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New York City and the Port Authority Want Your Business

 

By Margo McKenzie

Mayor de Blasio wants the city to clink glasses and offer a toast to his administration; it helped over 100 Women and Minority Business Enterprises(W/MBE) win $93 million dollars in contracts. The mayor is now steps closer to achieving his ten-year plan of 16 billion dollars in contracts with W/MBEs.

His predecessor initiated the program in 2005, and Mayor de Blasio augmented it. So, is a celebration in order? Let’s take a look at the details found on a NYC Web site.

The data below, from the Checkbook NYC Web site, shows NYC contract distribution among M/WBEs:

Minority or Women Business Enterprises Total Amount of City Contracts Percentage of total contracts
Asian-American $535.27 million 30%
Black American $51.02 million 0.3%
Women $400.42 million 2.3%
Hispanic $111.42 million .6 %

 

 

Total M/WBEs $1.10 billion 6.2%
Total Non- M/WBE contracts $16.60 billion 93.8%

(www.checkbooknyc.com)

Women and minority business owners secured slightly over 1 billion dollars in city contracts, providing a variety of services for a wide array of departments run by the city. These businesses run the gamut: electric, construction, computer networking, painting, building maintenance, graphics, cleaning and more. If a company wants to sell its business services to the city, the door is wide open.

By 2021, the mayor’s goal is that M/WBEs comprise 30% of the distribution pie, and to increase these partnerships his administration has established a variety of training programs to help companies bid and win contracts. Of the broad categories of the M/WBEs listed in the chart above, Asian-Americans were recipients of contracts with the highest value followed by Hispanics; Black Americans won the least amount.

Joslin Johnson, founder and CEO of Where to Get It Services, LLC, located in Brooklyn, credits the New York City M/WBE program for her current contract with the city’s Build It Back Program to restore homes destroyed by Hurricane Sandy. During a phone conversation, she explained that years of preparation equipped her for the challenges she encounters maintaining her own business and qualifying for a city contract. She wasn’t surprised to learn that so few Black Americans benefited from the program. “You need a godfather, somebody with deep pockets to help you over the hurdles.” She was able to get a line of credit when her money ran short.

Joslin Johnson, Founder and CEO of Where to Get It Services, LLC

Johnson added that her previous experience as project manager and her two master’s degrees in administration and project management, respectively, provided a strong foundation. Ultimately, she admitted “entrepreneurship is in my DNA.” Her mother, now deceased, ran a variety shop. “I learned to be a risk-taker; a $300,000 contract should be completed within schedule and within budget, but there’s so much training and opportunity out there,” [to help that happen], she said. Her participation in the NYC Construction Mentorship and Bonding programs offered by NYC Small Business Services, an MBA-type training and education experience has provided some of the structure needed to get over the difficult hurdles.

Archie Cauley, co-owner of Cauley Coach, Inc. in Queens, was equally baffled by the low representation of Black businesses participating in the citywide program. He and his wife Patricia have owned their charter bus service business for over thirty-two years. He has scaled down his regular charter bus service to focus more on using his buses to shuttle construction workers from their parking site to their work site. In the past that work site was JFK.   In two months, he is hoping to provide bus service for 400  workers at Laguardia Airport.

 

The Port Authority conducted an information session to inform businesses about the $10 billion-dollar project at La Guardia Airport. “The session was well-attended. I had a front-row seat. At the end of the session, I took a quick scan of the audience. Maybe twenty-five of us were there out of approximately 200 people.”

Archie and Patricia Cauley, Cauley Coach Line

Cauley emphasized businesses need “ready access” to assistance. He used the term “liaison” and “contact person,” and “intermediary” during his phone conversation. These connections provide needed support for his small businesses. His company is listed among a digital, yellow page-type list of M/WBE firms ready to do business with the city. Listing does not guarantee a contract. Thousands of other businesses are also listed.

The Port Authority, with whom Cauley also has M/WBE status, helped to establish the Regional Alliance for Small Contractors(RASC), which Cauley has an easier time navigating. “I can call them from time to time and ask if there are any agencies that could use my services. They keep businesses abreast of opportunities.”

In an attempt to make up for the traditional lack of opportunity for businesses owned by minorities and women to sell their services, NYC and RASC, respectively, have developed extensive programs to train and support the development of businesses and training for procurement of contracts.

For anyone with a business or an idea for a business, NYC and the Port Authority can potentially serve as counselor and customer. Go to www.nyc.govsbs and www.regional-alliance.org to find out how so more can participate in de Blasio’s celebration.

Margo McKenzie writes about issues which shine light and hope (Article updated August 14, 2017

 

 

 

THE ART of the REAL : A fearless former First Daughter rises…as Trump heirs reportedly err

Chelsea Clinton politely shuts down Trump’s G-20 tweet

As reported on ABC News:

After President Donald Trump responded to criticism of his daughter Ivanka Trump sitting in on a meeting at last week’s G-20 Summit by tweeting about Hillary and Chelsea Clinton, the former First Daughter tweeted a reply of her own on Twitter Monday morning.

President Trump wrote that if Chelsea Clinton had been “asked to hold the seat for her mother, as her mother gave our country away, the Fake News would say CHELSEA FOR PRES!” The president was referring to the attention given to Ivanka Trump’s presence alongside G-20 leaders when she occupied his seat after he left for bilateral meetings.

In response, Chelsea Clinton tweeted, “It would never have occurred to my mother or my father to ask me,” adding, “Were you giving our country away? Hoping not.”

While members of a leader’s delegation are occasionally called upon to sit in during such summits if the leader must be elsewhere, Ivanka Trump’s presence amplified the ongoing criticism by some of the role of the president’s family members in his administration. Both Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, serve the president as unpaid employees as an adviser and senior adviser, respectively.

Last week, a White House official told ABC News, “Ivanka was sitting in the back and then briefly joined the main table when the president had to step out and the president of the World Bank started talking as the topic involved areas such as African development, areas that will benefit from the facility just announced by the World Bank.”

Chelsea Clinton received her doctorate from Oxford University last Saturday.                                    ________________________________________________________________

Trump defends ‘innocent’ son Donald, Jr. over Russia meeting

Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump, Jr.

According to the BBC:

Donald Trump has defended his son over a meeting with a Russian lawyer, Natalia Veselnitskaya, during his presidential campaign, calling him “open, transparent and innocent”.

He tweeted hours after Donald Trump, Jr. spoke to Fox News about the meeting he was told would offer Kremlin-linked information about Hillary Clinton.

Critics accuse Mr. Trump, Jr. of intent to collude with the Russians, and believe he may have broken federal laws.

Mr. Trump, Jr. told Fox News the meeting was “such a nothing”.

However, he accepted he should have handled it differently.

Earlier in the day, Mr. Trump, Jr. had released the e-mail exchange that brought about the meeting after being informed the New York Times was about to publish it.

US officials are investigating alleged Russian meddling in the US election.

Since he was elected, President Trump has been dogged by allegations that Russia tried to sabotage Mrs. Clinton’s campaign.

He has denied any knowledge of this and Russia has also repeatedly denied interfering.

Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump, Jr.

 

(Compiled by BG)

The Legacy of Lynching: Confronting Racial Terror in America, July 26 through September 3

Exhibition features groundbreaking research on racial terror and its effect on the nation today

Bryon Stevenson is the founder and Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama

The Brooklyn Museum is proud to join forces with the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), headed by acclaimed public interest lawyer and MacArthur Foundation “Genius” recipient Bryan Stevenson, and Google to present a timely exhibition: The Legacy of Lynching: Confronting Racial Terror in America. On view from July 26 through September 3, the exhibition presents EJI’s groundbreaking research on the history of racial violence in the United States and its continuing impact on our nation to this day.

 

 

The exhibition will include video stories featuring descendants of lynching victims, a short documentary, photographs, an interactive map presenting EJI’s research, and informational videos featuring Bryan Stevenson. The content on display in the museum can also be viewed on http://lynchinginamerica.eji.org, an interactive platform that EJI recently launched with support from Google that digitizes their research on the more than four thousand racial terror lynchings of African-Americans between 1877 and 1950. This work underscores the profound effects of the racial terror committed against Black people and Black communities, which continue to shape our nation today.

Shirah Dedman, Phoebe Dedman, and Luz Myles visiting Shreveport, Louisiana, where in 1912 their relative Thomas Miles, Sr., was lynched. 2017. (Photo: Rog Walker and Bee Walker for Equal Justice Initiative)

To deepen the conversation, a team of Brooklyn Museum curators selected more than a dozen artworks from its collections by African-American artists whose practices respond to racism in the United States in several forms. Artists include Sanford Biggers, Mark Bradford, Elizabeth Catlett, Melvin Edwards, Theaster Gates, Rashid Johnson, Titus Kaphar, Jacob Lawrence, Glenn Ligon and Kara Walker.

The exhibition also presents materials from the Museum Library and Archives on the institution’s support for efforts against lynching. They include a 1935 pledge by Museum Director Philip N. Youtz supporting the NAACP’s anti-lynching art exhibition as well as documents from a benefit art auction and exhibition for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund that the museum hosted in 1963. More recently, the museum presented Bryan Stevenson in a conversation with death row exoneree Anthony Ray Hinton in 2016 as part of the ongoing program, “States of Denial: The Illegal Incarceration of Women, Children and People of Culture”, organized by Elizabeth A. Sackler and the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art at the Brooklyn Museum. The museum has also held numerous exhibitions on related topics including Witness: Art and Civil Rights in the SixtiesAgitprop! and Sanford Biggers, among others, including We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women, 1965-85, currently on view.

The Legacy of Lynching: Confronting Racial Terror in America will include a special public program featuring Bryan Stevenson, artists Glenn Ligon and Sanford Biggers, Elizabeth Alexander, poet and Director of Creativity and Free Expression, Ford Foundation on Tuesday, July 25 at 7 pm. Admission is $25.

By highlighting the historical impact of systemic racism in our country, the exhibition is conceived to raise awareness for EJI’s forthcoming Memorial to Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama. Opening in 2018, the memorial will be the country’s first-ever national monument to commemorate the more than four thousand black men, women and children who were lynched and murdered between 1877 and 1950. EJI also plans to open an accompanying racial justice museum that will trace a direct line between slavery and mass incarceration.

To approach this topic respectfully, the exhibition focuses on personal stories. It does not contain explicit photos. In order to appropriately acknowledge the subject of racial violence with the utmost care and sensitivity, the museum will provide a space outside the gallery for visitors to explore reading material and to reflect.

“Our nation’s history of racial injustice casts a shadow across the American landscape. This shadow cannot be lifted until we shine the light of truth on the destructive violence that shaped our nation, traumatized people of color and compromised our commitment to the rule of law and equal justice,” said EJI Executive Director Bryan Stevenson. “We all must engage this history more honestly.”

Bryan Stevenson continues, “Art has always been a powerful tool in getting a society to think more honestly about human rights and human dignity. Our great artists have often found critically important ways to speak truthfully about history and the human condition. It’s energizing to take on a difficult topic like racial terrorism surrounded by the bold insights of brilliant African-American artists”.

Anne Pasternak, the Brooklyn Museum’s Shelby White and Leon Levy, Executive Director, states, “When Bryan Stevenson and Google approached us in late May to co-produce this exhibition, we didn’t hesitate. Throughout its nearly two-hundred-year history, the Brooklyn Museum has never shied away from difficult but important conversations— the very conversations our audiences are having every day— including racial exclusion and inequality. We are proud to work with the Equal Justice Initiative in their fight to confront America’s painful past in order to educate and heal, and to contribute to a more empathetic and just society”.

The Legacy of Lynching: Confronting Racial Terror has been assembled and organized by a team of Brooklyn Museum curators, librarian and archivist, educators, designers in collaboration with the Equal Justice Initiative and Google.

About Bryan Stevenson

Bryan Stevenson is the founder and Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama. Mr. Stevenson is a widely acclaimed public interest lawyer who has dedicated his career to helping the poor, the incarcerated and the condemned. Under his leadership, EJI has won major legal challenges eliminating excessive and unfair sentencing, exonerating innocent death row prisoners, confronting abuse of the incarcerated and the mentally ill and aiding children prosecuted as adults. Mr. Stevenson has successfully argued several cases in the United States Supreme Court and recently won an historic ruling that mandatory life-without-parole sentences for all children 17 or younger are unconstitutional. Mr. Stevenson and his staff have won reversals, relief or release for over 130 wrongly condemned prisoners on death row. Mr. Stevenson has initiated major new antipoverty and antidiscrimination efforts that challenge the legacy of racial inequality in America, including major projects to educate communities about slavery, lynching and racial segregation. Mr. Stevenson is also a Professor of Law at the New York University School of Law.

Mr. Stevenson’s work fighting poverty and challenging racial discrimination in the criminal justice system has won him numerous awards including the prestigious MacArthur Foundation “Genius” Prize, the National Medal of Liberty from the American Civil Liberties Union after he was nominated by United States Supreme Court Justice John Stevens, the Public Interest Lawyer of the Year by the National Association of Public Interest Lawyers and the Olaf Palme Prize in Stockholm, Sweden for international human rights, among others.

He is the recent author of the critically acclaimed New York Times best-seller Just Mercy, which was named by Time Magazine as one of the 10 Best Books of Nonfiction for 2014, and has been awarded several honors including a 2015 NAACP Image Award.

About the Equal Justice Initiative

Founded in 1989 by Bryan Stevenson, EJI is a private, 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that provides legal representation to people who have been illegally convicted, unfairly sentenced or abused in state jails and prisons. The Equal Justice Initiative is committed to ending mass incarceration and excessive punishment in the United States, to challenging racial and economic injustice, and to protecting basic human rights for the most vulnerable people in American society.

The Legacy of Lynching: Confronting Racial Terror in America is organized by the Brooklyn Museum and the Equal Justice Initiative with support from Google.

 

 

 

Police Officer Miosotis Familia, Killed in the Bronx, is Mourned Throughout the City

 

Excerpted from reporting by Jennifer Smith for Dailymail.com and the Associated Press

NYPD Officer Miosotis Familia, a 48-year-old single mother of three, was shot dead in The Bronx as she made notes in her patrol car in the early hours of July 5.  Her killer, paranoid schizophrenic Anthony Bonds, 34, was gunned down by other police officers as he tried to flee.

On Tuesday, thousands packed World Changers Church in The Bronx to lay Familia to rest.

Outside, scores more stood beneath screens and speakers which broadcast the service. When de Blasio appeared on-screen, some turned their backs on him in a show of protest over his decision to go to Hamburg last week in the immediate aftermath of the officer’s death, the New York Post reported.

Taking aim at protesters and the media for what he sees as too much criticism of officers, Police Commissioner James O’Neill said Familia’s death “should remind everybody that the civility of our city rests on a knife’s edge”.

“Where are the demonstrations for the single mom who cared for her elderly mother and three children?” he asked to a thunderous, extended standing ovation from an audience packed with officers.

“There is anger and sorrow, but why is there no outrage?”

De Blasio went on to call Familia a “beautiful New York City story” and said she “embodied the American spirit”.

“She embodied the American dream,” de Blasio said Tuesday, calling Familia a hero who “lived life the right way”.

 

 

 

Three Black Studies majors awarded Mellon Fellowships

Naajidah Correll, Bryan Guichardo and Nana Minder, from the Black Studies Program at The City College of New York, are 2017 Mellon Mays Fellows.

The Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program is the centerpiece of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundationís initiatives to increase diversity in the faculty ranks of institutions of higher learning.
Fellows have demonstrated academic ability and an aspiration to pursue a doctoral degree in selected humanities, social sciences and physical sciences. The fellowship provides fellows with structured programming; faculty mentoring; support for research activities; and repayment of undergraduate loans up to $10,000.

ìThe MMUF program is preparing me for my life goal of becoming a professor within the humanities, ì said Correll, who is also a Colin Powell Fellow and fellow of the Skadden, Arps Honors Program in Legal Studies. ìUpon graduating, it is my hope to join Stanfordís Modern Thought in Literature and Law JD/PhD program, which is directed by Mellon Mays Fellow and professor Bernadette Meyler.

2017 Mellon Fellows and their research topics are:
* Naajidah Correll (junior, literature, Black Studies minor) will be at the University of California, Los Angeles this summer for a six-week program to work on her research topic the resurgence of African spirituality in New York City, specifically among Black and Latin communities and seeing the correlation between certain political movements.
* Bryan Guichardo (junior, anthropology and Black Studies) is researching racial and ethnic identity through hair, within Afro-Latinx communities, with a focus on Dominican Studies.
* Nana Minder (junior, sociology and Black Studies, Women’s Studies minor) is researching Black girls in schools, particularly girls in the school-to-prison pipeline with high expulsion rates. She is doing research alongside Dr. Terri Watson at A. Phillip Randolph Campus High School and will be writing a book chapter with her on their work.

About The City College of New York
Since 1847, The City College of New York has provided low-cost, high-quality education for New Yorkers in a wide variety of disciplines. Today more than 16,000 students†pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees in eight professional schools and divisions, driven by significant funded research, creativity and scholarship. Now celebrating its 170th anniversary, CCNY is as diverse, dynamic and visionary as New York City itself.