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Women Trailblazers and Pathmakers

BKLYN Commons and NYBeauty Suites Celebrate

by Keith L. Forest
In celebration of Women’s History Month, BKLYN Commons in association with NYBeauty Suites hosted a festive soiree recently celebrating all things women.

The gathering took place at BKLYN Commons’ latest venture – Common Ground Marketplace – a collaborative, community-based weekend popup where local makers and creators come together to shop, grow, and learn.

Pictured, left to right – NYC Councilwoman Farah Louis; Ritha Pierre; NYC Councilwoman Rita Joseph; Dale Charles; and Johanne Brierre. Photo Credit: Gantry Studios


Hosted by Johanne Brierre, CEO of BKLYN Commons — a coworking space and collaborative innovation hub (bklyncommons.com), and Founder of NYBeauty Suites, state-of-the-art rental space for beauty professionals (nybeautysuites.com), the event included a festive cocktail reception featuring home-blended, crafted cocktails from Hibiscus Brew, a local café owned and operated by Allison Dunn.

It also included hors d’oeuvres and treats from women-owned or managed eateries Makina Café, 2 Girls and a Cookshop, and Brie on the Chrisme.

The evening kicked off with an awards ceremony honoring wellness and beauty-preneurs. New York City Councilwomen Rita Joseph and Farah Louis presented citations in recognition of the contributions of these remarkable women in their chosen fields.

Honorees included: Shantini Alleyne-Cooper, Niara Mullings, Samantha Frank-Beckford, Marissia Malcolm, Kerryann Bertrand Ashley Taylor, Dede Dia, and Virhonjeale “Vee” Sheridan-Matteson. In addition, citations were received from NY State Senator Zellnor Myrie and New York State Assemblyman Brian Cunningham.


Councilwoman Farah Louis, on behalf of Assemblyman Cunningham, presented a special recognition to the Natural Hairstyle and Braiding Coalition.

With a mission to elevate the art and science of natural hair and braiding (while providing safe options for chemical-free services through advocacy & activism; ethical education; business development; and community health & safety), the Natural Hairstyle & Braiding Coalition (NHBC), has helped pass legislation that empowers, uplifts the natural hair care industry. In attendance to accept the honors were Founders Diane C. Bailey, Diane De Costa, Erin H. Maybin, and Natasha Gaspard.

Brierre along with City Councilwomen Joseph and Louis also recognized some unsung community heroes in the industry. Dale Charles, Executive Director of Bed-Stuy Gateway BID, and Ritha Pierre, Law Professional and Media Entrepreneur received flowers for supporting black and women owned businesses.

The Business Reimagined Panel included Moderator Kela Walker; Kelly Ifill, Founder/CEO Guava Financial Services; May Bowman, Founder/CEO Official Black Wall Street; Kahlilah Webster, Co-Founder/Managing Partner, VMVP Accelerator, Inc.; Tanyette Colon, Founder/CEO In-FUUSE; Keisha Hickson, CEO, Hickson Agency, Inc, along with Johanne Brierre, Founder/CEO BKLYN Commons & NYBeauty Suites. Photo Credit: Gantry Studios


In addition to the award ceremony and cocktail reception, media partner Ellements Magazine unveiled its latest cover with Common Ground Marketplace founders Johanne Brierre, Samantha Frank-Beckford, Angel Yang and Allison Dunn.

The evening ended with a live panel discussion entitled “Business Reimagined: Pioneering Pathways for Tomorrow.”

Moderated by Kela Walker, the panelists included Mandy Bowman, Founder/CEO, Official Black Wall Street; Tanyette Colon, Founder/CEO, In-FUUSE; Keisha Hickson, CEO, Hickson Agency, Inc.; Kelly Ifill, Founder/CEO, Guava Financial Services; Kahlilah Webster, Co-Founder/Managing Partner, MVP Accelerator, Inc.

VIOLA DAVIS: Hollywood Legend Who’s Sounding The Alarm About The Big Pay Gap!

By Lisa Durden
It’s your girl Lisa Durden, back again to keep that Women’s History Month energy alive with a spotlight on the queens who aren’t just making movies, but making money moves! Today, let’s talk about another Hollywood legend shaking things up – award-winning actress Viola Davis!

For those of you who have been under a rock, she’s achieved EGOT status, nabbing an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony. But NEWS FLASH…did y’all know she’s been sounding the alarm about ‘The Big Pay Gap’ in Hollyweird? Let’s get into it!


Soon after graduating from the Juilliard School in 1993, Viola Davis made her Broadway debut in August Wilson’s ‘Seven Guitars’ earning a Drama Desk nomination, a Tony Award nomination, and a Theatre World Award. Viola embarked on an illustrious career from Broadway to the big screen.

You name it, she’s done it – from her Tony-winning performances as “Tonya” in the stage play ‘King Hedley II’ and “Rose” in the critically acclaimed play ‘Fences,’ to her Emmy-winning role as lawyer “Annalise Keating” in the ABC drama series ‘How to Get Away with Murder,’ making her the first Black actress to win the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series.

Let’s not forget her portrayal of “Rose Maxson” in the 2016 film adaptation of ‘Fences,’ winning her first Oscar for Best Supporting Actress, and her performance “ate” as blues legend “Ma Rainey” in the film adaptation of ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom!’

That award season Viola walked away with several accolades, including a Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actress, becoming the first Black woman nominated twice for a Best Actress Oscar and she shows no signs of slowing down!

In 2023 she dropped her best-selling memoir titled; “Finding Me’ which clinched a Grammy award for Best Audiobook, Narration, and Storytelling Recording.

Despite her stellar resume and undeniable talent, proving herself to be the best in the game to ever do it, Hollywood is still playing in her face!

But Viola’s not one to stay silent, so she ripped a page out of MoNique’s book and sounds the alarm about Black women and The Big Pay Gap! Do y’all remember the viral moment when she called out Hollyweird’s unfair pay practices??

I do! It was during her 2018 Women In The World L.A. Salon interview that she said loud and proud:


“We won’t talk about gender inequality of pay. We get probably a tenth of what a Caucasian woman gets. I have to go in and I have to hustle for my worth. I got the Oscar! I got the Emmy! I got the two Tonys! I’ve done Broadway!

I’ve done off-Broadway! I’ve done TV! I’ve done film! I have to get on that phone and people say ‘You’re a black Meryl Streep and we love you.’ Okay, then if there’s no one like me YOU PAY ME WHAT I’M WORTH!”


Viola Davis was unapologetic! WHEW CHILE! Every delicious word GAVE ME LIFE! It was inspiring! SHE SAID WHAT THE CLUCK SHE SAID! YAAAASSS! However, learning that she was being paid less than her white female counterparts, despite her long list of accolades over her decades-long stellar acting career was disheartening.

Our “Black Girl Magic” shouldn’t be building white wealth – it’s time we start building Black bank accounts! OMG Is It Only Me??


Although no one has ever given Mo’Nique credit as the trailblazer who brilliantly used social media to put Tinseltown on blast about ‘The Big Pay Gap’ she absolutely helped to pave the way for ‘A List’ Black actresses like Viola to pick up the torch and run with it…she’s standing ten toes down in the fight for fair pay!

So let’s celebrate Viola – not just as a Hollywood legend, but as a fearless warrior fighting for what she’s worth. But she’s not alone in this battle. Viola is standing on the shoulders of giants like Hattie McDaniel and Eartha Kitt, paving the way for actresses like Taraji P. Henson, who’s also not backing down!

She’s STANDING ON BUSINESS! Stay tuned for her story in the last of this four-part series, because we’re not done yet! #ClapForThat!


Lisa Durden is a prominent National Media Contributor and TV Personality, renowned for her appearances on prestigious platforms such as ABC 20/20 as an ABC News Contributor, Revolt TV’s ‘Revolt Black News,’ and Fox Soul’s ‘Being Black With Tammi Mac.’ Her contributions extend to CBS News, The Dr. Oz Show, and as an #APlusPanel Contributor on #TheOpinionZone for the former ‘Chasing News Series’ on the My9 Network.

Her distinctive voice and activism echoes through her storytelling, establishing her as a vocal Social Justice Journalist and thought leader, recognized by media outlets like Newsweek, Ark Republic and Our Time Press.
STAY CONNECTED:
Instagram: @lisardurden
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In Memoriam: Kenneth P.Thompson

As we celebrate March Women’s History Month, Our Time Press remembers the late Hon. Ken Thompson, King’s County’s first African-American District Attorney, elected to office in 2013.
He devoted his life to the pursuit of justice and worked hard to restore confidence in the criminal justice system.

At the time of Thompson’s death, Hon. Eric Gonzalez, then Chief Assistant Brooklyn District Attorney, said: “He was a giant among those seeking to reform the criminal justice system” and his leadership “transformed the office into a model urban prosecutors office with a mandate to do justice and treat everyone and every case fairly and with the utmost integrity.”

“Among his many initiatives, he created a model for correcting wrongful convictions, instituted a marijuana policy that would later be replicated citywide, and started a summons forgiveness program that would also be instituted in several other jurisdictions.”

In his early career, Thompson represented victims of pregnancy discrimination, as well as those, according to his biography, “who had been subjected to unlawful prejudice due to their race, gender, age, religion or sexual orientation.”

He worked on behalf of thousands, including Ms. Nafissatou Diallo, who had been sexually assaulted by Dominique Strauss Kahn; Mr. Gregory McCullough and Ms. Judith Bailey, the victims of the Con Edison steam pipe explosion; and Ms. Sharon Simmons-Thomas, whose lawsuit exposed and put an end to the “shop and frisk” practices at a major department store.

Born on March 14, 1966, DA Thompson passed on October 16, 2016, after a valiant battle against cancer.

A special tribute to our friend and neighbor, initially scheduled to run in last week’s Our Time Press, on the anniversary of his birth, March 14, has been rescheduled. For an extensive bio, visit (brooklynda.org).
Photo: Bernice Elizabeth Green

Historymakers are Praying Women

Rev. Pamela Holmes Becomes FDNY’s First Black Female Chaplain, Sworn in by 1st African American and Woman AG of New York, Letitia James

Amazing Grace Under Pressure: Rev. Pamela Holmes (left), an associate pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, became the first Black female chaplain of the Fire Department of New York City on Thursday, March 7, 2024. Rev. Holmes was sworn into her role at the esteemed Christian Cultural Center in Flatlands by another ground-breaking history-maker Letitia James, first African American and woman Attorney General of New York State.

This significant milestone in diversity and the department’s history was nearly marred by an ill-mannered segment at the promotion ceremony. James, always fierce, greeted fire with fine words of grace: “We’re in the House of the Lord. I will pray for you.” It was a fitting sentiment for the important occasion. Chaplains pray at ceremonies and do invocations.

In addition to house and church visits, a chaplain’s role is to make hospital visits to the sick and injured firefighters, assist when families are notified about the death of a loved one in the line of duty and counsel firefighters.
Bernice Elizabeth Green
Photo:thechiefleader.com

National Guard at NYC Subway Stations – the response

By Nayaba Arinde

Editor at Large

This is not a drill, the nation’s organized militia – the National Guards are now stationed at several New York City subway stations.

“At least they don’t have their long guns anymore,” a male commuter repeated several times as he walked past two National Guardsmen on Tuesday, March 11, at the Fulton Street subway hub at John Street in Lower Manhattan. The two military men ignored the heckling. An NYPD police sergeant monitored the scene, as he directed unsuspecting riders to a table where two police officers dove into their bags.

Lead balloons get floated to see if they land, or they wait for the thud.

Last week, Gov Hochul sent 750 National Guard members  to check commuters’ bags at turnstiles in major New York City subway hubs like 34th Street and Times Square. 

The National Guard are presently deployed on Joint Task Force Empire Shield. Now they are subjected to fall under NYPD officers’ jurisdiction, who  have already been rummaging through riders’ bags for more than 15 years.

It is a common sight. But now Hochul has added 250 members from the New York State Police and the MTA Police Department, who can call folk to the side to dive into their personal bags.

In response to the recent rash of violence on the subway system – shootings, beatings, stabbings – had Hochul deploying the National Guard.

“Since taking office, I have been laser-focused on driving down subway crime and protecting New Yorkers,” Governor Hochul said. “My five-point plan will rid our subways of violent offenders and protect all commuters and transit workers.

I am sending a message to all New Yorkers: I will not stop working to keep you safe and restore your peace of mind whenever you walk through those turnstiles.”

National Guard members with M4 carbines on the New York City transit system was enough to create a public brouhaha that had Gov. Hochul rescind her call to have the soldiers be strapped with their automatic firing, body armor-piercing military assault rifles.

Hochul said, “As soon as I saw the first photo of them carrying a long gun, I said, I don’t think that’s necessary…This is more akin to just being there in a supportive role, letting people know if they need help there’s extra people there.”

“It means you have lost control of the city,” Brooklyn activist Caleef Cousar told Our Time Press. “If it can happen in New York, it can happen anywhere. This a test run, because what’s going on underground, will come overground.

What if they bring the National Guard to regular everyday life situations? There’s no way in the world, with subway incidents increasing, and even with unlimited unvetted migrants – they do not have a counter-plan. Is this it?

They have now brought the National Guard to a situation that the City should be capable of handling.”

But, retired NYPD captain Mayor Eric Adams insisted, “The presence of a uniform makes people feel better, and if the National Guards or the state police want to add to that presence, I applaud that.”

“It’s another form of stop and frisk,” retired NYPD detective Graham Weatherspoon told Our Time Press. “I don’t know why they are doing bag checks. Most people committing crimes are not carrying bags. So you are going to arbitrarily do a stop and frisk – predicated on what?”

Those carrying weapons are prone to carry them in waistbands, not backpacks.

After 9/11 under the auspices of the Empire Shield joint task force, the National Guard has been a common sight in places like Penn Station, Grand Central Station, or even now the Oculus at the World Trade Center.

“The initial decision by Gov. Hochul to send the National Guard and MTA Police throughout the subway system was clearly an over-reaction,” retired detective Marquez Claxton told Our Time Press.

“Although Mayor Adams’ 2022 Subway Safety Plan emphasized omnipresence of law enforcement, it never indicated expanding the use of the National Guard with long guns with the MTA Police conducting bag searches next to them, throughout the entire system. Gov. Hochul made the decision that rather than providing State funding to support an increased NYPD presence throughout the system, she would utilize the State’s personnel and expand their presence from the 2022 levels when they were only assigned to the 4 major commuter railroad hubs (Penn Station, Grand Central Station, Atlantic Terminal, Sutphin-Archer/Jamaica Station).”

Black Law Enforcement Alliance co-founder Claxton said, “Given NYC’s history of law enforcement constitutional infringements, these well intended actions may increase anxiety rather than actually allaying fears or addressing the issue of ‘feeling’ safe.

A more prudent and proven successful approach would be for the State to increase funding for the original Subway Safety Plan which was more holistic and resulted in dramatic crime decreases once the NYPD was able to fund the overtime associated with shifting above-ground resources to the subway system. A police omnipresence plan has to be organized and managed separate and independent of any military support action.” 

A City Hall spokesperson told Our Time Press this week:  “Under the Adams administration, overall crime is down across the city, and transit crime was down 15 percent in February. Governor Hochul has been a true partner in keeping New Yorkers safe on our subways…We continue to surge NYPD officers into the system.”

The TWU, while accepting the increased law enforcement presence, slammed Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg, and MTA Jan Lieber  as being soft on crime. TWU Local 100 President Richard Davis said, ”Most of the people that’s being arrested have priors.

If you look at their record, they have multiple, multiple arrests.. multiple times have been in jail, and the courtroom is like a revolving door. They come right back out on the street.”

There have been three murders on the subways this year. Last month subway station agent Noreen Mallory was repeatedly punched in the face by a man on the 4/5 train Wall Street subway platform.

Last month C train conductor Alton Scott received 24 stitches after being slashed in the throat after 3 am at the Rockaway Avenue subway station.

A spokesperson for DA Bragg told Our Time Press in a statement: “Manhattan is the only borough in the city where transit crime is down, yet ironically the only local elected official named at today’s press conference was Alvin Bragg.

We make charging decisions based on facts and evidence, and anyone who jeopardizes the safety of passengers or transit workers is held accountable. The continued decrease in transit crime throughout the borough is the result of our comprehensive strategy and close collaboration with our law enforcement partners.

We care deeply about the safety of TWU members. We have offered and continue to welcome a meeting with TWU leadership, so we can have a productive conversation with real solutions that will hold up in court.”

MTA Chairman Janno Lieber said, “My view is the NYPD is doing a hell of a job in the New York subway system…The Governor has brought additional resources. The MTA has the NYPD’s full confidence.”

“I would love to have that state trooper standing there,” Mayor Adams said. “I think their uniforms are cool as hell. Having them being there, standing in the subway system. People like seeing it.”

New York Civil Liberties Union executive director Donna Lieberman said, “Deploying military personnel to the subways will not make New Yorkers feel safe; it will, unfortunately, create a perfect storm for tension, escalation, and further criminalization of Black and Brown New Yorkers.”

“It’s giving the people a false sense of security. This is an image of protection. They are not deterring crime,” retired detective Weatherspoon told Our Time Press. “You can’t fire a long gun in a crowded station. You can’t fire an AR15 in the subway that’s going to go through a person, and hit a few other people.”

Saying that it was more PR, than practical, Weatherspoon said it was also “abject stupidity.”

The immediate public outcry brought a reversal to that decision.

“What is needed is adequate staffing of NewYork Transit police. The way you bring crime down in the subway is by having police officers in the subway, and the transit bureau.”

Hochul’s office nor the NYPD did not respond to Our Time Press inquiries by press time.

Weatherspoon added, “The MTA eliminated token booths in areas where there should be an agent. They have cameras, but they don’t do a damn thing when you’re being robbed, had your head cracked in, or you’re pushed on the tracks.

I ride the subway, why are there E-bikes, and gasoline-powered scooters on the subway that can burst into flames? Used to be you couldn’t get a bicycle on the train. What is going on?”

Cousar continued, “It’s optics. They’ve already got scare tactics in place. But it adds to the fear factor under which our communities are used to.

You are disarming the citizens physically and mentally. We are used to seeing the National Guard helping out in natural disasters, hurricanes, floods, and civil unrest – not going through handbags in the subway. Wait till it gets hot – like 80 degrees day after day. But, whatever happens in New York, happens in New Jersey, and Philly.” 

“How many surges of law enforcement into the subway will satisfy the political desire of city and state leaders to address riders’ fears being fanned by those same leaders? This is the fifth or sixth in recent years, and even in response to real concerns and crimes, it remains unsustainable,” said Public Advocate Jumaane Williams.

“Militarizing the subway with the National Guard and suggesting a wholesale ban on individuals from accessing public transportation are dangerous misuses of resources which could be better spent addressing these issues at their root.

It’s one thing to have conductors announce increased police presence on the platform. It’s another entirely to further criminalize the public on public transit while neglecting the real improvements these resources could be devoted to, like fixing the subway itself.”