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Nadler Pushes For Kushner Suspension Of Security Clearance

Congressman Jerry Nadler (D-Western Brooklyn, Manhattan) last week joined several Democratic House members in writing to the FBI and Office of Personnel Management (OPM) requesting that they suspend White House Senior Advisor and President Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner’s security clearance.

The group of lawmakers including Reps. Don Beyer (D-VA), Ted Lieu (D-CA), Jamie Raskin (D-MD), Jerrold Nadler (D-NY), and Peter Welch (D-VT) cited in their letter Kushner’s admission that he “omitted” required details about meetings with foreign officials from an FBI questionnaire.

“We were concerned last week that a story with significant national security implications – White House Senior Adviser Jared Kushner’s ‘omission’ of meetings with foreign government officials – did not receive the scrutiny it deserved. Mr. Kushner must divulge the details of his meetings with foreign officials and explain why he did not reveal them when he was clearly required by to do so by law,” the lawmakers wrote.

“The fact that Kushner is President Trump’s son-in-law does not place him above the law. Anyone else would face severe discipline for failing to disclose meetings with foreign officials, a material omission which potentially amounts to a criminal offense.

“Furthermore, background checks for security clearances are in large part assessments of the judgment of the person being evaluated. Mr. Kushner signed a legal document that withheld details about significant meetings with foreign officials, including meetings with allies and emissaries of Vladimir Putin. This action throws Mr. Kushner’s judgment into serious question and doubt.

“We are gravely concerned about the larger context within which this omission occurred. Mr. Kushner’s lack of candor about meetings with Russian officials appears to be part of a larger pattern of dissembling and deception on Russian contacts from the Trump team, and we believe the public deserves the truth about why these meetings took place and what they mean for U.S. foreign policy.”

DeVos Civil Rights Office Pick Once Claimed Discrimination for Being White: Report – NBC News

by Safia Samee Ali

Department of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has appointed as the acting head of the department’s Office for Civil Rights a woman who once complained of discrimination for being white. The appointment has civil rights advocates leery of the choice.

Attorney Candice Jackson, who was announced as the deputy assistant secretary in the Office for Civil Rights on Wednesday, spoke out about being discriminated against for being white as a college student, according to a report by ProPublica.

READ MORE: Source: DeVos Civil Rights Office Pick Once Claimed Discrimination for Being White: Report – NBC News

NYC’s Homeless Shelters: What Happened to “Fair Share”

By Akosua K. Albritton

“Un-‘Fair’ and against the law!” This was the message of a rally of Crown Heights residents at the Bed-Stuy Restoration Plaza recently.   For the residents, the unequal bed counts in the communities tell an open tale of inequality: Crown Heights has 1,779; Bed-Stuy 1,527 and Park Slope has 331 while Bensonhurst, Bay Ridge and Borough Park all host zero beds for the homeless.

Many residents of Brooklyn Community Board #8, with 17 shelters, felt that a shelter for homeless seniors, due to open at 1173 Bergen Street, was another blow to their community. The residents came together as petitioners Rebirth of Bergen Street Block Association, Dean Street Block Association and 28 individuals against the NYC Department of Homeless Services, CORE SERVICES GROUP, INC., and CSN, LP (the owners of 1173 Bergen Street) to petition the Kings County Supreme Court to issue a temporary restraining order “To stay the City from opening a 104-bed men’s shelter.” The petitioners’ grounds were that “their neighborhood is already overburdened and saturated with homeless shelters and that DHS failed to conduct a Fair Share review in accordance with the Fair Share Criteria.” Justice Paul Wooten issued the order on March 24, 2017 and Justice Levine extended the order on March 28, 2017, “Until the Court has had an opportunity to review the Fair Share Analysis (“Analysis”) submitted by the respondent City of New York (“City”) as well as forthcoming legal papers.”

From a study of ACRIS, 1173 Bergen Street (Block 1214-Lot 76) has passed through several hands since 2006. Previous owners include 720 Livonia Ave. Realty Corp., Bergen LLC, City of NY, Crown Heights North Historic District, Metro Co. and, since November 20, 2014, the property was owned by CSN Partners LP. However, shortly after CSN Partners LP purchased it, the business got involved in flipping the property between itself and 1802304 Alberta, Ltd., Arnav Industries, Inc. and Profit Sharing Plan & Trust.

While the two Kings County Supreme Court Justices see the validity of completing the Fair Share Analysis, other quarters believe the community folks are callous to homeless people’s plight. After all, a shelter designated for seniors would be a relief to those aged 60 years or more. Male adult shelters can be hard for 18-22-year-olds to be in and the same is true for the elderly in terms of verbal abuse and physical threats of harm.

Adem Bunkeddeko, a North Crown Heights resident and Brooklyn Community Board 8 member, views the shelter controversy within the context of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s February 28, 2017 announcement of “the City Plan” for homeless services. The mayor intends to “open 90 shelters, while cutting the number of facilities by 45%; eliminating ‘cluster’ apartments by 2021; and stop using commercial hotels by 2023.” Critics of the plan contend it requires more details for its feasibility.

What cannot be disregarded is the cost to New York in keeping the homeless in commercial hotels. NYC Comptroller Scott Stringer issued DHS Commercial Hotel Summary, December 14, 2016 and DHS Commercial Hotel Update, April 17, 2017. The “Update reveals:

  • Nearly 347,000 rooms were booked between November 1, 2016 and February 28, 2017
  • The cost for that period was $65.2 million.

“I strongly believe we need to build shelters. There are folks who need dedicated shelters to stabilize their lives. I view it as a social justice issue. On the other hand, Crown Heights is overloaded. I’m not sure whether Crown Heights is shouldering more than its fair share,” says Adem Bunkeddeko, but regarding the City Plan he says, “The proposal, as currently presented, does not seem fair or transparent. There are 90 proposed shelters but the public has been informed about only five of them—three are in the Crown Heights area. One of the three is in operation in Prospect Heights. Without a full understanding of all 90 sites, it is unfair to go forward with the plan. The public needs to see the whole picture.”

It is a fact that Bronx, Brooklyn and Manhattan bear the load of homeless shelters. Queens and Staten Island get off lightly. Former NYC Comptroller John Liu issuedDown and Out: How New York City Places Its Homeless Shelters” in May 2013. This report revealed: the Bronx had 148 homeless shelters, Brooklyn had 127, Manhattan had 74, Queens had 15 and Staten Island had 6.

It is these concentrations of homeless shelters and services that disturb New Yorkers that reside in these community boards. The public questions how does the application of the eight Fair Share Criteria result in, for example, Brooklyn Community Board #3 having 25 shelters and #8 having 17 shelters but Brooklyn Community Boards #10 and #12 do not have shelters? In 2013, New York City had a homeless population of 51,000. By 2016, the population had grown to 60,000 homeless people. Is it time for the Fair Share Criteria to be revised? The last revision occurred in 1998 during Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s administration.

Herkimer Street Apartments to Go Dark: Losing Line-of-Sight and Light

Tenants of 400 Herkimer Street held a rally this past Saturday, to protest developer Candor Capital new building, being right up against 400 Herkimer Street, is taking out 18 bedroom, kitchen and bathroom windows affecting 12 apartments.  Neither the building manager at 400 Herkimer, Mr. Delwar Hussain of Surat Realty or Mr. Shlomo Sinay of Candor Capital returned messages for comment.

Mawuli Hormeku Challenges Inez Barron for East New York City Council Seat

By Kings County Politics

Calling for a new direction in self-empowerment, Mawuli Hormeku today announced he will challenge City Councilwoman Inez Barron (D-East New York, Canarsie, East Flatbush, Brownsville) in the upcoming 42nd District City Council Democratic Primary.

City Council Member Inez Barron

City Council Member Inez Barron

Inez Barron is the former Assembly member representing East New York, and is wife to former City Councilman Charles Barron. The spouses switched seats in 2013 after Charles Barron was term-limited out of office.

In going against the Barron juggernaut, which has controlled politics in the East New York area for close to 20 years, Hormeku said he respects the Barrons for their passion, but that change now is desperately needed to stem the tide of encroaching gentrification.

“Under the guise of black nationalism, the Barrons have been promoting poverty through social engineering and panhandling from the government instead of developing social entrepreneurship and ownership,” said Hormeku.

“If we don’t find ways to own the neighborhood we will be displaced, and the only way to that is through education and economics,” said Hormeku. “We have to develop the mind-set that we can’t depend on the government and we have to learn to handle responsibility ourselves. We can’t worry about how the Trump Administration will affect our community through budget cuts. We need leaders to create new revenue streams so we can do for ourselves.”

Mawuli Hormeku

Mawuli Hormeku

Hormeku draws inspiration from his father, Kofi Hormeku, who brought his young family from Ghana, West Africa and raised them in Brownsville, where he was one of the original owners of a Nehemiah Home, an early 1980s cooperative effort between local churches, community organizers and the city to build affordable single- and two-family brick town house homes in Brownsville, East New York and Spring Creek (the Starrett City area).

In 1994, the elder Hormeku founded Nehemiah Economic Development, Inc. (NED), 1168 Lenox Road, which promotes social entrepreneurship via ownership. Meanwhile, Mawuli grew up in the Nehemiah Homes and went on to graduate from Brooklyn Tech, before earning both a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and Master’s of Education from Boston College, and a Master’s in Educational Policy and Social Analysis from Columbia University.

He then traveled the world extensively to research and lecture on the topics of education and pedagogy before returning to Ocean Hill-Brownsville and East New York to become NED’s executive director.

As part of this effort, NED established The Kofi Hormeku Scholarship, a 10-year commitment of $50,000 to the Fund for Public Housing via a collaboration with CUNY, students residing in NYCHA housing in Ocean Hill-Brownsville and East New York. The organization also awards $20,000 to graduating high school seniors attending a four-year college in the fall who live in the areas of Ocean Hill-Brownsville and East New York.

Hormeku said rather than look to the government for help, the greater communities of East New York and Brownsville have to begin “legacy building.”

“We have to start making plans for our children for years to come,” he said. “Right now, people are just passing down memories. We have to change our mind-set through vocational, educational and economic self-empowerment.”

The City Council Primary is slated for Tuesday, Sept. 12.