AN EMAIL FROM ANOTHER PS 282 PARENT

This note was sent to me by Rawle Jackman, a parent of a first grade student at PS 282. When I asked if it would be okay for me to post his email he wrote, "Sure you may. Anything that can help to keep this from becoming a very ugly situation."

Hello Ms. Crawford,

As
a parent of a first grade Lead student at PS 282, I would like to
reassure you that the basis for the parents’ opposition to the Khalil
Gibran International Academy is and has been purely relating to the
logistics and perceived educational hits that the currently high
achieving school may undertake. It is truly disappointing to see that
such a hateful message, the MIM link, could be infused into this
already very serious issue. It lowers, greatly diminishes and diverts
the attention from the concerns that we as parents really have.

As many parents have asserted, our quarrel is not with the
Khalil Gibran International Academy, many have met and spoken to the
the principal of that school, Ms Debbie Almontaser, there is no reason
to believe that her school will not be successful. In fact many such
schools in today’s America, may indeed be necessary. But as the New
York Times article stated, these "New Schools" are slated to be placed
in low performing schools throughout the city. PS 282 is by no stretch
a low performing school. Our concerns are with the compromising of
curriculum, where the focus of the Dept. of Education, should be on
improving and not diminishing, inadequate facilities, the overcrowding
of the school, it’s bathrooms, classrooms, stairwells, also used by
Pre-Kindergarteners, etc. The improving of the computer labs, science
labs, music rooms etc. Oftentimes it seems that when it comes to
education in NYC, the decisions on where and on what to spend money seems seriously inequitable.

I thank you for your time.

Rawle Jackman
PS 282 1st Grade Parent

SUMMER RENTALS ON THE NORTH FORK

Realtor Claire Day writes:

It’s interesting, but there is a very Brooklyn feel to this
place,some wonderful transplants, both fulltime and weekenders.
There are quite a few rentals for the season, some on the water, some
not so pricey in the hamlets.

It’s never too early to start planning for the summer! Don’t get caught without somewhere to go when the summer comes.

Contact Claire if you’d like to explore this special part
of Long Island:  cday@c21lagawamalbertson.com or call her at
917-214-0616

LIVE YOUR REAL DREAMS: BUY A HOUSE ON THE NORTH FORK

Agents324_2
A friend who used to live on Smith Street moved to Long Island a few years ago. She and her husband and two kids now live in Southhold, a lovely town on the North Fork not far from Greenport and Orient Point.

They were the brave ones who were willing to make a big change— getting out of New York City to try a different kind of life. I’ve known Claire Day for years—she is a a very special person with great creativity and  kindness. 

She is now selling real estate on this dazzling tip of Long Island. She’s the one to call if you’re interested in buying a house out there.

She sent a letter recently. In it she spoke of her 15-year old daughter’s dedication to riding her dappled gray Arabian pony and her son’s passion for hockey.

Sadly, her husband, a sucessful commercial photogarpher, has Parkinson’s Disease. "It is not easy, this betrayal of  body and mind, but B manages to find humor and humanity in the face of it. His B.S detector is still very keen and it helps us (me in particular) deal with the many trials and tribulations we’ve been facing of late."

She then goes on to state the real purpose of her letter:   

The purpose of this letter is threefold. season’s greetings (just in time for spring!). family announcements, and a shameless self-promotion.

Claire recently got her real estate license and has joined the Cenutry 21 Agawam Albertson Agency in Southold. Shortly after starting her new career as a real estate associate, the New York Times ran an article that ranked real estate the least prestigious profession in America.

"So while I cannot single-handedly persuade the doubting public of our worthiness, I can made an honest plea to you all in my "sphere of Influence." If you or anyone you know is thinking of buying or seiing real estate in the near future call on me. I am PASSIONATE about the real estate market on this dazzling tip of Long Island…

I urge you to email Claire if you’d like to explore this special part of Long Island:  cday@c21lagawamalbertson.com or call her at 917-214-0616

ST. PATRICK’S PARADE: TRAFFIC MESS

The Park Slope St. Patrick’s Day Parade is fun and all but yesterday on the way home from Rehoboth Beach it was just a major hassle. Major.

Yesterday’s was OSFO birthday party and I had to get home at 1 p.m. SHARP. We made great time from Rehboboth Beach except for that little speeding ticket thingy.

Zoom, zoom, zoom it was quick up the Jersey Turnpike. Zip, zip, zip: even Staten Island wasn’t too bad. Same with the Verrazano Bridge and the BQE.

But then we hit 8th Avenue in Park Slope and it was bumper to bumper. MAN THIS SUCKS WE SAID. And then I saw them: the bag pipers walking west on 15th Street.

"Damn, it’s the St. Pat’s parade," I said feeling like an idiot because I posted about it last week. I could see the headline: Park Slope Parade on Sunday. How had I forgotten? DUH. DOH. DAMN.

No one was moving. Eighth Avenue was at a gridlocked standstill. It was a mess. Cars were turning on 16th Street toward the Park. I told my friend to make the turn and I’d get out.

"I’ll get my bags from you later. Tomorrow. Whatever. I’ve got to bolt."

"What about your computer?" she said.

"OMIGOD," I pulled my computer out of the back of her hybrid but couldn’t get my duffel bag full of all the gifts I gotten for family members at the Beach.

I walked down a congested Seventh Avenue to the F Train. Party time…

Tired.

TODAY IS OSFO’S BIRTHDAY

Today may be a big day for OSFO but it’s a really big day for me. One of the two best days of my life— other best day being the day Teen Spirit was born.

Big day. Big day. My heart soars with memories of that day ten years ago. TEN YEARS AGO? Hard to believe.

She was a tiny 6 pounds, 12 ounces. Only 19 inches long — she was robust with dark eyes, dark hair. So, so precious.

I pressed her to my breast. Mine—she’s mine. I felt so lucky. She started to breastfeed within an hour of her birth in the recovery room. I was impressed. She impressed me even then.

Up in my room at Lenox Hill, I felt so blessed. She was the most beautiful baby in the entire world and she was mine.

I wanted her with me at all times. That first day we stayed together until I could stay awake no more. Then a nurse brought her to the nursery. It was a quiet day. Peaceful. The world outside wasn’t there. It was just the world in that room. Quiet. Soothing. Hepcat and me. My parents were there. My sister.

There were hours when I was alone her. Hepcat went home to be with Teen Spirit, who was too afraid to come that first afternoon.

"I’ll come tomorrow," Teen Spirit said. "Tomorrow."

He was terrified about this change in his world. He’d been excited during the pregnancy and very attentive to me. "Don’t forget your glass of milk, mom," he’d say.

But as the day got closer, he was nervous. What would this all mean?

I couldn’t walk after the C-section, so after resting I asked a nurse to bring my baby to me. I never felt less alone. That first night in the hospital. I was with my precious. So proud to have her, so pleased that she was mine.

The next day Teen Spirt came. He was only five-years-old. My sister picked him up at the Children’s House, a Montessori School in Park Slope. He was painting at an easel.

"I haven’t finished my painting yet. I’m not ready to go," he told Diaper Diva. She walked around the block.

Finally, he was ready to see this new creature who was going to change his life he could just tell. He didn’t know what to expect. Teen Spirit bolted into the hospital room. He looked at OSFO. "She looks like a mouse."

Then he made a bee-line for the other hospital bed and enjoyed riding up and down. Up and down. 

Relief. He seemed covered in it. We were a family of four now. A tiny, tiny baby girl. A much relieved boy who would still have a ways to go before he truly accepted his sister’s place in the family. Hepcat, me. The beginning of an adventure. 

We didn’t have a clue what we were doing. 

THANK GOD THIS IS OVER: DELICES DE PARIS RE-OPENS

On Friday, Delices de Paris finally re-opened after being closed down by the Health Department and what has been quite an difficult time for owner, Rosana Rosa. She is quite a tropper. Customers were pleased to see the store re-open. The Daily News has the story.

For many restaurant owners, dealing with the city Health Department lately has been a decidedly unsavory experience.

Take the example of Rosana Rosa, whose two-week ordeal to reopen her
French bakery, Delices de Paris in Park Slope, came at a time when the
city agency was shutting down an unprecedented number of eateries after
it was embarrassed by the romping rat fiasco at the KFC/Taco Bell in
Greenwich Village.

In the first 10 days of March, inspectors shut down 67 restaurants
citywide. That means the agency is on pace to shut down about 200
eateries this month – more than five times the 36 ordered closed in the
entire month of March last year. But Health Department officials denied
there is a crackdown.

Rosa’s bakery was shut down on Feb. 22 after inspectors found mouse
droppings there. But that was just the beginning of her ordeal.

"I understood the first violation. So I got it fixed and went to the
[Health Department] office to fill out a correction," Rosa said.

"But then the next person who helped me told me [the forms] had to
be typed. So I had to go all the way back to Brooklyn to type it. When
I came back with the whole thing typed, the guy started screaming that
he wanted it handwritten."

On followup visits, inspectors cited Rosa’s bakery for a range of
minor infractions, such as faulty plumbing and having more than the
permitted maximum of three fruit flies in the store.

Rosa was hardly alone. The Vegas Diner in Bensonhurst, John’s Pizza
in lower Manhattan and the hip Coffee Shop on Union Square were among
the more notable eateries shuttered in the wake of the rat debacle.

While explaining her predicament to the Daily News last week by cell
phone from Health Department offices, she was repeatedly berated by an
agency official, and broke down into sobs.

Rosa said that after waiting two hours in a cramped office, she was
told that she could reopen – then minutes later told she was denied,
and then an hour later that she passed inspection.

"Why can’t they get themselves together and figure out what they are
doing? Rosa asked. "This is not a game; this is my business."

A Health Department spokeswoman said inspectors are following the
rules and trying to get restaurants up and running as soon as possible.

"It’s kind of a team effort," Sara Markt said. "We want the restaurants to open as much as they do."

Another agency official said the number of closures has risen as a result of better inspections, not because of a crackdown.

On Friday, Rosa’s pastry shop finally reopened, much to the delight of Rosa and her customers.

"They were lining up outside the door," Rosa said. "Thank God this is all over."

MEETING A PARK SLOPER ON THE HIGHWAY

Getting a speeding ticket on the highway is a cultural experience for a not-very-often driver like me. Actually, I wasn’t even driving. My friend was. But still, it was one of those classic moments and while it meant a $40. ticket for my friend I was just soaking it up.

We were driving along on Highway 1A from Rehoboth Beach to Wilmington area, when my friend saw some police lights in her rearview mirror.

"Shit, is this guy stopping me. Was I speeding?"

She pulled over and waited for the police officer to get our of his car and tell her what was going on.

"Do you know how fast you were driving?"

Not really. I was following the car in front of me. Certainly not going any faster than anyone else" she said.

"Do you have any idea what the speed limit is around here?"

"No I’m not sure. We were gabbing and I guess I lost sight of that too," he said.

"Well you were going quite a bit over the speed limit. Where are you two from?"

"We’re from Brooklyn."

"No," he said. "Where in Brooklyn?"

"Park Slope," I said.

"No," he said again. "I’m from Park Slope. I grew up on 17th Street between 8th and 9th Avenues. My parents still live there. Where do you live?  he asked me.

"Third Street," I said.

"No." he said. 

I tried to milk it for all I could. We both did. Have you been to Park Slope lately. It’s really changed. Have you heard about the high rises on Fourth Avenue?

"I heard there are condos across from the armory.

Yup. We tried to keep the conversation going. You never know when you’re going to run into someone from Park Slope. He actually did get a lot nicer after that. But he did give my friend a ticket. $40 bucks.

"Drive safely. The speed limit speeds up a little up the way," he said.

And off he went.

WANNA STAY TOGETHER? HAVE TIME APART

Here’s this week’s Smartmom from The Brooklyn Paper:

These days, Smartmom and Hepcat are like ships passing in the night. In recent weeks they’ve spent more time apart than together and people are getting suspicious.

“Everything okay between you two?” Groovy Grandpa asked the other day on the phone when Smartmom told him that Hepcat was in California.

He’s just visiting his mother in California, she told her nosy dad. Besides he needed to check on The Little Orange Car, the Porsche he inherited from his beloved uncle, which he keeps in a container behind his mother’s house.

“But you went away last week with the Oh So Feisty One,” Groovy Grandpa reminded her, obviously building a case that Smartmom and Hepcat are on the outs.

Well, they’re not and Smartmom wants to make that abundantly clear. When you’ve got two kids in different schools and different schedules you’ve got to divide and conquer in order to make things happen.

Everyone knows that (doesn’t he)?

And more to the point, when you’re as busy as Smartmom and Hepcat are — with different work schedules and deadlines — you’ve got to grab any downtime you can get.

Still, the conversation with Groovy Grandpa did make Smartmom wonder if it was normal for a married couple to take short trips independent of one another.

Normal schnormal! Who cares about normal? Smartmom may not be Marlo Thomas, but she believes that the freedom to be you and me is essential for a good marriage. And it’s major tenet of her relationship with Hepcat.

Still, Hepcat and Smartmom have been going solo quite a bit of late. So what’s up with that?

Well, last month, Smartmom decided on a whim to take OSFO to the Minerals Inn at Crystal Springs Spa in Vernon, New Jersey for a quick getaway during the seemingly endless winter break.

Before making the reservations, she asked Hepcat if he wanted to join them. But he had too much going on at the office. Besides, it didn’t sound like Hepcat’s kind of vacation. Too cushy. Too comfortable. Too bourgeois.

Hepcat grew up on a farm and is a rugged kind of guy. He still kvells about his three days alone in the woods with Outward Bound like it was three nights at the Ritz.

Hepcat’s idea of a vacation is an itinerary-free drive cross-country in The Little Orange Car, staying in Indian-owned motels.

But Smartmom and OSFO crave some R&R (or, technically, P&P — pampering and pillows) every now and again.

So Smartmom, OSFO and the Kravitzes went off for a fun and sporty weekend at the New Jersey spa. Third Street goes on vacation.

What’s not to like? Seven inter-connecting pools, including an outdoor heated pool for winter swimming under the stars, hot tubs, a steam room, sauna, an indoor track, an indoor basketball court, tennis, Pilates classes, a salon for massages and facials.

The kids had a first-class vacation and so did Smartmom and Mr. and Mrs. Kravitz (who picked up three bottles of red wine at the local mall). Plus, it was fun for them to hang out with good friends somewhere other than their identical dining rooms.

Once they got home, Smartmom told Hepcat all about the restful trip, but he still wasn’t convinced it was his kind of thing. And Teen Spirit, well, he was perfectly happy hanging out with friends and practicing his guitar (too loudly some would say).

A few weeks later, Smartmom went on an overnight to Boston with Best and Oldest, her best friend since fifth grad, to see Opera Diva, her high school best friend, sing the lead in “Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.”

Well, Smartmom couldn’t exactly skip hearing her friend sing the lead in this rarely performed opera by Kurt Weil and Bertolt Brecht.

But Hepcat couldn’t come along — someone needed to stay home to police Teen Spirit and OSFO. Plus, it meant being away on a Tuesday, and that’s Important Staff Meeting Day at the Edgy Startup where he works.

So Smartmom went solo. After the show, which was terrific, she and her high school pals drank martinis until 2 am with the cast and crew. It was the most fun the three old friends have had together since they each turned 30 in 19 — (we’re not telling!).
Naomi Village: In the heart of the Poconos

Once home, Smartmom and Hepcat barely got a chance to chitchat before he was getting on a Jet Blue flight for Oakland. Because it was the week of the fourth grade test, it was out of the question for Smartmom and family to join him.

Besides, he likes to visit the family farm and see his family by himself from time to time. He has lots of things to take care of out there and there’s always The Little Orange Car.

Yes, The Little Orange Car.

Okay, so Smartmom is a tad jealous of The Little Orange Car. It’s just that, Hepcat pays so much attention to HER. She’s his screen saver, for Buddha’s sake! When they’re together, he takes her for long scenic drives, buys her expensive gifts like piston rings, seat belts, and a $2,000 carburetor.

When was the last time Hepcat bought Smartmom a $2,000 carburetor? The Little Orange Car: she’s almost like his mistress. Except, well, she’s a car.

Hepcat came back on Saturday night and now they have only a few days together before Smartmom is off on her own little adventure at a writer’s conference in Rehoboth Beach. It’s called “Writers on the Beach,” but Writers on the Beach During Off-Season” sounds more accurate.

Smartmom has never been to a writer’s conference, but she likes the sound of it. It’s a professional trip, a serious investment in her writing career, a chance to mingle with important writers.

It’s also a chance to sleep in a hotel for three nights, eat dinner out, and be alone.

Smartmom hasn’t even told Groovy Grandpa about this trip. She’s afraid that it’ll only add to his sense that Smartmom and Hepcat are going through a rough patch and heading for the Big D.

But that’s not it at all. Smartmom and Hepcat know that the secret to their togetherness is their ability to be apart. They try to give each other the extra space they need when they need it. That way there are no built up resentments or hurt feelings.

Even so, Smartmom hopes the next time she goes away it’s with her Hepcat. She does enjoy being with the man she married every now and again.

ANTI-WAR ACTIVTIES FOUND ON BROOKLYN PARENTS FOR PEACE WEBSITE

BENEFIT FOR IRAQ VETERANS AGAINST THE WAR

Tuesday, March 20
8:00 pm Reception & Photo Exhibit — Nina Berman
Sadie’s Lounge: FREE and open to the public
9:00 pm–Midnight: The War Room
Tickets $15 in advance, $20 at the door.
The Ground Truth: clips from the award-winning documentary
Vets Speak: Get the real deal from those who have served
Invaded or Not Invaded: Soldier v. Citizen Edition — Test your knowledge of American foreign policy and win a prize
Special Musical Guests
Mo Pitkins
34 Ave. A in Manhattan
arrow  Download a flyer (PDF)

BROOKLYN PEACE PARADE

Sunday, March 25, Gather at 1:30 pm
Assemble 1:30 pm at Carroll Park (President St between Smith and Court Sts) (Subway F or G to Carroll Street)
March 2:00 pm: along Union Street to Grand Army Plaza for a rally

Bring neighbors, friends, kids, musical instruments, banners, and your VOICES FOR PEACE!
Sponsored by Neighbors for Peace. Endorsed by Brooklyn Parents for Peace.

COUNTER-RECRUITMENT LEAFLETING AT FDR HIGH SCHOOL

Wed. Mar. 21, 7:30 am–8:15 am
Thurs. Mar. 22, 2:30–3:30 pm

Military
recruiters are active in Brooklyn high schools. We’re active too,
telling students they have alternatives to military service, and that
they can say no to being contacted by military recruiters.

PARK SLOPE’S BELOVED DANCE STUDIO LOOKING FOR NEW SPACE: CITY SECTION ARTICLE

On Sunday, the City section ran a story about The Park Slope Dance Studio, which has been in existence for 25 years. Owner Jennifer Kliegel, was told by her landlords that she has to move out by summer. Kliegel, who is truly a force of nature, has taught thousands of Park Slope children, as well as adults. She sent out a letter a few weeks ago to many Park Slopers explaining the situation.

The story in the City Section should be a great shout out — and will possibly help her find an appropriate space.

Teen Spirit took gymnastics there years ago with Marian Fontana. I can still see him at the recital in a red polo shirt and shorts on the stage at the theater at Brooklyn College.

Later, OSFO took Tots-on-the-Go with Marian, where we discovered that she was quite coordinated when it came to somersaults and cartwheels.

For her 2nd, 3rd and 4th birthday, OSFO had Marian’s famed Tots-on-the-Go birthday parties. For me, it’s a special place because it’s the site of my weekly writer’s group.  Read the article here.

WHAT IS WRITERS AT THE BEACH?

This is from the Writers at the Beach website:

Many of you know the story by now, the one about how “Writers at the
Beach: Pure Sea Glass” came into being. It started as a whim, a
half-formed longing on my part, to raise money for the United
Mitochondrial Disease Foundation (UMDF), the organization devoted to
research of this incurable and often terminal disease that severely
afflicted my then 7 and 12 year old nephews, Sam and Zachary. In
October 2004 when the idea for this “Writers at the Beach” first
occurred to me, I conceived of it as a one-time event, never never
imagining how the writers, participants and sponsors would forever
alter my life.

In that first year, our authors came from
Delaware, Maryland and Virginia. They now hail from these states as
well as from California, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
Tennessee, and West Virginia. All of them come here on their own dime
for a cause many had never before heard of. Their generosity has
allowed us to donate to UMDF over $10.000 each year while still keeping
the cost of this event substantially lower than any comparable writers’
conference, especially one boasting a line up of authors such as ours.

At
this year’s “Writers at the Beach,” you will have a choice of twenty
workshops in four different genres—including, for the first time,
songwriting; you’ll have an opportunity to dine with an author of your
choice on Saturday evening, as well as an opportunity to have your work
evaluated ahead of time by an author, then discussed one on one. You’ll
hear readings throughout the weekend by some of our country’s best
writers; and you’ll have the chance to listen to Keynote speaker,
Marion Fontana, author of Widow’s Walk, a 9/11 memoir about
the loss of her firefighter husband, Dave Fontana, talk about why, more
than ever before, stories are essential. 

Enjoy looking
through the amazing choices of workshops and conversations that the
authors have made unique, compelling and challenging. I know it won’t
be easy to choose. Take a moment, too, to appreciate the sea glass
image, the use of which has been donated by artist and photographer
Celia Pearson, as well as the work of Franklin Parrish of Franklin
Parrish Design Systems, who has worked tirelessly these past two
months, at his own cost, to design this web site.

For
those of you returning, all of us–the authors, the volunteers, my
family and I–look forward to seeing you again. For those joining us
for the first time, we are eager to meet you, to welcome you to an
event that will remind you that your story is important, that it should
be told, that writing, in a world that increasingly seems to devalue
words, still matters to us all a great deal. 

      
      
      
   
   

NEW BLOG ON THE BLOCK: SOMETHING LOUD AND ANNOYING THIS WAY COMES

Hi, thanks for running a great blog.  I’ve put up a new blog, SOMETHING LOUD AND ANNOYING THIS WAY COMES, about a weird, loud, high-pitched sound that’s been sounding from somewhere near Montague and Court for the past two months. 

I don’t know the exact source (and the police have been unwilling to go looking for it) but I live near 166 Montague.  Could you refer your readers to the blog and pass along any suggestions if you have any?  Thank you!

http://montaguestreet-piercingalarm.blogspot.com/

Nicholas Pekearo: Auxillary Cop Killed in Greenwich Village Shooting

Just got this from my sister:

Just read in the NY Times that one of the auxillery policemen, Nicholas
Pekearo, who was killed lived in Park Slope. He was also a writer. He
worked at a bookstore on the Upper Eastside. The other man, Yvergeniy
Marshalik, 19, was a student at NYU. He was only 19. His family fled Chechnya  when he was a young boy. He lived in Brooklyn, as well.

SEEING GREEN ON ONE-WAY NO WAY MEETING

Read Seeing Green’s report on the One-Way No Way meeting at Methodist Hospital. As always incisive and interesting. He is. Here’s an excerpt. Read more at his place.

It was quite a night at the DOT presentation of the One-Way Street
Proposal, sponsored by Community Board 6, held at New York Methodist’s
auditorium last night. Raucous, exciting, noisy, super-well-attended
and, no surprise after seeing the level of protests around Park Slope,
with a happy outcome (so far.)

I was lucky enough to have gotten there early enough to be able to
get a seat in the 200-seat room; there were literally hundreds of
people who had to stay outside, most in the hospital building, but
dozens and dozens of people overflowed into the street outside.

CB6 had set aside about 30 seats for board members and other VIPs
and there was a threatened revolt a few minutes before the start as the
audience started chanting "LET THEM IN!"…shades of the 60’s…A
sturdy and unsmiling security guard closed the door and stood akimbo.

Talking of which, the 60’s I mean, I found it both odd and oddly
reassuring, that the median age seemed to be 50 or so, and I fit right
in. All white haired and raring to go, I thought…where were the Gen
X-ers and Y-ers? Off for a spin in their SUVs? Or watching the latest
reality TV show instead of protesting as we were?

HEPCAT NEEDS A JOB: IT GUY/SOLUTIONS ARCHITECT

I want to thank the readers who responded to yesterday’s post about Hepcat needing a job. I am  just thrilled—and so is he. All leads are being followed up on. What a great bunch of LEADS. How can I thank all of you? In the off chance that you didn’t see yesterday’s post, I am running it again in the hopes of getting even more responses. You can never have too many — it’s so competitive out there.

It’s hard to do justice to the many skills of Hecpat (No Words_Daily Pix). But we’re gonna try.

The new-fangled word for what Hepcat does is SOLUTIONS ARCHITECT.
I like the sound of that. In old style language: he’s a brilliant IT
guy with skills, brains, and computer know-how up the wazoo. And he
needs a job. He’s a creative and expert problem solver with top notch
an analytical skills and much experience in the world of computing.

Resume and references available on request.  Send inquiries to louise_crawford@yahoo.com

Any headhunters or HR people out there?

500 PEOPLE TURN OUT FOR ONE WAY NO WAY

Read Gowanus Lounge’s report on the Community Board meeting at Methodist Hospital last night. I’m in Delaware so I wasn’t there. But there’s tons of coverage. Here’s an excerpt.

Nearly 500 people turned out for a Community Board meeting in Park Slope last night to oppose a Department of Transportation proposal to turn Sixth and Seventh Avenue into one-way streets.
More than 160 people squeezed into an auditorium before doors were
closed to chants of "Let them in! Let them in!" Another 200-250 people
listened in a vestibule outside the auditorium and even more people
stood outside on the sidewalk in the rain. The meeting was held at
Methodist Hospital in Park Slope.

The DOT plan was presented by Deputy Commissioner Michael Primeggia. He faced a sometimes hostile and mocking crowd and presented the rationale for making Sixth Avenue one-way northbound between 23rd Street and Atlantic Avenue and for making Seventh Avenue one-way Southbound between Flatbush Avenue and Prospect Avenue.
"First and foremost it improves safety," Mr. Primeggia said to jeers
from the skeptical audience. Under the plan, he said, "half of all
pedestrian crossings will be unopposed and conflict free." The B-67 bus
would also have to be re-routed because of the change. The DOT Deputy
Commissioner listed added benefits adding parking spaces where bus
stops are eliminated, introducing muni-meters, giving more "green time"
to lights on cross streets. (There is an overall perception in the
community that the proposal is being made to eventually ease the flow
of traffic through Park Slope to Atlantic Yards.) Another proposal, to
eliminate a lane of traffic in each direction from Fourth Avenue and to use them as turning lanes we greeted more openly by the audience.

NOTES FROM THE WRITERS CONFERENCE ON THE BEACH

I’m in Delaware attending the Writers at the Beach writer’s conference rooming in a slightly faded  mid-century modern hotel with a good friend.

It’s kinda like a slumber party. Fun to be sharing a room, talking, listening to music. Laughing a lot.

Dreary, dark rainy morning but it’s fun to be doing this — getting out of the normal routine — living the groovy writer’s life. At the beach in winter.

Something about being at the beach in winter. I’m thinking of Louis Malle’s "Atlantic City" or "Julia" with Jane Fonda as Lillian Hellman.

Last night, after dinner at an ultra-Victorian style restaurants with fringed lampshades, pink velvet and teacups on dispaly, we took a walk on the dark, empty beach until the rain starting coming down.

I love the moodiness of this place. In the summer, I hear it’s quite the hot spot.

Last night there was a ‘meet and greet’ in the hotel restaurant but the band — kind of a funky, New Orleans style group — was too loud. You couldn’t really talk and my friend got a sore throat. We drank Bailey’s Irish Cream and talked to a English teacher from Baltimore, who spends summers at the beach.

Sounds like Rebobeth Beach has quite a writer’s community — a writer’s guild, writing groups, etc. The Browsabout Bookstore seems to be the epicenter of activity on the boardwalk.

This morning: registration, lunch and opening remarks, a reading and  a three-hour workshop. Most of the workshops are sold out so we don’t what we’re gonna do.

Maybe go to one of the town’s multiple outlet malls and do some shopping. Or not. 

HEPCAT NEEDS A JOB: IT GUY/SOLUTIONS ARCHITECT

It’s hard to do justice to the many skills of Hecpat (No Words_Daily Pix). But we’re gonna try.

The new-fangled word for what Hepcat does is SOLUTIONS ARCHITECT.  I like the sound of that. In old style language: he’s a brilliant IT guy with skills, brains, and computer know-how up the wazoo. And he needs a job. He’s a creative and expert problem solver with top notch an analytical skills and much experience in the world of computing.

Resume and references available on request.  Send inquiries to louise_crawford@yahoo.com

Any headhunters or HR people out there?


 

DIVORCE JUDGE ON TRIAL

Saw this on Park Slope Parents.

For any one who has or is going through a divorce in Brooklyn, you may be interested to know that the Judge Gerald Garson is finally on trial in Brooklyn. 

Jury selection is taking place this week and the trial will go on for several weeks.

It is open court and a number of concerned citizens are attending the
trial to show that we will not tolerate corruption in the Brooklyn Courts.

Garson is charged with accepteing bribes to fix a number of divorce and
custody cases, often with detrimental outcomes to the children.  Google
the name and his cousin will come up, too.  Seems it runs in the
family.

There will be a number of concerned citizens there but we are hoping
that more people will attend.

Supreme courthouse
at 320 Jay Street
the new tall supreme court building

2nd floor – use escalators…Special Courtroom 1

M-Th 9am-4:30pm , no Fridays

Judge Berry  has asked for no cell phones..so please…..don’t bring
them

NOTE–  the DA has made it clear that a protest would be fine……they
would be very happy with plenty of attention on this case.  So lets
bring it!

 

Continue reading DIVORCE JUDGE ON TRIAL

PS 282 PARENTS CLARIFY THEIR POSITION

I got this email today from the PS 282 parents who wrote the letter to Chancellor Klein yesterday. They wanted to clarify their position — and thought that I may have misinterpreted their email. Yes, it’s true I may have misconstrued the meaning of their email. Or maybe they weren’t clear. Their inclusion of the link to the Militant Islam Monitor was misleading. This letter helps to clarify their position.

Dear Louise Crawford,

We are sorry if you have misunderstood the meaning of what we were writing, or maybe we didn’t express ourselves well.
Our letter was written as a personal missive and the meaning that you attribute to it is misleading.

As has already been quoted regarding this blog, "The potential controversy about the school adds a potentially destructive further layer of complication to the situation. It’s clear that the Khalil Gibran International Academy will face opposition by MIM and like-minded ideologues wherever it goes."

This is the reason why the extreme radical article was included; only to show the worst of what outside feelings are already being voiced about the proposed addition to our school.

We would be happy to have both arabic language and middle east studies added to our current curriculum. Children should have the opportunity to learn about Aristotele as well as Ibn Rushd and of Plato as well as Abū ‘Alī al-Husayn; they should know were our mathematic and astrological systems come from and read the most beautiful poems by arab poets such as Omar Khayyám. Certainly this field of study has been largely ignored in American childhood public education.

Our children have a beautiful school with enough space to enable them in their learning that would be reduced substantially by the new installment. If you attended the PTA meeting you would probably agree that the group of presenters did not appear to have given any consideration to the effects it would have on the current school population. In fact they admitted that they had only looked at the "square foot per child" ratio of the building and were unprepared to address any issues of sharing between 5 yr old children and teenagers of school facilities like the cafeteria and bathrooms. Not to mention security issues.

If the promoters of the Khalill Gibran International Academy are given entry to our school so will their critics, and we think that by reporting what you could easily find with a simple google search, shows how low could be the tone of the debate. Whether or not you or we want it, this is the pressure that we are talking about and one element that our community, by default, will have to confront.
In addition to the loss of space and other physical adjustments, we as a community have to be aware of the kind of pressure this new school could put on our children.

thank you for taking the time and giving space on your blog for this discussion and allowing us to clarify our opinions, again we apologize if our intentions were misleading or misunderstood.

best regards

WANTED: SOMEONE TO WRITE ABOUT THE NO WAY MEETING FOR OTBKB

OTBKB can’t be at tonight’s meeting but would love for a few people to report back on the meeting. The event will obviously be well covered by the local bloggers and media (the big guns will surely be there). I am looking for bloggy details: slice of life, interesting quotes, atmospheric reporting. What was the VIBE? How are people feeling? What was the upshot of the meeting?

In other words, anyone want to be a guest blogger? Please send bloggy reporting to louise_crawford@yahoo.com and I will post it.

Let me know in advance if you’re interested.

TONIGHT’S THE NIGHT: BIG MEETING ON ONE WAY 7TH AVE INITIATIVE

Aaron Naparstek, the man responsible for convincing Commerce Bank to RETHINK its plans to make a drive through on Fifth Avenue, is at it again. (They didn’t build the drive-thru as everyone knows).

His Streetsblog has become the central locus of important information pertaining to the initiative by the DOT to change the direction of 6th and 7th Avenues. Today, he has a video on  his site that is well worth looking at. Check out the video ad compare and contrast. As he says, "Which type
of street is more conducive to neighborhood life?"

In Park Slope, Brooklyn, the Department of Transportation has put forward a plan to convert a pair of two-way neighborhood avenues to one-way operation. DOT says that the plan is designed strictly "to make it safer for pedestrians crossing the street,"
but the noisy, fast-moving traffic that we filmed on one-way Eighth
Avenue, just a block up the hill, suggests that this plan is more about
moving traffic than helping kids and elderly people cross the street.
Watch as we use a speed gun and a noise meter to compare one-way Eighth
Avenue and two-way Seventh Avenue. Then decide for yourself: Which type
of street is more conducive to neighborhood life?

Tonight is the BIG MEETING, the community’s chance to express their opposition to this plan, at  the Methodist Hospital auditorium at 6:30 p.m. Entrance on 6th Street between 7th and 8th Avenue.

NO LAND GRAB ROUND-UP ON ONE WAY NO WAY

Here’s No Land Grab’s round up of One Way No Way activity on blogs and elsewhere.

Everyone’s talking about One Way No Way in the Slope. I overheard Angela, the PS 321 crossing guard on 2nd Street, explaining to a parent why it’s such a terrible idea. "I don’t want children to get killed…" I overheard her saying.

I hope she’s planning on going to tonight’s meeting at the Methodist Hospital auditorium at 6:30 p.m. entrance on 6th Street between 7th and 8th Avenue.

Alas, I won’t be there. Going out of town.

Serving Park Slope and Beyond