Showing posts with label take action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label take action. Show all posts

Monday, August 18, 2008

Letters


Mr. Louis let me start by thanking you on a great article and keeping the heat on the Mayor! I can't believe that they're trying to put more homeless people in the armory. The place is horrifying--I live not too far from it and the amount of drug dealing and crime in and around the place is way more than you mentioned! I know guys who exclusively sell drugs to all those homeless cats...As a matter of fact some people travel from other parts of Brooklyn just to sell drugs right on Atlantic Ave...a lot of the men in that place are there to take advantge of the lack of authority there. A childhood friend of mine, who is a career criminal, shared a lot of his experiences with me while he was staying there and said the armory is a launch pad for killers, rapists, and thieves who commit crimes and come back at night for shelter. I'm afraid if Bloomberg gets his way then Crown Heights will be the New East New York of the 80's...My mom is fed up with all the loitering and is tired of calling the cops about weird and shady people in our neighborhood...Please let us know where any protests will be! Thanks.


-Manny

Read More...

Friday, August 15, 2008

Concessions Made in Plan for Homeless in Brooklyn

On Thursday, Heather J. Janik, a spokeswoman for the city’s homeless services agency, said an additional intake center would be opened in Manhattan to lessen demand at the proposed Brooklyn site. She said it would open “in tandem” with the new Brooklyn intake center, at the same time that the current central intake center, the Bellevue Men’s Shelter on the East Side, closed down. The site of the new center in Manhattan, which will be open 24 hours, has not been determined.

Bill de Blasio, the city councilman who leads the committee overseeing the homeless services agency, said more was needed, including guarantees from the city about improving the armory. “I think it’s going to take a lot more before folks in the neighborhood are satisfied,” he said.

One of the local organizers, Sandy Taggart, set a higher bar, saying, “We will absolutely not accept an intake center here.”


Read the full article here.
Courtesy of the NY Times

Read More...

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Homeless Intake Center Plan Provokes Broad Opposition


Community outrage at the city's plan to relocate the the homeless intake center for all five boroughs to the Bedford-Atlantic Armory in Crown Heights reached fever pitch last night at a special Community Board 8 meeting attended by Deputy Commissioner of the City’s Department of Homeless Services George Nashak and three of his staff members. In his introductory remarks, Nashak emphasized that as part of the plan to bring the intake center to the armory, Crown Heights would be benefiting from a net reduction in beds from 350 to 230. This didn't fly with the crowd...


Read the full article here.
Courtesy of brownstoner.com

Read More...

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Momentum

Budget negotiations that are wrapping up over the next few days have the potential to kill this once and for all!

Read the letter signed by 24 state legislators urging Governor Patterson to kill the plan to relocate the Manhattan central intake center to the Bedford-Atlantic Armory shelter
here.

Courtesy of coalitionforthehomeless.org

Read More...

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

MARCH OVER B'KLYN BRIDGE FOLLOWED BY RALLY @ CITY HALL

Council Member Letitia James, along with Coalition for the Homeless, Crown Heights Revitalization Movement (CHRM), neighborhood residents & local community groups, advocates for the homeless and public officials participate in march over the Brooklyn Bridge, followed by a rally at City Hall to oppose DHS’ plan to move the men’s homeless intake center in Manhattan to the Bedford Atlantic Armory in Brooklyn

This march and rally, in support of homeless individuals and the community is scheduled to take place on Thursday, June 12th (right before the Stated Council meeting). The marchers will meet at the entrance of the Brooklyn Bridge at 12 PM, and enter at Adams and Tillary Streets. The group will then walk along the bridge footpath to City Hall Park. The rally is scheduled to begin at 1:00 PM on the Steps of City Hall.

Please join us to fight this misguided plan that will not benefit the City’s male homeless population (60% reside in Manhattan), and will harm a struggling community.

Who: Council Member Letitia James, Coalition for the Homeless, Crown Heights Revitalization Movement, advocates for the homeless, advocates for the community, and public officials

What: March over the Brooklyn Bridge in opposition of DHS’ (Department of Homeless Services) plan to close the men’s homeless intake center in Manhattan, immediately followed by a Rally on Steps of City Hall to demand that the City abandon plans to move the men’s homeless intake center to Brooklyn’s Bedford Atlantic Armory, located in an already overburdened community

When: Thursday, June 12th - march begins at 12 PM, and press conference/rally is at 1 PM

Where: Marchers will meet at the entrance of Brooklyn Bridge around noon (Tillary and Adams Streets) – Rally attendees will gather on the Steps of City Hall

Contact: Amyre Loomis at (718) 260-9191

Read More...

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

TWO HUNDRED RALLY AT BEDFORD-ATLANTIC ARMORY SHELTER

Brooklyn, Jun 3, 2008—A crowd of two hundred Central Brooklyn residents, members of
community-based organizations, and elected officials gathered near the steps of the Bedford-Atlantic Armory Shelter to protest a disastrous plan, recently announced by the Bloomberg administration, to close the existing central intake center for all homeless men in New York City. Under this plan, the current Manhattan site would be leased to private developers to build a luxury hotel and conference center, and the intake center for all homeless men from all five boroughs would be relocated to a dangerous and difficult to reach armory in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.

Sunday’s rally was organized by the Crown Heights Revitalization Movement (CHRM). Sandy Taggart, one of CHRM’s co-founders, said of Sunday’s rally, “This is just the beginning. This community cares for people, and the community’s opposition to the City’s plan is tremendous because it is bad for everyone—the homeless men currently living at the shelter, all homeless men in New York City, and the people who live and work in Central Brooklyn.” CHRM is joined in the fight by neighborhood residents and businesses, many local community groups (Crow Hill Community Association, Crown Heights Unites Coalition, Crown Heights North Association, Central Brooklyn Anti-Violence Coalition), advocates for the homeless (Coalition for the Homeless, the Legal Aid Society, Homeless Services United), and many of Brooklyn’s elected officials.

Speakers at Sunday’s rally, in unanimous opposition to the City’s plan, included Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz; NYS Senators Velmanentte Montgomery and Eric Adams; NYS Assemblymen Hakeem Jeffries and Karim Camara; NY City Council Members Letitia James, Albert Vann, and Bill deBlasio; Democratic District Leader Jesse Hamilton; Nizjoni Granville, Chair of the
Housing Committee for Community Board 8; Patrick Markee, Senior Policy Analyst for the
Coalition for the Homeless; Nathan Ashford, a resident of the Bedford-Atlantic Shelter; New York Daily News Columnist Errol Louis; and Takhara Robinson of the Central Brooklyn Anti-Violence Coalition.

Citing poor management of the Brooklyn shelter, the harm to all homeless men Citywide and the degradation of the quality of life in the already oversaturated residential communities of Central Brooklyn that are home to the Bedford-Atlantic Armory, the speakers demanded that Mayor Bloomberg and the City’s Department of Homeless Services keep the intake center in Manhattan, the borough with the largest number of street homeless men. According to Borough President Markowitz, the planned move of the intake center would be bad for both Brooklyn and Manhattan. Mr. Markowitz emphatically stated at the rally, "Manhattan residents agree with us because their fear is that if they move the intake center to here, more of those that need services will choose not to come to Brooklyn and will stay on the streets of Manhattan."

Common themes of the rally’s speakers were better services for homeless men, respect for Central Brooklyn, and fair share for all communities. "It's not a question of not in my backyard at all, media. We have done our fair share," said Councilmember Letitia James. NYS Senator Velmanette Montgomery was quick to point out the City’s abysmal management of the current shelter at the Bedford-Atlantic Armory, "We have had this ongoing battle to try to clean up this facility for many years, and we have still not gotten the city to pay attention, so rather than working with us to help bring the necessary support to the men in this facility they are now going to dump another number of homeless men in this place that is not fit for the men who live here already." Speaking of the disrespect for the Brooklyn communities that are home to the Armory, Councilmember de Blasio commented that it would "have been nice if the City of New York had come to you and said, 'What should we do here? How can we improve the community?' But that's never the way the City of New York starts the discussion," said de Blasio. "It never goes to people who've been the backbone of the community and says, 'What's the right thing to do?'"

The communities neighboring the Armory Shelter are culturally rich, diverse communities. These are old-fashioned friendly neighborhoods of churches, community organizations, and beautifully tended gardens. These are communities of hard-working families who take pride in their neighborhood and who are ready to lend a helping hand. They are also thriving and growing economically. But these communities are oversaturated with social service beds and are now stretched to the limit. According to official City and State data, Community Board 8, which is home to the Armory, has more residential social service beds per acre than any other Brooklyn neighborhood—more than six times the median.


Courtesy of www.revitalizecrownheights.org
June, 3, 2006, Tuesday

Read More...

Friday, May 30, 2008

Rally against relocation of homeless intake center to Crown Heights


Data recently compiled from the City's own agencies reveals that the central Brooklyn neighborhood where the Bedford-Atlantic Shelter is located (Community Board 8), although small geographically, houses more residential social service beds per acre than any other Brooklyn community. At 112 bed per 100 acres—more than five times the average—the situation has become a crisis demanding immediate attention. The data used for this analysis is the City's own, and includes beds from both State (Office of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities), Office of Mental Health, Office of ASIS) and City (DHS) agencies, as well as those contracted through non-profit organizations. This data does not include the many ¾ houses in the community as the information was not available at the time of assessment.

Expected to participate are Borough President Marty Markowitz, City Council Member Letitia James, NYS Assemblymen Karim Camara and Hakeem Jeffries, and NYS Senator Eric Adams.


Courtesy of phndc.org (Read the full article here)

Read More...