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Students Learn the Sky is the Limit inP.S. 5 Hands-on Learning and Career Exploration Program

By Yvette Moore
Hands-on learning and career exploration is the pedagogic theme at Bed-Stuy’s P.S. 5, the Dr. Ronald E. McNair Elementary School. Currently the school offers music—woodwinds, violins, keyboards, African drumming— a dual language French program; STEM enrichment classes including coding, computer lab, virtual reality creation; visual arts, a student-run bookstore and a student-run restaurant, swimming, cooking, and more. Students have built and launched a rowboat.


The school also has a drone program, an aviation program, and its newest initiative, a global gardening network to teach student urban farmers how to grow their own food using AI and more.
Building community partnerships is how school principal Dr. Lena Gates makes all this happen. Several of the partners came to the school for the recent visit by Congressman Hakeem Jeffries.


Gregory Jackson of Alpha Drones, one of those partners, described what Dr. Gates is doing at P.S. 5 this way:
“Growing up when I was in school, we had home economics. I learned how to sew. I learned how to cook. I learned how to do wood shop. Some schools had mechanics, and they learned how to take care of cars. Somewhere down the line, all of that phased out. What you’re doing here is home economics 2.0. Because the world has changed.”


Alpha Drones volunteers teach students to operate drones, which are now used commercially in scores of industries from farming and agriculture to eco-friendly skyscraper cleaning, to film and cinematography, to public safety, to entertainment, and more.


“I met Ms. Gates in 2022, and her vision is just amazing,” said Capt. Paul M. Pierre, a pilot with American Airlines, a key partner in the school’s aviation program. “We came. The pilots came. We painted the classroom, and step by step, we have what you’ve seen today.”


The school’s aviation room has several flight simulators, drones, and pictures of the students visiting American Airlines facilities at LaGuardia Airport. Students come to the center for instruction and practice twice a week and sometimes during the school’s afterschool program.
Juan Hinojosa, managing director of global government affairs for American Airlines, said the aviation field needs the new generation of workers the school is helping to create.


“One of the things we care about in American Airlines is the aviation workforce. There have been shortages that have been impactful in the industry,” he said. “We need more pilots, and we need more mechanics. You don’t have enough pilots, and you don’t have enough mechanics; you can’t fly the aircraft. So, we talk a lot about inspiring folks to pursue a job in aviation by introducing it to them at an early age. What this school is doing has multiple layers of benefits because, hopefully, some of these students are going to want to become a pilot or a mechanic.”


Capt. Pierre explained that the pilot shortage is largely due to the 60-year-old mandatory retirement age. Many pilots come into the profession from the military. A significant number become pilots through civilian channels, but that route is very expensive, he said.


Dr. Gates said introducing children to a wide variety of career options at an early age is essential to help overcome such obstacles and free them to dream before they learn to fear.
“Our goal is to get into these industries,” Dr. Gates said. “We want to make sure our children have all the opportunities that they need to make their choices. There’s nothing they can’t do. You can be a doctor or a lawyer, and you can also be a plane pilot or a drone pilot.”
Or they can be urban farmers.


The students were wrapping up a Zoom call comparing notes with fellow student gardeners in Kenya through the One Planet Education Network, the day the Congressman visited. One Planet Education Network connects students from Kenya, Jamaica, Liberia, Namibia, and the United States as they learn cutting-edge technology to get more productive yields and healthier food on a planet facing impactful climate changes.


After the call, students escorted the visiting delegation to their “smart” outdoor school garden.
“We have peppers and tomatoes,” one second grader said.
They excitedly spoke over one another to explain that moisture sensor meters in the some of the garden plots send data to their class phones and computers to let them know when plants need water or other supplements. In their other garden plots, the students explained, they used regenerative gardening techniques that focuses on using organic material to enrich soil and address pests without harmful chemicals. The children pointed out the straw spread over their plots as an example of the technique.


“This makes our vegetables grow super big and healthy,” said another second grader.
Dr. Gates said it’s important to strengthen and expand these programs at P.S. 5.
“The only way we can fund these programs [through the Department of Education] is based on ‘funding availability.’ So, this is where we reach out to our community to help us be able to fund these programs,” Dr. Gates said. “Everyone has seen here today what these programs can do for our children.”


Yvette Moore is a YA writer and grandmother living in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. She is the author of novels Freedom Songs and its sequel Just Sketching, both available on Amazon.

Juneteenth Goes Tech at BPL

All Photos Courtesy of: Juneteenth Tech™

By Jeffery Kazembe Batts
On Saturday, June 24th, hundreds of mostly young and middle-aged Black people gathered at the Stevan Dweck Cultural Center inside the Brooklyn Central Library for the second “Juneteenth TechNYC.”

This year, led by the creator Etophia “Biz Girl” Lane, the “Level Day 2025” conference had the theme “Future Forward.” During panel discussions, attendees were empowered with information from institution builders such as Cordeiro Brown, Yvonne Elosiebo-Oguntolo, TeLisa Daughtry, and J. Alexander Martin, among others.


After the panel discussions and a complimentary lunch, breakout rooms were available. These smaller sessions allowed people to network and focus on business creation, artificial intelligence, and other emerging technologies. At the end of the five-hour conference that celebrated New York Black Tech makers, many participants expressed a new determination to use technology to better themselves, the Black community, and the world.

Breathing Techniques 101

By London Little

1.
(Breathe)
Why is it that my heart is so heavy.
Why is it that I spend so much time (gasp) twisting my mind (gasp), my thoughts (gasp), my heart.
(Gasp)
Breathe.
Breathing is hard,
The air consuming my lungs
And I know you’re probably thinking, “London, that’s what’s supposed to happen.”
Well, my mind must not be able to comprehend that logic because I take it as a threat.
An attack on my life.
A will to take me out, anyway it can.
I’m sure it’s not a foreign thought.
I’m sure when we are shot and killed our people feel the air.
Blood.
Right, they feel the blood rushing, draining.
The only air that is filling their lungs is the type they can’t grasp onto.

London
Little

2.
Breathe. (breath)
Since we are on the topic let’s talk on the constant discrimination of our people.
Nah, bigger than that, let’s go over names:
Daunte Wright
Andre Hill
Manuel Ellis
George Floyd
Breonna Tayler
Atatiana Jefferson
Aura Rosser
Stephon Clark
Botham Jean
Philando Castile
The list goes on.

So many of our people suffering from the dehumanizing treatment by those who are supposed to be here to protect us.
Those same acts draw back decades even though they might look a little different.
Those same acts are the reason families are torn apart.
Leaving another mother without a daughter or son.
Leaving another young Black boy not growing past the age of 21.
I’ve heard what happens to kids that look like me.
You thought this was just adults?
Nah, they target our kids too.
Taking us out left and right, making sure we can’t put up a fight.
My sources say they track killings all the way back to 2013, there’s more than that.
It makes me want to scream
(Scream)

175 fatalities of people younger than 18.
You know what that means.
Another story on 12 o’clock news.
Another protest.
Another family without their child.
When is it going to be enough.
How long will they keep breaking our families, our communities, our minds.
(Breathe)

3.
They try and steal our power, our thunder.
They want to be like us so bad but would never want to be us.
My ancestors who live through me, they inform me of how they were treated.
I’ve heard of gunshots that fire through little Black kids’ bodies.
I’ve heard how their bodies drop down on the concrete, I can see it now.
They use our blood to paint over their sins
They dissect and pick apart our brain stripping away pieces, hiding them in a locked box.
They say our lives are insignificant and not to be given a second thought,
That when we are murdered in the street, it is justified by the twisted sense of — “I thought he had a weapon” “He was reaching” “I was scared for my life.”
Phrases used to justify their actions.

My heart aches for every person they strip life from.
When I breathe, I will think of them.
Of their lost breath.
Of their lost time.
Let us breathe.

1..
2..
3…………….
Oh, wait.
I forgot.
I can’t breathe.

(London Little, 15)

June Swoon

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By Eddie Castro
For the most part, this season, baseball in New York has been on top. Both the Yankees and the Mets came out of the gates as hot as the weekly heatwave, with both teams being atop their respective divisions. The Yankees are looking to return to the Fall Classic (World Series) for a second consecutive year, while the Mets look to take one more step towards the World Series. What the past two weeks have taught us all is that it is a long season, and all teams will hit a wall throughout the course of the 162-game campaign.


For the Mets, it’s been a combination of terrible pitching and inconsistent at-bats. As we go to press, the Mets have lost nine of their last 10 games. In those 10 games, they have scored a total of just 19 runs. Before this 10-game stretch, the Mets were not only atop the National League East division by 5 ½ games, but were the top team in all of the National League. In a recent interview Mets Manager Carlos Mendoza was asked about the team’s struggles, he said “We are relying so much on our top guys.

Once you get past the fourth of fifth batter, we’re having a hard time creating opportunities, creating chances for us and it’s hard to score like that”. The numbers of late, backup Mendoza’s statement. In 12 of the last 13 games, the Mets have scored 5 runs or less. During that stretch, hitters five through nine have hit for a combined average of .183, which is the worst in the majors.


It’s pretty much the same issue the Bronx Bombers have been going through lately. The team recently snapped a six-game losing streak in which they went 29 innings without scoring a run. Slugger Aaron Judge has also been in a bit of a hitting slump with his batting average dropping from .390 before the recent Red Sox series to the mid-350s, which is still really incredible. The Achilles heel with Judge’s performance is that when he doesn’t hit, neither does the rest of the lineup. Another factor is the team’s pitching.

Decimated by injuries all year long, the team continues to search for pitching depth to replace significant losses such as Gerrit Cole and Luis Gil. The Yankees still sit at first place in the American League East by two games; however, division teams such as the Rays, Red Sox, and Orioles have gained some ground within the last 2 weeks. It is still early for both New York teams to turn it around, as both clubs are expected to not only make a few calls come the trade deadline, but are also expected to get a few key players back from injury.

We are still a month away from the halfway point of the season with a lot of good baseball ahead for both New York teams. Hopefully, this June Slump turns into a sizzling July for both the Yanks and Mets.


Sports Notes: (Basketball) The NBA draft resumes tonight with day No.2. With powerhouse teams like Milwaukee, Boston, and Indiana due to miss top players for the upcoming season, how will the Knicks and Nets capitalize on building a championship contender in the East?

Developer Missed Atlantic Yards Affordable Housing Deadline, EDC Established New Timeline

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By Mary Alice Miller
Norman Oder’s skepticism long foreshadowed the possibility that the deadline for more than 800 affordable housing units and the platform on which the apartment buildings would be built would not be met. Oder’s watchdog blog, AtlanticYardsReport, has painstakingly chronicled the entire saga from the beginning when the project was announced in 2003.


Back in 2019, Oder blogged that “May 31, 2025 is the deadline for the required 2,250 affordable housing units, with potentially onerous $2,000/month fines per missing unit facing developer Greenland Forest City Partners. Two towers starting this year and likely next year should include 25% to 30% affordable apartments, leaving a gap of some 900 units to be built.”


And later that year, Oder wrote “The year 2022 is a key year in the Atlantic Yards/Pacific Park timetable, as I wrote last month, because 6/15/22–the last date to start a building under the current Affordable New York tax-incentive program–could be a deadline to start any building contemplated to meet the 5/31/25 deadline for the project’s affordable housing.”


That 2022 deadline was amended due to the settlement of a 2014 lawsuit brought by BrooklynSpeaks, a coalition led by the Fifth Avenue Committee and the Prospect Heights Neighborhood Council (PHNDC). BrooklynSpeaks stepped into the void left by the demise of Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn (DDDB).


(DDDB disbanded when its leader, Daniel Goldstein, settled with New York State for $3 million to vacate his apartment in a timely manner to allow the sale of the Brooklyn Nets to Russian Oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov. Goldstein was the last holdout who filed numerous lawsuits against Atlantic Yards and the eminent domain taking of his property.)


The Brooklyn Speaks settlement included a “new 2025 deadline for the project’s 2,250 units of affordable housing, with $2,000/month penalties for each unit not delivered,” according to a 2020 blog from Oder. The new deadline to start the platform over Vanderbilt Yard, MTA’s working railyard, was May 12, 2025.


Oder wrote in 2010, “When the project’s Development Agreement first surfaced, the section regarding the project’s platform stated that the developer must begin construction of the platform over the railyard no later than the 15th anniversary of the Effective Date.”


He explained, “That deadline was one of several that indicated that the project likely would not, as often projected, be completed in ten years but rather could take 25 years, until 2035.”
Other factors that impacted the development of affordable housing at Atlantic Yards (rebranded Pacific Park Brooklyn in 2014) included COVID, uncertainty regarding state tax abatements, and Shanghai-based Greenland Holdings that bought out the majority share from Forest City Ratner, then faced debt default woes, both in China and in the United States.


At issue is 876/7 affordable housing units yet to be built on Atlantic Avenue east of Barclays arena. Despite the transfer of ownership to Greenland, the affordable housing commitment remained.


According to a statement from BrooklynSpeaks, “When the Atlantic Yards project was announced in December 2003, its 2,250 promised affordable apartments were seen as a solution to a burgeoning housing crisis in Brooklyn. By building platforms over rail yards along Atlantic Avenue, the project would remove blight and connect neighborhoods by creating new open space and high rise apartment towers.

Twenty years later, the platforms haven’t been started, and neither have the remaining 877 affordable apartments. The $2,000 per month charge for each unfinished apartment agreed upon in the 2014 settlement means ESD must collect $1,754,000 each month from developer Greenland USA beginning in June. The funds are to be used by the City of New York to create and preserve affordable housing in the neighborhoods surrounding the project.


Empire State Development Corporation is reviewing a new developer application. ESDC is hesitant to impose millions of dollars in penalties that they say would make it harder to build housing at Atlantic Yards.


ESD has established a new project timeline. The current owners of the Atlantic Yards location have until August to transfer the development rights to a new company. Apparently, a new real estate firm is involved, and the state said that it is reviewing the application for a new developer.


Under this new timeline, they have until August to transfer the development rights. A new community planning process is scheduled to commence by December.
“ESD has allowed the Atlantic Yards developers to delay the costliest parts of the project – deeply affordable apartments and platforms over the rail yards – until the last possible moment,” said Michelle de la Uz, Executive Director of the Fifth Avenue Committee.

“In the meantime, rising housing costs have pushed out thousands of low-income households from the surrounding neighborhoods. The Governor has a responsibility to ensure her agency fulfills its commitment to address the housing crisis in Brooklyn.”


“The 2014 settlement we reached with ESD does not allow the agency to rewrite its terms without our agreement,” said Danae Oratowski, Chair of the Prospect Heights Neighborhood Development Council. “How can the public possibly have any confidence in a new plan if Governor Hochul continues to let Atlantic Yards slide on its commitments?”


Most of the already built housing at Atlantic Yards serves middle-income people making 80-120% of the Area Median Income, people making six figures. Affordable housing advocates want even deeper affordability so that truly low-income or lower-middle-income people can afford to live there.