Category Archives: Civics and Urban Life

Red Cross Tips for Avoiding Thanksgiving Hazards

Today I spoke with Chi Kong Liu, assistant director of web services at the American Red Cross, about the hazards of Thanksgiving and ways that you can avoid fire and other disasters on this day.

He told me that Thanksgiving is the peak day for cooking fires, 90 percent of which are caused by unattended cooking. That’s why the American Red Cross came up with this list of ten tips for keeping your Thanksgiving fire-free:

1.  Stay in the kitchen when you are frying, grilling or broiling food and keep a fire extinguisher handy. If you leave the kitchen even for a short period of time, turn off the stove.

2.  If you are simmering, baking, roasting, or boiling food, check it regularly, remain in the home while food is cooking, and use a timer to remind you that you’re cooking.

3.  Clean cooking surfaces on a regular basis to prevent grease buildup.

4.  Keep anything that can catch fire—potholders, wooden utensils, food wrappers, towels or curtains—away from your stove top.

5.  Make sure your sleeves are out of the way when cooking. Wear tighter fitting clothing with shorter sleeves.

6.  Have a “kid-free zone” of at least 3 feet around the stove and areas where hot food or drink is prepared or carried.

7.  Never hold a child while cooking, drinking or carrying hot foods or liquids.

8.  Turn the handles of pots and pans on the stove inward to avoid accidents.

9.  Smoke alarms save lives. Install a smoke alarm near your kitchen, on each level of your home, near sleeping areas, and inside and outside bedrooms if you sleep with doors closed. Use the test button to check it each month. Replace all batteries at least once a year.

10. If you are deep frying your turkey, before filling your fryer with oil, take into account how much the oil level will rise with the turkey in the fryer to prevent overspill. Also make sure the turkey is completely thawed in the refrigerator for 3 days. Frying a frozen turkey will splatter violently.

Visit www.nyredcross.org/fire for more fire prevention tips or take an online Turkey cooking quiz.

Here’s Park Slope: Great Local Reporting

Here’s Park Slope, an excellent hyper-local blog in Park Slope, has been in existence since 2009. Dan Meyers, who runs the blog, has been doing some real shoe leather reporting about restaurants, stores, architecture, and Park Slope history. He posts frequently and has an impressive weekly editorial schedule:

Tuesday: Business of the Week
Thursday: Then & Now
Know Your Bartender
Friday: Foodporn
Every Day: News and Observations

Here he is on Aunt Suzies, today’s restaurant of the week:

When Brooklyn native Irene LoRe decided to open up a restaurant on Fifth Avenue in the late 1980s, gentrification was still years off. Bodegas and dollar stores dominated the avenue, and if you wanted a decent meal your best bet was to head up to Seventh. Enter Irene: named after her mother, Aunt Suzie’s was the family friendly, inexpensive local place that neighborhood folks had been waiting for…

Here he is on one of my favorite houses in the South Slope.

As you venture further south in Park Slope, the uniform brownstones of the North Slope side streets give way to a hodgepodge of brick townhouses and vinyl- and wood-sided buildings. The latter houses vary between run-of-the-mill and completely outlandish, and stumbling upon one of the crazier ones can make you stop dead in your tracks…

The blog’s name, I assume, is an homage to E.B. White’s great book, Here is New York, a tribute to New York City in all its wonder, chaos and complexity.

At Here’s Park Slope, Meyers brings Park Slope to life and seems to be an all seeing, all knowing member of the community, who takes the time to tell us what he sees. Thanks, Dan.

Panel: No Waiver for Cathie Black Unless…

According to the New York Times, the panel selected to advise New York State’s education commissioner, David M. Steiner, has voted to deny a waiver to the publishing executive her appointment as NYC Schools Chancellor unless—and this is a big unless—an educator is selected to assist her.

Interesting lists at It’s a Free Country of those who oppose, those who support and those who are concerned about her nomination.


Poll Says School Head Should Have Education Experience

I’ve been hearing this all day and I’m finally getting around to telling you about it!

According to a poll from the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, a majority of New York City voters believe Cathie Black, the publishing executive selected by Mayor Bloomberg to be NYC School Chancellor, is the wrong person for the job because she lacks educational experience needed to run US’s biggest school system.

An eight-member panel was selected to help state education Commissioner David Steiner decide whether or not she should get a waiver because of her lack of qualifications.

Now everyone wants to know how and why this panel was chosen because the panel includes three former school officials who worked under Chancellor Joel Klein and New York Historical Society President Louise Mirrer, whose museum received a half million dollar donation from the mayor.

Conflict of interest you say? What’s going to happen next?

Bklyn Bloggage: neighborhoods

Rainbow Bandshell, beloved venue: Sheepshead Bites

Save Sheepshead Bay High School: Gerritsen Beach

Tionna Smalls looking to open Bed-Stuy store: Bed-Stuy Blog

East Williamsburg Photo Du Jour: NY Shitty

Sunday afternoon talk with State Senator Daniel Squadron: Pardon Me for Asking

PS Bklyn coming to Union Street: Here is Park Slope

Midnight arsonist in Park Slope: Effed in Park Slope

Woman raped on Central Avenue: Bushwick BK

New record for Bishop Laughlin’s can drive: The Local

Will a pop-up cafe come to Prospect Lefferts: Hawthorne Street

90th Birthday Celebration for Brooklyn Health Advocate

In a collaboration between the Paul Robeson Theater and The Imagine Project, there will be a celebration of the life of a real Brooklyn heroine, Dr. Josephine English, one of the first African American women to practice OB/GYN in New York State.

An advocate for the health care of men and women of color, Dr. English was granted a license from the New York State Department of Health to develop a free-standing ambulatory surgical center in Bed-Stuy. She is also responsible for a senior citizen center in that neighborhood.

“Community is the answer to helping the children and each other. It is community development that is going to change the world. We have to change it for ourselves. We have to make the community work for us and we have to work for the community,” Dr. English said.

Reserve ahead for tickets to this celebration, on December 18, at 6PM at the Paul Robeson Theater (40 Greene Avenue), which will honor Dr English’s contribution to the women and children of Brooklyn. There live performance of new songs and special holiday material by young actors from NYC Homeless Shelters, many of whom created the original material they will be performing.

These young actors will also perform several pieces from the Off Broadway show “IMAGINE. Time Out New York gave it four starts and wrote: “A must see for youngsters, their families and all who care about the beauty and magic of childhood.”

12% Increase in Need at Brooklyn’s Largest Soup Kitchen

St. John’s Bread & Life is Brooklyn’s largest soup kitchen. Located at 795 Lexington Avenue (that’s Brooklyn, folks), they expect to serve 2,000 meals on Wednesday, a 12 percent increase from last year. Besides serving more than 2,000 meals daily, Bread and Life also provides numerous social services, including nutrition counseling, housing referral services, medical support, education, support groups, a legal clinic and tax preparation.

So while people say that the economy is rebounding (oh really?)the intensity of the need and the services provided at St. John’s Bread & Life proves that there still is a growing number of New Yorkers, who will need emergency food services by the year’s end.

“As our community continues to struggle with lay-offs and home foreclosures, we’re seeing many new faces at the soup kitchen- including families,” said Anthony Butler, executive director of Bread & Life wrote to me in an email.  “Our Thanksgiving tradition ensures that the spirit of the holiday is shared with those less fortunate. We have volunteers up at the crack of dawn to make sure the homeless are not forgotten.”

Due to the ongoing economic issues and the unemployment rate hovering at 9%, the demand for emergency food services in New York City has surged.”

WHEN: Wednesday, November 24, 2010, 10:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.

WHERE: St. John’s Bread and Life Soup Kitchen, 795 Lexington Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11221

Free Thanksgiving Turkeys Arrive at Local Organizations

Props to Assemblywoman Millman and Fairway Market. T hey partnered to deliver 50 frozen turkeys to seven community organizations today. The following organizations received donated turkeys:

The YMCA at 30 Third Avenue; The Raices Times Plaza Senior Center at 460 Atlantic; The Prospect Park YMCA on 9th Street between 6th and  5th Avenues; The Hope Program of Brooklyn at One Smith Street; The Raices Gowanus Senior Center; CHIPS, Christian Help in Park Slope, located at 200 Fourth Avenue; and the Eileen C. Dugan Senior Center located at 380 Court Street.

    High School Tour Confidential: Williamsburg Prep

    Miss Kelly, the friendly and enthusiastic parent coordinator at Williamsburg Preparatory High School, agreed to give us a personal tour of the school because there are no more open houses or tours scheduled.

    We met up with her in the office she shares with the Parent Coordinators of Brooklyn Preparatory High School and Williamsburg High School for Architecture and Design, the other schools that share the old Harry Van Arsdale High School Complex on North 6th Street and Driggs, a large building with an elevator that at one time was a very tough school.

    That’s one of the reasons why there are still metal detectors in the lobby. Everyone is required to go through the metal detectors when they enter the school. It’s a noisy and jangling process but one that the students seem to take in stride.  We watched as one student was asked to remove her boots and was told by a policewoman that some kids try to sneak in their cell phones that way.

    Once beyond the metal detectors, the school feels very safe. We took the elevator to the 4th floor and stepped out into the spacious, sunny and well-decorated corridors of Williamsburg Prep, a school of approximately 500 students, which takes up one entire floor and uses another floor that is dedicated to science laboratories and classrooms.

    Continue reading High School Tour Confidential: Williamsburg Prep

    Petra Foundation: Helping Those Who Help the Disenfranchised

    My mother and I went down to Washington to attend the Petra Foundation awards dinner on Saturday night. The Petra Foundation is best described as an organization that facilitates and supports individuals who work on behalf of “the rights, dignity and autonomy of others.”

    Part of what the foundation does is honor (and reward) unsung and under-financed individuals and grass roots organizations, that help the abused, the incarcerated, the marginalized, the underrepresented and the poor in the United States. A group of “Petra fellows”  are selected each year (from a long list of nominees) and honored for the work they do.

    But that’s not all. Since its founding in 1988, Petra has created a growing leadership network of fellows that helps to connect them to each other and others involved in the battle for human rights in this country.

    In a sense, the Petra Foundation is a nurturing community that helps sustain, renew, connect and mentor those who work tirelessly on behalf of others. They help the helpers and make it possible for them to carry on with resources and support (and access to allies, advocates and policy makers) that might not otherwise be available to them.

    Last night Petra honored Brooklyn’s Anuradha Bhagwati who runs the Service Women’s Action Network, a group that addresses the abuses suffered by servicewomen and female veterans; Carrie Ann Lucas, an advocate for the disabled; Maria Jimenz, who is considered “the go-to person for strategic advice before engaging in an immigrants’ rights battle”; and Wahleah Johns of the Black Mesa Water Coalition, which advocates for a “prosperous, green and transparently governed Navajo Nation.”

    Continue reading Petra Foundation: Helping Those Who Help the Disenfranchised

    High School Tour Confidential: Harbour School

    We haven’t made it over to the Urban Assembly Harbour School on Governor’s Island yet but I hear great things. This small public school has, according to its website, “a rigorous, college preparatory curriculum that instills stewardship skills by utilizing New York City’s waterways.”

    This week, Joyce Szuflita of NYC School Help took the tour and has lots to say about this exciting, new school. Here’s an excerpt. You can read the rest at Joyce’s blog.

    I got out of bed at the crack of dawn to head to the Governor’s Island Ferry yesterday. I have been anxious to see the new Harbor School building. I wondered what kids who are always a little late in the morning would do with a “be there or wait an hour for a ferry” schedule. I finished the tour at 11 totally in love with the kids, staff and curriculum. As the parent of seniors, who sees college essay themes everywhere I look, I couldn’t help but think of the great story these kids will tell. I dare you not to tear up when you watch this video about the school…

    Illustration by Kevin Kocses: www.kevinkocses.carbonmade.com

    Poetry, Rap, Ghost Stories Tonight at BAM Cafe

    I just heard from Tai Allen, who is hosting a poetry slam at BAMCafe at 9PM tonight. You can get there earlier and catch the Happy Hour that’s 5:30 until 8PM. Here’s Tai’s email it’s kinda poetic:

    hey folks,
    i am long-time ny and bed-stuy resident (my life basically)…
    i am also a pretty good poet/singer/visual artist/interactive developer.
    and this week, while i am back from a short tour, i am presenting
    a poetry event at BAM/BAMCafe via the Brooklyn Art Council.
    http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=2752

    i know it is hella at the last minute but maybe we can have the event posted
    on your site. AND we would love for you to come and enjoy too.
    a lil blurb on me, to show i am repping the stuy properly:
    http://bit.ly/taicentric

    thanks for the moment of your time

    So that’s happening tonight (Friday, Nov 19) at 9:00PM at BAM: Poetry, rap, ghost stories, and verbal duels duke it out in this animated evening of spoken-word fireworks, presented by Brooklyn Arts Council as part of Black Brooklyn Renaissance. Tai Allen hosts an evening to feature Edwina Tyler, Pamela Sneed, mTkalla keaton, Sabrina Gilbert, Hanifah Walidah, James Lovell, and George Davidson.

    Bklyn Bloggage: art & ideas

    Grace: Fresh Poetry Daily

    There’s no place like home: The Writer and the Wanderer

    Drawing closer to nature: Art in Brooklyn

    Another helping: Brooklynometry

    Post-romanatic: Do the Math

    The old man’s hat: The Spiral Staircase

    Psalms 136-138: Water Over Rocks

    Cherished, Estranged, Lost, Hurtful, Hopeful, Complicated Sisters and Brothers: Greenlight Bookstore

    Singing Stand By Me on the F Train: And I’m Not Lying

    Sharon Van Etten tour dates: Brooklyn Vegan

    Thoughts on mitigated hell: Old First Blog

    Millenium 2 High School Coming to Park Slope!

    It’s not just a rumor anymore. Millenium 2, a replicate of the very popular and successful Millenium High School in Manhattan is coming to Park Slope’s John Jay High School building. What’s more: the principal will be Lisa Gioe-Cordi, who currently runs MS 447: The Math and Science Exploratory Middle School.

    I heard the rumor last Friday from a VERY reliable source but didn’t want to irresponsibly spread it around before it was confirmed. But minutes ago, Joyce Szuflita of NYC School Help reports that an announcement was made last night by Principal Gioe-Cordi at a parent’s meeting at MS 447.

    New High Schools are always coming online and are usually announced shortly before the New HS Fair in Jan. but news of Millennium II has leaked so Lisa Gioe made an announcement to her parents at MS 447 Math and Science District 15 last night.

    Millennium 2 will be opening in the John Jay HS complex on 7th Ave. and 4th St. in Park Slope in Sept. 2011 with Lisa Gioe as principal. It will be a replication of the popular Millennium HS with the addition of an ASD NEST program like the one that has been instituted at 477. I believe that this may be the first program of its kind in a HS. It will also be an “advanced Exploratory Program supporting internships”. It will not be a choice on the Main Round application. If you would like to add the school to your list of HS you can do it during the short period after the New HS Fair in January when you are allowed to resubmit the application and add new programs that will be starting in fall.

    For clarification, the ASD-NEST program means that five children with autism spectrum disorder are placed in a class with general education students. The students with autism have their own special education teacher, who travels with them from class to class and assists them with a range of therapies and support services. This program was innovated at MS 447 New Explorations in Math and Science and was the first middle school program of its kind in the city. Millenium 2 will be the first high school program of this kind.

    Coordinated School Rallies Protest Teacher Data Reports

    This morning at around 8AM parents and educators at five schools in Brooklyn protested the proposed release of the Department of Education teacher data reports (TDRs).

    The group at PS 321, organized by parent Martha Foote of  Time Out from Testing, opposes this grading system of individual teachers, based on the test scores of their students.

    Some say these reports contain statistical and ignore other important aspects of teaching that perhaps cannot be ascertained from a standardied test. Opponents say that TDR humiliates teachers by subjecting them this public “report card.”

    Parents at these coordinated rallies,  which took place at PS 321 and MS 51 in Park Slope, at PS 29 in Cobble Hill, at PS 24 in Sunset Park , and at PS 154 in Windsor Terrace, were joined by Councilmember Brad Lander and his staff, State Senator Eric Adams and Assemblyman Jim Brennan.

    Nov 20: Walk, Bike or Run for Brooklyn Food Pantry

    The Second Annual Helping Hands Food Pantry 5K Fun Run will take place on Saturday, 11/20 @ 11:00 a.m.  in Prospect Park. The run begins at the Bartel-Pritchard  15th Street & Prospect Park West entrance of Prospect Park at 11:00.   Participants are invited to walk, bike or run.  All proceeds go to Helping Hands Food Pantry, which operates out of St. Augustine Church in Park Slope.

    Helping Hands, which has been in existence since 1992, distributes emergency food supplies to approximately 600 needy residents (men, women and children) in Prospect Heights, Park Slope and Fort Greene Brooklyn each month. All staff work on a volunteer basis. Brooklyn Jubilee, a legal advocacy ministry, which began at Park Slope Presbyterian Church and operates in several Brooklyn locations, works in conjunction with Helping Hands twice monthly to offer free legal advice relating to housing, health insurance, and food stamps

    Our City Councilman Says No To Full Body Scans

    Our man Brad Lander, City Council Member for the 39th District, is in the news yet again this week. Earlier in the week Lander penned a piece in the Huffington Post against the nomination of Cathie Black for NYC Schools Chancellor and now he’s speaking out against full body scans at airports.

    Today on the steps of City Hall, Lander joined Council Members David G. Greenfield, Gale Brewer, Fernando Cabrera, Debi Rose, Robert Jackson and Jumaane Williams in support of legislation that would ban the use of full body scanners in New York City, including New York’s two airports – JFK International Airport and LaGuardia Airport.

    The Council Members were also joined by  Marc Rotenberg, a professor of law at Georgetown University and President of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC). He is heading up a  lawsuit to suspend the deployment of body scanners at US airports, pending an independent review.

    Continue reading Our City Councilman Says No To Full Body Scans

    Fanny Allié Posts Final Sentence in Window of Urban Alchemist

    For the past few weeks, Fanny Allié, a young French artist who now makes her home in Brooklyn, assembled clay alphabet letters into a sentence as part of her installation, Something Else, the latest show curated by Krista Saunders and Jill Benson of  G-Train Salon at Urban Alchemist, a Fifth Avenue shop that sells artisan  jewelry, clothing and objects d’art.

    “I turned back and went to Stone Park Cafe I sat in the window and watched people passing by.”

    At the opening earlier in November, Allié told me that she likes to use language in her work though she is not a writer.  “I write for myself, notes, journals. I like words and I think in English now,” the native-French speaker told me. In her artist statement she writes: “I explore the notion of trace 
that indicates the existence of others and my own. 

Trace also shows the passing of time. Many of my projects suggest the course
 of time as they examine memories, past actions or incidents, and events that 
happened at a specific and recorded time.”

    Here’s is Fanny’s story in its entirety:

    The stranger was walking on 5th Avenue in my direction when he got close enough he started talking to me.

    He invited me for a drink at Ginger’s Bar. We spent hours talking about life.

    At midnight we said good bye and we exchanged our numbers. The day after I was walking on 5th Avenue and I saw hm again.

    I waved and I smiled at him but he didn’t respond. When I was near him I realized he wasn’t able to see me.

    I turned back and went to the Stone Park Cafe. I sat near the window and watched people passing by.

    This G-Train Salon made its debut in a living room on Flatbush Avenue and it is committed to showing the work of emerging artists from Brooklyn and Queens (hence the name G-train) in intimate and unusual settings. A discussion with the artist is an important part of the concept and adds immeasurably to the experience, the curator told me.

    Surveys and Petitions about Cathie Black Nomination

    Cathie Black’s nomination for schools chancellor has certainly stirred anger and controversy this week. I think the anger is exacerbated by the general frustration with Mayor Bloomberg’s autocratic style of governing.

    Because Black lacks experience in education or public service her candidacy is being questioned. The fact that Bloomberg made her selection a secret and presented her appointment as a fait accompli only added to already simmering tensions.

    Black must get a waiver from State Education Commissioner David Steiner to verify that she is an  “exceptionally qualified person” nonetheless. Some parents, teachers, administrators and politicians think that waiver should be denied.

    Petitions are circulating asking the commissioner to deny the waiver. Others, like Oprah Winfrey, support the mayor’s choice.

    Public Advocate Bill de Blasio may have the best solution. He advocating for a public forum where Black would have to speak publicly to parents, educators, and students about her plans.

    Ultimately I think Bloomberg did a disservice to Black. If she is SO qualified he should allow her to speak publically about her managerial vision for the Department of Education. Hiding her in the closet seems like a great way to fan the flames of discontent among the naysayers.

    At Inside Schools you can register your opinion on the nomination by Mayor Bloomberg of Cathie P. Black.

    So far 9,887 people have signed the petition calling on David M. Steiner to deny the waiver that would enable Cathie Black to be the NYC Schools Chancellor.

    High School Tour Confidential: Catching Up

    Yikes. The last few weeks have been busy, nutty, frustrating, overwhelming and did I mention busy with high school tours, assessments, auditions, interviews and more running around.

    I think I speak for all parents involved in this process when I say: WTF?

    This morning we went to Williamsburg Preparatory High School and while I review my impressions I offer you links to the other High School Tour Confidential posts, as well as introduce our fab Illustration by Kevin Kocses: www.kevinkocses.carbonmade.com. His expressive and fun illustration really gets at the frustration of this experience. Thank you, Kevin.

    Here are the links to the complete High School Tour Confidential Series:

    Edward R. Murrow High School,

    Midwood High School

    the NYC iSchool

    Brooklyn Latin School

    Frank Sinatra School of the Arts

    Beacon

    Do Looks Matter?

    The Test

    Envisioning a Green Gowanus

    I just got word about last night’s forum on the future of Gowanus, Envisioning a Green Gowanus & Beyond. The series, presented by the Fifth Avenue Committee, hopes to ensure community participation in the Gowanus Canal Superfund and other community redevelopment processes.

    Last night’s forum, Making a Splash, was held at The Old American Can Factory. Community residents, elected officials and other local leaders were there, in addition to representatives from the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and members of the EPA’s Community Advisory Group (CAG).

    The “Making a Splash” forum highlighted what the public can expect from the Superfund process. The forum included an educational presentation by experts from the Edison Wetlands Association about their extensive experiences with the Superfund clean-up process and the importance of on-going community participation.

    A representative from the US EPA also provided details on the government agency’s role and mission to remediate the site. Local City Councilmember Brad Lander also voiced his commitment to being a part of the community discussions and efforts to encourage efficient, thoughtful clean up of the waterway and new development alongside the Canal.

    Continue reading Envisioning a Green Gowanus

    Friday Morning Rallies to Protest Teacher Data Reports

    At PS 321 there’s an early morning rally to protest the release of the DOE Teacher Data Reports (TDR) naming teachers. A PS 321 parent, Martha Foote of  Time Out from Testing, is spearheading PS 321’s efforts. On Friday morning other schools are also rallying – all at 8:15AM, including MS51,  the Secondary Schools at the John Jay complex, P.S. 29, P.S. 154 and P.S. 24.

    Here is the letter from Martha Foote:

    As a member of the PS 321 community, I oppose the public release of the Teacher Data Reports (TDRs).  While I fully support meaningful teacher evaluations, the TDRs – which rate teachers based on their classes’ state test score changes from one year to the next in English Language Arts (ELA) and math – have several problems.

    1.      Experts agree that progress based solely on test scores is a poor way to measure student achievement or teacher effectiveness.  Learning is complex; assessment should be, too.

    2.      The TDRs are full of errors due to inaccurate and unverified data.  For example, classes have been listed to the wrong teachers and non-math teachers have been given math ratings.  Teachers on child care leave have been given ratings even though they weren’t in the classroom.  One principal reported errors on nearly ¼ of her teachers.

    3.      The TDRs are calculated using a flawed model that does not take into account a host of variables that affect test scores.  In fact, a recent analysis demonstrates that the TDRs have an average margin of error of 34-61 percentage points out of 100.

    4.      Principals report that many of their best teachers have received poor ratings on their TDRs due to the flawed model.  For example, a minute .05 change in math test scores, from 3.97 to 3.92, landed one teacher in the bottom 6% of the rating scale.

    5.      The DOE has used flawed test data to calculate the TDRs.  The State Education Department announced this summer that the state test scores have been inaccurate for the past several years, yet these inaccurate test scores are the basis of the TDRs.

    Furthermore, I fear the release of the TDRs will harm public education in New York City as excellent teachers will resign rather than face the public humiliation of an inaccurate bad rating.  Additionally, there will be even more test prep in our schools as teachers will be compelled to drive up test scores instead of providing a quality education for all our children.

    Send Your Nominations for the Park Slope 100

    It’s that time of year again. Time to compile the Park Slope 100. What is the Park Slope 100?

    Good question. Here’s how I’ve defined it in the past:

    “100 stories, 100 ways of looking at the world, 100 inspiring people, places and things. The list is in alphabetical order. There are no repeats from last year. There are always serious omissions.”

    The 100 is culled from suggestions and nominations from visitors like you. Send me names of people YOU think should be on the Park Slope 100.

    So what does it take to be considered?

    You need to have done something interesting, strange, noteworthy, crazy, fun or original. You don’t have to be famous. No, not at all. And in some way you need to give outward or connect with the neighborhood or the world with generosity or flair.

    I’ve already got about 10. Send me yours (louise_crawford(at)yahoo(dot)com. I usually roll out the list in early December so I better get cracking.

    New Sign System at MetroTech

    Today at 1PM, the MetroTech Business Improvement District (BID) announces the initial deployment of the Downtown Brooklyn Wayfinding Sign System.

    The  first two signs of a seventy-eight (78) sign system will be unveiled in front of 209 Joralemon Street and off the Northwest corner of Adams Street (Brooklyn Bridge Boulevard) and Joralemon Street.

    This pedestrian friendly system consisting of 45 kiosks containing maps and locations of key destinations in Downtown Brooklyn, together with 33 directional signs, will be installed over the next few months, in a large area of Downtown Brooklyn from Fort Greene to DUMBO.

    The signs identify twelve “neighborhoods” in Downtown Brooklyn and contain info about  local destinations, directions, historic and cultural anecdotes and subway locations.

    The design and content was reviewed and contributed to by many of the neighborhood associations and institutions located in Downtown Brooklyn and approvals were granted by Community Board #2, the Department of Transportation, the Landmarks Commission and the Public Design Commission.

    The signs were designed by Two Twelve Associates and fabrication and installation will be done by Design Communications LTD.