The BP says he hopes to hear from every person here who wants to speak. Started exactly on time (thank you) anticipating a long list of speakers.
Testimony has not started yet, but folks at home/at work/in transit can follow along at bronxnet.org/watch/
MOCJ's just finished presenting on the plan, which many people here have seen a few times. Last month MOCJ presented on the plan at @BronxCb1's heated general board meeting, during which the board joined Brooklyn and Queens in voting no on the plan: thecity.nyc/2019/05/despit…
Many questions here from the BP on how the city's proposed site for the jail (an NYPD tow pound in Mott Haven) was selected. He's pressing Dana Kaplan of MOCJ on whether or not anyone from the Bronx was in the room when the decision was made. She defers the question to the mayor.
"We are not ignoring or dismissive of" what the community concerns are, says Kaplan.
"Has anything like this been done before?" Diaz asks officials of the shared ULURP for the jails proposed for Queens, the BX, BK, and Manhattan. Someone from planning says yes, but can't recall any off the top of her head.
A court officer is trying to remove someone in the crowd who has repeatedly and loudly demanded the public be allowed to speak. But @rubendiazjr intervened, asking the officer to let her stay. Reminds the audience that he wants to hear from everyone.
🌶️ public comment time! 🌶️
Rev. Wendy Calderon, ED of @BronxConnect, goes first, throwing her support behind the mayor's plan.
The fourth speaker's husband is currently in prison. "My children have only known their father as an incarcerated man," she says. She supports the mayor's plan, though she adds that she does not want to see anyone else "in cages."
Six speakers in, all support the plan. "Listen to directly impacted people," the sixth speaker says. "Talk to us," he adds. "Talk to us."
I see others here who have been imprisoned, at Rikers and elsewhere, or who have had family locked up. Eighth speaker lived on LI and used to travel to Rikers to see his brother. Says visits were dehumanizing, and though he is "vehemently" against prisons, he supports the plan.
Speakers 9 and 10 were at Rikers. 9th says rats running around always kept him up at night. He later became a RI "exterminator"; says he killed 250 rats there. 10th was 16 when he got to RI. When he got there, he "couldn't understand why they was cleaning blood off the ceiling."
Both speakers support the plan - number 10, Harvey Murphy, who spoke at the Mott Haven meeting last month, says hearing the stories of what others endured on the Island is "triggering" him.
Lisa Ortega of @takebackBX, who has been at Rikers, is the first speaker to come out against the plan. Her son is at Rikers now. "Please do not say yes with conditions," she says. "Fuck those people," she ends her statement saying.
A second no, from someone working with Diego Beekman.
And a third, No New Jails member, Myra Hernandez, who lives near the proposed site. She calls out de Blasio and MOCJ for pushing a "false narrative" that suggests the only way to close Rikers is to spend billions on new jails. Urges investments in schools, NYCHA, other resources.
My time here is almost up, but seriously follow @BronxnetTV to see more of this important meeting, including comment from Diego Beekman CEO Arline Parks, who told me she does plan to testify today.
Just kidding - it's Arline's turn. Not leaving just yet. She opposes the plan, of course, says she and others in Mott Haven have been working hard to improve the community for decades. Calls for closure of Rikers, but "not at the expense of (her) neighborhood."
Though the level of lung-aggravating particulate matter in NYC air has mostly declined, air over the Cross Bronx Expressway still contains high levels of PM 2.5. We wrote about how this affects resident health, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Preliminary research suggests exposure to air pollution is associated with higher COVID-19 death rates. Nationally, this link is most apparent in The Bronx, according to a new peer-reviewed study out of SUNY’s College of Environmental Science and Forestry and ProPublica.
Using U.S. EPA data and local mortality figures, scientists found the Bronx ranked the worst for COVID-19 death rates and respiratory hazards of the more than 3,100 other counties in the country. (Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens placed second, third and sixth, respectively.)
OMG I TOOK A CLASS JESS KRUG TAUGHT ONCE vscjkvkfbklsbkdfscda
was trying to remember where I knew her from lmao
also this always seemed kinda obvious? it felt a little toooooo performative even then. i think i still have the syllabus from the class at my parents' house. a lot of the class was centered on racial justice and something just always felt off?????
The fact that the findings on U.S. journalism that came out of the Kerner Commission — convened to examine the unrest happening in American cities in the 60s — are still relevant more than 50 years later is massively disappointing:
(Journalists: Can we please keep this in mind as we report on what's happening in our cities? Will we refuse to "uncritically accept" and publish information we can't vet independently, like damage estimates? How hard are we gonna work to get the literal receipts?)
Evergreen, really: "The journalistic profession has been shockingly backward in seeking out, hiring, training, and promoting Negroes. ... "The plaint is “We can’t find qualified Negroes."
"Tokenism—the hiring of one Negro reporter, or even two or three—is no longer enough."
Twice I've applied for — and been denied — a NYPD press pass. I still don't understand why the police department is responsible for credentialing journalists.
Protests are intense for virtually every reporter at this point, but it worries me that I could be out trying to do the work and have problems with the police because of this.
For some reason I don't think I would get the benefit of the doubt 🙃
Three days after posting this, Amber Isaac, 26, died during delivery.
Her partner said she raised concerns about her care with doctors for weeks. Among them: She learned she was high-risk in February, he said, but she didn't have any office visits in March because of COVID-19.
Doctors opted to hold video calls in place of those office visits that month, her partner said. He told THE CITY was not sure whether she had any bloodwork done in March.
Amber "knew she needed to be seen," though, and called and emailed doctors for an in-person visit, he said.
Dr. Aimee Mankodi, maternal care director at the Institute for Family Health, called telehealth a “wonderful option” for many pregnant women, but added, “When you have high-risk pregnancies, you have to double down and try to really move fast, especially during COVID.”
In no other NYC borough are residents more likely to die from COVID-19 than in The Bronx, where those infected have died at a rate double that of the city, @THECITYNY's analysis of city data shows. New from @annjychoi + me, with help from @yoavgonen:
Of the confirmed cases, those who've contracted COVID-19 here die at a rate 3X higher than those who live in Manhattan. Public health experts say it’s likely The Bronx’s elevated death rate is connected to the borough’s high rates of diabetes, asthma & hypertension.
The Bronx logs more ER visits for asthma than any of the other 61 counties in the NY state. Bronx County also has the state’s highest share of adults — 16% — with diabetes. (Asthma and diabetes are among the conditions associated with COVID-19 complications.)