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Bill Thompson Concedes as Vote Count Continues

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Bill Thompson

By Mary Alice Miller

Bill Thompson conceded the primary on Monday, flanked by front-runner Bill de Blasio and Governor Andrew Cuomo. “Today, almost a week after the primary, we still don’t know the outcome of the election,” said Thompson. “We don’t know if there should be a runoff or if there shouldn’t be a runoff. We don’t know how many votes I got, or even how many votes were cast. And we’re not talking about a few votes here and there. We’re talking about tens of thousands of votes.”

Thompson called the situation “a disgrace”, adding that, “In the greatest city in the world, in the greatest democracy on earth, we ought to be able to count votes. But the reality is, right now the votes have not been counted, and it is by no means clear when they will be counted. For all we know, the Board of Elections might not finish counting paper ballots till the date scheduled for a runoff has come and gone.”

Under those circumstances, it is impossible to even campaign, let alone offer a meaningful choice to Democratic voters, said Thompson. With the primary vote outcome unresolved, the NYC Campaign Finance Board would not release funds of the mayoral runoff making it impossible for the Thompson campaign to make spending decisions.

In an effort to unify the Democratic Party leading up to the general election, Thompson threw his support behind de Blasio and asked his supporters to do the same. “Bill de Blasio and I want to move our city forward in the same direction. We share the same views and values,” said Thompson. “This is bigger than either one of us. And the best way to guarantee that we improve schools, save our hospitals, create good jobs, protect our people and their rights is to come together.”

On Monday, the Board of Elections began counting 78,000 absentee and affidavit paper ballots.

The slow, methodical vote tally is not entirely the Board of Election’s fault. The BOE is chronically underfunded. Earlier this year, the state legislature granted NYC the right to use the old lever mechanical machines. And last year, the legislature amended state election law to, among other things, reduce the number of signatures required to get on the ballot. But the fight to move state primaries to June was stymied by Senate Republicans.

In the latest mayoral poll of likely voters, Bill de Blasio has opened up a 43-point lead over Republican Joe Lhota (65-22%). But just as there was poll movement during the primary campaigns, voters can expect fluidity leading up to the general election.

Now that the primaries are over (except for the Oct.1 Public Advocate runoff), voters can expect third-party candidates including Adolfo Carrion (on the Independence Party line) and Michael Greys (on the Freedom Party line) to step up their messaging.

Brooklyn Democratic County Leader Frank Seddio’s first Judicial Convention formally nominated five candidates for Supreme Court Judge. Judges Betty Williams, Desmond Greene, Dawn Jimenez, Bernard Graham and Kenneth Sherman were nominated to run for this year’s five vacancies. Next year, there will be three vacancies to be filled.

Republican mayoral candidate Joe Lhota and the Republican and Conservative Parties are encouraging Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes to actively campaign for the general election. Hynes had said he would not campaign after Ken Thompson’s primary upset (55-44%). Unless the District Attorney’s Office takes action between now and Jan.1, four Brooklyn police shootings of civilians will remain unresolved. Hynes has not yet empaneled grand juries in the deaths of Shem Walker, Shantel Davis, Tamon Robinson and Kimani Gray. Ken Thompson will inherit those cases.

On primary night, Robert Cornegy had a 94-vote lead in the 35th Council race. By Friday, a canvass of the machines saw his votes increase to 150. “Hopefully, that trend and trajectory will continue with the paper (ballot count),” said Cornegy.

Council member Letitia James – who got 36% of the primary vote – faces off with State Senator Daniel Squadron (33%) after she didn’t meet the 40% threshold to prevent a runoff. With no Republican candidate for Public Advocate, the runoff will decide who becomes the city’s advocate.

In other political news, federal authorities announced that Assemblyman William Boyland, Jr. will enter a guilty plea next Monday. Boyland was charged last year with bribing undercover FBI agents and claiming reimbursement for per diem expenses on days he was not in Albany.

The terms of Boyland’s plea are not yet known, but a felony plea deal will require him to step down from the Assembly, leaving his seat open. With Assemblywoman Inez Barron’s election to the City Council, her seat will open on Jan. 1. State Senator Eric Adams’ pending election to Brooklyn Borough President will open his seat. And if State Senator Daniel Squadron is elected NYC Public Advocate, his seat will open. (Pending the outcome of a federal trial, State Senator John Sampson’s seat is an open question.) Governor Cuomo will have to schedule special elections. Until that happens, Brooklyn will have four open Senate and Assembly seats. Once a legislative seat is open the governor can call for a special election, which would take place between 70 and 80 days of the announcement, and would occur in the spring during the height of the legislative session. Or the governor can wait until next year’s general election.

Hopeful Future for Interfaith Medical Center

By Mary Alice Miller

Last week a bankruptcy court ordered that Interfaith Medical Center remain open beyond the next court date on October 15. Sharonnie Perry, chair of Interfaith Medical Center (IMC) Community Advisory Board, said the court acknowledged improvements at the hospital. “Progress is being made,” said Perry. “We are working closely with labor and staff to strengthen services at the hospital.” According to Perry, a member of the NYS Department of Health has agreed to meet with the IMC Community Advisory Board “and some other community stake holders so that she can hear directly what the community wants at the hospital and not what they feel the hospital should be.”

Perry said the community advisory board and other stake holders are working on a plan for continuing health services at Interfaith. “We know there are going to be some changes and restructuring,” said Perry, but parts of the facility are under-utilized. “We asked that OB/GYN services be returned back to Interfaith and a continuation of emergency services. We ask that they look at putting a Women’s Center in the east building to deal with cervical and breast cancer, and other women’s issues. We are asking for a state-of-the-art asthma center because Central Brooklyn is one of the communities with the highest rates of asthma in the city. We are also looking at a geriatric center for our aging population. We are also looking at putting a stroke center in Interfaith. Right now, if a stroke patient comes in, they have to be sent to another hospital. And we definitely want Behavior Management services to continue.”

“Ironically,” Perry said, “the psych/behavior management department was almost at full capacity this past weekend. And on Monday the emergency room was at full capacity.”

Congressman Hakeem Jeffries continues to seek a formal meeting with Governor Cuomo regarding the future of Interfaith. Jeffries spokesperson Stephanie Baez said the congressman has asked the governor’s staff for an extension of time in order to expand the Medicaid Waiver via the federal government for Interfaith itself. That Medicaid Waiver would be granted specifically for hospitals that are safety net hospitals, which Interfaith Medical Center is classified as one. “That is the outlet the congressman is trying to take to save the hospital,” said Baez.

District Leader and tentative-elect 35th Council member Robert Cornegy said Interfaith got “a stay of execution from October 15.” From the beginning Cornegy has been “calling for a moratorium on hospital closures in the borough until some determinations can be made regarding benefits to hospitals from the Affordable Care Act because federal monies will be available.”

Last week Judge Johnnie Lee Baines ruled that the state Department of Health’s regulations for closing hospitals were “unconstitutionally vague” and that the DOH must take the needs of the community into consideration when considering a hospital closure, something it appears not to have done regarding LICH.

Cornegy sees the ruling as having an impact on efforts to keep hospitals open throughout Brooklyn, including Interfaith. “We are looking to piggyback what was done at LICH and the court’s recommendation that closing are illegal. That’s not for LICH; that is for all state hospitals. The language in the closings is illegal,” said Cornegy. “If that stands for LICH I don’t know why it wouldn’t stand for Interfaith as well.”

“We are asking for continued support from the community to support our efforts to save the hospital,” said Perry.

A coalition of the community, labor and other stake holders host support meetings for Interfaith take place on Wednesdays at 5pm in the cafeteria.

 

Kings County Politics

By Stephen Witt

CFB denial of matching funds questioned

Insurgent 42nd District City Council candidate Mercedes Narcisse and her campaign manager Michael Roberts charged this week that Campaign Finance Board official Chris Dragotakes assured them on numerous occasions that Narcisse was in line to receive public matching funds and yet never received any such money.

According to Campaign Finance Board records, Narcisse raised $95,320 in her failed primary race against Kings County Democratic boss Frank Seddio’s protégé Alan Maisel for term-limited Lew Fidler’s seat. Of this money, Narcisse put in a claim that $34,125 was eligible for public matching funds.

Maisel, the standing assemblyman, raised slightly more than $81,000, or about $14,000 less than Narcisse, and received $92,400 in public matching funds. Additionally, the Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY) spent $237,706 as an independent expenditure on behalf of Maisel’s campaign. They also spent $46,458 in negative mailings and attack ads against Narcisse.

Maisel won the primary with 59 percent of the vote to Narcisse’s 41 percent.

“I think it’s a lot of crap,” said Narcisse campaign manager Mike Roberts of the CFB denying public money to the campaign. “We bent over backwards getting them information and they kept shifting the goal posts. They wanted information dating back to 2007 and making unreasonable demands even after she (Narcisse) was certified and made the threshold twice.”

CFB spokesperson Matt Sollars responded that beginning in March, the campaign failed to respond to routine requests for documentation that helps the CFB ensure campaigns are complying with the law.

“The campaign was never able to satisfactorily demonstrate that it had complied with the disclosure requirements,” he said. “In addition, the campaign had the opportunity to petition the board to reconsider, but failed to do so.”

Narcisse said she didn’t file a petition to the CFB to reconsider because they strung her along for months, and by the time they denied her funds, it was only days before the primary and she had to focus on getting out the vote.

Narcisse said while she has no evidence that Seddio’s powerful Brooklyn machine might have convinced the CFB to go over her papers with a fine-tooth comb, she thinks it is entirely possible.

“The politics around this town is they (the Kings County Democratic Machine) do a lot of things and control a lot of things,” said Narcisse. “But in the future, if they (CFB) really want to help a first-time candidate they should work with them and don’t tell them everything’s okay and then deny funds.”

KCP has issued a FOIL (Freedom of Information Law) request to the CFB for all correspondences between the agency and Narcisse’s campaign for the past year and a half. It is waiting to hear for a reply.

 

Seddio’s Next Decision

With the primary season over, Kings County Democratic boss Frank Seddio has consolidated his role as kingmaker with hardly a reformer in sight.

Among those who Seddio helped to power and who now appear as loyal soldiers are Congressman Hakeem Jeffries, State Senator Eric Adams, who ran unopposed in the primary for Borough President, and City Councilman Jumaane Williams, who came up through Seddio’s powerful Thomas Jefferson (TJ) Democratic Club and will need Seddio’s help in upcoming City Council committee assignments.

Perhaps as a testament to their loyalty, Jeffries, Adams and Williams all shied away from making an endorsement in the recent 46th District City Council primary race between Seddio’s hand-picked candidate Assemblyman Alan Maisel and insurgent Haitian-American candidate Mercedes Narcisse. This, despite the fact the district is crying for more Caribbean-American representation due to changing demographics – particularly in Canarsie and Flatlands.

Interestingly, Democratic mayoral nominee Bill de Blasio was the only major elected official to support Narcisse.

That being said, Seddio’s choice to replace Maisel in the now-open 59th District Assembly seat is sure to cause some grumbling among his loyal soldiers no matter who he picks.

Several sources say that among those Seddio is considering is twenty-something Mitch Partnow, the son of Brooklyn Supreme Court Judge Mark Partnow, and who currently heads the Thomas Jefferson Democratic Youth Club in Canarsie. Among those who appear to like Partnow are some of the party’s young bloods, such as Stefan Ringel, who is the head of the Brooklyn Young Democrats Club.

Ringel was recently named Borough President Marty Markowitz’s new communications chief after serving in a similar capacity for Williams. Markowitz is very close to Seddio, and the KCP thinking is that Ringel is being groomed to become Adams’ communications director or another executive position once he becomes borough president.

But while some of the young Dems would like to see Partnow get the nod for the Assembly seat, others such as Jeffries and Williams might push for a Caribbean candidate to reflect the demographic changes in the district. As such, there is also talk that Roxanne Pursaud, another Seddio loyalist from the TJ Club, is reportedly under consideration for the position.

Seddio could not be reached for comment as his spokesman George Arzt said he is too busy with the judicial convention to comment to KCP about the open seat.

 

Odds & Ends

Looking ahead to the city’s general election in November, there are two City Council races worth watching. The first is the 43rd District covering Bay Ridge where Democratic incumbent Vincent Gentile will face off against Republican John Quaglione, the longtime communications director for Republican State Senator Marty Golden.

While Gentile has a huge financial edge and has to be considered the favorite, Golden remains popular in the district and Quaglione, if he runs smart, has a shot to pull off an upset.

Meanwhile, the 48th District race, which includes the Russian-American enclaves of Brighton Beach and Sheepshead Bay, appears too close to call at this point. Running for Mike Nelson’s term-limited seat are Republican Russian-American David Storobin against Democrat Chaim Deutsch. Storobin is considered a young Republican on the rise, having defeated City Councilman Lew Fidler for the open Senate seat after former Senator Carl Kruger was convicted and jailed on felony corruption charges.

Local Construction workers protest outside Assemblyman Mosley’s office

Protesters outside State Assemblyman
Walter Mosley’s office.

Demands lawmaker withdraw from construction union lawsuit that could cost their jobs at City Point

By Stephen Witt

Several dozen African-American men on Monday held a spirited rally outside the Hanson Place office of State Assemblyman Walter Mosley demanding the lawmaker drop his name from a construction union lawsuit seeking to stop work on the massive City Point project in Downtown Brooklyn.

The mixed-use project on the former Albee Square Mall site on Fulton Street is an open shop, meaning it utilizes both union and nonunion labor. Upon completion, it will include 680,000 square feet of retail space and 680 units of housing including 125 units of affordable housing for moderate- and low-income residents.

“I 100 percent support Walter Mosley, but I also support the people at Ingersoll and Farragut that need to work,” said Ed Brown, the former Ingersoll Houses Tenants Association President and whose Team Brown Consulting firm has landed several people from those developments construction and security jobs on the City Point project with a starting pay of $20 an hour.

“Now I understand union benefits, but for younger people out there right now that have issues of paying rent and child support and are trying to stay away from drug dealing and other illegal activities, $20 an hour beats a blank,” he added.

Brown said he is confident that eventually the elected officials will come up with a plan for economic development in the local community but in the meantime they shouldn’t try to impede any work that’s out there already.

“We need to stop the bleeding right now and then we can do the surgery later,” said Brown.

The group also came with copies of a letter sent to Mosley alleging his opposition to City Point is in direct conflict with his position as a supporter of local and minority hiring.

“City Point has made an unprecedented commitment to community-based MWBE (Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises) contracting and employment. The project has achieved over 50 percent contracting and over 80 percent local and minority workforce participation. To date, over $35 million in construction contracts have been awarded to certified MWBE firms,” according to the letter.

But in a reply letter signed by Mosley and distributed by the Local 46 Ironworkers Union at the protest, Mosley said he signed on to the lawsuit because City Point developer Acadia Realty Trust  is building the project on city-owned land and has a responsibility to provide good jobs with health care and other benefits.

Mosley, who records show received a $4,100 campaign contribution from Local 46 on May 29, also alleges in the letter that Acadia is not hiring any local people.

“I have repeatedly asked Acadia to name just one single person working at City Point that lives in my district, and incredibly, they can’t do it,” Mosley wrote.

But Martin (Ab) Allen, whose company PPEE Construction, 790 MacDonough Street in Bed-Stuy, currently has 38 people working on City Point from NYCHA’s Farragut, Wyckoff and Gowanus Houses, as well as residents from Brownsville, Fort Greene, Bed-Stuy and Bushwick, said he’s given a letter to Mosley with the names of people from his district working on the project.

Additionally, several of the people on the picket line were from the local district.

“We’re dealing with hard-to-employ people. We’re trying to stop young brothers from going to prison,” said Allen. “I don’t understand Walter. He’s come to our office about getting some of these people jobs and now he’s talking about unions. I gave him a list of people I put to work from the district. Tell him to give me a list of the people he has put to work.”

The Legacies of Founding Fathers: Sons of Restoration Pioneers Share Perspectives

Part Two

Colvin Grannum, President & CEO, Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation (Restoration), hosted a community breakfast last week with David R. Jones, President and CEO of the Community Service Society (CSS) and the honorable Robert Doar, Commissioner, New York City Human Resources Administration and Department of Social Services.  It saluted the pioneer work of Jones and Doar’s fathers, the late Judge Thomas Russell Jones Jr. and John Michael Doar, Esq., 91, in helping to found, grow and expand the birth years of Restoration, the first community development corporation in the nation.

Mr.  Grannum brought together the two men, who are friends, to discuss the impact their respective fathers had on their lives and their choice of careers. Mr. Doar, whose father was present, and Mr. Jones described what they see as their father’s respective legacies, and what messages, they, in turn are taking to their children.

“These two people are committed to much of the same work as their parents,” Grannum said in the Restoration community room before a standing-room only crowd of community leaders and residents. “They both are battling for social equity and economic justice. Their fathers were committed to public service.”  David leads one of the oldest nonprofits in the nation; it provides services to families.  Robert leads the largest community service organization in the country.

Both men said their fathers would not take the full credit as the “driving forces” behind Restoration.

 

Transformations: Mrs. Ruby Sinckler, born and raised in Brooklyn, can recall the years when remnants of the structure that houses Restoration Corporation were part of the old Sheffield Farms milk factory. She marveled at the work that has gone into transforming Fulton Street at Marcy Avenue into a mecca, but she says she is concerned – as her former colleagues Judge Thomas Russell Jones Jr. and Shirley Chisholm, a sister Girls High student, were in the 60’s – about reaching the young people. “What more can we do to stimulate them to reach new heights?” Ms. Sinckler apparently has done her job: she is the mother of Mr. Dyrnest Sinckler, Restoration’s Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, who grew up in the neighborhood.

“My father was committed because he believed his work in the community was the right thing do.” He said his father early on wanted to find a way to serve the nation, to get out of the small Midwestern town, and get to the big city. “When we got to DC, he saw the power certain interests had over the oligarchy, the congress, and he had (even more of a) devotion to equal justice from his experience.”  That involvement got deeper when he went South and met a sharecropper, father of 12, who became a friend.  He was denied the right to vote. “And it angered him.” Along the way, Mr. Doar, senior, met and worked in the Civil Rights struggle with Bob Moses and Medgar Evers.  He was with James Meredith when he entered the University of Mississippi. “But he felt community work was harder, more difficult. When (the family) moved to Brooklyn, it was a shell.”  Doar junior asked, “What are we doing here?”  But he felt lucky to be there (on the frontlines). His view was to take on the dragons, zig when others were zagging. My father was driven by desire to work and help his country and family and that was contagious.”

Jones said, in describing how his father, a lawyer to Paul Robeson and Bertram Baker; a Garveyite, a lieutenant who fought in World War II’s  Battle of the Bulge, involved him (“A little kid”)  in his community work, “I have never escaped my father’s mentorship.” That meant that Mr. Jones was involved in fighting adversity in the community right alongside his father. At the time it was blockbusting in Bed Stuy and Crown Heights when the community was divided by real estate interests, establishing the Brooklyn Democratic Club, voter registration drives in the NYCHA dwellings where, Jones as a “disorganized” 17-year-old knocked on doors.   Young Jones would say to potential registrants, “I can’t vote, but you should.” And wound up signing up thousands. “There were certain realities. He was an angry man. Part of that legacy is tied up with how he found a way to channel it. He fought for others who could not speak up: suing on behalf of sheet metalworkers, a woman whose husband, unarmed, and was killed in a locked cell. “When others were afraid to stand up to someone like Nelson Rockefeller, they called on Thomas Russell Jones, a man who boldly fought for human rights with Eleanor Roosevelt.  So when Senator Robert Kennedy came to Brooklyn, it was his walk with community leader Elsie Richardson and Mr. Jones’ speech on the issues confronting the people of Bed-Stuy, issues of poverty, children, families, economic equality, health disparities, that led to the Senator establishing Restoration.

“But he was still a person of color, and his inability to control himself when he saw people suffering is what prompted his talk with Senator Kennedy. There were many best achievements in Jones’ life, including the fight against the downgrading of Medgar Evers College, the Ocean Hill/Brownsville fight, and so many others.  “There were so many fights,” said Jones.  “It’s good that this is Election Day; it’s symbolic of fighting and (working for) equality”.

Said Doar, “My Father was with Restoration for about 7 years. He would say his greatest contribution was in the area of Civil Rights. He had to bring cases before judges who were not receptive to his work and not for the Voting Rights Act. That all came to bear with the (eventual) election of Barack Obama, and the President giving my father the Medal of Freedom”.

Mr. Grannum asked both friends what they see as the issues that need working out.  For Doar, it was unemployment, the need to create jobs, the economy. “People want to work, and take advantage of resources. If the economy goes bad we will have major problems.  The issue is poor people are not able to move up.”

For Jones, it is myriad issues, with education and jobs topping the list.  We tend to have amnesia about the old days, he told the audience, explaining that back in the 1960’s, there were safety nets, even when people lost a job or dropped out of school.  Today, people who are out of school or out of work, are not going anywhere. He also said that people are working hard every day, and still not able to make enough to get out of poverty.  “If I’m a low wage worker, how can I help my children, how can I get a house?  There are kids who desperately want to learn, but they don’t have the foundations,” he said.  “How can they be called inferior, if they haven’t been given the building blocks?  You must be doing calculus, algebra all along, from a very young age in order to master it, he noted. Funds need to be reallocated to help those in need, he said.

Robert Doar (left) and David R. Jones discussed their fathers’ lives and legacies at recent Restoration breakfast.

Grannum also invited John Doar, who sat at a table near Mr. Jones and his son, Robert, to comment.  He shared: There’s a thirst for ownership from corporations, he said. It would be a good thing if we can fuse business interests with the community interests and still have the institutions owned by the community. People of different philosophies and economic statuses should work together.  The business community, he said, should say we are going to help you, but they also have to say we won’t direct you.  Also, he said, community groups must have a say in which and how problems and issues are going to be worked out.  “The lesson of the past is we need to work together or the country will be in big trouble.”

“It’s a long twilight struggle,” said Robert Doar, with Jones agreeing: “Every generation must face (the struggle).”

They both agreed that they were seeing a Brooklyn “renaissance” in progress.

One person who held the key to getting on the road to Brooklyn’s revitalization from 1960’s slump was the late Elsie Richardson, a friend of Mr. Jones and colleague of Mr. Doar.  It is reported she was the first to catch the ear of Sen. Kennedy during his historic visit in 1966 to Bedford-Stuyvesant which led, the following year to the beginnings of Restoration Corporation.  Mrs. Richardson’s heirs, Sabra Richardson and Celeste Moses, were present at the breakfast event.

The breakfast kicked off the commemoration of the Comprehensive Fulton Street Redevelopment: West Plaza, Marcy Plaza and Fulton Streetscape Initiative.  It was hosted by The Boards and Staff of Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation, Bed-Stuy Gateway Business Improvement District and Community Planning Board No. 3. Coverage of the ribbon cutting ceremonies and dedication will be recapped in a future issue of Our Time Press, to accompany coverage of the upcoming October 12-19 Bed-Stuy Alive! Events. (Bernice Elizabeth Green)