Category Archives: Civics and Urban Life

Short Storm, Much Damage in Park Slope

By 6PM, the  tornado that twisted through Park Slope was over and the wind and rain had ceased, but the storm left much damage in its wake.

The front windows of Brooklyn Industries on 7th Avenue and 9th Street blew out, as did the shop’s front door. The shop itself was water soaked.

Street after street there were downed trees, crushed vehicles, and damage to homes and shops.

On 10th Street between 6th and 7th Avenues, a tree fell on two cars. There were many branches and parts of trees in the street and on the sidewalks of that block.

On 5th Street between 6th and 5th Avenues, a fire truck blocked the street to cars because a tree crushed a car on that street preventing traffic to go through.

Awnings, windows, chairs, tables: all kinds of things went flying during the intense storm earlier this evening.

My daughter reports that the sky was green before the onset of the storm, which is a sure sign of a tornado. She was in Pino’s Pizza when the tornado hit. “The windows were shaking and rattling. A woman tried to come in through the door but she couldn’t get it open. When it finally opened, it pushed her against the wall,” she told me.

Susan Fox of Park Slope Parents watched the tornado from her apartment windows and told me that a friend of hers claims to have seen a cone/funnel shape in the sky.

Tornado Twists Through Park Slope, Brooklyn

At 5:35 PM a tornado twisted through Park Slope, Brooklyn. I was on 7th Avenue in Dashing Diva (getting a pedicure) when the sky darkened like night and rain came pouring down in wild zig zag sheets. Suddenly wind was banging against the windows and blowing the glass doors of the nail shop violently open and shut. The employees were terrified and one customer said aloud: “Should we go into the basement?”

One of the manicurists locked the doors just as we heard glass falling on the sidewalk. Turns out a window from the House of Whimsy, a decrepit corner building on 2nd Street and 7th Avenue, came crashing onto the street.

By 6PM the wind had stopped beating and the rain subsided a bit. From the salon I could hear the sound of shopkeepers sweeping glass off of the sidewalk. Seventh Avenue was filled with rain water and water was pouring into the basement of Met Food, a grocery store on Seventh.

Adults and children came out of their homes to discuss what they’d just seen and heard from their homes. Many described the tornado as frightening.

“I opened my window because there was so much banging I thought it would break,” one neighbor told me. “Wait until you see the damage on Third Street. The pine tree in front of C’s building is down,” she said.

Walking home to Third Street between 7th and 6th Avenues I saw many, many tree branches and parts of trees lying on the sidewalk. My daughter just called to say that a whole tree was down in the turf field behind the Old Stone House, a historic museum near Fourth Avenue.

My sister was in Prospect Park with her daughter attending a PS 321 class picnic that started at 5PM. At approximately 5:35,  the rain began and the parents and children started to leave the park. “As we walked out of the par torrential rains drenched us and panicked the people we were with. Everyone was screaming. No one could see in front of them. A tree fell right in front of us. There was an apocalyptic feeling. People had abandoned their strollers to run out of the park. I saw strollers turned over and abandoned backpacks. I ended up  carrying a stroller (with the baby in it) for one of the babysitters to get out of the park. We went into the lobby of a building on Prospect Park Park and 3rd Street. Children were crying. While we were walking home we saw a tipped over mail storage box. It was really scary. I was terrified,” my sister, Caroline Ghertler, told me.

Photo: the photo was sent into Twit Pic and I saw it at the City Room blog. It’s 6:56PM and No Words Daily Pix is getting his camera and running out to take pictures.

The Emotional Terrain of New York City

Where can you see…

–a three-dimensional map of the lower Manhattan skyline made of a Jell-O-like material by Liz Hickok
–an anxiety map of the five boroughs lit by sweat-powered batteries by Daniela Kostova and Olivia Robinson
–a “Loneliness Map” from Craigslist’s Missed Connections by Ingrid Burrington
–a scratch-and-sniff map of New Yorkers’ smell preferences by Nicola Twilley
–a cemetery map of Polish ancestors’ graves by Kim Baranowski
–an installation constructed from city ephemera by Pratt faculty member Robbin Ami Silverberg
–personal maps created from a call for submissions by the Hand Drawn Map Association including works by Tony Dowler, Will Haughery, Janine Nichols, Yumi Roth, Gowri Savoor, Rob Servo, Krista Shaffer, Kees Touw, Dean Valadez, and Shane Watt
–a series of mapped reflections on the extinction of the passenger pigeon and the ascendancy of the rock dove by Miranda Maher
–a New York subway map in Urdu by Pakistani artist Asma Ahmed Shikoh

????

Pratt Manhattan Gallery will present “You Are Here → Mapping the Psychogeography of New York City,” an exhibition of work by a selection of contemporary artists that will map the emotional terrain of the world’s most famous and influential urban center, New York City, and explore the effect of the city’s powerful moods on those who live and work here. “You Are Here” will run from September 24 through November 6, 2010, and will be celebrated with an opening reception on Thursday, September 23 from 6–8 PM. The exhibition and opening reception are free and open to the public.

New Pedestrian Countdown Clocks in Park Slope

Crossing the street at 9th Street and Fourth Avenue just got a whole lot less dangerous.

Park Slope City Council Member Brad Lander and other Park Slope and Sunset Park pols and community leaders joined DOT Commission Janette Sadik-ahn to unveil pedestrian countdown clocks, which are set to be installed along the length of 4th Ave from Pacific to 65th Streets and on 3rd Ave from Prospect Avenue to 63rd Street, display numbers that count down the number of seconds remaining before the “flashing hand” phase turns solid red.

Those signs have proven to be a big help for pedestrians at dangerous crosswalks because they can decide whether there is enough time to cross the street safely and reduce the number of pedestrians still in crosswalks during the “do not walk” phase of the light.

Continue reading New Pedestrian Countdown Clocks in Park Slope

Van Service On Eliminated Bus Routes

Many were affected when the MTA recently cut several bus routes, including Park Slope residents who lost the B71. That’s why NYC has introduced a new program to provide van service along select discontinued bus routes.
This pilot program will help reduce the negative impact of the MTA’s service cuts and allows residents greater accessibility to other buses and subways.

According to the NY Times, Community Transportation Systems and four other companies have been chosen by the Taxi and Limousine Commission (now run by former Park Slope Councilman David Yassky) to participate in Group Ride Vehicle Pilot Program. This company began service on Monday; the four other commuter-van operators, which will run along the former routes of the Q79, B23, B39 and B71, will begin on Sept. 20 and 27.The price to ride the vans will be $2, cash only — no MetroCards, unlike city buses. Riders will be able to request unscheduled stops along the driver’s route. This pilot program is meant to last a year at which point the Commission will determine its success.

Should New York City Prohibit Outdoor Smoking?

When we were in Berkeley, California, the first American city to ban smoking on sidewalks throughout its business districts, I worried that my stepmother might get arrested for smoking outdoors.

And now it looks like she may have trouble in NYC, too.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and members of the City Council are talking about banning some outdoor smoking as well.

Today a bill will be introduced in the City Council would prohibit smoking in all 1,700 city parks, 14 miles of city beaches, public marinas and even pedestrian plazas, like the one in Times Square.

According to City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, some of Times Square would allow cigarette smoking. People would still be able to smoke on sidewalks.

For  Bloomberg it’s about second hand smoke and the health risks of being around smokers.

According to the city about 75% of  litter on city beaches is cigarette butts.

Yes, smoking is gross. But should smokers not be allowed to smoke outdoors. What do you think?

Sept 23: Young Writers at Brooklyn Reading Works

On September 23rd at 7PM Brooklyn Reading Works presents the second annual Young Writers Night, fiction, poetry and song by New York City teenagers. “In planning this event, I looked for artists with fresh insight, candor and guts.” writes curator Jill Eisenstadt, author of From Rockaway and Kiss Out. Young Writers should be an exciting night and a preview into the next generation of published writers.

Young Writers is an all ages event at the Old Stone House. Third Street and Fifth Avenue in Park Slope. Suggested donation of $5 includes refreshments.

Readers include Hananh Frishberg, Maria Robis-Somerville, Noah Miller, Banks Harris Lily Konigsberg and Gussie Roc. For their bios click on “read more.”

Hannah Frishberg is a Sophmore at Bard High School Early College.  She loves New York City, and spends a good deal of my time working with kids, on the F train, or making jewelry out of household objects.  This is her second year participating in Young Writers Night at the Old Stone House, and she is excited to be back!

Maria Robins-Somerville is a Sophmore at the Beacon School. She is happyto be participating in the Brooklyn Reading Works for the second year in a row. Other than writing, she enjoys theater, cooking, and spending time with friends.

Noah Miller is a Freshman a Hunter College High School. He is the winner of a Scholastic Young Artists Award and will be published in BEST TEEN WRITING OF 2010

Gussie Roc is a sophomore at Saint Ann’s School in Brooklyn.  She’s been studying poetry since she was in kindergarten. Her favorite author is Harper Lee . Her dream, to move to Paris and/or make an Academy Award winning film about an issue that really matters to her.

Banks Harris is currently attending the Eugene Lang College the New School for Liberal Arts. She has been published in Best Teen Writing 2008 and has received numerous awards for her short stories.

Lily Konigsberg has been a fixture on the youth music scene in Brooklyn since she was 14.  She has made her name as a singer songwriter on the acoustic circuit and the writer, lead-singer and rhythm guitarist of the band, Macon Dead.  In the past two years, Lily has performed at all ages venues across New York City, including the Cake Shop and the Tank in Manhattan and  Dead Herring and Goodbye Blue Monday in Brooklyn.

NY Primary 2010 Results

You can find a full listing of the results of primary 2010 at NY 1. In case you haven’t heard:

–Eric Schneiderman is the Democratic candidate for New York’s Attorney General.

–Carl Paladino is the Republican candidate for New York Governor.

–Rick Lazio is the Conservative candidate for New York Governor.

–Kristin Gillebrand is the Democratic candidate for US Senator from New York.

See the NY1 returns for all the local races that I haven’t mentioned yet.

Vito Lopez Winner and Loser

In the inner world of Brooklyn Democratic politics, Assemblyman Vito Lopez is a force to be reckoned with. The county boss and local kingmaker, he rouses strong feelings in his opponents and loyalty in his friends.

In his own Democratic Primary race in the 53rd Assembly District he won handily against Esteban Duran. But in the District Leader races, where he was strongly pushing his hand-picked candidates, the results were mixed.

In the 52nd AD, Lopez’s choices, Hope Reichbach and Steven Williamson, lost to Jo Anne Simon and Chris Owens. In the 53rd AD,  the race has not yet been determined. Lincoln Restler, of New Kings Democrats, was the clear winner beating out Lopez-backed Warren Cohn and Warren Cohn are fighting it out in the recount of this extremely close election.

Kate Zidar who ran with Lincoln Restler for the female District Leader post seems to have lost. She was also backed by New Kings Democrats, a reformist group intent on bringing new faces into the Brooklyn Democratic party.

Restler’s win really puts New Kings Democrats, “a progressive, grassroots political organization committed to trans­parency, accountability, and inclusionary democracy to the Kings County Democratic Party,” on the map. Formed by vets of the Obama campaign, they are seeking to “Transform local politics.”

Restler told the New York Daily News recently:

“It is a one-man democracy in Brooklyn…To be on Vito’s side you must agree with him 100% of the time. He rules Brooklyn with an iron fist, and any dissent is unacceptable.”


Jo Anne Simon and Chris Owens Win District Leaders’ Primary

It was the primary race to watch even if District Leader is a fairly obscure position. Unpaid and part-time, it is a powerful job nonetheless. David Friedlander of Politicker NY writes:

There were a series of heated contest in obscure district leader races in much of Brooklyn this year that pitted a group of reformers against those loyal to county boss Vito Lopez, and according to sources with some very early numbers, it appears as if the reformers won out.

Joann Simon and Chris Owens, who were endorsed by OTBKB, were the primary winners in the 52nd AD.

Lincoln Restler won and Warren Cohn are still fighting it out in a recount in their incredibly close race for District Leader in North Brooklyn. I know Kate Zidar did not win but I’m not sure who won for the female spot.

My First Electronic Vote

At 4PM I went to my usual voting place, the auditorium of John Jay High School, on Park Slope’s 7th Avenue, to vote in the primary. First change: the voting is no longer in the auditorium, it’s now in the cafeteria.

Once in the cafeteria, there were no lines and I quickly got a paper ballot from an elderly woman, who found my name in the registry and filled out a little green card with my name and a number.

She directed me to a standing desk where I filled out the ballot, which looked like a standardized test. The type was small but still it was easy to read and easy to fill in the little bubbles.

I then went over to the scanner and a man explained to me how to use it. It was like feeding a piece of paper into a fax machine. It takes about 20 seconds for the ballot to scan and I watched the screen while I waited. When it was done an American flag appeared on the screen.

Voila. My first electronic vote was counted.

Done.

Bloomberg: Primary a Royal and Unacceptable Screw-up

Today after Mayor Bloomberg swore-in the City’s second-ever class of the NYC Civic Corps—a specially trained group of AmeriCorps members who work at nonprofit organizations across the city—had this to say about reported malfunctions at polling sites today.

“Today unfortunately, we are hearing disturbing reports that some polling sites have been very disturbing.We’ve been told of some polling sites that opened two to four hours late. That is a royal screw-up – and it’s completely unacceptable.

It means some voters waited for hours – and other voters may not have a chance to cast their ballots at all.

We’ve also gotten reports of broken and missing scanners, emergency ballots, and poor customer service.

Other counties have also experienced problems, but I’m not sure any of them have been as severe as we’ve seen in our five boroughs. Over the past five years, the City has provided the Board of Elections with more than $77 million to make the transition to the new machines – and that doesn’t include the $85 million in federal funds used to purchase the new machines.

But there is a total absence of accountability for how the Board performed on Election Day – because the Board is a remnant of the days when Tammany Hall ran New York.

New Yorkers deserve better than this – and the time has come to fix it.

We owe that to all of you – and to every voter.

No democracy is perfect, but the more people participate in civic life, the stronger that the democracy is.

And that’s why voting is so important – and that’s why the commitment we’re making today is so important – and I just want to thank all of you here and wish you all the best of luck. I wish our Board of Elections had performed as well as all of you guys are going to do.

Tour Park Slope With Rick Kadlub

It’s always a pleasure to see Rick Kadlub, who runs A Tour Grows in Brooklyn, educational and historical walking tours around Park Slope and Prospect Park. I saw him at the bagel place on Union Street and 4th Avenue and he was getting ready to meet some tourists from Austria.

“I’ll take them to Al Capone’s house on Garfield, I’ll show them the Williamsburg Bank, we’ll have lunch at Pino’s.” Rick told me.

Rick is Brooklyn born and bred and he knows the ins and out of this neighborhood like no other. In addition to the history and urban folklore, he’s a fan of its many restaurants, including Two Toms, the legendary no-frills Italian eatery on Third Avenue near Union.

“It’s hard to get in there in November and December because the Fire Department, Police, Sanitation. They all have their Christmas parties there,” he told me.

People from all over the world have enjoyed walks with “Big Rick” as he’s called. That’s because he’s got a high ranking in Trip Advisor—40 rave reviews—and he’s a fun and interesting guy to walk the nabe with. Here’s one of those reviews from a woman named Mary Ellen Dickson.

My husband & I took A Tour Grows in Brooklyn today with Big Rick and it was one of the better tours (and we go on a lot!) that we have taken in NYC. Rick, a dyed in the wool Brooklynite, loves his neighborhood and it shows in his boundless enthusiam and extensive knowledge. He really made Park Slope come alive for us by sharing his personal family stories and was very generous in pointing out interesting places to shop and eat along the tour route. We can highly recommend this tour and Rick proved to be a wonderful ambassador for Brooklyn. Rick helped us realize that there really is more to NYC than just Manhattan! We’ll defintely be back to visit and getting better acquainted with a very interesting historical area.

OTBKB Endorsement: Biviano for Assembly in the 52nd AD

Fresh air, new faces, time for change: that’s what’s needed in Albany. Even the New York Times recommends voting against the incumbents in Assembly primary races.

In the Assembly, there are not enough real contests. And in New York, that means one thing: the Democratic Party has given some of Albany’s worst legislators a free ride. Here’s the only solution: vote against the incumbents.

I interviewed Doug Biviano last year when he was running for City Council in the 33rd District. At the time, he was endorsed by none other than Dennis Kucinich.

Biviano impressed me then and he still impresses me with his energy, his independence, his reform-minded attitude and his smarts.

I think he’s a good man. God, I hope so. He’s intelligent, articulate, progressive and a big audacious. I think he deserves a chance.

Biviano Vs. Millman in the 52nd AD

Who Ya Gonna vote for Millman or Biviano for Assembly in the 52nd AD?

Because I was away for much of the summer I haven’t been following the campaign for assembly in the 52nd AD. However, I interviewed Doug Biviano when he ran for City Council in 2009 and you can see that interview below.

Biviano has been running a “throw the bums out” kind of campaign. He has also accused Joan Millman of “double dipping” i.e. collecting her pension as a retired NYC teacher and receiving a $79,000 (plus $12,000 lulu) salary for the Assembly job.

She’s freely admits that what she’s been doing and claims that she had no choice. On video Biviano asks: “Where’s the leadership in that?. You guys make the rules, maybe you should change the rules…”

Truth be told, I don’t know much about Millman, except that she’s a respected politician in these parts.

But it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that we need some fresh energy and outlooks in Albany. Could be Biviano is the man for the job, even though he has no experience in public office.

That could be a good thing.

Even the New York Times recommends voting against the incumbents in Assembly races:

In the Assembly, there are not enough real contests. And in New York, that means one thing: the Democratic Party has given some of Albany’s worst legislators a free ride. Here’s the only solution: vote against the incumbents.

Here is Millman’s bio from her website:

Assemblywoman Joan L. Millman was first elected to the Assembly on February 18, 1997 in a special election. Since then, she has diligently served the 52nd Assembly District, now a unified “brownstone” district, which includes the neighborhoods of Brooklyn Heights, Cobble Hill, Boerum Hill, Carroll Gardens, DUMBO, Vinegar Hill, Gowanus, Park Slope, Columbia Street Waterfront, and Prospect Heights. A life-long educator, Millman spent over three decades working on behalf of New York City’s children. From 1964 to 1984, she taught elementary school and served as the school librarian at P.S. 10 in Brooklyn. From 1985 to 1996, Millman served as an educational consultant to New York City Council President Carol Bellamy and State Senator Martin Connor and served as a facilitator for Comprehensive School Development and Planning. Millman also served as a member of the Citywide Advisory Committee on Middle School Initiatives from 1995 to 1996, where she assisted middle schools in District 15 in Brooklyn. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Brooklyn College, a Master’s in Library Science from Pratt Institute and a Professional Diploma from Long Island University, Brooklyn Campus. Since being elected to the Assembly, Millman has authored and sponsored legislation that has saved lives, protected consumers, and improved the quality of life for New Yorkers. Millman has been a leading advocate on senior and education issues and for consumer rights. She was recently appointed Chair of the Commission on Government Administration, where she continues to advocate for budget reform, and for greater oversight of government administered programs. Millman is also a sponsor of legislation to reform the Rockefeller Drug Laws, the Women’s Health and Wellness Bill and the Safe Weapon Storage Act. Assemblywoman Millman was an early advocate for the creation of the Brooklyn Bridge Park and has worked to revitalize all of Brooklyn’s waterfront. She has been on the forefront of the struggle to clean up the Gowanus Canal and adjacent properties, and leads the fight to re-open Engine Company 204. She has been a strong advocate for our schools and has worked to protect our senior centers. Every year, Assemblywoman Millman sponsors numerous initiatives to bring needed services to her constituents. Assemblywoman Millman is Chair of the Assembly Committee on Election Law. She is a member of the Assembly Standing Committees on Corporations, Authorities and Commissions; Education; Labor; Transportation; and the Assembly Majority Steering Committee.

Here is my Breakfast-of-Candidates interview with Doug Biviano from May of 2009 when he was running for City Council in the 33rd District.

Doug Biviano, a City Council candidate in the 33rd district, met me for breakfast at Theresa’s, a Polish coffee shop on Montague Street in Brooklyn Heights.

In 1969, Biviano was born in the Mill Basin neighborhood of Brooklyn. Biviano’s dad was a Transit Authority carpenter and his mom a nursing assistant. The family later moved to Brentwood, Long Island. But his parents separated soon after and Biviano and his brother spent weekends at his father’s apartment in the Ex-Lax building on Atlantic Avenue. Biviano came to love Brooklyn Heights on those trips especially when he and his father would take long walks to the Brooklyn Heights Promenade and the Fulton Ferry Landing.

Biviano attended Cornell University, where he received a B.S. and a masters in Civil and Environmental Engineering. “Math and science always came easy to me. I am a conceptual thinker,” he said.

Clean cut in a blue blazer and a neat button down shirt, Biviano ordered a bowl of fresh fruit and coffee. I ordered a toasted, buttered bagel, which arrived toasted and dry. But my conversation with Biviano was anything but dry.

Unexpected is a word that Biviano likes and I can see why as his life story takes all kinds of unexpected twists and turns. After a post-graduate stint at an engineering firm in Buffalo, NY,  Biviano followed his girlfriend (who later became his wife) to Colorado to live the skier’s life. Seasonally he got work as a soil consultant at Geo Technical and Vail Associates.

“They pay you 20% in the view,” Biviano told me. He enjoyed the work which involved driving to the mountains and doing foundation excavation and track rigging. Later, he got his professional engineer’s license but was frustrated by the low “mountain pay” in an area, where it’s very expensive to live.

Another unexpected turn: Biviano decided to start his own construction business with a friend while his wife cleaned houses. They worked hard and managed to save enough money to embark on another adventure.

The couple bought a sailboat and packed up their belongings and headed for Annapolis, Maryland to pick up their Morgan Outlander and set sail on the Inter-Coastal Highway.

Biviano and his wife knew nothing about sailing.  “I figured I’d learn. You figure it out. Like running for City Council,” he joked. “It’s the journey always the journey,” he added.

For nine months the couple lived “off the grid.” On the sailboat Biviano designed and installed a solar power system with controllers and battery bank, which utilized sun, wind, rain water and a reverse osmosis water maker. He loved the sense of community he found in Freeport where hundreds of sailors dock in the winter.

It was on this sailing adventure that Biviano developed his appreciation for the “goodness of people around the world. The people I’ve met are good, decent and hardworking.”

When the couple realized that they were expecting a child, they sold the sailboat and headed to New York City. A job as a superintendent in a Brooklyn Heights coop provided Biviano with a job and an apartment in the neighborhood he learned to love as a teenager. Biviano is proud of the fact that he works as a laborer and an engineering professional because it gives him a broader perspective on the world.

And then 9/11 happened. Biviano watched from the roof of the Brooklyn Heights coop where he is a superintendent and wondered why someone would want to do that.  “Instead of thinking ‘let’s go get ’em’ I found myself wondering why. I wanted a deeper answer.”

“I reject the ‘Axis of evil.’ The people I’ve met where I’ve gone are good and decent. Start there.”

This revelation set Biviano on a path that has led to his candidacy for City Council. It was his subsequent discovery of WBAI on the radio dial and Amy Goodman’s show Democracy Now in particular that helped him refine his humanistic and progressive beliefs.

He also discovered Dennis Kucinich, who is now one of his heroes. “I love his politics. Peace as an organizing principle of society,” Biviano said. In 2004 Biviano made a monetary contribution to Kucinich’s presidential campaign but in 2008, he donated his time and energy becoming Kucinich’s New York State coordinator. From Kucinich he learned “the possibilities of politics” and traveled to many forums where he spoke as Kucinich’s surrogate. In this capacity he discovered an ability to connect with an audience and communicate political ideas in a humanistic way.

“I learned from Kucinich to put a human face on politics. Iranians are beautiful people. They love their children. If you start from there, put a human face on it, it’s different.”

With two kids at PS 8 (and another child too young for school), Biviano is a regular school yard dad. A year ago, he found out that a friend was out of a job and would be paying $1,600 a month for COBRA.

“There are 400,000 people in Brooklyn without health insurance,” he told me incredulously. Biviano advocates a single-payer system supported by a group called Physicians for a Single Payer Health Plan that would cover all medically necessary services, including: doctor, hospital, preventive, long-term care, mental health, reproductive health care, dental, vision, prescription drug and medical supply costs.

When Biviano realized that that City Council Member David Yassky was vacating his Council seat, he decided to throw his hat into the race with a focus on Medicare for all, a livable city that respects its institutions like public schools and big picture ideas like reducing the budget for war as a way to fund cities.

“I’m a dreamer. A little kid,” Biviano told me. And in a way it’s true. It’s his background in engineering that taught him an important maxim: “if you can think about it you can build it.”

We were talking for 90-minutes when I realized I had to leave to see a friend on a panel about search engine optimization at the Brooklyn Business Summit.

“Do you know where Polytechnic Institute is?” I asked Biviano.

He volunteered to walk me over to the school which is in the Metro-Tech complex not far from Theresa’s. This gave us a chance to continue our conversation while we walked speedily in the light rain.

Biviano is running for City Council because he believes that the City legislature is a powerful position on the world stage. “It’s such a powerful platform for a massive Democratic voice.”

At the candidates forums Biviano has been an unexpected and sometimes refreshing presence. He talks about bringing fun to politics. But he’s very serious, too about the ways that war spending takes away from our cities.

“Let’s take a slice of the trillion-dollar war pie and feed investment in our communities,” said Biviano. “There are structural problems at the city, state, and federal levels where there are funding processes that are not connected to community interests. I want to think big,” Biviano told the Brooklyn Star.

Voting Headache for Chuck Schumer at PS 321

Apparently Chuck Schumer had a voting headache this morning, when he went to vote at PS 321 at 5:55 Am . Here from Celeste Katz at the Daily News (thanks to DITHOB for the tip).

What the hElmo is going on with these voting machines?

There was some dispute about whether the senior senator had to vote by emergency or regular ballot, but his office says he was (finally) able to vote by regular ballot.

Another source said, “First, the site opened late. Second, the room was in a different location. Third, there were only 2 machines, and workers told him there were supposed to be 8. And 4th, the machines did not boot-up on time.”

“They don’t open the polling place until 6:10… They can’t figure out how to open the machine and he is, like, screaming at the staff that he wants to vote,” the insider said.

Learn about the new voting machines

When you go to vote tomorrow you will encounter New York City’s new electronic voting machine.

According to Vote NY:

“The DS200 Ballot Scanner system is a portable electronic voting system that uses an optical scanner to read marked paper ballots and tally the results. This system allows for paper ballots to be immediately tabulated at your polling site. The DS200 also notifies you of any voting errors. You will be able to immediately correct these errors to ensure that Your Vote Counts!”

I’m going to miss the old voting machines…

Continue reading Learn about the new voting machines

Who Ya Gonna Vote For?

Maybe you’ve given some thought to the “bigger races,” the statewide stuff like the race for Attorney General and Senate. But what about the locals.

What about the locals?

Today is the day to familiarize yourself with who’s running and what they believe in. In some cases, it’s a good day to learn what the position entails (i.e. District Leader). It’s also worth taking a look at the new voting machines at Vote NY.

Here’s a list of the races you will see on your ballot depending on where you live:

U.S. Senate

NY Attorney General

U.S. 10th Congressional District

U.S. 12th Congressional District

New York State Senate, 18th

New York State Senate, 20th

New York State Assembly, 52nd

District Leader, 52nd AD

So What Is a District Leader?

The race for District Leaders in Brooklyn has been one of the hottest races this primary season.

So what is a District Leader?

There is one male and one female District Leader for each State Assembly district. These are unpaid, part-time positions, Nonetheless it’s a powerful job (especially in Brooklyn)  and they perform some important duties on behalf of the voters in their district. The district leader serves a two-year term.

Here are some of the District Leaders’ responsibilities as I understand them:

–They hire poll workers and election inspectors for the primary and general elections.

–They help pick judges and the party chairman.

–They attend party meetings and events on behalf of the district

–They organize meetings and events in the district.

–They work closely with the district’s city, state, and federal elected officials.

–They help elect party members to public office in the district.

–They provide  info to the district’s voters about poll site locations, election results, and general information about party candidates.

Read more about the importance of District Leaders at the Brooklyn Heights Blog.

Tuesday is Primary Day

Tuesday, Sept 14, 2010 is Primary Day in New York, when voters go to the polls to choose their party’s candidates for several positions, including attorney general, senate, assembly, some congressional districts, district leaders and some judicial posts.

The polls are open from 6AM until 9PM. There is usually low voter turnout at these primaries so please make a point of getting to your polling place and vote.

To understand more about the race for District Leader I direct you to the Brooklyn Height Blog for a piece by Claude Scales called District Leader Races: Why They Matter?