Home Blog Page 157

Six Bronx Parishes Merge as Six Roman Catholic Bronx Churches Set to Close In August 2015

0
St Roch's Church on Wales Avenue in Mott Haven is scheduled to close by August 2015 as it merges with nearby St Anselm's Church on Tinton Avenue.
St Roch’s Church on Wales Avenue in Mott Haven is scheduled to close by August 2015 as it merges with nearby St Anselm’s Church on Tinton Avenue.

In one fell swoop (after 4 years of planning) the head of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, ushered in the largest reorganization of the archdiocese in its 208 years of existence.  Six parishes in The Bronx are slated to merge with six others which will leave the borough with 6 churches that will close by August 2015. In total, 112 parishes will be merged across the archdiocese.

Some parishioners breathed a sigh of relief to find out that their churches were not closing, particularly after years of worrying that they would end up on the chopping block.  The New York Times reported:

“And for some in the 24 parishes who learned that their church would remain open despite a merger, there was also a sense of relief.

Not far from the bridge onto City Island, 100 members of St. Mary Star of the Sea filled the pews for Sunday’s first Mass. They had been concerned that closing only Catholic church on City Island would prevent elderly congregants from attending services.

Jackie Kyle Kall, 89, the first woman to arrive at Mass, had already heard the good news. “The church is saved!” she said to a fellow parishioner, as she pushed open the church’s doors against the wind whipping off the water.”

Although I’m no longer a Roman Catholic or even a Christian, I was deeply saddened to see St. Roch’s on the list — the place where I was baptized but breathed a sigh of relief that St. Anselm’s Church, who will absorb St. Roch’s parishioners, remained safe for now.  St. Anselm’s is where my parents were married along with several other members of our family and its parochial school is where I spent the first 10 years of my educational life.

According to the Archdiocese:

“The following parishes will merge. The designated parish church is identified with an asterisk in the column on the left (TOP). As of August 1, 2015, although remaining a church which may be used on special occasions, Masses and the sacraments will no longer be celebrated on a regular weekly basis at the church on the right (BOTTOM).”

1. *Saint John

3021 Kingsbridge Avenue
Bronx, New York 10463

Visitation (CLOSING)
160 Van Cortlandt Park South
Bronx, New York 10463
______________________________
2. *Saint Brendan
333 East 206 Street
Bronx, New York 10467

Saint Ann (CLOSING)
3519 Bainbridge Avenue
Bronx, New York 10467
______________________________
3. *Saint Anselm
685 Tinton Avenue
Bronx, New York 10455

Saint Roch (CLOSING)
525 Wales Avenue
Bronx, New York 10455
______________________________
4. *Saint Rita of Cascia
448 College Avenue
Bronx, New York 10451

Saint Pius V (CLOSING)
420 East 145 Street
Bronx, New York 10454

______________________________

5. *Holy Family
2158 Watson Avenue
Bronx, New York 10472

Saint John Vianney (CLOSING)
715 Castle Hill Avenue
Bronx, New York 10473
______________________________

6. *Holy Rosary
1510 Adee Avenue
Bronx, New York 10469

Nativity of the Blessed Lady (CLOSING)
1531 East 233 Street
Bronx, New York 10466

The full press release is as follows:

For immediate release: November 2, 2014

MAKING ALL THINGS NEW  DECISIONS ANNOUNCED

“This time of transition in the history of the archdiocese will undoubtedly be difficult for people who live in parishes that will merge.  There will be many who are hurt and upset as they experience what will be a change in their spiritual lives, and I will be one of them. There is nobody who has been involved in Making All Things New who doesn’t understand the impact that this will have on the Catholic faithful. It will be our responsibility to work with everyone in these parishes so as to help make the change as smooth as we possibly can.”

With these words, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York, today announced the results of a multi-year pastoral planning process, Making All Things New, undertaken to strengthen and enhance parish life in the Archdiocese of New York and to assist the archdiocese in serving its Catholic faithful most effectively.  This pastoral planning process, which had its beginnings in 2010, sought the input and suggestions of parishioners, the leadership of religious orders of women and men, and the clergy, resulting in today’s announcement.

The first phase of pastoral planning, directed by Bishop Dennis Sullivan, then the vicar general of the archdiocese, picked up on the good work begun by Cardinal Edward Egan prior to his retirement as archbishop in 2009.  This initial work consisted in surveying the parishioners of every parish of the archdiocese; meeting with priests, deacons, and religious throughout the archdiocese; consulting with the archdiocesan pastoral council; and reviewing the observations offered by Cardinal Dolan from his own extensive parish visits since his 2009 appointment as archbishop. These elements were used to determine how pastoral planning should proceed, as well as to identify areas in which the archdiocese should concentrate its resources. Among the issues raised most frequently during these meetings were:

  1. The need for a strategic plan for Catholic schools
  2. Improved religious education and faith formation programs for children, youth, and adults
  3. Greater outreach to various ethnic groups, in particular Hispanic Catholics and recent immigrants
  4. Enhanced ministry to teens, college students, and young adults
  5. Better use of technology for more effective communication with parishioners
  6. Expansion of healthcare throughout the archdiocese
  7. An emphasis on the works of charity, particularly in affordable housing
  8. Enhanced transparency, especially on financial matters
  9. Promotion of greater involvement of the faithful in the life of the Church, especially in attracting new people to the faith, and winning back people who have left

Even while the pastoral planning process of the archdiocese was being developed and instituted, these areas of concern identified by the faithful, religious, and clergy of the archdiocese were being addressed:

  1.  Pathways to Excellence, a strategic plan whose principal purpose is to improve the education and formation provided by Catholic schools, was developed and implemented.  A key component of the plan is the establishment of regional school boards for non-parish based schools, with the governance of these schools on the local level. While this plan led to a number of schools closing, a record 60% of the students enrolled in neighboring parish schools, with all schools strengthened as a result.  This past year was the first in many years in which no archdiocesan schools closed.
  2. An all new, cluster-based religious education program for school age children is being developed, with a qualified director or coordinator of religious education for each cluster and the introduction of new technology to enhance learning.  In addition, a director for adult faith formation has been hired to develop new opportunities for on-going religious education in the archdiocese.
  3. The Office of Hispanic Ministry has been expanded, with a new, full-time lay director hired to work with all departments and parishes in the archdiocese to better minister to and with our Hispanic parishioners.  A particular emphasis has been placed on the upper counties of the archdiocese, which has seen an influx of Hispanic Catholics over the last several years.  Replicating the excellent outreach to Hispanics being done by a community of religious sisters in the Bronx, several women religious of another community will serve in the upper counties to visit, evangelize, and catechize as part of this new emphasis.  Regarding new immigrants, a long-term parish home is being identified for the Ghanaian Catholic community in an existing parish that might otherwise have been merged.
  4. A new office for teen ministry has been established, with the goal of remaining connected to young people, especially after they receive the Sacrament of Confirmation.  While all Catholic colleges and universities have campus ministry programs, FOCUS (Fellowship of Catholic University Students) has recently expanded its campus ministry presence at two large secular universities in the archdiocese. A new director for young adult ministry is expanding programs for post-college age young adults, including monthly Masses and opportunities for fellowship, service, and faith sharing.
  5. A comprehensive plan utilizing technology to enhance communication within parishes and between the archdiocese and its parishioners has been developed and is being implemented. This includes the ability to hold archdiocesan wide “town hall” videoconferences, new websites for the archdiocese and its parishes, and the use of an email and text messaging system for better communication within individual parishes.
  6. ArchCare, the archdiocesan healthcare ministry, has been expanding into all ten counties of the archdiocese, with new programs including home healthcare, visiting nurse services, and PACE programs to supplement our existing nursing home system.
  7. Responding to the need in New York City for affordable housing for the poor and low income, Catholic Charities, through its affiliated housing entities has leveraged over $300 million for rehabilitation of more than 2000 family and senior units of housing and extended their commitment to affordability for years to come.  One project in particular is in the Morrisania section of the Bronx on a site previously occupied by St. Augustine’s Church that is currently being developed to offer 112 units of new housing for low income families and individuals with special needs.
  8. Annual condensed financial statements of all centrally managed programs, together with a report of total revenues and expenses of parishes and schools, are published in Catholic New York and posted online.
  9. Members of the faithful are now serving on the boards overseeing the regional schools.  The archdiocese is also jointly sponsoring a Master of Science degree in church management to train members of the faithful to assist our parishes as parish managers.

The pastoral planning process also brought to light numerous new pastoral needs and opportunities which are now either underway or undergoing serious consideration.  Responding to the growing number of Catholics in the upper counties, a second auxiliary bishop has been assigned to live and serve there. There are also needs in existing parishes, for example the need for a larger and more complete Saint Frances Cabrini Parish on Roosevelt Island, the need for an expanded church at Saint Mary’s Parish in Washingtonville, a potential move of Saint Michael’s Parish in Manhattan to accommodate the pastoral needs of those who will move to the new Hudson Yards development, and a more intense presence in the works of charity and healthcare in the upper counties.

            Making All Things New has also identified changes that need to be made to the existing parish structure of the archdiocese, one that was largely established between the mid-19 th to mid-20 th centuries.  Changes in individual parishes have, of course, always taken place.  For instance, in the last 50 years alone, 42 parishes have been consolidated, which includes 2007’s reconfiguration plan, which resulted in 21 consolidated parishes.  However, Making All Things New is the first planning initiative to incorporate the “ground up” involvement of every parish in the archdiocese.

Based on the input the cardinal received from the 368 parishes and 75 parish clusters (groups of about 4-7 neighboring parishes); a 40 person advisory committee comprised of clergy, religious men and women, and the faithful from across the archdiocese; the priest council; other close advisors and key staff, he has decided that:

  1. All parishes will work together more collaboratively within their clusters in providing services and ministries
  2.  48 parishes will merge with a nearby parish, resulting in 24 new parishes, with Masses and sacraments celebrated at both churches. There will be an evaluation every two years of these newly merged parishes, and every parish throughout the archdiocese.  To accomplish this, the archdiocese has established a parish planning office, to be directed by Eileen Mulcahy.
  3. 64 parishes will merge with a nearby parish, resulting in 31 new parishes, and while this new parish will have two churches, Masses and sacraments will only be celebrated on a regular basis at one church as of August 1, 2015.

There are a small number of new proposals for parish mergers that have arisen as a result of the cardinal’s own reflection on those proposals presented to him, as well as from his discussions with key advisors.  In keeping with the spirit of the Making All Things New process, Cardinal Dolan has asked that these new proposals be shared with the appropriate clusters and the archdiocesan advisory group so as to solicit their input.  These will eventually also be reviewed by the priest council of the archdiocese before a final decision is reached.  It is hoped that these new proposals will be acted upon soon so that final decisions are reached over the next several months.

Cardinal Dolan praised the efforts of the men and women who worked to develop the recommendations and suggestions that formed the basis of his decisions.  “I am grateful to the parish core team members, who gave so much of their time and wisdom in helping us plan for the future, and to the members of the advisory group who took the work of the parish clusters and developed the recommendations that were presented to me at the beginning of the summer.  It would have been impossible to reach this point without the thoughtful contributions of our parish core teams, the advisory board, and the priest council, all of whom approached their work patiently, prayerfully, and prudently,” he said.

Bishop John O’Hara, an auxiliary bishop of the archdiocese, who has directed the Making All Thing New process, acknowledged that, while change and transition often call for sacrifice, it was necessary for the archdiocese to exercise good stewardship in using its resources, including its priests, to carry out its mission.  He said, “We have heard from our people the anxiety they feel that they not be ‘abandoned’ after this process has concluded.  The parish is where they come in life’s happiest moments, like a wedding, first communion, or baptism, and where they turn when facing difficulties and hard times.  So, there is an understandable sense of loss, particularly for those merged parishes where we have announced that Masses and sacraments will no longer be regularly celebrated at one of those churches as a result of the merger.  It is now up to us, in the next phase of this process, to work with those parishes that will merge with neighboring parishes.  I also want to assure those Catholics in some of the more economically challenged areas of the archdiocese that this is definitely not in any way going to take away from the needed and necessary programs and initiatives in service to the less fortunate.”

Cardinal Dolan emphasized that, while the next pastoral and canonical steps must still be determined for the utilization and possible disposition of certain churches and unused buildings, the work of the Church in serving its people must and will go on.  He said, “It is imperative that we continue to find new ways of meeting the spiritual, education, charitable, and human needs of the people of God of this archdiocese. The archdiocese has long been a leader in providing affordable housing, and as part of our on-going discussions with the City of New York, we will now be able to explore several new sites as possible locations for housing. Caring for people with special needs is an ever-increasing ministry, and the archdiocese will look into new and creative ways to accomplish this as well.”

Because of the large amount of data reviewed for each parish, the thoroughness of the input from the local parishes and clusters, and the comprehensive study that led to the recommendations of the advisory group, only previously non-considered information and material that could have a significant impact on a parish will be accepted and evaluated, so as to determine whether a change in the initial recommendation is needed.

Making All Things New does not conclude with today’s announcement.  A plan for implementation has been developed which will include pastoral teams to work with any parish that is affected by mergers.  Although the timing of transitions will be made on a parish-by- parish basis, it is anticipated that most changes will be implemented prior to August 1, 2015.

In closing, the cardinal expressed his hope for the future.  He said, “One thing that has impressed me about Catholics in this archdiocese is their ability to come together in trying times.  That was brought home to me most vividly during the period when schools needed to close underPathways to Excellence.  Despite the sadness many felt in losing their school, everyone came together and worked to do what was best for our children, the schools, and the Church.  Or, look at how we came together at Hurricane Sandy.  I am confident that this same spirit will carry us through the next phase of Making All Things New, as the Archdiocese of New York begins a new chapter of serving Jesus and his followers in faithfulness and in love. Jesus is in charge, and He will never let us down.”

-30-

Please click here for Spanish.

Parish List 1 – Masses and Sacraments celebrated at both churches

Parish List 2 – Masses and Sacraments to be celebrated at the designated parish church; the other church may be used on special occasions.

===================

Follow us:

Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/Welcome2TheBronx/

Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/Welcome2TheBronx/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/Welcome2theBX

Instagram: http://instagram.com/welcome2thebronx

Tumblr: http://welcome2thebronx.tumblr.com/

 

Spooktacular Halloween Events In The Bronx For All!

0

For those not looking to travel outside The Bronx for Halloween, Welcome2TheBronx has compiled a handy list of fun and free events in our own home borough for tomorrow. From FREE Holiday portraits at the Bronx Documentary Center to spooky readings of Edgar Allan Poe’s classics at Poe Cottage, to Baron Ambrosia hosting a special Safe Streets and Treats event, there’s something for folks of all ages!

tumblr_ne48tfsnZx1qlidg4o1_1280

Free Halloween Portraits for Bronx Residents!

Friday, October 31, 5-7PM

As part of our ongoing Holiday Portrait series we are holding free Halloween portraits for Bronx residents this Friday. Each family will get a free 8×10 print, extra prints are $5 each.

Due to past demand, this offer is for Bronx residents with ID only. Thanks for your understanding.!

Location:

Bronx Documentary Center

614 Courtlandt Avenue (At 151st Street)

Audio-Poe-flyer-v2

Audio Poe!

Friday, October 31, 2014

11:00 a.m.1:00 p.m.

Come celebrate Halloween with award-winning audio book narrators, Robert Fass and Dion Graham, reading selected Poe stories and poems.

Audience talk-back session follows.

Come dressed as your favorite Poe character. The best costume wins a free audio book!

Location

Poe Park Visitor Center in Poe Park
2640 Grand Concourse
Bronx

Directions to this location

Cost

Free

1798546_10205143411404411_5266268736699999425_nSafe Streets & Treats

Giveaways, candy & healthy snacks all hosted by the one and only, Baron Ambrosia!

When

October 31st, 3PM – 6PM

Location

East 204th Street Between Perry and Hull Avenues

wpid-img_840894308693663.jpeg

 Mott Haven Merchants Association’s Trick or Treat

Take your kids to local participating businesses on Halloween!  All children MUST be accompanied by an adult.  See above for participating merchants and area map.

When

October 31st from 4pm – 8pm

===================

Follow us:

Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/Welcome2TheBronx/

Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/Welcome2TheBronx/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/Welcome2theBX

Instagram: http://instagram.com/welcome2thebronx

Tumblr: http://welcome2thebronx.tumblr.com/

Tonight: Understanding Ebola Town Hall Discussion At The Bronx Museum Of The Arts

0

10443274_10205117018190425_2504741918159849707_o (1)

New York City Department of Immigrant Affairs along with NYC Department of Health have teamed up to give the community the REAL facts on Ebola as well as let the community ask questions and share their concerns.

The event will run tonight, Wednesday October 29th, from 6PM – 8PM and will be hosted at The Bronx Museum of The Arts located at:

1040 Grand Concourse

Bronx, NY 10456

Make sure you spread the word with your networks!

=====================

 Sponsored Ad: Space still available at new school in Mott Haven!

 

Wallworks NY Presents Major Photography Exhibition: Point. Click. Shoot.

0

10153656_10152919402135676_4140064816101788905_n

This Saturday November 1st is the opening reception of ‘Point. Click. Shoot.’ at Wallworks New York in Port Morris.

The exhibition includes photography from some of the biggest names in the craft who have documented people and neighborhoods with a cast of Bronx and Downtown photographers including the world-renowned Annie Leibovitz and of course 4 of the 6 photographers known as Seis Del Sur.

The photographers, who’s work will be featured in the exhibition which runs from November 1st to December 10th, are as follows:

Henry Chalfant
Joe Conzo
Martha Cooper
DAZE
Ricky Flores
David Gonzalez
Logan Hicks
Lisa Kahane
Sue Kwon
Annie Leibovitz
Francisco Reyes II
STASH

Wallworks New York is located at 39 Bruckner Boulevard at the corner of Alexander Avenue in the Port Morris neighborhood of the Bronx.  The opening reception will be from 6PM to 9PM on Saturday, November 1st.

=====================

 Sponsored Ad: Space still available at new school in Mott Haven!

Yes, “Cromwell-Jerome” Could Become Gentrified. But The Residents Can Stop That |The Blinker

5
macombs-billiards-jerome-avenue-bronx-new-york-city
Featured photo credit: Kim Snyder / Flickr

 

The following is by our friend Geoffery Mullings of The Blinker who has kindly allowed us to syndicate this important piece.

Yes, “Cromwell-Jerome” Could Become Gentrified. But The Residents Can Stop That |The Blinker.

YES, “CROMWELL-JEROME” COULD BECOME GENTRIFIED. BUT THE RESIDENTS CAN STOP THAT

Between the screeching of the 4 Train overhead and the sounds of drills and valves, you can hardly find serenity on Jerome Avenue in The Bronx. All of that noise is probably ambiance for the mostly immigrant mechanics who keep one of the last few auto repair zones of its kind Downstate functioning. For all of its noise and environmental pollution, Jerome offers refuge to many. Consumers come there for its cheaper auto repair prices. And the employers keeping it running are some of the few fortunate enough to still hold automotive repair jobs, in a market where those opportunities are increasingly harder to come by.

It’s here that the City is exploring “designing” a new neighborhood, to be called Cromwell-Jerome. According to the Department of City Planning’s website, the initiative will be “a community-driven neighborhood plan centered on affordable housing in Community District 4 and Community District 5 in the Bronx.” Promises are that there will be a comprehensive plan to improve traffic safety, crime rates, and food access for the neighborhood also.

But the vision isn’t without some controversial costs. Building more affordable housing may call for the area to be rezoned from industrial and small-scale commercial use to residential use, similar to the Willets Point redevelopment in Queens. Rezoning could mean the end for Jerome’s auto repair market, and the displacement of many local residents who rely on the agglomeration of shops and other businesses to make ends meet.

More affordable housing, at what cost?

With NYC in a housing crisis, some may wonder if it isn’t worth dismantling old industry to create more affordable housing in the City’s poorest borough. Rest assured the answer is almost unequivocally “no.”

First, it’s arguable that New York hardly needs any more housing units at all. There are enough vacant units across the City to house our entire homeless population, with remainders. Much of that stock is inaccessible for a number of reasons, including mismatches between supply and demand (high demand for Studios & 3 BRs on a supply mostly comprised of 1 & 2 BRs) and the use of vacant units either only part-time or as investment vehicles. An effort to connect tenants to vacant units by mayoral candidate and former Speaker of the Council Christine Quinn pretty much failed.

Related: This Might Be NYC's Housing Crisis Solution

In any case, building more affordable housing with such limited land options and so much vacancy is inefficient.

We should also ask: affordable to whom? The affordable housing formula has yet to be sufficiently demonstrated by Mayor de Blasio, and the normal assumption is that the newest housing stock typically goes to the highest matching bidder. It’s unlikely that incumbent tenants will have access to new housing, especially at rents they can afford. And while there is an argument that new housing stock could have hand-me-down effects on housing for lower income residents, the displacement and unemployment that could be generated from rezoning needs to be fully considered.

What will gentrification look like along Cromwell-Jerome?

The first step to gentrifying any neighborhood is uprooting the infrastructure used by incumbent residents to make a living. People without jobs can’t pay rent, and they’ll move to places where either matching employment is offered or low-cost living opportunities exist. That makes room for new tenants, who only need a new or nearby job market to attract them to more reasonably priced housing.

Rezoning Jerome Avenue will all but certainly start the gentrifying engine. The jobs there are unique anchors for nearby residents, in an industry with relatively low barriers to entry and international prominence. If you fixed vehicles in the Dominican Republic, or Jamaica, you can fix them on Jerome Avenue. Many immigrants with little training in other industries or with poor English Language Proficiency rely on the local auto repair market to give them a shot at surviving in NYC.

As one resident asked according to Bronx Bureau, “Are these the kind of jobs we need to protect?”

And rezoning isn’t the only finger pointing towards gentrification. “The rest of the picture involves revitalizing the whole strip and making it safer” notes Curbed. While the surrounding area and the Concourse has had some troubles with block gangs (sometimes called “crews”), the idea of delivering safety is subjective. In Washington Heights, wheregentrification more prominently threatens the neighborhood, enhanced safety has meant criminalizing incumbent, otherwise law abiding residents for minor crimes like marijuana possession. Needless criminalization will only make gentrification easier if it removes harmless income streams or inhibits access to employment and education.

Related: What If We Got Gentrification All Wrong?

The road to safer streets starts bycreating more jobs, not taking existing ones away.

Once jobs are removed, it’s all downhill from there. The neighborhood will be ripe for improvements that few if any of the incumbent residents will benefit from. Rezoning will hopefully decongest the neighborhood’s streets and air – something incumbent tenants could badly use – but that will only make the area more appealing to educationally better armed, employment hungry Millennials. They won’t hesitate to occupy a neighborhood with excellent transit access (easy highway access, but even more attractive are the 4, B, and D trains) better parks, fresher air, and apartments marginally more affordable than those in Manhattan.

“I always said that there could be more done with this neighborhood—to blow it up,” says David Modesto, 22, according to Bronx Bureau. David says many of his friends left The Bronx after college, and spend most of their leisure time in Manhattan. Although he has roots in the neighborhood the sad reality is that young, highly educated workers like him will be the folks most likely to replace incumbent low-skill immigrants when auto repair shops are swapped for new housing stock mostly affordable to the well employed.

The community reacts

“I’d like to see a business atmosphere where one can feel comfortable bringing their family to a sit-down restaurant,” said José Rodriguez, district manager of Community Board 4, according to Bronx Bureau. “Not the Kennedy Fried Chicken, not the McDonalds, not a liquor store on every corner. I want to see a real nice neighborhood with folks walking up and down, without having to move because there are 50 cars on the sidewalk.”

Rodriguez brings up very valid points about the community’s current state and welfare. Jerome Avenue, due to the surrounding poverty, is a prime example of a food swamp, among other harmful characteristics. But residents are weary of the City’s investigation and ultimate plans for the neighborhood. A walking tour was recently disrupted by presumably incumbent tenants who were concerned that their neighborhood only became relevant when it seemed ripe for profit.

The community has all right to be suspicious, considering the direction being described by people involved in Cromwell-Jerome’s planning. There seems to be more concern about a hopeful future, and less concern about ensuring incumbent tenants can make it through to the other side.

How to make sure incumbent tenants survive the inevitable

One person interrupting the walking tour may have put it best, “Ya’ll should have been here 10 years ago.”

Whether or not some tenants want change, it’s hard to see a future within which Jerome Avenue remains unchanged. It’s also hard to find good reasons why Jerome Avenue should remain unchanged – the neighborhood serves a marginal economic benefit to tenants as is, but much of that is eroded by the noise and environmental pollution, and socioeconomic neglect. Residents there deserve better. And better starts with solidifying a place for incumbent tenants in whatever Cromwell-Jerome will look like, using what is known about the neighborhood now and what we know about surviving gentrification.

Expanding rent stabilization and maintaining it where it exists should be central to any redevelopment strategy. It’s been demonstrated that stabilized rents keep poor people in place, especially during gentrification. Additionally, evidence suggests incumbent tenants who live in stabilized units are more likely to enjoy the socioeconomic benefits of the improved neighborhood. There is no reason why people need to choose between continuing to scrape by or being left behind.

Combined with stabilization should be an incumbent-preference in any housing development. Not only should tenants be protected where they live, but they should be given the first opportunity to move into better conditions if possible. Similar local hiring preferences should also be given by new businesses attracted to development in the area. It’s about protecting the livelihoods of people who sustained the community through its decades of neglect.

Rezoning shouldn’t happen without a highly subsidized retraining initiative and limited-time protection of select auto repair businesses in the area. That is to say, people should be given the time and opportunity to adjust to any changes in their neighborhood. The market there is so vital that some businesses will also need to be protected (at least not zoned out) if displacement is to be avoided. And workers willing to be retrained for in-demand, related Green Industry jobs need to be offered that chance at the lowest cost possible. As tenants find their steady footing in the new labor market protections on auto repair shops can be gradually lifted.

Finally, we must consider the businesses for whom displacement hinges on whether or not they can keep up with changing neighborhood preferences. Bodegas and other grocery stores, which complement businesses and residences in the area, need to be armed with tools to offer healthier options. Improving a neighborhood for its residents – not without them – includes offering residents the choices they deserve: the ones in their best interest, not just the ones that sell well.

If your biggest concern about this survival plan is its cost, you’re absolutely sane. This won’t be cheap, especially since it shifts the costs of community protection from residents and non-profits to the City government. But the costs are relatively small compared to the burdens of homelessness, hunger, and social stagnation that will accompany the unchecked gentrification of Jerome Avenue. Communities don’t have to remain dormant for incumbent tenants to survive, but after the years of intentional destruction of parts of the outer boroughs it’s time that the City pays its fair share to uplift residents.  If others want to profit, the residents who held these neighborhoods down for decades need to see the dividends first.

Featured photo credit: Kim Snyder / Flickr

About Geoffery Mullings:

Geoffrey Mullings is the Editor-in-chief of The Blinker and is a CUNY student hailing from The Bronx. Versed in social science, communication, and business, Geoff also brings to the team experience in news, politics, education, and audio-visual production and technology. Geoff is currently seeking an MBA from CUNY Baruch and is a Fordham alum.”

Disclaimer:

Comments, views, and opinions are that solely of the author and should never be misconstrued as that of Welcome2TheBronx or any other authors of this site. Welcome2TheBronx only edits articles submitted by readers for grammar and spelling leaving fact checking up to the author.

Welcome2TheBronx encourages reader submissions for consideration for publication on our site. It is our mission to be able to provide a platform where Bronx residents can have their voices broadcasted to a wider audience.

To submit an article, email us at submissions@welcome2thebronx.com

=====================

 Sponsored Ad: Space still available at new school in Mott Haven!

Important Ebola Awareness Event Sponsored by Bronx Ghanain Activist Felix Sarpong

1
Image Credit: CHU FOR NEWS Members of Victory Entertainment (clockwise from l.), Kwaku Nsoroma, Felix Sarpong (aka Phil Black) Tony Essien and Twi Gangsta, perform fusion of hip hop and African music.
Image Credit: CHU FOR NEWS
Members of Victory Entertainment (clockwise from l.), Kwaku Nsoroma, Felix Sarpong (aka Phil Black) Tony Essien and Twi Gangsta, perform fusion of hip hop and African music.

In light of the recent attacks on two innocent, young Bronx African boys from Senegal and were called “Ebola”, the following is an important educational awareness event:

In response to the deadly Ebola virus outbreak that directly and indirectly affects the African community here in the Bronx and throughout the city, we the Ghanaian community in collaboration with the Hip Hop Pioneers Ground Breakers of the Bronx, have put together a comprehensive program to educate the immediate communities citywide and eventually take it globally. This collaboration is so great because the hip hop pioneers who were the original messengers are now being rebirth through this collaborative efforts with the new and growing Ghanaian community to bring forward awareness. We are requesting the assistant of local media and national media help us educate the global community. We invite the press to to take coverage of this important event and help disseminate information. You can also inform your media contacts that we have an open schedule for pre and post interviews. If we can get some press before the event it would be great!

We will be performing at the event being hosted by West Harlem Development Corporation and Manhattan Borough President Office.

Date:Thursday October 30, 2014
Time: 5:30pm – 9pm

Venue: Aronow Theater@
City College of New York
Ground floor at the North Academic center

Enter at Convent Avenue and 138th Street

RSVP REQUIRED: Ebola@africanfed.org or call 646-476-3394

FREE: ADMISSION and FOOD

ALL ARE WELCOME TO COME TO THIS EVENT

Thank you in Advance!

Best Regards,

Felix M Sarpong
CEO/ Management
Victory Entertainment Int’l

Youth Icons Ghana
Executive Director (USA)

 

Below is the recent incident involving the two young brothers from The Bronx:

“A group that advocates for Africans in the Bronx is calling for action after it says two brothers who had recently immigrated to the borough from Senegal were beaten and severely injured by several people who called them “Ebola.”

The boys, in sixth and eighth grade, were attacked Friday afternoon at I.S. 318 in Tremont, according to the African Advocacy Council.”

via African Boys Attacked at Bronx School, Called “Ebola”: Advocacy Group | NBC New York.

=====================

 Sponsored Ad: Space still available at new school in Mott Haven!

Bronx Residents Disrupt Tour of Proposed ‘New Neighborhood’ – Gentrification Watch – Curbed NY

2
Via Curbed.com

Since we first began discussing Cromwell-Jerome on Welcome2TheBronx and throughout various Bronx Facebook Groups, many residents have been disturbed by the idea of the rebranding of a neighborhood and the community not having input in even the proposition of the study area which was presented by Department of City Planning last month.

On Saturday, during the second tour of the study area which was hosted by DCP, Bronx residents disrupted the tour in anger.  Welcome2TheBronx received calls and emails about what had transpired including their fear and anger at what they perceive is going on.

One thing which the agency insists is that this is something that is and will involve community input and they are giving residents the opportunity to shape the area.  Unlike previous rezonings, this particular one is simply highlighting an area and we haven’t been presented with the Bloomberg-era two maps of the area: 1 which shows the area as it currently stands and the 2nd showing what it could be.

In conversations with Welcome2TheBronx, DCP insists that this is an effort from the ground up and that no planning has been done on their end other than laying out the study area and they are truly at the very beginning stages of the study. They are conducting these tours to get area residents input on what they envision their neighborhoods would look like. These tours will eventually be followed by larger community forums where residents can gather together under one roof and continue the discussion in reshaping their neighborhood.

DCP states they don’t know what the final form would look like; it could be more open space or employment centers if that’s what community input call for.

But many folks don’t buy that.

Because of the previous administrations, lack of community involvement, the anger surrounding this is very understandable.  One thing for sure is that the Cromwell-Jerome name needs to go and it simply should be a study area.  By calling it Cromwell-Jerome, the city is implying the rebranding of an entire neighborhood which already exists and is a conglomerate of several areas.

As citizens, we must exercise our rights to be heard and utilize the tools that which are provided by government. In this instance, we continue to be a part of the conversation and any planning that goes on in our neighborhoods and it seems that perhaps this is one of those instances where there will be true community involvement in the process.

Here’s what our friends at Curbed had to say:

“The city’s plan to create a new neighborhood in the South Bronx was shown to be a tough sell to locals over the weekend when residents disrupted a walking tour led by the Department of City Planning. The department wants to rebrand a 57-block corridor that is currently dotted with auto shops as “Cromwell Jerome.” New housing, both affordable and market-rate, would pop up along with new retail stores after a rezoning of the area. Seeking input on the existing swath for a new study, the DCP held its second walking tour Saturday, which focused on traffic and park conditions. But half of the dozen or so locals who showed up were more interested in discussing what they saw as a major move to gentrify the area—and they were dubious.

“Who’s going to be coming in when the project is done? That’s the question we have to ask,” said Jay Espy, an organizer with activist group People Power Movement. This calm reflection at Mullaly Park preceded a collective confrontation that would prematurely end the tour.”

Please read the rest over at Curbed: via Bronx Residents Disrupt Tour of Proposed ‘New Neighborhood’ – Gentrification Watch – Curbed NY.

=====================

 Sponsored Ad: Space still available at new school in Mott Haven!

WATCH: Over 6,000 Cyclists Descend Upon Our Borough for Tour De Bronx Event

1
Thousands wiz by at the beginning of the Tour de Bronx through Melrose.
Thousands wiz by at the beginning of the Tour de Bronx through Melrose.

Thousands of cyclists rode their bikes across the borough to enjoy the beauty that is The Bronx for the 20th annual event known as Tour De Bronx which is hosted by Transportation Alternatives. The tour had two routes to choose from:  a 25 mile route and a 40 mile route which took you across all the neighborhoods of our borough.

Check out this awesome video by  Jose Gonzalez who took part in this event.  I had registered for the event but due to a last minute conflict in my schedule, I couldn’t make it and boy it looks like I missed out on a lot of fun!  There’s always next year!

Thousands wiz by at the beginning of the Tour de Bronx through Melrose.
Thousands wiz by at the beginning of the Tour de Bronx through Melrose.

=====================

 Sponsored Ad: Space still available at new school in Mott Haven!

One Voice from the South Bronx: Q&A with New York Times Reporter David Gonzalez | CentroVoices

0
Image from CentroVoices
Image from CentroVoices

Here’s an excellent article and interview with Bronx Hero David Gonzalez, a Bronx born and bred New York Times reporter.

Reporter Samy Nevir Olivares of CentroVoices says of Gonzalez:

“After working at Newsweek, Gonzalez moved to The New York Times in 1990, becoming one of the first Latino staff at the paper. There he led the Bronx and Central America/Caribbean bureaus. Along with reporting, he co-edits Lens Blog and does the biweekly Side Street photo-essay feature for the City Room blog.

For his social conscience and in-depth work, Gonzalez won Columbia University’s Mike Berger Award in May 1992, and the 2008 Distinguished Writing Award from the American Society of Newspaper Editors for “House Afire,” a feature for The Times. He was inducted into the National Association of Hispanic Journalists (NAHJ) Hall of Fame in 2013.”

During the interview, David Gonzalez goes on to talk about the contributions he has been able to make to The New York Times as a Latino reporter and says:

DG: Una punta[sic] de vista muy distinto. Mireya Navarro que se crió en Puerto Rico, Angel Franco el fotógrafo. Again, we all bring to the table our life’s experiences. When I write about, for example, people in the South Bronx who were struggling getting their buildings… you know, struggling for credibility or respect, I know what it is like because I grew up in neighborhoods like that. I know what it’s like because I lived in a neighborhood that was falling apart and where people banded together to demand that the city provides services. We bring insights into a situation that they might not know about. I think that the real thing we’ve got to talk about is that we opened up the world to them in some ways, the world that’s literally right in front of them. I’m not saying that I should be a chauvinistic New Yorker, but I mean our city is so diverse that you can literally find the world in our city. I mean I can point out parts of the city where the Cambodians live, where Canadians live, where the Ecuadorians are. I’m saying, Latino reporters, diverse reporters, because it is not just about being Latino … You know, diversity means a lot more than having people of a particular ethnic descendencia, porque tú y yo sabemos que hay gente que tiene el nombre y tiene el apellido pero no tienen el sabor… (laughs)

Please make sure you read the entire article and interview via One Voice from the South Bronx: Q&A with New York Times Reporter David Gonzalez | CentroVoices.

Also from CentroVoices: Click to hear David Gonzalez talk about reporting from Puerto Rican and Latino communities
and see a sample of his photo coverage since the 1970s. 

=====================

 Sponsored Ad: Space still available at new school in Mott Haven!

Bronx River Provides Blueprint for Urban Waterway Restoration | Huffington Post

0
Before river restoration efforts began in the late 1990s and early 2000s, cars and other garbage clogged the Bronx River. Photo used with permission from the South Bronx Waterfront Partnership.
Before river restoration efforts began in the late 1990s and early 2000s, cars and other garbage clogged the Bronx River. Photo used with permission from the South Bronx Waterfront Partnership.

From the Huffington Post:

“We sometimes take our waterways for granted. We know that they run through our cities and neighborhoods, but because we don’t all directly rely on them every day for our livelihoods, it is easy to forget about how important they are.

Surely, early New York settler Jonas Bronck appreciated the river that bisected his land when he purchased it in 1639. What became known as Bronck’s (later “the Bronx”) River supplied his family with water for irrigation, fish for food, and beaver for pelts.

Today, the Bronx River is still the only freshwater river in New York City. But somewhere in the 375 years between Jonas Bronck’s settlement and the very recent past, New Yorkers became disconnected from this fantastic natural resource. The river was polluted by industrial waste, urban runoff, and sewage overflow. In some places it began resembling a trash dump. Wildlife all but vanished from its waters and shores.”

via Bronx River Provides Blueprint for Urban Waterway Restoration | John F. Calvelli.

 

=====================

 Sponsored Ad: Space still available at new school in Mott Haven!

Mother Who Lived In The Bronx Speaks Out: I’m a Single Mom, and This S*** Is Hard | Vanessa Martir

0

Image from Huffington Post

Correction: Vanessa Martir lived in The Bronx but currently does not reside here.

There is a strong stigma against single mothers and The Bronx is no exception and according to Congressman José E. Serrano, The Bronx  has the 3rd highest rate of single mothers in the country.

Back in 2011, NPR had a show on the issue based on recent data from a Pew Research poll and had this to say:

“The American family looks a little different now than it did in the days of Ward and June Cleaver. Sometimes, parents are married, sometimes unmarried. Sometimes dads have – kids have two dads. Some couples don’t have children at all. Some parents raise kids alone.

A new Pew Research poll found that among all those possible configurations, moms raising kids on their own are considered bad for society.”

In 2012,  Katie Roiphe, an author and journalism professor at New York University wrote an opinion piece which was published in the New York Times called, ‘In Defense of Single Motherhood. Roiphe says:

“There is no doubt, however, that single motherhood can be more difficult than other kinds of motherhood. In France, the response to the added difficulty is to give single mothers preferential access to excellent day care. Here the response is moralism disguised as concern and, at other times, simply moralism.”

Now, Vanessa Martir, a single mother who lived in The Bronx speaks out and here is part of her story. You can read the rest of this profound essay at the Huffington Post via I’m a Single Mom, and This S*** Is Hard | Vanessa Martir.

“Months after leaving my daughter’s father, I confessed to him that I was having a hard time adjusting to being a single mom. I was having a hard time with my four-hour daily commute — an hour on the bus across the Bronx to upper Manhattan to drop her off with my grandmother, then an hour on the train to get to work, then the reverse in the evenings — five, sometimes six days a week. Then I had to feed my little girl, bathe her, read to her, and coddle her. By the time I put her down for the night, I was utterly exhausted but still had to bathe and get myself ready for the next day. I had to read, and I had to write. I am a writer, after all.

His response went something like, “Give me custody. I’ll take her.” As if that were what I was saying.

That was my entry into the shame imposed on us single moms. We can’t say it’s hard. We can’t cry over the pressure. We are supposed to grin and bear it. It’s no wonder so many snap, so many are depressed, so many take this pent-up rage and resentment out on their kids. I’m not saying it’s right. I’m saying I understand, carajo.” – Vanessa Martir

Are you a single mother? We’d love to hear from you and your experiences.

=====================

 Sponsored Ad: Space still available at new school in Mott Haven!

 

Breaking News: Barnes & Nobles To Stay At Bay Plaza; Negotiations Made

4
image
©Welcome2TheBronx.com

At a press conference with Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr, and many elected officials as well as representatives from Barnes & Noble and Prestige Properties it was announced that bookstore will stay in Bay Plaza in Co-op City.

Diaz said that when news reached his office that the bookstore was going to close, his, “phone was burning with phone calls from Bronxites and elected officials.”

“We are pleased to announce that we are staying in the Bronx”, said Frank Morabito a representative of Barnes & Noble.

In a press release issued by the Borough President’s office, Sam Shalem, Chairman and CEO of Prestige Properties said, “As a courtesy to the community and upon request of the Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr, we made every effort to ensure that Barnes & Noble remains at their current location…we are thankful for the Borough President’s assistance in making this happen.”

It should be noted, however, that the lease is only for 2 years so the future is still murky. Mr Morabito did not want to elaborate further and said that when the extension is up, the appropriate conversations will be had at that time.

Residents, however, were overjoyed that for now we are keeping the store.

We thank everyone who said no to this happening to our borough and everyone who signed the petition and made phone calls to stop this. We thank the Borough President and his office for working hard in not letting the worst case scenario happen.

image
Amelia Zaino, who first broke the story online and started the petition to save the store. ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

image
Patrons, including many students studying, sitting at the cafe at the bookstore ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

===================

Follow us:

Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/Welcome2TheBronx/

Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/Welcome2TheBronx/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/Welcome2theBX

Instagram: http://instagram.com/welcome2thebronx

Tumblr: http://welcome2thebronx.tumblr.com/