children, this is not a good politician to learn from. A politician has to be clean, no matter what.”