Sankofa – 21

Entries from June 2008

Bronx teen gets his wish: a summer job

June 30, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Bronx teen gets his wish: a summer job

Bronx teen gets his wish: a summer job

BY PHYLLIS FURMAN
DAILY NEWS BUSINESS WRITER

Sunday, June 29th 2008, 12:52 PM
Lombard for News

After looking for a job for a year, Anthony Hunt landed a summer job with Ramon Falu’s employment firm.

There was something about Anthony Hunt that grabbed Ramon Falu’s attention.

Falu, the president of Bronx employment firm Pink Diamond Staffing Services, read a Your Money cover story this month about Anthony, a 17-year-old junior at Frederick Douglass Academy III Secondary School, who had spent a year looking for a job without getting an offer. But after reading about Anthony’s dedication, Falu, 69, tracked him down and offered him a summer job at his office in the Hub section of the Bronx. Anthony will work Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. for $8 an hour.

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

Categories: GENERAL

Summons drives Wendell Gault to battle for justice over broken parking

June 30, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Summons drives Wendell Gault to battle for justice over broken parking

Summons drives Wendell Gault to battle for justice over broken parking

Sunday, June 29th 2008, 3:45 PM

If you got a parking ticket at meter 324-0188 between December 2007 and while you’re reading this, you may have just gotten lucky, courtesy of Wendell Gault.

“May” is the operative word here; it all depends on the administrative law judge hearing your case.

But there is evidence that you, and dozens if not hundreds of parkers like you, have been scammed by the aforementioned parking meter – evidence provided by Gault, 56, of Prospect Heights, Brooklyn.

The meter is in front of the Royal Video rental store at 317 Flatbush Ave., at Seventh Ave. Gault parked there the morning of April 8. He said he dutifully inserted his quarter, only to watch as the meter clicked off his half-hour in seconds and started to blink “FAIL.”

Gault, a realtor and musician, said he parked in the space anyway because DOT agents have told him many times that you’re allowed one hour at one of these defective meters.

He returned 20 minutes later to find a $35 ticket on his windshield.

Royal Video owner Mary Gidiuli has seen it many times before.

“My son and a lot of other customers have gotten tickets at that meter,” she said. “It’s been like that since we moved here last December.

“Every time someone claims the meter is broken, the city denies it.”

Gault is not one to let things go. He has fired off letters to elected officials about a number of community issues, from the nearby Atlantic Yards project to the inequity of having alternate side parking four times a week in Prospect Heights but only twice a week across Flatbush Ave. in Park Slope (“Are they saying we’re dirtier on this side of Flatbush?” he asked.)

Gault wrote “broken meter” on his ticket and mailed it in.

On May 28, he got a letter denying his claim.

“The Department of Finance has received your claim of a defective meter in response to the summons written below. In order to help you we checked the meter repair records at the Department of Transportation and found that these records do not substantiate your claim.”

In plain language, the city claimed the meter could not have been broken because there was no record of it ever being fixed.

The letter did reduce the fine from $35 to $28.

Given that formula, even if only one car was ticketed at the meter a day since December, minus Sundays and parking holidays, it generated at least $4,480 in fines – at the reduced $28 rate.

Gault didn’t pay it.

Armed with a video camera, Microsoft’s Moviemaker program and with girlfriend Linda Simpkins providing technical assistance, he made a film clip of the meter doing its shortchanging thing.

Gault took the video to his hearing. It was enough to convince Associate Law Judge Richard Ballerini to throw out the ticket.

“He said if I went to that much trouble, I must be telling the truth,” Gault said.

Meter 324-0188 was still broken as of Friday.

crichardson@nydailynews.com

NYDAILYNEWS

Categories: GENERAL

Rev. Al Sharpton’s not looming so large

June 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Rev. Al Sharpton’s not looming so

large

Sunday, June 29th 2008, 4:00 AM

Who doesn’t love dieting tips from the stars? But from political pundits?

Consider some advice from the Rev. Al Sharpton, who is sporting a wildly slimmer figure. The good reverend has dropped a solid 20 pounds in the past six months!

According to Sharpton’s camp, the now-svelte talking head and activist works out four days a week on the treadmill and elliptical and has kept to a strict, almost starvation-style style diet.

He eats only two meals daily, both before 6 p.m. His breakfast is two hard-boiled eggs and tomato, and his other meal is fish accompanied by a green salad. One day a week, just to mix it up, he throws some chicken on that salad.

SOURCE: NYDAILYNEWS

Categories: GENERAL

A community Conversation to Save and Preserve Income-Target Properties in Crisis

June 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Greetings!

A community Conversation to Save and Preserve Income-Target
Properties in Crisis

Date: Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Time: 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Place:Oberia Dempsey
Multi-Center

127 West 127th Street

Between Lenox Avenue and Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
Blvd.

Invited Guest Include:Hon. Scott Stringer,
Hon. Keith LT Wright, Hon. Bill Perkins, Hon. Inez Dickens, HPD Representatives
of TIL, DAMP and HDFC units, UHAB, The HDFC Council, Residents along with Tenant
Advocates and Activists!!!

GET INVOLVED! MAKE A CHANGE! THE TIME IS
NOW!!!

Please RSVP by Friday, June 27, 2008 via e-mail: GJames@cb10.org or by calling the Community
Board 10 office: (212) 749-3105


Sincerely,

Carolyn Johnson
Welcome to Harlem

Griot
Eula M. Young, COO Griot’s Roll Film Production &
Services Inc. Website: www.griotsrollproduction.com http://blog.myspace.com/griots Blog: http://blog.myspace.com/griotsroll (212)
281-2286

Categories: GENERAL

HEAT’S ON BX. POL FOR FIRE FUNDS

June 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

HEAT’S ON BX. POL FOR FIRE FUNDS – New York Post

HEAT’S ON BX. POL FOR FIRE FUNDS
By GINGER ADAMS OTIS and ANGELA MONTEFINISE

June 29, 2008

A nonprofit group with ties to Bronx City Councilman Larry Seabrook received more than $300,000 in city money to improve firefighter diversity – a program that did little beyond burn cash, sources said.

The “Firefighter Advocacy Program” – run by the Northeast Bronx Redevelopment Corp. – was supposed to “produce up to 25 members of the NY Fire Department each year,” increase “the number of minority applicants and firefighters” and provide “information and services . . . [for] minority recruitment,” according to the organization’s proposal.

In 2006 the group received $310,000 for the effort – with $205,000 earmarked for staff salaries.

Two years later, the FDNY says its only contact with the group was a request to provide free posters and recruitment materials – which it was asked to leave in Seabrook’s office.

A source affiliated with the group said it did print recruitment materials and do community outreach, but steered most applicants into already established training programs run by the Vulcans, the FDNY’s association of black firefighters, and John Jay College. The group also gave about $15,000 to the Vulcans for study materials.

But it’s unclear where the bulk of the $310,000 went – the group’s proposal shows it filled two of 12 funded positions. One was an administrative assistant. The other was the $25,000 “executive director” position, which went to Gloria Jones-Grant – who reportedly already receives a $71,000 salary from the Northeast Bronx Redevelopment Corp.

The proposal also included $42,000 for rent – even though Northeast Bronx said it would work out of its existing offices.

Seabrook has long been linked to the organization, once located in the same building as his office. In March, the city froze his request for $912,000 to the obscure Bronx African American Chamber of Commerce, also in that building.

Jones-Grant and Seabrook did not return multiple calls for comment.

gotis@nypost.com

Categories: GENERAL

Indian Road Cafe

June 28, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Test Logo

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

* Indian Road Café
Newsletter *

* Update *

* June 2008 *

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dear Neighbors,

Thank you so much for a great welcome to the community. We have had a
wonderful first week.

Our
coffee bar will remain open with limited hours of 7am-6pm until Friday, July
4th.

On
Friday, July 4th we will open the wine bar and café with a limited menu and new
hours which will be:

  • Monday thru Thursday — 7am – 10pm
  • Friday & Saturday — 7am – 11pm
  • Sunday — 7am – 6pm


We
will be closed on Monday, July 7th and Tuesday, July 8th.

Once again, thank you so much for the warm welcome to Inwood.

Indian Road Café &
Market

Contact Information

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

phone: 212-942-7451

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Categories: GENERAL

Tomatoes may not be to blame for salmonella outbreak after all

June 28, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Tomatoes may not be to blame for salmonella outbreak after all

Saturday, June 28th 2008, 9:09 AM

WASHINGTON – As salmonella cases continue to climb, the U.S. government is checking if tainted tomatoes really are to blame for the record outbreak — or if the problem is with another ingredient, or a warehouse that is contaminating newly harvested tomatoes.

The widening outbreak — with 810 people confirmed ill — means whatever is making people sick could very well still be on the market, federal health officials warned on Friday.

Tomatoes remain the top suspect and the advice on which ones consumers should avoid has not changed, stressed Food and Drug Administration food safety chief Dr. David Acheson.

However, he said it is possible that tomatoes being harvested in states considered safe could be picking up salmonella germs in packing sheds, warehouses or other facilities currently under investigation.

Most worrisome, the latest victim became sick on June 15 — long after the outbreak began on April 10 and weeks after government warnings stripped supermarkets and restaurants of many tomatoes.

“The source of contamination has been ongoing at least through early June, and we don’t have any evidence that whatever the source is, it’s been removed from the market,” said Dr. Patricia Griffin of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Disease detectives at the CDC in Atlanta are doublechecking their own probes just in case some other type of produce is really the culprit.

“We have also kept an open mind about other possibilities and are looking into other ingredients,” Griffin said.

She would not identify other potential suspects, except to say that from the beginning some patients have told the CDC they ate raw tomatoes in fresh salsa and guacamole. Officials have previously cleared salsas in jars.

For now, the FDA continues to urge consumers nationwide to avoid raw red plum, red Roma or red round tomatoes unless they were grown in specific states or countries that FDA has cleared of suspicion. Also safe are grape tomatoes, cherry tomatoes and tomatoes sold with the vine still attached.

But FDA’s Acheson made clear that consumers should stay tuned in case that advice changes.

“The facts keep changing here. The outbreak is continuing,” he said. “We need to re-examine all parts of this system and make sure that the consumer message is still solid.”

SOURCE: NY DAILY NEWS

Categories: GENERAL

A Sculpture in Harlem Regains Its Luster

June 28, 2008 · Leave a Comment

A Sculpture in Harlem Regains Its Luster – NYTimes.com

With Elbow Grease and an Artist’s Eye, a Sculpture in Harlem Regains Its Luster

Librado Romero/The New York Times

Parks Department workers and volunteers restore “Harlem Hybrid,” a bronze installed in 1976.

By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS
Published: June 28, 2008

When the artist Richard Hunt conceived Harlem Hybrid, a welded bronze sculpture on a traffic island at West 125th Street, he intended for it to blend in with its surroundings: the triangular plaza it sat on, the church across the street, the street itself.

CLICK HERE FOR FULL STORY

Categories: GENERAL

H.I.V. Diagnosis Rates Continue to Rise Among Young Men, African-Americans

June 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

H.I.V. Diagnosis Rates Continue to Rise Among Young Men, African-Americans – NYTimes.com

H.I.V. Diagnosis Rates Continue to Rise Among Young Men, African-Americans

By DAVID TULLER
Published: June 27, 2008

Diagnoses of H.I.V. and AIDS in men who have sex with men rose significantly between 2001 and 2006 while declining in other demographic groups, the federal Centers for Disease Control reported Thursday.

click here for full article

Categories: GENERAL

Exclusive: No ice at the North Pole

June 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Exclusive: No ice at the North Pole

Polar scientists reveal dramatic new evidence of climate change

By Steve Connor, Science Editor
Friday, 27 June 2008

It seems unthinkable, but for the first time in human history, ice is on course to disappear entirely from the North Pole this year.

The disappearance of the Arctic sea ice, making it possible to reach the Pole sailing in a boat through open water, would be one of the most dramatic – and worrying – examples of the impact of global warming on the planet. Scientists say the ice at 90 degrees north may well have melted away by the summer.

“From the viewpoint of science, the North Pole is just another point on the globe, but symbolically it is hugely important. There is supposed to be ice at the North Pole, not open water,” said Mark Serreze of the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre in Colorado.

If it happens, it raises the prospect of the Arctic nations being able to exploit the valuable oil and mineral deposits below these a bed which have until now been impossible to extract because of the thick sea ice above.

Seasoned polar scientists believe the chances of a totally icefreeNorth Pole this summer are greater than 50:50 because the normally thick ice formed over many years at the Pole has been blown away and replaced by hugeswathes of thinner ice formed over a single year.

This one-year ice is highly vulnerable to melting during thesummer months and satellite data coming in over recent weeksshows that the rate of melting is faster than last year, when therewas an all-time record loss of summer sea ice at the Arctic.

“The issue is that, for the first time that I am aware of, the NorthPole is covered with extensive first-year ice – ice that formed last autumn and winter. I’d say it’s even-odds whether the North Pole melts out,” said Dr Serreze.

Each summer the sea ice melts before reforming again during the long Arctic winter but the loss of sea ice last year was so extensive that much of the Arctic Ocean became open water, with the water-ice boundary coming just 700 miles away from the North Pole.

The diminishing polar ice

Courtesy of NOAA / NESDIS Center for Satellite Applications and Research

This meant that about 70 per cent of the sea ice present this spring was single-year ice formed over last winter. Scientists predict that at least 70 per cent of this single-year ice – and perhaps all of it – will melt completely this summer, Dr Serreze said.

“Indeed, for the Arctic as a whole, the melt season startedwith even more thin ice than in 2007, hence concerns that we may even beat last year’s sea-ice minimum. We’ll see what happens, a great deal depends on the weather patterns in July and August,” he said.

Ron Lindsay, a polar scientist at the University of Washington in Seattle, agreed that much now depends on what happens to the Arctic weather in terms of wind patterns and hours of sunshine. “There’s a good chance that it will all melt awayat the North Pole, it’s certainly feasible, but it’s not guaranteed,” Dr Lindsay said.

The polar regions are experiencing the most dramatic increase in average temperatures due to global warming and scientists fear that as more sea ice is lost, the darker, open ocean will absorb more heat and raise local temperatures even further. Professor Peter Wadhams of Cambridge University, who was one of the first civilian scientists to sail underneath the Arctic sea ice in a Royal Navy submarine, said that the conditions are ripe for an unprecedented melting of the ice at the North Pole.

“Last year we saw huge areas of the ocean open up, which hasnever been experienced before. People are expecting this to continuethis year and it is likely to extend over the North Pole. It is quite likely that the North Pole will be exposed this summer – it’s not happened before,” Professor Wadhams said.

There are other indications that the Arctic sea ice is showingsigns of breaking up. Scientists at the Nasa Goddard Space Flight Centre said that the North Water ‘polynya’ – an expanse of open water surrounded on all sides by ice – that normally forms near Alaska and Banks Island off the Canadian coast, is muchlarger than normal. Polynyas absorb heat from the sun and eat away at the edge of the sea ice.

Inuit natives living near Baffin Bay between Canada and Greenland are also reporting thatthe sea ice there is starting to break up much earlier than normal and that they have seen wide cracks appearing in the ice where it normally remains stable. Satellite measurements collected over nearly 30 years show a significant decline in the extent of the Arctic sea ice, which has become more rapid in recent years.

Categories: GENERAL

June 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Categories: GENERAL

City Is Pushing for H.I.V. Tests for All in Bronx

June 26, 2008 · Leave a Comment

City Is Pushing for H.I.V. Tests for All in Bronx – NYTimes.com

City Is Pushing for H.I.V. Tests for All in Bronx

By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS
Published: June 26, 2008

The New York City health department plans to announce on Thursday an ambitious three-year effort to give an H.I.V. test to every adult living in the Bronx, which has a far higher death rate from AIDS than any other borough. The campaign will begin with a push to make the voluntary testing routine in emergency rooms and storefront clinics, where city officials say that cumbersome consent procedures required by state law have deterred doctors from offering the tests.

read full article here

Categories: GENERAL

Road Records and Drug Use Are Unrelated

June 26, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Road Records and Drug Use Are Unrelated

By TIM MARCHMAN
June 26, 2008

One of the stranger things about what has so far been a strange season has been just how lousy teams have been on the road, and how much this has affected the races. Three last-place teams — Toronto, Colorado, and Cincinnati — actually have winning records at home and are in the basement entirely because of shabby road trips. Atlanta, with the second-best home record and third-best run differential in the National League, is nonetheless flailing about below .500; at one point, they were an embarrassing 7-24 away from Turner Field. The Chicago Cubs have the best record in the sport, but it’s due entirely to their unreal play at Clark and Addison; away from the North Side, they’re 16-20. In all, 26 of 30 teams are at or below .500 away from home.


addthis_pub = ‘nysun’;

   

Predictably, given the times in which we live, this has led to a lot of theorizing about drugs in the game. If I had a dime for every time I’ve heard or read that the cause of bad road records was baseball’s amphetamine testing program, I’d have enough to buy a can of beer at Shea Stadium. (This represents many dimes.) As the idea goes, traveling players, tuckered out from long flights and fueled by nothing stronger than espresso and Adderall, can no longer perform with the same fervor and drive they did a few years ago — or, for that matter, in Henry Aaron’s day — when drowsiness was cured with potent, high-grade methamphetamine. Hence the bad road records.

Like the beliefs that English royals are actually shape-shifting lizards or that Barack Obama is a Muslim, this is the sort of thing that people will credit whether or not it makes any sense. Still, it’s probably worth raising some obvious objections to it, if only because it’s really not good for people to credit mystical powers to greenies and other now-proscribed pep pills.

The first problem with the theory is that, while in the old days, players on the road may have been filled to the brim with speed, so too were the home team players. How exactly it’s a massive comparative disadvantage to not be using drugs other athletes aren’t using is something you’ll have a hard time explaining. (Of course it’s also hard to explain how it is that Queen Elizabeth has gotten away with being a Gila monster for so long.)

The second problem is that amphetamine testing started two years ago. Why exactly it would start showing up in road records now, rather than when it was first instituted, is an even more difficult question to answer. As with the problem of the reptilian queen, there are possible answers — perhaps all the drugs players were taking all this time only just washed out of their systems, for instance — but none are entirely persuasive.

The most convincing objection to be raised, though, is that there’s nothing at all unusual about this year’s road records. Historically, road teams play about .460 ball — sometimes a bit worse, sometimes a bit better. Through the start of yesterday’s games, road teams had a .433 winning percentage this year. At the same point in the season last year, that number was .475. The year before, it was .460. And the year before that, it was .431. Thirty years ago, it was .427 — over the course of a full year.

These last two points are the most inconvenient for anyone who wants to argue that baseball is suffering a game-wide case of the shakes this year as it comes off a decades-long drug binge. 2005, after all, was the last year in which players weren’t tested for amphetamines and their various derivatives. How is it, if the lack of these drugs is to explain bad road records, that when they were last all but legal in the game road performance was just as bad as it is this year? How is it that in 1978, when any player could take anything he wanted, road teams played much worse than they’re playing now?

As much of a comedown as it may be — I, too, would be entertained to find out that Prince Charles really has green skin and a forked tongue — the sad, boring truth is that the English royals are normal people, and teams are playing badly on the road this year just because they are. Baseball is an odd game in which odd things happen; there’s no more reason or order to be found in most of them than there is in life in general. Teams on the road generally win about 46% of their games. Sometimes they randomly do better, sometimes they randomly do worse. The upside to all of this is that it reminds us that baseball players aren’t great at what they do because of drugs, but because they’re singularly gifted and driven. When you’re not looking for reasons to look at them as hopped-up drug fiends, it’s all the easier to really appreciate just how driven and gifted they are.

tmarchman@nysun.com

Categories: GENERAL

Ron Brown Sccholars Program!

June 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Greetings!
Ron Brown Sccholars Program!

The Ron Brown Scholars Program seeks African-American high school seniors to receive $10,000 annually for four years to attend an accredited four-year college or university in the US.  
 
Deadlines:   November 1, 2008   -  application will be considered for the Ron Brown Scholar Program AND forwarded to a select and limited number of additional scholarship providers.
January 9, 2009  -  final postmarked deadline in order to be considered for only the Ron Brown Scholar Program ONLY.
 
Application materials must be mailed in one packet. Transcripts and letters of recommendation should not be sent under separate cover. Incomplete, e-mailed or faxed applications will not be considered.
Due to the volume of applications received, the Ron Brown Scholar Program can only notify semi-finalists and finalists of their status in the competition. This notification will be made in March. Winners of the scholarship will be notified by April 1st and names will be posted on the Ron Brown Scholar Program web site.
Scholarship Conditions
 
Ron Brown Scholarships may be used to supplement benefits from the college or university a student plans to attend and from other foundations or organizations. Scholars may use the scholarship to cover the costs of tuition, fees, books, room and board, computers, health insurance, general living expenses and other college-related expenses. Scholars may request that all or a portion of the award be utilized each year of undergraduate study or deferred for graduate study.

Mail application, transcripts and recommendation letters in one package.  

 
For further information, please contact us:
Ron Brown Scholar Program
1160 Pepsi Place, Suite 206
Charlottesville, VA 22901
Phone: 434 964 1588
Fax: 434 964 1589
E-mail: info@ronbrown.org
Web site: www.ronbrown.org

Carolyn Johnson
Welcome to Harlem

Categories: GENERAL

Ralph Nader plays the race card

June 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Ralph Nader plays the race card

Joni L. Reynolds | Posted June 25, 2008 3:46 PM


 

Presidential candidate Ralph Nader, in an effort to get some attention to his pathetic quest, has tried to play the race card. Today he said “There’s only one thing different about Barack Obama when it comes to being a Democratic presidential candidate. He’s half African-American.”

 

Nader went on to say “Whether that will make any difference, I don’t know. I haven’t heard him have a strong crackdown on economic exploitation in the ghettos. Payday loans, predatory lending, asbestos, lead. What’s keeping him from doing that? Is it because he wants to talk white? He doesn’t want to appear like Jesse Jackson? We’ll see all that play out in the next few months and if he gets elected afterwards.”

 

First of all, the issues Nader enumerated are issues that affect all poor Americans, not just black Americans, and the charge that he is just addressing issues that affect white America is just plain ridiculous.

 

He went on to say “I mean, first of all, the number one thing that a black American politician aspiring to the presidency should be is to candidly describe the plight of the poor, especially in the inner cities and the rural areas, and have a very detailed platform about how the poor is going to be defended by the law, is going to be protected by the law, and is going to be liberated by the law,” he said. “Haven’t heard a thing.”

 

Barack Obama is speaking on the issues that face the entire country, like the economy, the War and the price of gas. He cannot be marginalized as a one-issue candidate.

 

Nader is caught in a time warp, and he still believes he is relevant. He is the only one that does not know his time has come and gone.
 

*News Source-Colorado Rocky Mountain News

 

[Original Link]

Joni L. Reynolds, an African-American mother, writes a blog called Ebony Mom Politics.

Categories: GENERAL

NYPD wants suspects to sign search consent form

June 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

NYPD wants suspects to sign search consent form

BY ROCCO PARASCANDOLA

rocco.parascandola@newsday.com

June 25, 2008
Click here to find out more!

The New York City Police Department wants suspects to sign a consent form before searching their homes or cars, a move that eliminates the need for a warrant and is meant to provide police a layer of legal protection, Newsday has learned.

The initiative was put in place because consent searches are often challenged at trial – and jurors too often believe the suspect’s claim that police never got permission to conduct the search, police sources said.

At the same time, sources said, there has been concern within the NYPD about a handful of cases in which an officer’s truthfulness was recently called into question.

In one case, a federal judge said he found it “wholly plausible” that a sergeant forced his way into a Bronx apartment to conduct a search despite the sergeant’s contention otherwise.

The case, for a fatal 2002 shooting, was eventually dismissed and the city paid $280,000 to settle a civil rights lawsuit.

The consent form has been used by the FBI for years and is already in place in a number of police departments around the country, including in Suffolk County.

The New York Civil Liberties Union says the forms have an obvious upside because it adds to the record of a particular interaction between officer and civilian.

“On the other hand, we certainly hope this wouldn’t be used to camouflage any wrongdoing, such as coercion,” said Donna Lieberman, the group’s executive director. “We hope the Police Department monitors how things work out and that the CCRB [Civilian Complaint Review Board] carefully looks at the implementation of this new protocol.”

Robert Thetford, a retired FBI agent who works closely with state troopers on constitutional law issues, says a signed consent form is typically the difference between a jury believing an officer or believing a suspect.

“The bottom line is juries believe what they see in writing,” he said.

Categories: GENERAL

THE LOUNGE

June 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

STATE CONTROLLED MILK PRICES TO RISE – New York Post

SHOPPERS GET MILKED
By DAVID K. LI

June 25, 2008 –

Holy cow, milk prices are going through the barn roof!

The state-controlled price for a gallon of milk in New York City will rise to $4.37 next Tuesday, state regulators said, in the wake of rising fuel costs and diminishing corn supplies.

State agriculture authorities set the loose ceiling of milk prices, based on the cost of farm production. Individual stores can top the milk-price threshold – now at $3.93 a gallon – if they can show financial hardships, such as extraordinarily high wholesale, rent or delivery costs.

So in practice, the state-set threshold generally applies to the large supermarkets, while neighborhood bodegas tend to have higher prices, officials said.

Industry analyst Kenneth Bailey predicted the price of a gallon of milk should stay in the $4.37 range for the rest of 2008.


COUPLE HELD FOR WELFARE FRAUD – New York Post
370G WELFARE RAP ON COUPLE
By ALEX GINSBERG

June 25, 2008 –

A
Brooklyn woman collected $370,000 in welfare benefits after claiming
her husband abandoned her, even as he secretly paid for the children to
attend religious schools, prosecutors said yesterday.

“Single”
mom Farahnaz Arghavanifard, 40, and “deadbeat” dad Beny Levi, 50, were
ordered held on $50,000 and $75,000 bail on charges of welfare fraud
and grand larceny.

Prosecutor Frank Dudis said the couple scammed Medicaid, food stamps, and rent assistance.

In
addition to allegedly supporting his wife and children with his
$80,000-a-year job, Levi also allegedly paid the kids’ tuition.


AG ‘SPOILING’ FOR RX FIGHT

By ANNIE WILNER and ANDY GELLER

June 25, 2008 —

State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said yesterday he will sue CVS and Rite Aid for continuing to sell expired baby formula, milk and children’s medicine.

On June 12, Cuomo announced that a three-month investigation by his office found that 28 CVS and 22 Rite Aid pharmacies statewide were selling expired products.

After follow-up visits last week, undercover investigators found that 50 percent of CVS stores checked – 12 of 24 – and 40 percent of Rite Aid stores checked – eight of 20 – were still selling expired items, Cuomo said.

A Rite Aid spokewoman said the company is retraining staffers to remedy the problem. A CVS spokesman said the chain is removing expired products. NYPOST



Categories: GENERAL

Difficulty of Work Blamed for Delays Replacing Park Space Lost to Yankee Stadium

June 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Difficulty of Work Blamed for Delays Replacing Park Space Lost to Yankee Stadium – NYTimes.com

Difficulty of Work Blamed for Delays Replacing Park Space Lost to Yankee Stadium

By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS
Published: June 25, 2008

A parks department official, called before the City Council to explain why an effort to replace recreation space lost to construction of the new Yankee Stadium has been plagued by delays and cost overruns, said on Tuesday that the department’s inexperience with such complex projects was partly to blame.

The city was required to build new parks in the Bronx after Macombs Dam Park and a portion of John Mullaly Park were chosen as the site of the new stadium. State and federal law dictate that a similar amount of parkland of equal or greater fair market value replace the old parks.

Categories: GENERAL

SAFER SEX IN THE CITY

June 24, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Vital SignsSAFER SEX IN THE CITY

Fewer Partners and More Condoms Would Decrease Risk of Infections, including HIV

More than One Third of Men Who Have Sex with Men and Who Have Multiple Sex Partners Did Not Use Condoms Consistently

New Yorkers with multiple sex partners, and low rates of condom use, are putting themselves at risk of sexually transmitted infections, including HIV, or unplanned pregnancy. According to a new Health Department report – Are New Yorkers Having Safe Sex? – rates of unsafe sexual behavior, particularly among men who have sex with men, continue at a high rate. In 2006 alone, more than half of all New York City pregnancies were unplanned and more than 60,000 new sexually transmitted infections (STIs) were reported – including 3,745 new HIV diagnoses.

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Categories: NEWS

1 IN 6 NYC TEENS ABUSED

June 24, 2008 · Leave a Comment

1 IN 6 NYC TEENS ABUSED – New York Post

1 IN 6 NYC TEENS ABUSED
By BETH BRAVERMAN

June 24, 2008 — Sexual violence against high-school aged kids is “prevalent” in the city – and the percentage of teens who say they’ve been victimized by their dating partners, family members or others is far higher than the national average, according to a new survey.

The nonprofit NYC Alliance Against Sexual Assault’s report on sexual and dating violence among city high-school students surveyed 1,454 students, the majority of them 15 or 16 years old, at four unnamed high schools.

It found that 16.2 percent reported experiencing sexual violence at some point in their lives. Nationwide, between 7 percent and 10.2 percent of kids 12-17 years old said they have been victims of sexual assault.

Of the teens assaulted, 89 percent said they knew the person who victimized them, according to the study done with Columbia’s Center for Youth Violence Prevention.

Categories: GENERAL