Showing posts with label DE BLASIO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DE BLASIO. Show all posts

August 29, 2020

In NYC, Things aren’t going well.

 

I

DAILY NEWS, HARRY SIEGEL

Time feels weirder than ever in these post-New York Pause days, when things are open again, supposedly, and the governor who says it’s halftime in the fight against the coronavirus is writing a book about his victory over it. Taking just one moment of silence for each of New York’s 32,451 COVID deaths would stretch over nine hours.

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Mr. Do Nothing.

[The mayor's] counting down the days until someone else’s election in November, and with the hope that he can just keep buying time until then. Speaking as someone who’s started every week for 20 years or so with the sincere belief that this will be the one when I finally get it all together, I can relate. ... If any of the people hoping to be our next mayor has a serious vision for leading the city out of the deep financial hole we’re already in while building a foundation for a fairer and more resilient future, it’s news to me.

Meantime, New Yorkers can find an endless run of anecdotal “news” stories in the Times about well-heeled people leaving New York, or in the Post about poor and violent people ushering the Bad Old Days back in. In a city where people are always coming and going, and something terrible is always happening somewhere, it’s not hard to find accounts that confirm the trends your editors are fixated on.

But a piece in The News on Friday stopped me in my tracks, and may end up slowing down an awful lot of New Yorkers. Ace transit reporter Clayton Guse reported that there have been so many smashed windows on the No. 7 — at least 200 since the start of August — that the MTA might have to cut service on the line after exhausting its glass reserve for those subway cars.

That’s a huge jump from 32 broken windows in May and June — itself a huge jump from just two broken windows over the same two months last year, when train ridership was four times bigger and drunk baseball fans were the usual smashing suspects. It’s not clear if the unseen smasher (or possibly smashers) has anything to do with a guy the police are after who’s used some blunt object to break 200 windows in 63 different train cars on multiple lines since March.

It is clear that things aren’t going well.

That gunplay is way up across the city as some cops have withdrawn from streets even as others have been barricading parks and simply occupying full blocks in Manhattan around precincts in the midst of a department-wide nervous breakdown about being held to some outside account for officers’ actions.

Enjoy your stay

II

Trump, Rudy and the PBA’s cynical ’90s’ NYC fear campaign

DAILY NEWS, HARRY SIEGEL

I kept thinking about our “bad old days” as America’s Mayor™ ripped into America’s “Democrat” mayors at the Republican National Convention Thursday night for supposedly sanctioning “out-of-control violent crime and rioting” as he claimed that Joe Biden, of all people, was a “Trojan horse” for the anarchist left, preparing to bring chaos and violence to a community near you.

Rudy paid special attention to Bill de Blasio’s New York, where shootings and murders spiked this summer and June saw widespread looting in Manhattan. Said our old mayor, “how did we get overwhelmed by crime so quickly and decline so fast.” He didn’t wonder about how even with that spike, from historic lows, the city is much safer by every measure than it was when he left office in 2002.

Pat LynchGiuliani spoke just after Pat Lynch — who’s led the NYPD’s biggest police union since 1999, when Rudy was in his second term — endorsed a presidential candidate for the first time in the PBA’s history, declaring that “the violence and chaos we’re seeing now isn’t a side effect. It’s actually the goal…wherever Democrats are in power.” And Democrats, of course, are the only power in New York City, where the PBA and its members have been racking up a string of losses in court and in the court of public opinion amidst persistent rumors that parts of the NYPD, after showing up in force to confront people protesting the police, have been leaving the city to police itself.

In 1989,  New York City recorded a then-record 1,905 murders and David Dinkins inched past Giuliani to become New York’s first, and so far only, Black mayor.  In 1990, the city hit a still-record 2,245 murders. In 1991 (2,154 murders), when the Crown Heights pogrom further polarized the city as the Dinkins administration, which de Blasio served in, effectively decided to let “the community” vent as police stood by and the New York Times infamously provided cover by framing anti-semitic attacks on Jews as inter-racial clashes between Jews and Blacks. In 1992 (1,995 murders), when Giuliani spoke at a racist police riot at City Hall. And in 1993 (1,946 murders), when Giuliani inched past Dinkins, as a Staten Island secession measure on the ballot helped tip the scales just enough.

Those were the two highest turnout and closest margin races the city has ever seen. Almost no one changed their vote after four years in the polarizing, totalizing conflict between a fairly mild and conventional clubhouse Democrat and an angry and norm-shattering outsider. (One of the rare people who did shift was Trump, who, as Tom Robbins detailed, backed Giuliani’s 1989 campaign shortly after the then-Manhattan U.S. attorney closed without charges a case involving money laundering at Trump Tower. But Trump stayed out of the 1993 race for fear of losing city approval of various pending projects.)

Rudy’s win led to two decades of plunging and then declining crime here after an equally long era of rising crime and vigilantism, one defined in part by the likes of Bernie Goetz and the Guardian Angels. 

In 1993, 45,000 votes changed the future of a city of 7,500,000 souls. In 2016, 77,000 votes in three states changed the future of a nation of 323,000,000.

RNC Speaker: Rudy Giuliani — Trump's lawyer, defender, cheerleaderThat’s why a vacuous and morally hollow showman and salesman with no law enforcement background focused his convention in 2020 (with 280 murders in NYC as of Friday) on scenes of urban chaos, and warnings about Democrats who’ve often seemed petrified to call that chaos out lest they be accused of betraying a righteous movement and the people protesting peacefully for it.

November 8, 2019

Chief of Detectives Dermot Shea Appointed New N.Y.P.D. Commissioner as O’Neill Resigns



NY TIMES

For Third Time, Mayor Passes Over a Black Chief to Run the N.Y.P.D.

Mayor Bill de Blasio defended his choice of a white police commissioner, saying the job was a “special calling.”



NY TIMES

July 13, 2019




Con Edison Says a Burning 13,000-Volt Cable Touched Off Manhattan Blackout Affecting Over 72,000 Customers for More Than 4 Hours.  


NY TIMES

MTA crews rescued thousands of stuck subway riders during  blackout

DAILY NEWS

De Blasio returns to NYC, defends his absence during Manhattan blackout.


DAILY NEWS

December 2, 2014

NYC: Crime Keeps Falling;/ If Carriage Horses Are Outlawed, Who Gains?; Hint: Not the Horses. / Helping Mentally Ill Stay Out of Jail

Mayor Bill de Blasio at a news conference in Brooklyn on Tuesday with Police Commissioner William J. Bratton and Public Advocate Letitia James. Credit Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times        

N.Y. Times

Mayor Bill de Blasio declared that New York, which his opponents once said would grow more dangerous under his watch, had in fact become even safer.
Robberies, considered the most telling indicator of street crime, are down 14 percent across New York City from last year. Grand larcenies — including the thefts of Apple devices that officials said drove an overall crime increase two years ago — are also down, by roughly 3 percent.
And after a record-low 335 homicides in 2013, the city has seen 290 killings in the first 11 months of this year, a number unheard-of two decades ago.
 
Even shootings, which had increased by more than 10 percent earlier this year, have receded amid a push by the Police Department to stamp out troublesome pockets of gun violence. There were just over 1,000 shootings in the first 11 months of this year, about a 4 percent increase over last year.
 
For Mr. de Blasio and his police commissioner, William J. Bratton, the numbers provided a kind of cushion for the criminal justice and policing reforms that both men are putting into place.
Officers will this week begin a pilot program of wearing body cameras in three police commands, Mr. Bratton said on Tuesday, and a wholesale retraining of the department’s patrol force is also starting. A new marijuana policy aimed at reducing low-level arrests, which was announced in November, has already resulted in a 61.2 percent decline in arrests in its first two full weeks.
 
Indeed, Mr. de Blasio pointed to 20 years of “momentum” that he inherited, referring to an “arc of continuous progress across different mayors, different commissioners.” He expressed pride in the performance of the Police Department over the first 11 months of this year, and declined to describe the continued decline as vindication of his reform-minded policies.Others were more ready to do so.
 
“Bravo!” wrote Joseph J. Lhota on Twitter, who as the Republican candidate for mayor last year ran ads predicting a return to the crime-plagued streets of the early 1990s if Mr. de Blasio were elected.
With a month still to go before the end of the year, the favorable crime numbers appeared to render a verdict on at least one question: Would a vast decline in the number of recorded stop-and-frisk encounters create an opening for violence to return? So far, Mr. de Blasio and Mr. Bratton said, the answer has been no.
Mr. Bratton said that by the end of the year there would be fewer than 50,000 such stops, down from a high of over 685,000 in 2011.
 
With fewer crimes, detectives have found themselves with more time to devote to investigations, said Robert K. Boyce, the chief of detectives. The rate at which homicide cases are closed — usually with an arrest — reached 77 percent this year.
“It’s the highest I’ve seen,” said Chief Boyce, who joined the department in 1983.
 
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Another Look At De Blasio's  Plans For Carriage Horses
 
A horse waiting for a customer at Grand Army Plaza, near Central Park. Legislation to be introduced in the City Council would ban carriage horses in the city. Credit Kirsten Luce for The New York Times        
 
 
Jim Dwyer, N.Y.Times
 
Mayor Bill de Blasio declared this week that he will carry out a promise made during the mayoral campaign: to rid the city of the carriage horse.
Legislation will be introduced in the City Council any minute now, the mayor said, but many details remain to be aired out.
That makes the moment pregnant with questions.
Such as:
Is the still-unseen de Blasio plan good for horses or for people interested in developing the Midtown West real estate where they live?
Once the horses are banished, what will become of their stables and the 64,000 square feet of lots that they sit on, their value swelling by the day?
 
And what of the 220 or so carriage horses that now live in sprinkler-equipped homes and enjoy regular veterinary examinations and five weeks in the country annually? The group leading the campaign to ban the carriage horse, New Yorkers for Clean, Livable and Safe Streets, said it and other groups, like the Humane Society and the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, would ensure the well-being of the steeds.
“We’d be happy to provide lifetime care for all these animals,” Allie Feldman, the NYClass executive director, said. This is an offer that sets off fireworks at Burgundy Brook Farm in Palmer, Mass., a sanctuary and rescue farm for work horses where a number of carriage horses have retired.
“The horses in New York City are some of the healthiest and best taken care of I’ve ever seen,” said Pamela Rickenbach, the executive director of Blue Star Equiculture, which runs the farm.
Offering them new homes is like giving away ice in the winter.
“Those horses are not going to have any problem with finding a home,” she said. “They are so well adjusted to begin with. They are selected for their intelligence and their temperament.”
Horses with jobs, like pulling carriages, have pretty good homes already, Ms. Rickenbach and others said. But, they said, there is a national crisis of homeless horses — beautiful creatures who are expensive to provide for.
“We are completely over-full and overwhelmed,” Ms. Rickenbach said. “It seems impossible to address the problems of the homeless horse. Every day I could send them horses that need homes.”
Many horses that either land at the rescue farm, or in the rural community she lives in, are “in need of medical attention, or they’re underfed, starving.”
New York City and the animals that live here are not immune to the laws of supply and demand, and the mayor and council members who support the carriage horse ban ought to look at an earlier example of good intentions with horses that went awry.
The United States effectively banned slaughter of horses at the end of 2006, according to a 2011 report by the Government Accountability Office, but the story took some bad turns.
“Horse welfare in the United States has generally declined since 2007,” the report found, citing increased abandonment and reports of neglect. “Abandoned, abused and neglected horses present challenges for state and local governments, tribes and animal welfare organizations.”
 
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NYC Aims to Divert Mentally Ill From Jail’s Revolving Door
 
N.Y. Times