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Marlene Saunders: A Life of Compassion and Community Dedication

Marlene Saunders, a cherished member of the community and retired nurse who made an indelible mark on the lives of those around her, peacefully transitioned on Sunday, January 21, 2024. She was 79.
Born in Trinidad & Tobago, Marlene immigrated to New York City and became an integral part of the community she loved. She graduated from Girls High in Brooklyn and earned a Bachelor of Science from Long Island University after pursuing higher education at Medgar Evers College.
Marlene’s commitment to the well-being of others shone brightly throughout her career as a NICU nurse. Her impact extended beyond hospital walls, as she actively worked towards positive change in her community. Living in Crown Heights 77th Police Precinct, Marlene served as the vice president of the community council, advocating for improved services and safer neighborhoods.


Marlene was also a longtime Crown Heights brownstone owner, whose clarion call for justice led to millions of dollars of generational wealth saved for New York City Black home and small property owners through the mismanaged Third Party Transfer program.
A devoted member of St. Gregory Church, Marlene served as a trustee, contributed to the Vigil Choir, and participated in the executive commission. Her commitment to community safety was evident in her support for National Night Out Against Crime for 25 years. Marlene also served on Community Board 8 and the Neighborhood Advisory Board, dedicating decades to community improvement.
Her tireless dedication made her an invaluable asset to the organization and the community.
Beyond her community involvement, Marlene found her greatest joy in her family. She is survived by her two sons, Brian and Paul Saunders, and a beloved grandchild, Anissa Saunders.
Marlene Saunders will be remembered as a compassionate, selfless, and resilient individual. Her commitment to community service and uplifting those around her has left an indelible mark. She will be greatly missed by her family and friends, and the entire community she faithfully served.


A memorial service to celebrate Marlene’s life and legacy will be held on Wednesday, January 31, at St. Gregory the Great Church, 224 Brooklyn Avenue and the corner of St. Johns Place. Viewing from 5-7 mass to follow In lieu of flowers, the family kindly requests donations be made to TBD, as a tribute to Marlene’s lifelong commitment to helping others.

“Huddled Masses” Strain New York

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By Nayaba Arinde
Editor-at-Large

There are at least two more months of frigid winter, and a common scene on New York City streets are “huddled masses”, resembling piles of discarded old clothes. The heaps actually are layers of clothes keeping homeless people warm.
Then there are people walking in traffic, tapping on windows, asking for change. Or food. Common on the subway trains or platforms are the women with babies bound to their backs, selling sweets for a dollar.
Add to that the steady number of West African men who are finding ways to make a dollar to eat. It may be food delivery on fast bikes, setting up tables selling hats and gloves, etc. There are those walking into mosques, churches , and the offices of elected officials, desperate for shelter and help.
New York City is struggling to house the almost 70,000 migrants left in the city out of the 168,000 who traveled to the Big Apple since last April. Nine months later, there’s no sign of hope springing eternal for easing this situation.
“At ground level, in the neighborhoods and communities throughout Brooklyn–and all of the City, there are uneasy interactions–not only between migrants and the citizen residents but between the diverse migrant groups themselves,” Marquez “Marq” Claxton, founder of the Black Law Enforcement Alliance, told Our Time Press.


“While the Federal government denies the necessary support funding, the City has to use its own financial resources to stabilize the migrant population,” continued the Brooklyn-born social justice advocate and retired detective. “The lack of traditional work authorizations and opportunities has created a survival competition. Increases in poverty/property-related crimes, larceny, burglaries, and robberies are inevitable and commensurate with the under-resourced migrant population.
“Add to the mix the disparate support of some immigrant populations due to their seemingly subjective Temporary Protected Status, and you have a powder-keg situation in which, in this case, the Federal government is acting like a casual observer.”
The Gothamist reported recently that, “New polling of New Yorkers reveals wide-ranging ambivalence about the city’s sheltering of its burgeoning migrant population, including on such basic questions as whether the city should continue helping the newcomers settle — and for how long.”
Citing a “Right to Shelter” HarrisX survey on behalf of the New York Immigration Coalition, they reported that “just 58% agreed that the city’s ‘right to shelter should include all families in need, including asylum-seekers,’ and 42% agreed that ‘the right to shelter should be limited to only New York families.’”
Only 30% of respondents felt that “‘New Yorkers should continue to accept new migrants and asylum-seekers,’ while 70% agreed that ‘New Yorkers have already accepted enough migrants.” Then again, “60% agreed ‘New Yorkers should continue to live by the words written on the Statue of Liberty, ‘Give me your tired, your poor … Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me.’”


“The American asylum-seeker/migrant crisis is directly connected to American policies and international trade agreements,” community advocate Olanike Alabi told Our Time Press.
“In order for America to address the crisis in New York City, the nation must first pass comprehensive immigration reform at the Federal level and re-examine its treatment of nations referred to as ‘third-world.’ Those who empathize with the plight of migrants will do what they do best and that’s open their hearts and their wallets. The real question is how can we expect the government to adequately address the crisis affecting new migrants when they have been lacking in addressing the needs of everyday New Yorkers?”
The Gothamist reported, “President Joe Biden, Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams, as well as the City Council, state Legislature and Congress.
Respondents handed each of them ‘underwater’ approval ratings for their handling of the migrant issue: 37% for Biden’s administration; 39% for Hochul’s; 35% for Adams’; 36% for the Legislature; 36% for City Council; and 29% for Congress.”
There are rallies galore, covering all the angles, including this week’s protest at City Hall slamming Mayor Adams’ enactment of his 60-day-limit shelter eviction rule for families. The rule for adults is 30 days. Around 4,800 families received eviction notices in late 2023. The evictions began on January 9th, 2024, and they had to reapply for shelter at allocated centers like the Roosevelt Hotel in midtown Manhattan.


During his November announcement that he was slashing all city-agency spending by 5% due to the cost of the crisis, Mayor Adams announced that migrant spending would also be hit.
“Our mayor is a slumlord,” charged Deputy City Council Speaker Diana Ayala at Monday’s City Hall rally. Having families shuffling around the city to find shelter has a domino effect; and it is “cruel and inhumane to remove children out of schools,’ where they had some semblance of stability and some access to services.
City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams said, “This action actively hurts people, uprooting youth and families with children, forcing them to navigate an unnecessarily burdensome and bureaucratic process to receive a new shelter placement.”
Then, during last week’s State of the State address Governor Kathy Hochul tapped $2.4 billion for the City of New York for the continuing migrant crisis. This should take some pressure off, but this week, Mayor Adams said that the city has had to manage this crisis with, “No help from the federal government. We had to navigate this on our own, getting thousands a week, not a month. There’s some weeks we got four to five thousand that Deputy Mayor Williams-Isom had to figure out how to house.
“Unlike other cities, not one child or family is sleeping on the streets of the City of New York. And we have the audacity to tell people within 30 days with intense support, you have to be self-sustaining because we can’t carry you forever.”
At the Community Conversation in Co-op City Dreiser Community Center, the Mayor said, “And you had the loud noises of those who never navigated this process telling us we’re inhumane for telling people 30 days you have to navigate out of the system. Eighty percent of the single adults we told they had to navigate out in 30 days, 80 percent went and became self-sufficient.


Bed Stuy resident Mark Lawton lives near the Bedford Armory, which is partly being used as a migrant shelter. He told Our Time Press, “The fight should not just be about the migrants, it should be about all the homeless, and dispossessed. Food, clothing, and shelter is a human right.
“The argument for some, is that the migrants are receiving all the services which poor people already here should be getting. They feel that resources should already be established, (and the migrants’) presence should not be impacting the community as hard as it is. It’s a human rights issue.”
Mayor Adams said, “This is not something … migrants should be blamed for. This is something that our national government needs to fix with a real decompression strategy and to fund this.”
Publishers’ note to readers: You are welcome to share your thoughts on or experiences with The Migrant Situation at editors@ourtimepress.com.

Roundtable with Survivors of Gun Violence Convened by Brooklyn Borough President Reynoso and Cong. Dan Goldman (NY-10)during National Gun Violence Survivors Week

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“Caught in the crossfire” of gun violence are the families and loved ones left behind to mourn for life.
Yesterday, Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso and Congressman Dan Goldman (NY-10), vice Chair of the House Gun Violence Prevention Task Force and Chair of the Dads Caucus Gun Violence Prevention Working Group, convened a roundtable discussion for New York survivors of gun violence to bring their stories and their advocacy directly to the people elected to represent them.
The roundtable with survivors was the second of three events hosted by Congressman Goldman for his ‘NY-10 Alliance Against Gun Violence’ Event Series during National Gun Violence Survivors Week.


During the event – attended by New York City Councilmembers Alexa Avilés and Crystal Hudson and moderated by Deputy Brooklyn Borough President Kim Council – gun violence survivors from across New York shared their stories.
The survivors focused on the human impact of gun violence and the solutions they would like to see implemented at the local and federal levels. Highlighting their personal experiences, many of the survivors pushed for greater investment in community resources and intervention programs. Congressman Goldman also shared resources available to survivors and families and highlighted the work of local organizations leading the fight against gun violence.
Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso said, “Centering survivors and their stories is key to understanding the impact of gun violence on everyday people and their loved ones. In this first month of 2024 alone, gun violence has already shaken several communities across Brooklyn. This Gun Violence Survivors Week, as national organizations across the country uplift survivors’ stories, it is important that we follow their lead in our own communities.


“ I am grateful to all who made today’s roundtable possible — Congressman Dan Goldman, Everytown for Gun Safety/Moms Demand Action, New Yorkers Against Gun Violence, and most importantly, the New Yorkers who shared their stories about the impacts of gun violence with us. It is my hope that events like this will push lawmakers to strengthen gun safety laws and protect people from gun violence in the streets of Brooklyn and across the entire country.”
“The incredibly touching stories of New York’s gun violence survivors motivate me every single day to fight the gun violence epidemic that is plaguing our communities,” Congressman Goldman said. “I applaud every one of these survivors who joined us today for their bravery and their willingness to use their voice to impact change. I hope that everyone takes a moment to listen to their experiences during this National Gun Violence Survivors Week. As the community of gun violence survivors grows larger by the day, I will never stop fighting to uplift these voices and reverse this unconscionable trend.”
The effects of gun violence extend far beyond when the last bullet is shot – survivors oftentimes suffer from long-term physical and mental health issues. Their healthcare costs average around $35,000 and victims of gun violence face long-term disabilities, including paralysis, limited mobility, and psychiatric disorders.


Researchers have observed a 70% increase in mental health diagnoses following a gun violence injury, most notably Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Major Depressive Disorder. Survivors suffer a 90% increase in substance abuse disorders, and parents of survivors experience a 30% increase in substance abuse. The Journal of Criminal Justice urges improved trauma-informed services and connection to mental health care to help victims of gun violence.
Earlier this week, Congressman Goldman co-sponsored the ‘Resources for Victims of Gun Violence Act,’ which would aid survivors of gun violence in navigating the difficult-to-find resources and connect them with victim assistance professionals.

How Do We Fight Back?

“Flesh on the Ground in the Trump Era” Part III of III

By Talib Kweli Greene
I have always hesitated to compare Trump to Hitler. It can come off as petty and dramatic and undermine otherwise sound arguments to jump to Hitler comparisons. However, Donald Trump has without a doubt consistently displayed the traits of a narcissistic fascist who doesn’t understand the difference between president of a democracy that has governmental checks and balances and a dictator. When I saw his first unhinged press conference, in which he disrespected a black journalist, silenced a Jewish journalist, and told bold faced, very unnecessary lies about the margin of his victory over Hillary Clinton, I knew I was watching a Hitler moment. It wasn’t good enough that Trump won the election, he very badly needed us to believe that he won bigger than anyone in history. This is so far from being true it’s amazing that he even fixed his lips to trot this lie out, but lie he did. Bigly.


When challenged on this lie by a journalist from NBC, Trump’s response amounted to “well that’s what I had heard, so…” When no other journalist pressed the issue, when Trump was simply allowed to tell lies to the American people from that podium, when Trump was allowed to say that the buck shouldn’t stop with him as president, I knew we were in bigger trouble than I thought. The politicians, Hillary, Bernie, they failed to stop Trump. The journalists are now failing to correct Trump and hold him accountable. The media has completely failed us.
The right-wing media insisted for almost weeks that Hillary Clinton was under criminal investigation over emails, when she wasn’t. Obama was criticized for everything from asking about the price of arugula during a campaign stop to mentioning that his blackness helped him relate to Trayvon Martin. GOP congressman Joe Wilson literally yelled “liar” at Obama during a speech, while Obama was the president. The double standard that is applied to Trump is unacceptable. Donald Trump built his political career on a racist lie about Obama being born in Kenya. Why is nobody yelling “liar” at Trump? If the politicians and the media refuse to hold the Trump administration accountable, the people have no choice but to.
How do we fight back? We show solidarity with marginalized groups that will be further marginalized in Trump’s America. We stand with the family of Ben Keita, a black American Muslim who was lynched in Seattle. We stand with the families of Srinivas Kuchibhotla and Alok Madasani, the Indian men shot by a white supremacist in Kansas. We show solidarity with the women who marched on Washington during 2017’s historic women’s march. We show solidarity with Jewish people whose communities and cemeteries are currently under attack by white supremacists. We stand with the Native Americans who are protecting Standing Rock from the DAPL pipeline. We say no to mass incarceration. We say no to the over-policing that leads to over-criminalization of communities of color. We say no to the travel ban, we say no to the wall, we say no to Donald Trump, loudly and often.


These are the reasons I decided to show up in Washington on Monday, March 6th. I was inspired by the Green Revolution, by Occupy Wall Street, by the Ferguson Uprising. Hashtags and RTs are cute and make us feel all warm and fuzzy inside, but without actual flesh on the ground, there is no movement. Many working class people say that they do not have the luxury to take time away from their lives to resist Trump, but we are now at the point where we don’t have the luxury not to. So I will do what you can’t.
As an artist and my own boss, I can determine my schedule easier than someone who has a boss. So I will put my flesh in these streets as much as I can. I don’t know what this is about to be, as I have never done anything like this before. But I can’t just sit around and do nothing. I am not rich, I still have to work for a living, and I still will. But when I’m not getting that bag, I will be in these streets showing solidarity for as long as I can be.
For two weeks, I invited those who wanted to resist to meet us at Rock Creek Park, 24th and P St NW, Washington D.C., at noon. We held our ground, demanding that the House Of Representatives begin the impeachment process of Donald Trump, staring with his violation of the Emolument clause, a release of his tax returns and a call for an independent bipartisan investigation into the Donald Trump’s Russian connections.

Talib Kweli is one of the world’s most talented, accomplished, and socially conscious hip-hop artists. His book, Vibrate Higher: A Rap Story (MCD, Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2021), is a first-hand account of hip hop as a political force. Kweli commands attention by delivering top-tier lyricism, crafting captivating stories, and showing the ability to rhyme over virtually any type of instrumental. In 2011, Kweli founded Javotti Media, a record label and platform for independent thinkers and doers.

Beyond Brooklyn 

Philadelphia, City of Firsts

The City of Brotherly Love ended and started the year with some historic Sisterly firsts.  Cherelle Parker is now Philly’s 100th Mayor.  Sworn in on January 2, Mayor Parker is the first woman in the history of the city to serve in this capacity.

And, as if to herald Mayor Parker’s coming, Maisha Sullivan Ongoza is seen standing proud with the nearly 11-foot tall Kinara, in the southwest corner of Philadelphia’s City Hall.  She was one of the activists who inspired the idea for the Kwanzaa Kinara to be on display in celebration of Kwanzaa, December 26 to January 1.  Councilmember Kendra Brooks (at-large) introduced this first official display by the City of Philadelphia.  The sculpture is an original piece of artwork created by Maisha Sullivan-Ongoza of the Kwanzaa Cooperative.