Home Blog Page 910

Sustaining Bed-Stuy:

Recycling is catching on in Bedford-Stuyvesant, and The Hattie Carthan Community Gardens, led by urban farmer Yonnette Fleming, second from right, and The Magnolia Tree Earth Center, represented here by Nancy Wolf, far right, are leading the movement.   Last month, those community-based environmental groups partnered with the Lower East Side Ecology Center, to offer an electronic waste recycling event and 46 households participated on short notice.  “We were very pleased with the outcome,” said Christine Datz-Romero (second from left in photo), the Executive Director of the LES Ecology Center of  the Ecology Center’s  first conducting an activity in the neighborhood.  “We will be returning to spread the word about the importance of responsible disposal of outdated electronic equipment.”

“In addition to representatives from the households, we talked to many more community residents.  We view these events also as an opportunity to inform the community about the importance of e-waste recycling and making people aware that by January 1, 2015 it will be illegal for NYC residents to dispose of their old electronics in the regular trash.”

The Ecology Center has a permanent drop-off location in Gowanus at 469 President Street (corner of Nevins St.) where items can be dropped off, Tuesdays/Thursdays/ Fridays, 10a-5p; Wednesdays, 12p-7p; and Saturdays, 10a-4p.  The Brooklyn warehouse also offers affordable priced refurbished electronics.

Nancy Wolf (far right), founding board member of the Magnolia Tree Earth Center, informed us, “The following working and  non-working items are accepted: computers, monitors, printers, scanners, keyboards, mice, cables, TVs, VCRs, DVD players, phones, audio/visual equipment, video games, cell phones and PDAs.”

The Lower East Side Ecology Center, founded in 1987, was one of the first organizations to offer community-based recycling and composting programs in New York City.  Magnolia Tree Earth Center, founded 40 years ago, is the oldest community-based ecology-focused center in the Bedford Stuyvesant neighborhood. The Hattie Carthan Community Garden, named for the late neighborhood ecology leader and community activist, is served by more than 40 area farmers and gardeners.

NYC Councilman Al Vann (center and in photo with children), a former teacher and a staunch supporter of Bedford Stuyvesant ecology programs, is also credited with helping create community awareness of environmental issues through the years. Photo credit: Barry L. Mason

A Schedule Of Events For Parents, Teachers, Caregivers, Students

October 5

9:00a-12n- Common Core in Common Language – DOE Parent Academy 2013: Start the School Year Strong. Long Island University, 1 University Plaza.  Meet Kimberly Cline, LIU President and Dennis Walcott, Chancellor, NYC Department of Education.  Workshops collaborating with your school, Welcome to pre-K, Get Ready for College and Career,  Alternative Schools and Programs, Resources for English Language Learners, Special Education. To register: 212-374-4118 nycparentacademy.org.

8:30a-1p: Adelaide L. Sanford Institute Fall 2013 Parent Sessions on Common Core State Standards Awareness Sessions: Grades 3-12.  DO YOU KNOW WHAT YOUR CHILD’S TEST SCORES MEAN? Session Topic: Grades 3-8: Getting the most out of the ELA & Math Parent Reports.  For Grades 9-12: Preparing for the NEW Algebra & English Regents examinations. How can you help your child be successful in grades?  Bring your Parent ELA & Math Report to the sessions.  Register for this free session at ryoung4@ix.netcom.com, or contact your child’s school principal or parent coordinator. Breakfast provided.  Location: Boys & Girls H.S., 1700 Fulton St, BK.

October 8

6:30p-8:30p: PUBLIC TESTIMONY INVITED at JOINT LEGISLATIVE FORUM ON SCHOOL GOVERNANCE REFORM.  NYS Sen. Velmanette Montgomery, NYS Sen. Bill Perkins, NYS Assemblyman David Weprin respond to public’s call for improvement of NYC public education system. St. Francis College, Founders Hall (1st Fl.), 180 Remsen St.  RSVP: 718-643-6140. (See Story on this page)

October 9

9a-12n:  PARENT ACADEMY: PARENT-TEACHER CONFERENCE BOOT CAMP at Scholastic Publishing, 557 Broadway, Manhattan. Refreshments served 8:00a.m.- 9:00a.m. Meet Jesse Mojica, Executive Director, Division of Family and Community Engagement Workshops: Finding Resources in Your Community, Preparing for Parent-Teacher Conferences, Welcome to pre-K!, Collaborating with Your School and  Successful Behavioral Strategies for Children with Autism, District 75 – Maximizing Student Potential Through Tailored Support for Alternative Schools and Programs,  Resources for English Language Learners. To register: 212-374-4118, nycparentacademy.org.

6pm: COMMON CORE Workshop Series: What are the changes you should see in schools? Facilitator: Alonta Wrighton, Principal, P.S. 11, 419 Waverly Ave., BK – Please RSVP: Precious Jones-Walker, District Family Advocate, pjoneswalker@schools.nyc.gov or 718-636-3234.

 

October 11

6p-8p: PARENT ACADEMY: To Infinity and Beyond: College and Careers. Long Island University, 1 University Plaza, BK. To register: 212-374-4118, nycparentacademy.org.

 

October 16

6p:  COMMON CORE Workshop Series: Testing Procedures and Strategies. Facilitator: Karyn Nicholson, Principal, P.S. 45, 100 Clermont Ave., BK –Please RSVP: Precious Jones-Walker, District Family Advocate, pjoneswalker@schools.nyc.gov or 718-636-3234.

 

Ongoing

After-school HOMEWORK ASSISTANCE: P.S. 23, P.S. 54, P.S. 157, P.S. 256, P.S. 297, P.S. 380,

P.S. 636 and Success Academy – Bed-Stuy 1.

 

Saturdays: Ongoing thru November 9

11:00a- Ready, Set, Kindergarten! For children 3-5 years and participating parents or caregivers: stories, activities, exploration of literacy, science, math through music stories, crafts, play. Free materials available. www.brooklynpubliclibrary.or/first5years

 

Looking Ahead to 2014

NASA will be offering Internships for Students, Graduates, Teachers. There are a variety of valuable opportunities that begin with programs for high school students and go forward. Suggest anyone interested visit:
https://intern.nasa.gov/

 

AFRICAN-AMERICAN HERITAGE CENTER

Macon Library, 361 Lewis Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 718-573-5606

 

READING RECOMMENDATIONS

Children’s Books

Tar Beach by Faith Ringgold

The Jones Family Express by Javaka Steptoe

Visiting Day by Jacqueline Woodson

Lola Loves Stories by Anna McQuinn

Pretty Brown Face by Andrea & Brian Pinkney

 

Parenting Titles

Awakening the Natural Genius of Black Children

Amos N. Wilson

 

Strong Fathers, Strong Daughters: 10 Secrets Every Father Should Know

Meg Meeker

 

Connecting Fathers, Children and Reading: A How-To-Do-It Manual

Sara Willoughby-Herb & Steven Herb

An SOS Call – We Owe Our Children Community

Listening to Amy Goodman’s Democracy Now daily serves as a reminder that I want a better world for my grandchildren and future generations. That requires seeking ways to resurrect innate intelligences of each and every child.  Observing the lack of respect for human life that exists throughout the country, the people, especially parents and extended family, must become an army committed to our children’s survival and fulfilling their potential.    Our duty as caretakers is creating the absent regard for human life -especially that of our children in this country.  We start on our blocks where youth are being slaughtered physically and mentally – creating opportunities where our children are recognized for what they as individuals bring.   And that might be a challenge because as adults we have been sold the Euro-American value system whose highest-held value is possession of objects; deserting the African value system which held relationships and community as its highest value.

It’s obvious with examples like the failure to pass effective gun laws, the death tolls of civilians  abroad and here especially our children,  the current government shutdown, which interestingly enough was triggered by a health care feud and forces some 800,000 federal workers off their jobs.  However, the payroll of the armed forces was not affected.  Take this as an opportunity to examine the value system of the individuals whose decisions determine the quality, or lack of, in the lives of our families and our communities.   We owe our children more.

 

Opportunities for Giving our Children More: 

Home is the place where children learn from infancy a view of their self-worth and capabilities.  Unhealed emotional upsets within the home leaves unseen scars that causes lack of self-confidence,  antisocial or  negative behavior towards others.   Parents must create the environment at home that gives children the freedom and opportunity to express their thoughts and feelings (that includes complaints about parents).  Suppressed feelings become explosive and triggers hostile behavior towards others, or being a victim to such behaviors.   The Parents Notebook welcomes parents communicating  any challenging behaviors they’re up to resolving in ways that leave their child empowered .  Remember, the transformation of a nation begins in the homes of its people.

On your Block – If any number of children live on your block you’re a candidate for making a difference, shaping their experience of community.  It’s rewarding to be greeted by young adults (now parents)   with memories of the bus rides, sports events, block parties, SCRABBLE clubs held on Lefferts Place when they themselves were children.

Other individuals and families from the block currently serve youth, building a sense of community.  The Filomeno Family Awards Foundation, whose Executive Board , comprised of Angela –the mother and children Jessenia, Jessica, Smilie and Hazel Filomeno– sponsors  an annual Achievement Awards event recognizing  students.   In August of this year, the 7th year, 48 students received  awards  including from Brooklyn’s Borough President Marty Markowitz.

Currently, another resident, Terrence King, who is a supervisor for the Office of Child Support, serves as a head coach and is an Executive Committee member for Brown Memorial Baptist Church’s Ministry in Action, which provides scholarships and other youth initiatives, including basketball teams .  Terrence,  father of three and grandfather of Chasity 3, has been coaching for 20 years which includes Claver Place in Brooklyn,  Each One Teach One in Harlem and at Brown Memorial for the last 15 years.

Terrence started playing basketball at the age of eight.   He played with  a church league  (Christ the King),  received a scholarship and attended Lehman College.  According to Terrence, coaches create a bond with the players that establishes a serious love for the game while teaching how to conduct oneself as an uncle or father would – making it a major contribution to single-parent homes missing male role models.

Basketball was historically a male sport but now schools and colleges have added female teams.  Currently, Terrence has a girls team participating in the Rose Classics, a female tournament  at  P.S.  117, located at Willoughby and Franklin Avenues.  The girls on his team range from ages 10 to 16 and have not played together before this tournament – four – Jasmine, Nailah, Dynasty and Bliss coming from Lefferts Place but not attending the same schools.  Observing them on the court, you would think they played together all the time.

The point is individuals are resources and if we share, block-by-block, we can create cities where communities flourish and the senseless violence ends.  Readers are invited to take inventory of resources on your block and share with parentsnotebook@yahoo.com.

 ###

 

The Affordable Care Act, Section by Section

Below you will find a brief outline of all 10 Titles of the Affordable Care Act.

Title I. Quality, Affordable Health Care for All Americans

This Act puts individuals, families and small business owners in control of their health care. It reduces premium costs for millions of working families and small businesses by providing hundreds of billions of dollars in tax relief – the largest middle class tax cut for health care in history.  It also reduces what families will have to pay for health care by capping out-of-pocket expenses and requiring preventive care to be fully covered without any out-of-pocket expense. For Americans with insurance coverage who like what they have, they can keep it. Nothing in this act or anywhere in the bill forces anyone to change the insurance they have, period.

Americans without insurance coverage will be able to choose the insurance coverage that works best for them in a new open, competitive insurance market – the same insurance market that every member of Congress will be required to use for their insurance. The insurance exchange will pool buying power and give Americans new affordable choices of private insurance plans that have to compete for their business based on cost and quality. Small business owners will not only be able to choose insurance coverage through this exchange, but will receive a new tax credit to help offset the cost of covering their employees.

It keeps insurance companies honest by setting clear rules that rein in the worst insurance industry abuses.  And it bans insurance companies from denying insurance coverage because of a person’s pre-existing medical conditions while giving consumers new power to appeal insurance company decisions that deny doctor ordered treatments covered by insurance.

Title II. The Role of Public Programs

The Act extends Medicaid while treating all States equally.  It preserves CHIP, the successful children’s insurance plan, and simplifies enrollment for individuals and families.

It enhances community-based care for Americans with disabilities and provides States with opportunities to expand home care services to people with long-term care needs.

The Act gives flexibility to States to adopt innovative strategies to improve care and the coordination of services for Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries.  And it saves taxpayer money by reducing prescription drug costs and payments to subsidize care for uninsured Americans, as more Americans gain insurance under reform.

Title III. Improving the Quality and Efficiency of Health Care

The Act will protect and preserve Medicare as a commitment to America’s seniors.  It will save thousands of dollars in drug costs for Medicare beneficiaries by closing the coverage gap called the “donut hole.”  Doctors, nurses and hospitals will be incentivized to improve care and reduce unnecessary errors that harm patients.  And beneficiaries in rural America will benefit as the Act enhances access to health care services in underserved areas.

The Act takes important steps to make sure that we can keep the commitment of Medicare for the next generation of seniors by ending massive overpayments to insurance companies that cost American taxpayers tens of billions of dollars per year.  As the numbers of Americans without insurance falls, the Act saves taxpayer dollars by keeping people healthier before they join the program and reducing Medicare’s need to pay hospitals to care for the uninsured. And to make sure that the quality of care for seniors drives all of our decisions, a group of doctors and health care experts, not Members of Congress, will be tasked with coming up with their best ideas to improve quality and reduce costs for Medicare beneficiaries.

Title IV. Prevention of Chronic Disease and Improving Public Health

The Act will promote prevention, wellness, and the public health and provides an unprecedented funding commitment to these areas.  It directs the creation of a national prevention and health promotion strategy that incorporates the most effective and achievable methods to improve the health status of Americans and reduce the incidence of preventable illness and disability in the United States.

The Act empowers families by giving them tools to find the best science-based nutrition information, and it makes prevention and screenings a priority by waiving co-payments for America’s seniors on Medicare.

Title V. Health Care Workforce

The Act funds scholarships and loan repayment programs to increase the number of primary care physicians, nurses, physician assistants, mental health providers, and dentists in the areas of the country that need them most.  With a comprehensive approach focusing on retention and enhanced educational opportunities, the Act combats the critical nursing shortage.  And through new incentives and recruitment, the Act increases the supply of public health professionals so that the United States is prepared for health emergencies.

The Act provides state and local governments flexibility and resources to develop health workforce recruitment strategies.  And it helps to expand critical and timely access to care by funding the expansion, construction, and operation of community health centers throughout the United States.

Title VI. Transparency and Program Integrity

The Act helps patients take more control of their health care decisions by providing more information to help them make decisions that work for them.  And it strengthens the doctor-patient relationship by providing doctors access to cutting edge medical research to help them and their patients make the decisions that work best for them.

It brings greater transparency to nursing homes to help families find the right place for their loved ones and enhances training for nursing home staff so that the quality of care continuously improves.  The Act promotes nursing home safety by encouraging self corrections of errors, requiring background checks for employees who provide direct care and by encouraging innovative programs that prevent and eliminate elder abuse.

Finally, the Act reins in waste, fraud and abuse by imposing tough new disclosure requirements to identify high-risk providers who have defrauded the American taxpayer.  It gives states new authority to prevent providers who have been penalized in one state from setting up in another.  And it gives states flexibility to propose and test tort reforms that address several criteria, including reducing health care errors, enhancing patient safety, encouraging efficient resolution of disputes, and improving access to liability insurance.

Title VII. Improving Access to Innovative Medical Therapies

The Act promotes innovation and saves consumers money. It extends drug discounts to hospitals and communities that serve low-income patients. And it creates a pathway for the creation of generic versions of biological drugs so that doctors and patients have access to effective and lower cost alternatives.

Title VIII. Community Living Assistance Services and Supports Act (CLASS Act)

The Act provides Americans with a new option to finance long-term services and care in the event of a disability.

It is a self-funded and voluntary long-term care insurance choice. Workers will pay in premiums in order to receive a daily cash benefit if they develop a disability. Need will be based on difficulty in performing basic activities such as bathing or dressing.  The benefit is flexible: it could be used for a range of community support services, from respite care to home care.

No taxpayer funds will be used to pay benefits under this provision. The program will actually reduce Medicaid spending, as people are able to continue working and living in their homes and not enter nursing homes. Safeguards will be put in place to ensure its premiums are enough to cover its costs.

Title IX. Revenue Provisions

The Act makes health care more affordable for families and small business owners by providing the largest middle class tax cuts for health care in American history.  Tens of millions of families will benefit from new tax credits which will help them reduce their premium costs and purchase insurance. Families making less than $250,000 will see their taxes cut by hundreds of billions of dollars.

When enacted, health reform is completely paid for and will reduce the deficit by more than one hundred billion dollars in the next ten years.

This title will be implemented by the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

Title X. Reauthorization of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act

The Act reauthorizes the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (ICHIA) which provides health care services to American Indians and Alaskan Natives. It will modernize the Indian health care system and improve health care for 1.9 million American Indians and Alaska Natives.

For the full text of the law, go to:
http://www.hhs.gov/healthcare

 

36TH DISTRICT CITY COUNCIL RACE Robert Cornegy to succeed Al Vann in City Council representing Bed-Stuy

Foy concedes after Board of Elections certifies 68-vote win

By Stephen Witt

Robert Cornegy, Jr. was certified the winner of the 36th District City Council Democratic Primary last Friday, all but assuring that he will succeed his term-limited mentor Al Vann and represent Bedford-Stuyvesant and parts of Crown Heights at City Hall next year.

The Board of Elections certification came more than three weeks after the primary. Over 14,000 votes were cast in the four-person race, and Cornegy edged out second-place finisher Kirsten John Foy by 68 votes.

“I’m overwhelmed and honored,” Cornegy told supporters. “We overcame insurmountable odds. We didn’t hire strategists. Our genius and supporters came right here from the community. The power was not in the money. It was in the vote.”

The race turned increasingly nasty towards Primary Day with the high-powered Real Estate Board of New York pumping in over $300,000 for Foy in independent expenditures. This included a series of negative mailings and paying for people to canvas the neighborhood on behalf of Foy.

Foy’s campaign characterized the results of the close election as being hampered by irregularities, many of which was the result of the BOE using outdated voting machines and not doing an effective job of letting voters know about closures of longtime polling places.

But Foy opted for conceding rather than take the election to court after sleeping on it over the weekend.

“I have decided not to move forward with a legal challenge to address Board of Elections irregularities and to ensure every vote is counted in this race,” said Foy in a statement. “While I still feel strongly that every eligible voter who came out to cast a ballot should have their vote counted – and not thrown out because of a mistake by the Board of Elections – the resources required to pursue such legal recourse makes the endeavor prohibitive.”

Cornegy said that Foy called to concede the election to him on Monday. “Foy’s attorney called my attorney as well and said the matter won’t be pursued in the courts,” said Cornegy.

Vann, speaking at last Saturday’s Vanguard Independent Democratic Association (VIDA) club, said Cornegy weathered a perfect political storm in which a lot of money and several unions were backing Foy to beat not only Cornegy, but two other credible community candidates – Rev. Robert Waterman and Rev. Conrad Tillard.

“We had a great candidate, a great campaign and a great community,” said Vann. “Money makes a difference but it failed to understand the legacy established in our community.”

Cornegy said he looks forward to representing the community in the City Council. He also gave a special thanks to this newspaper, which did not endorse a candidate in the election.

“Community newspapers are in a unique position to quickly and efficiently disseminate local news, and Our Time Press was a timely and reliable news source for voters of the area,” he said.