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Major Owens Issues Comprehensive $1 Billion Re-development Plan for Central Brooklyn

Retired Congressman Major Owens has issued a challenge to central Brooklyn elected officials in the form of a Leadership Pledge “to appeal to Gov. Cuomo and the New York Legislature leaders to support the authorization and reservation of one billion dollars for rebuilding the Central Brooklyn community.”

Among the components of the Plan are a Community Housing Trust to confront the foreclosure crisis, an Enhanced Prime Contracting System to provide technical assistance and fiscal support for small community-based organizations receiving foundation grants or member item funds, a Coordinating Council for Job Training to develop new job creation and job placement opportunities and an Institute for Medical Resources Management to end the hardships caused by the closing of mismanaged hospitals and to monitor medical services. The Plan also includes targeted services for school age children and an Institute for African Diaspora Business Exchange.

The impetus for Owen’s Plan was Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s proposal for a $1 Billion economic development package for Buffalo in his 2012 State of the State Address. Cuomo said Buffalo has the third highest poverty rate of any city in the nation, with 28% of residents living in poverty and chronically high unemployment. “But it doesn’t have to be that way,” said Cuomo. Owens feels the same about poverty in Central Brooklyn.

Combined, the eighth and ninth congressional districts composed of 1.4 million people, far larger than Buffalo area. Since 2008, blacks have lost half of their wealth. In addition to his Buffalo initiative, Cuomo proposed 10 Regional Development Council across the states. NYC has been designated as one of those regions. $700 million is to be divided among those regions. Funding had already begun to flow through those Councils.

Owens believes a “Band-aid approach” in which each little group submits their own little proposal is insufficient. “Given the comprehensive nature of the crisis we face, having a little project here and there will not do it. We need something on the order of an empowerment zone approach,” Owens said. “Charlie Rangel got his empowerment zone in Harlem. Ed Towns, Nydia Velazquez and I prepared an empowerment zone proposal for Brooklyn. It was well-received in Washington. It needed to be signed by Mayor Giuliani. He wouldn’t sign it. In my head a comprehensive approach is nothing new.”

Prior to his years in state and federal elected office, Major Owens was the NYC Commissioner of the Anti-Poverty program for 6 years under Mayor Lindsay. “Although it was for the poor, the Black middle class benefited as well, because they had to administer the program,” Owens said.

Owens believes if/when President Obama is re-elected, federal dollars will begin to flow to states again even if the House of Representatives remains under Republican control. “We are in the position where to revive the economy; the federal government needs to spend some money on social programs. They will have to do that no matter who gets elected,” he said.

Chair of Black, Latino, and Asian Caucus Assemblyman Camara said, “My greatest concern is equitable distribution of state resources to communities that need it the most, and to make sure our budget prioritizes the poor and working class. We do need a city, state and federal commitment for additional resources, recreation in particular. I think the greatest disparity in urban communities is a lack of recreational opportunities, education, and job training and job creation. I am open to exploring the details of Congressman Owens’ proposal, without question.”

Vets Honored at Bed-Stuy Memorial Day Parade and Unveiling

Memorial in front of the Black Veterans for Social Justice headquarters.

Brooklyn’s first Bedford-Stuyvesant Memorial Day Parade began with a ceremony under the tent at Restoration Plaza and then proceeded up Marcy and culminated with an unveiling of the Veteran’s Memorial in front of the Black Veterans for Social Justice building on Willoughby Street.

In the preceding ceremony, Herbert Sweat, Chairman of the Board of the BVSJ, spoke of the special situation of the Black vet and of his experiences of being “accused, misused and abused, as a Black man, as a soldier and when I came home as a vet.” Army veteran Sweat served in Vietnam during the infamous Tet Offensive. The Franklin K. Lane High School graduate was in the 25th Infantry Division where his biography states he served as a Platoon Leader, Executive Officer and Company Commander during which time he was awarded the Bronze Star, Combat Infantry Badge, Vietnam Gallantry Cross w/palm and commendations. Sweat spoke of none of this, but instead he honored the brotherhood of Black vets and how Job Mashariki, founder and past-president of BVSJ, “came and got me from a place where my soul was gone. Homeless. Here I am a decorated war soldier. And I’m homeless?”

Herbert Sweat, Chairman of the Board of the BVSJ and a Vietnam veteran and Bronze Star hero, salutes the crowd at Bed-Stuy’s first Memorial Day Parade.

Fulfilling his own life mission of helping fellow veterans, Mashariki brought him into a holistically supportive environment which caused Sweat to say of the organization, “This is a place where souls are resurrected,” and it was certainly true in his life, bringing him from being a client to being a provider, a community leader and one who gives back to the generations that follow. He invites young people to “come into this building 5 days a week and speak with us. Come and understand what we can do for each other.”

Grand Marshal Job Mashariki said, “You talk about empowerment, this is a model for it,” and it’s also the way to honor those who have fallen by doing the work to rebuild lives. In recognition of his efforts, state Senator Velmanette Montgomery announced that Mr. Mashariki’s name will appear in the Veterans Hall of Fame of New York.

Attending the ceremony were opposing congressional candidates in the June 26 Democratic Primary, City Councilman Charles Barron and state Assemblyman Hakeem Jeffries. Sitting with only one chair of separation, they each appeared not to notice the other until Jeffries got up to speak, bringing him unavoidably into the councilman’s line of sight as he also spoke of the special sacrifices Black veterans have made.

The United War Veterans Council made a presentation to Mashariki but it was more than the veterans who were honored at this Memorial Day ceremony. As Chairman Sweat said “We are here on this day in recognition of those who have made a way out of no way. The mothers, the fathers, the sisters, the teachers, the lawyers and everyone that has come to this community.”

Bloomberg Administration Silent on Projected Center Closings

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Nadine Patterson sitting with her three children picking up her two oldest from the PAL Wynn center set to close.

Nine days after shots were allegedly fired at police from the rooftop of the Louis Armstrong Houses, five cops suffered minor injuries when bleach was poured on them from one of the development’s windows on Memorial Day.

 

Meanwhile, the Bloomberg Administration’s press office did not respond to several phone calls and e-mails concerning these incidents or about their plans to close the Police Athletic League (PAL) Wynn Children’s Community Center that serves mainly the Armstrong Houses.

 

The center, located at 495 Gates Avenue – on the same block as the Armstrong Houses – provides a safe supervised environment along with hot meals, homework help and other activities to hundreds of local kids for free six days a week – allowing many parents in the development to hold jobs.

 

“I’ll probably cry if they close this center,” said Shefie Linares, a waitress in Manhattan and Armstrong Houses resident as she picked up her two boys, ages 6 and 10, at the center last week. “I’ll have to pick them up from school myself and work shorter hours.”

 

Yvette Saunders, a single mother of six, said she needs the center to stay open because she just completed a job training program and is scheduled to start work this week after being unemployed for the past six years.

 

“If this center doesn’t stay open, I won’t be able to go to work because I need my son to go to this after-school program where it’s safe,” she said.

 

PAL Wynn Center Director Danielle Lynch, herself a single mother of three who commutes from the Bronx six days a week to run the center, explained the center has operated on a $400,000 budget spread out over three years.

 

Under Bloomberg’s proposed budget, all Out of School Time (OST) programs along with city-funded day care centers have seen city funding slashed, and many throughout the city closed. His administration has also ordered new requests for proposals (RFP) for OST programs and daycare centers, which is leaving thousands of kids without any of these services.

 

In Bedford-Stuyvesant, besides the PAL Wynn Center, at least three other OST programs will be shuttered and several daycare centers.

 

“This is going to cause a backward spiral for everybody,” said Lynch, who will likely lose her job if the center closes. “The children, the parents, the grandparents – they all depend on this place. They’re going to lose their own jobs ultimately. It’s scary.”

 

Lynch, the parents and others have been circulating petitions and holding emergency meetings to try to keep the center open. They also participated in a walk across the Brooklyn Bridge last week to protest the proposed closing.

 

Meanwhile, just down the street in front of the Armstrong Houses, older teenagers and young adults hang outside while wary police patrol the area.

 

City Councilman Al Vann said he is doing everything he can to keep all the OST and day care centers open.

 

“I am very well aware of the fact that PAL Wynn Center is among several after school centers that will be closing based on the mayor’s drastic reduction in “Out of School Time” funding. I also recognize that this particular center is located near the Louis Armstrong Housing Development where the volume of crime is often at an unacceptable level,” said Vann.

 

“There is a nexus between the availability of recreation and supportive youth programming and crime. I will continue to push for the restoration of OST funding and the restoration of funds to the PAL Wynn Center,” he added.

 

On the Right Track by Diane Dixon: My Virtual Olympic Interview (VOI) with 400-Meter Diva Natasha Hastings

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My candid chat with Olympic Gold Medalist Natasha Hastings (2008 Olympic Gold Medalist on 4×400 Meter Relay) is called a virtual interview in this Part I conversation to let the readers visualize her journey to the London 2012 Olympics and to see a personal side of her. The questions are in no order of events.

Natasha Hastings

 

From Brooklyn, New York, Natasha Hastings is on the fast track (literally) to Olympic Gold in the 400 Meters. At the tender age of 25, she already has many accomplishments. Most of her successes have come as part of the 4×400 Meter Relay. She’s a 4-time World Champion, a fitness model for Wilhelmina, a blogger and a social media queen and diehard Gamecock alumni.

DD: Your compression boots that you tweet about, please tell me what those are?
NH: Basically, they are a pair of boots that go all the way up to your thighs that are hooked up to a battery pack/machine and pumps air into the boots where they are compressing your legs (similar to an ice bath or a massage). They help to flush your legs after a hard workout. I usually sit on the floor because they can get pretty big and I even use them before a competition sometimes.

 

DD: I also noticed that while you were taking an ice bath you had on leotards or tights? Are those from Under-Armor? (Hastings recently signed a sponsorship deal with them)
NH: They are called “recharge” in the form of tights as well as a compression long-sleeved shirt. They help with recovery and I wear them in my ice bath and sometimes I sleep in them at night after a hard work-out or the day before a competition. It’s the same idea but they aren’t as restrictive as the boots with the idea of compression and getting good blood circulation for competition or recovery after a workout.

DD: The Samson Diamond League events, I see that you aren’t entered in any thus far. Is that indicative to where you are going because you have been competing in mostly low-key meets?
NH: Yes, I switched coaches last December and moved to Austin the day after Christmas. (Hastings previously was residing in South Carolina) You know, going to a new coach, we definitely wanted to take things slowly and make sure I am ready. I did a couple of meets indoors. One of my main concerns is that in the past I felt like I raced so much that I might have run fast at some point but I wasn’t able to finish the season strong as I would like to so I’ve been training really hard. I didn’t run a competitive season as I did the year before. However, I went to Istanbul and came away with a bronze and silver (2011 World Indoor Championships, 400 Meters and 4×400 Meters).
This outdoor season we took the approach to run a lot of relays in the beginning of the season and gradually move on into open events. Particularly, the meets overseas, that long travel that it becomes a mental block for me and I need more time to get over there and compete well enough. I feel I can get more quality races in on this side of the globe; I don’t necessarily have to make that trip to Europe and, of course, miss out on quality training as well. I am entered in the Prefontaine Classic this weekend (Hastings will compete on Saturday, June 2 at the Hayward Field Stadium in Oregon – place of the Olympic trials), which is a Diamond League event.

DD: You tweet about your weight and body composition/mass. Are you comfortable with your weight? Do you want to lose weight?
NH:
In the past, my weight has always been a topic. I think if you compare me to other quarter-milers, I am on the larger end of the spectrum. I feel like as a woman period, and as a woman going through high school and college, sometimes the way weight is spoken about I kind of see it as an issue if it’s not handled delicately enough. Not that it’s something that happened with me but I’ve seen women develop eating disorders or become close to it because so much pressure is placed on “Well you need to be this number, or you need to be this weight”. One of the things we implemented with my coach is that we check my body composition regularly.

DD: Who do you think will be your fiercest competitors at the Trials?
NH:
I never sleep on anyone because I feel like it’s an Olympic year and training as a whole, everybody has a new resume. Sanya, Jessica Baird, Francena McCorory, Allyson. The Olympics only come around every four years.

DD: Are you friends with other quarter milers on the circuit? In my day, we used to trash-talk but now everybody is so pleasant and everybody likes everybody? Is that common?

NH: I hear that more from you and Ato (Ato Boldon), and they always talk about how we’re so nice and we don’t trash talk. We come together at the end of the meet for the relays but there is definitely competitiveness between all of the women. We’re cordial; we have conversations here and there.
Stay tuned for Part II of the Hastings interview.

For more information or questions, please contact OlympianDianeD@yahoo.com
Check out my blog website at http://blog.dianedixonfoundation.org
Follow me on https://twitter.com/DianeDixon

On The Right Track with Diane Dixon

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Diane Dixon and Florence Griffith-Joyner (FloJo)

Flo-Jo was MY True Friend:

 

It was 1984 at the Olympic Training Camp in Santa Barbara, California and a red Datsun 300ZX with the license plate 84GOLD pulled up to the practice track. A shy young woman stepped from the car and began to warm up with the USA’s sprint relay team. Brooks Johnson, the head coach for the female track and field team, started to lecture everyone as he put together the order for the relay – Alice Brown to Florence Griffith-Joyner (Florence Griffith until 1988 when she wed Al Joyner), to Diane Williams to Evelyn Ashford.

 

It was only a practice meet. The gun went off and Alice blistered down the track passing the baton to Florence who handed it to Diane and finally to Evelyn.

 

Of course they won. Afterward, Florence retraced her steps to retrieve something. “Flossie Mae”, Brooks yelled using the nickname he had given Florence. “What are you doing?” Apparently, Florence’s 6-inch nails had broken off from the impact of the baton on her right hand. She then delicately glued all four nails back on.

 

It was 1988 at the Olympic Trials in Indianapolis. Florence, Sandra Farmer-Patrick, her husband David and I were in Florence’s hotel room. Florence was showing us all of the outfits she planned to wear at the Trials, including the one-legged creations she had designed.

 

As excited as we were to be at the Trials, Florence was amazingly quiet. She was at the same time introverted yet stylish, focused yet intriguing, shy yet mystifying. Florence and I schmoozed about everything but track. I finally confided in her how nervous I was. I remember her telling me to close my eyes and visualize my race, the 400 Meters. She told me to go through each 100 Meters as if I was running alone and to visualize myself in first place. I did and finally felt relaxed and confident. That’s the Florence I remember. A woman of substance, style, class, finesse – a woman of color. We were now prepared to make the team.

 

Florence competed before me. The night she broke the world record in the 100 Meters – 10.49 with a 0.00 wind reading– I was there. Her determination inspired me to do the very same. I thus went out and won the 400 Meters – a feat that was unexpected since I wasn’t the favorite.

 

After the Trials, Florence became known as Flo-Jo. The drug rumors soon began and Flo-Jo did not even bat an eyelash. To silence her critics, she ran faster and faster, passing runners and every drug test imaginable. She had few friends and surrounded herself only with people she truly cared about; people who were not envious and would not judge her.

 

(Ironically, those close to her called her Dee-Dee because her middle name was Delorez and my friends called me DD, same name different spelling. I just called her Flo)

Flo-Jo was my friend always. We never spoke about the rumors because friends don’t question or undermine all the hard work an athlete does to become a champion.

 

Here’s a poem I wrote about my friend:

 

A friend is someone special and very hard to find,

 And when you confide in someone, it’s Flo-Jo you have in mind.

 Friends aren’t always faithful, and true friends are very rare.

 But the ones that you can count on are the ones who are always there.

 

Florence was a friend and I, like so many others, am still confused by her sudden passing. In 1995, while I was pregnant with my son, I saw Flo-Jo at an event. I told her I wanted to compete again and she offered to coach me. As busy as she was, she offered to be my inspiration in getting back on the track. We spoke about her returning to compete in my race, the 400 Meters, and about her desire to compete in the marathon. I jokingly said to her, “So you are going from being the fastest woman in the world to the slowest woman?” she laughed. Her smile, her charisma, her positive anecdotes will forever be a part of me.

 

Exercise/Healthy Tidbits

Super Foods can help you live a longer and healthier life

Blueberries:  They are brain foods.  They contain pterostilbene, a plant compound to have cholesterol-lowering properties.  Their ORAC (antioxidant rating) is the highest of any fruit.  And they are rich in fiber.  Tip: Try them frozen.  They taste like sherbet!

 

Guava:  These are part strawberries and part pears.  One low-caloric cup of this vitamin rich fruit contains eight grams of fiber.  And in one widely used test of antioxidant power, Guava scored only second to blueberries, right behind Kale.  It also contains cancer-fighting lycopene.

 

Sardines:  Cheap source of protein.  They are rich in omega-3 fats, and one of the least contaminated of any seafood.  Eat them out of the can or on a salad. 

 

Apples:  The juicy red or green apple’s reputation for keeping you out of the doctor’s office.  Loaded with pectin (an important fiber), apples are one of the best sources of boron, a little known nutrient that helps support strong and healthy bones.  An apple with a glass of water is a great natural appetite suppressant.  Highest antioxidant value:  Red Apples.

 

Flaxseed:  It is one of the only plant sources of moega-3 fats, but the flaxseeds themselves provide the added benefit of fiber along with omega-3.  They can be thrown on salads, tossed into smoothies, or sprinkled on vegetables.  They also contain lignans, a group of plant nutrients that have been studied by the National Cancer Institute for their cancer preventive properties.

For more information or questions, please contact OlympianDianeD@yahoo.com

 

Check out my blog website at http://blog.dianedixonfoundation.org

 

Follow me on

https://twitter.com/DianeDixon