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Bronx Artist Christopher Estrada Releases Second Single & Music Video, ‘I Want More’

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Two months ago as the year was just starting, Bronx artist Christopher Estrada launched his first single and video, ‘Music is My Only Love’.

Now he’s done it again with the launch of his latest single and video, ‘I Want More’.

You first heard about Estrada when we published an intimate Q&A with him (make sure you read it!) and since then he has been featured in several other blogs and shows including Best of the Bronx on News12 the Bronx!

Check out his latest video below and remember, you can purchase the song on Amazon or iTunes! Support your local Bronx Artists!!

Oh and take a look at the making of the video. Footage on the set of the video was shot by yours truly!

How I Realized Black & Latino Men Can Make Guns With Their Minds | The Blinker

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The following is a compelling response by Bronx resident Geoffrey Mullings on the 14 year old boy in Brooklyn who shot and killed and innocent man on a bus.

How I Realized Black & Latino Men Can Make Guns With Their Minds

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theblinker.com

March 24, 2014

As tightly as I close my eyes and clench my fists, as hard as I wish for it, I can’t seem to materialize a gun.

The way Michael Bloomberg spoke about it, the way the NYT, the WSJ, the NYDN, and the Gothamist write about it, the way Ray Kelly handled it and the way his successor briefs us on it, I was under the impression that any Black or Latino male having reached puberty but under the age of 25 could immediately wish a gun into their hands. Yet as hard as I try, that doesn’t seem to be happening.

Trusting the above sources, wishing it into my presence would be the only way someone in my demographic could obtain a gun. After all, our City doesn’t manufacture firearms, and if the local retailers were at fault then we would have to logically assume that anyone in New York City could potentially illegally posses a firearm. The televised news had made it very clear though that only Black and Latino youths can own guns illegally.

Otherwise, guns must be illicitly coming in from outside the City. But that can’t be right. From all of our above sources, NYC’s gun violence problem is clearly a men of color problem. As former Mayor Bloomberg said, a disproportionate amount of people pointed out by victims and witnesses of crimes are Black and Latino men, and this must hold true for gun violence as well. Actually, I can’t recall ever hearing a NYC politician discuss our gun problem, in the context of communities of color, and delve any deeper than the interactions between victims and perpetrators.

As far the conversation is concerned, guns do not exist before they enter the hands of youths of color. And they certainly couldn’t have been sold to those youths, or to middle-men, by NYPD officers. Clearly, our gun problem starts and ends in communities of color.

Such is clearly the case in this most recent shooting on a B15 bus in Brooklyn. NYPD Commissioner Bratton, appointed by self-proclaimed progressive, Mayor Bill de Blasio, referred to, “the stupidity of those gangs that basically, over nothing, are trying to kill each other.” Fortunately the blame can be squarely laid on those gangs, because firearms or even poverty never existed before they arrived in our City.

Imagine how awful it would be if Commissioner Bratton was faced with the embarrassment of appending his statement. “The stupidity of those gangs… and the stupidity of a police department which, even with years of evidence that gun trafficking into a city is a major problem mostly affecting low-income Black and Latino communities, refuses to take serious steps to keep guns out before they arrive.”

“Unfortunately, while failing to uphold our duties to every New York City taxpayer, we allow the killing of innocents,” Bratton would have to say, knowing full well that guns illegally entering NYC have a higher probability of ending up in the hands of impoverished teenage men of color rather than at a precinct. It’s well known that teens make terribly rash decisions, imagine if Commissioner Bratton also knew that guns were almost exclusively landing in the hands of this unstable demographic while on his watch!

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Fortunately that isn’t the truth, because if it was, the media outlets reporting on such tragedies would be forced to ask the question of how a 14 year old, probably impoverished teen from Bed-stuy came into possession of a .357 Magnum, a gun that can cost anywhere from $50 to $100 when purchased from legitimate sources. Instead the Daily News can swing catchy photographs exclaiming “Big Gun, Small Punk,” because otherwise there would be seriously journalistic questions when one impoverished person uses an unaffordable gun, in a city with some of the strictest gun laws in the nation, to kill an impoverished resident who can barely afford his rent.

The NYT and the Gothamist ran ahead of these improbable questions by including concise explanations of block gangs, so their readers could understand the economies of scale activated when multiple young men of color come together and work hard to wish guns into their hands. Had those guns originated from anywhere else, both outlets might be forced to explain to their middle income, employed audiences that block gangs are almost a direct response to breakdowns in enterprise drug gangs that typically supported low-income families in NYC’s impoverished neighborhoods. They might have had to explain that as certain parts of our society moved toward a “college for everyone (who can afford it)” mindset, many were left behind in the dust of discrimination and poverty. Those left behind found unique ways to make ends meet when rent became 110% of the neighborhood’s average income.

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Feds Can’t Save Us From This Either

The use of young teens by enterprise gangs of the 80′s and 90′s prepared today’s relatively young block gang leaders to have no qualms with arming their slightly younger peers in some twisted version of a sibling society, the NYT would have to explain. The Gothamist would need a hilarious spin to keep their gentrification-era readers comfortable while explaining that social phenomenons that allowed them to move closer to lower Manhattan also concentrated poverty into neighborhood pockets and helped maintain low-employment rates in these denser ghettos among 16 to 24 year olds. And that would be a curious, highly causal link to the continued violence we’re observing in some neighborhoods even as NYC’s overall crime rate declines… if young men of color didn’t actually materialize guns with only their minds.

I will continue to work on my capabilities, fearful that I may lose them when I reach my 25th birthday. No doubts exist in my mind about my ability to make a firearm appear on my desk only through cognitive manipulation. Will it be a .357? Perhaps a Desert Eagle. How should I customize it? These are only questions about what the end result will look like, not the possibility of it happening. Certainly, our elected officials and gatekeepers of information wouldn’t leave the conversation only half disclosed and discussed if it wasn’t true that, indeed, the mind of the young, impoverished colored man is more powerful than any Smith & Wesson factory.

About Geoffrey 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

After 36 Years, A Son of the Bronx Returns Home; Publishes Book

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Bronx born and raised, storyteller, writer and author, Martin Kleinman, returned back to his birthplace after a 36 year journey living abroad — in, Queens, Manhattan, and 25 years in Park Slope, Brooklyn. (Sorry, Staten Island, as he quipped in an article in the Huffington Post back in January on a de Blasio Mayoralty).

Since Kleinman’s return to our great borough of the North, the writer of the blog, ‘The Real New Yorkers‘ — and Huffington Post New York writer — he’s published a book called Home Front: The Collection.

The New York-centric assemblage of fictional tales is an account influenced by our own great metropolis and its denizens. From the Bronx, to Brooklyn, to Manhattan, and bungalow communities of the Catskills, each short story is bright and alive with that real New York flavor that, well, a true New Yorker would instantly recognize and relate to.

Home Front: The Collection, is by no way meant to be a whitewashed account of our city and even our borough but an accurate portrayal of how things were, and now are.

The several stories that take place in the Bronx, provides a window into a Jewish Bronx or rather the end of that era from when once upon a time the Bronx was home to more Jews than any other borough. Some accounts estimated that almost 60% of Bronxites in the early to mid 20th century were Jewish.

Bronx Synagogues, an online repository on Bronx Jewish history, reports that in 1940, there were, “260 registered tax-exempt synagogues and at least twice as many unregistered synagogues in the South Bronx.

These stories written by Kleinman show a city in constant flux and a Bronx that has alwsys been home to a variety of immigrant communities. As the calendar changed, so did the motherland of the immigrants who settled in our borough.

Home Front: The Collection is a must read for Bronxites, and all New Yorkers and those who love us. Follow the links after the interview to purchase your copy!

BronxQ&A with Martin Kleinman

Why did you write this collection of New York-centric short stories and poems?

I actually HAD to write these stories and poems.  There was no way around it.  Writing them down was the only way I could find relief from the pressure that would build inside me.  The characters, the places, the situations — they had to come OUT.

Each piece in Home Front contains specific elements of my Bronx and New York area experience.  Many of these elements were less than pleasant.  Others were very funny, at least in retrospect.  Others were iconic situations that we — true, blue New Yorkers — faced, and still face.  I wanted the wider world to know about them.

The writing of Home Front was my pressure relief valve.  I am lucky enough to be able to use my writing as a way of simultaneously entertaining readers and pumping out some of the psychological toxin that’s been in my system for many years.  And, frankly, I wanted to tell the world what it was like here in the Bronx — as well as around New York City and surrounding areas — during a time of tremendous upheaval.  It was a time that led to the point where the entire nation basically gave the big middle finger to New York City.  Remember the famous headline in the New York Daily News: Ford to City — Drop Dead!  And today, even though we’ve bounced back from those days of the 1970s, we live in a time when many of us are getting priced out of our homes.  Remember, the Bloomberg administration would brag that prices were necessarily high here because “New York is a luxury product.”

Your characters and stories recall a bygone era of New York and New Yorkers — the kind of quintessential New Yorker of yesteryear. You give us a very raw, real look into that world without sugarcoating it. Where did you draw your inspiration from to develop them? 

Home Front is very deliberately “no frills.”  I intended to make it accurate and ring true, so that my best buddies from The Bronx would read it and say, “Yep, that’s what it was like, alright.”  Make no mistake — Home Front is not reportage.  The stories are completely fictitious.  But “stuff like that” happened, and “people like that” behaved the way they’re portrayed. 

There are several stories that take place in the Bronx, like Rain, Carlos and Almond Head Cruise Eastern Parkway, and of course Home Front.

Were these stories based on actual events you experienced (or any of your other stories for that matter) or just pure fiction? All the stories are fictitious.  I grew up in the world where Rain happened and where, as a young man, situations like those in Carlos and Almond Head actually did happen.  But none of my characters are based upon actual people, and none of the events happened like that.  The great part of being a writer from The Bronx is that there is NO shortage of situations or characters in your memory bank.  Some are hysterically funny.  Others scare me to this very day.  When we Bronxites talk with people who lived nice manicured quiet lives out of our region, they can’t believeour stories.  And those are the stories I can remember — and your readers can recall — without digging very deep.  We, here, live in a very colorful land.  I’m sure when those of your readers, who’ve moved from the area, start to reminisce, they find it easy to outdo each other with crazy stories from their days back in The Bronx. 

The hard part about writing the stories in Home Front, though, was capturing the feel of the stories and the characters and placing them in compelling narratives. 

Where did you grow up in the Bronx and which schools did you attend here? 

I grew up near Devoe Park, near Fordham Road and University Avenue.  I went to P.S. 86, JHS 143, De Witt Clinton HS and Lehman College.  Three years at Clinton taught me a lot.  So much talent, from all walks of life, went through those doors over the years: from Nate Archibald to Tracy Morgan, from Paddy Chayefsky to James Baldwin, to lyricist Fred Ebb and Burt Lancaster — even Ace Frehley, the guitarist from Kiss.  In retrospect, I had great teachers in The Bronx and a solid education.  A special shout-out to a few educators who were especially supportive: John Halvey and Gail Simon at Clinton, Jerome Charyn at Lehman College.

When did you move from the Bronx and why?

I moved from The Bronx in 1974.  I moved from my childhood home in University Heights after I graduated college.  It was time for me to leave that neighborhood and that apartment building. Around 1972-73, the break-ins, muggings, shootings — all kinds of things — started, in my neighborhood and in my building.  Once I graduated from Lehman College, I moved in with a friend to an apartment he found on Hunt Avenue, just south of Morris Park Avenue.  We had a ball there.  We both went to college in the Bronx, and now we were out in the working world and out on our own.  The world was ours.  We had no money but at that age, it did not matter. The next door neighbor kept roosters and chickens and the roosters woke us up well before dawn every day.  The apartment had no heat and various forms of Bronx wildlife.  We could care less.  Then, we both met girls.  My friend moved to Yonkers and I moved in with my girlfriend in Chelsea, years before it become “CHELSEA.”  It was still the 70s-era New York, and junk and crime was everywhere.  But — I was living in Manhattan, and sky high.  We got married and lived across the grungy street from a promising young Broadway star.  His name was Andre de Shields.  The year we moved in, he was cast for the title role in The Wiz.  I felt my life was about to change and I enrolled in writing classes at NYU’s School of Continuing Education.  There, I met writers at the Village Voice, who said I had talent and should stick with the writing.  One, a Harvard grad from a family of great wealth, suggested I “take a year off and devote myself to writing.”  Ed, he had no idea.  No idea at all…taking a year off was a complete impossibility.  I lived paycheck to paycheck.

When did you move back to the Bronx and what prompted your return?

The great circle of life.  We moved back in 2010, after living in Chelsea, Jackson Heights and, for 25 years, in Park Slope, Brooklyn.  We saw the phenomenon of gentrification, up close and personal.  We saw a down-at-the-heels neighborhood rise to the point where brownstones fetched more than

$3 million and cheaply constructed condos lined Fourth Avenue, where once only taxi garages and U-Haul shops stood.  We saw the monstrosity called Barclays Center rise, like a giant rusted turtle on Flatbush Avenue.   When the neighborhood was mixed, it was fine.  Everyone got along.  But, in my opinion, gentrification got out of hand.  Park Slope became some kind of distorted Frankenstein monster of what it once was.

We looked for a new neighborhood when we realized that 25 years of Brooklyn was more than enough.  We moved back to The Bronx.  It actually reminded us of Park Slope, circa 1985.  That is, a nice blend of the old and the new guards.

How was it growing up in the Bronx during your generation? How do you feel it prepared you for the world?

Growing up in the Bronx back then made you tough enough and strong enough to overcome hardship and deal with adversity.  We had a certain edge and resiliency.  We Bronx people learn, early-on, how to handle ourselves in certain situations and survive.  So, on the one hand, being a Bronx kid who would leave the apartment early in the morning during summers and come home around dinner time — out all day — made us self-sufficient. 

However, in some ways growing up in the Bronx was a distinct disadvantage, at least in some ways, when I entered the working world.  This was because I wanted to earn my living by using my writing skills, and this narrowed the playing field to areas such as advertising, public relations and publishing.  In this world, entry level applicants were suburban-bred, from prestigious schools, with more polish and poise.  I was more creative, more assertive, and mentally faster and tougher.  But, Ed, let’s face it.  In the interview situation, people like to hire people like themselves.  Money hires money.  The way I spoke, the way I dressed, all said B-R-O-N-X.  It took time to understand how to stay true to myself and still “fit in” in the world of Manhattan achievers.  Growing up, I could see the Empire State Building from my kitchen window.  But the business world of midtown Manhattan was — in many respects — much much more than 15 miles away.  In my early years, it might as well been on the Moon. 

Rain, and Home Front both feel to me to be rather a personal tale, is this the case? I love how these two stories are perfectly connected and describe a Bronx when it was dramatically changing in so many ways.

Yes, they are very personal stories and, not surprisingly, two of the first stories I wrote for the Home Front collection.  Over the years, I think back to what my grandparents went through, coming to New York from eastern Europe as teenagers, with virtually no money, living with distant relatives, dealing with a new language, and trying to make their way.  New York City and the immigrant experience are forever intertwined.  To a large degree, that’s a big theme in “Rain.”  My story “Home Front” takes this in another direction: the culture clash of the various immigrant groups.  It always made me bitter to hear a member of one ethnic group insult another.  Very few of us who grew up in New York City have relatives who came over on the Mayflower.  We really have to work together, especially in times of economic distress.  And perhaps that’s why these stories resonatetoday.  They were written about an era of dramatic social and economic change, in the 70s.  And, guess what?  Here we are in 2014, and the tectonic changes in our society are again shaking us to the core.

Are you working on any other books?

I’m writing a second collection of short fiction and already have five stories done.  And, I have many many story fragments, filled with people and places that are cool, but are not yet ready for prime time.  Hopefully, I’ll be finished by 2015.

Also, I’m working on another non-fiction book, Robert’s Rules of Innovation II, designed to help business owners — from start-ups to multinationals — implement sustainable innovation programs that can take organizations to the next level.  The first Robert’s Rules of Innovation was published by Wiley in 2010 (http://www.amazon.com/Roberts-Rules-Innovation-Corporate-Survival/dp/0470596996).

What advice do you have for any aspiring writers here in the Bronx?

Read, read, read. Read everything, from the classics to current books.  Read Dickens AND Junot Diaz.  Read stories that are out of your comfort zone, and that explore people and places completely unfamiliar to you.  Then, write, write, write.  Don’t stop.  The more you write, the better you get.  Don’t let anyone or anything discourage you.  The finest writers all have a shoebox full of rejection letters.  If you’re a writer, you HAVE to write.  You have no choice.  The stories come bubbling out of your head.  Don’t deny your stories their place in the world.  Let them out.  Write! 

And, finally, Bronx writers have a unique perspective and point of view.  The Bronx forges a certain type of personality, one that is both very sensitive and very tough.  We’ve seen it all.  We’re strong, but there is an emotional price to be paid for living here.  Maybe that is why the voices of story tellers from the Bronx are unmistakeable.  The world needs to hear more from us.  So please, keep writing.  
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Support your local Bronx artists, writers and entrepreneurs!

You can purchase Home Front:The Collection in either print or for your Kindle!

With A Drum, A Beat & Some Heart & Soul, One Man Creates A Cultural Bridge That Transcends Generations

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Las Perlas de BombaYo / ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

This past Saturday on March 22nd, the Puerto Rican Afro-Boricua rhythms of bomba echoed through the Andrew Freedman Home on the Grand Concourse — played and danced by both teenagers and senior citizens alike.

The event was in commemoration of t141st anniversary of the abolition of slavery in Puerto Rico and was hosted by BombaYo, an organization founded by José L. Ortiz (known by everyone as Dr Drum) and Melinda Gonzalez.

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One of Dr Drum's students got up and danced Bomba / ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

Dr Drum has been teaching the Bomba tradition for the past 13 years, passing along the rich history to not only the youth but to also seniors who do not always know their own history.

Saturday night’s performance was a first for many in the group, including, Las Perlas de BombaYo, an all-female group who gave an outstanding performance in front of hundreds of people who had come to experience the free, family event.

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Teresa Fortuna, 86,enthralls the attendees. / ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

The show started with the sounds of The Bronx Andrew Freedman Youth Conga Symphony, a group of adolescents taught by Dr Drum, and then proceeded with a powerful history lesson on the arrival of the enslaved Africans to Puerto Rico, centuries of brutal torture and finally freedom.

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Teresa Fortuna, 86, enjoys her first performance since joining the workshops in 2010 / ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

Then the long awaited act began with Las Perlas de BombaYo as they dramatically entered the ballroom of the Andrew Freedman Home in single file with just the sound of a maraca as one by one, the women of the group sang the chorus of the song, ‘1873’ written by Jerry Ferrao to commemorate the day of abolition.

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©Welcome2TheBronx.com

Once they reached the front and got into their positions, the drums and other instruments used in Bomba came alive as the women deftly played them with such familiarity as if they were experts of the craft of many years.

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©Welcome2TheBronx.com

To witness these women in their teens and well into their senior years performing with such joy and expertise is a testament to the hard work and dedication Dr Drum has to teaching his craft and the Puerto Rican community’s history.

The ultimate highlight of the evening was the last act when several senior citizens, who are Dr Drum’s students, went on stage along with other drummers and Las Perlas de BombaYo.

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Teresa Fortuna, 86, danced the longest of all the women / ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

Every single member of the group was outstanding but the belle of the ball that stole everyone’s heart was 86 year young, Teresa Fortuna. This was Teresa’s first dance performance since she started at BombaYo’s community workshops since 2010 according to Dr Drum. (See her video and others from the evening below).

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©Welcome2TheBronx.com

The power of the arts was very evident Saturday night and we must do what we can to support such workshops and endeavors in a borough so culturally rich and filled with art, music, and dance from so many diverse backgrounds, countries and continents yet starved by poor access to the necessary support networks.

Andrew Freedman Youth Conga Symphony

Las Perlas de BombaYo

86 Year YOUNG Teresa Fortuna Dazzles the Crowd

Bomba At Andrew Freedman Home

141st Anniversary Commemoration Of The Abolition Of Slavery In Puerto Rico Tonight At The Andrew Freedman Home!

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Tonight, Saturday March 22nd at 6pm the Andrew Freedman Home will be alive with the sound of traditional Puerto Rican Bomba music as the 141st anniversary of the abolition of slavery in Puerto Rico is commemorated.

Check out the sneak peek performance video below!

From the event organizers:

“Join us for this historical event as we honor the sacrifice of our ancestors with music, song and dance. Presentations by Las Perlas de BombaYo, The Andrew Freedman Youth Conga Symphony and a community Bombazo with the Afro-Boricua rhythms of BombaYo. An event for the whole family!”

FreshDirect Drivers File Class Action Lawsuit Against The Company Over Gratuities

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Idling, polluting FreshDirect truck in Chelsea, Manhattan several weeks ago / ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

On Wednesday, March 19th, delivery workers for FreshDirect filed a class action lawsuit against the firm over gratuities they are losing due to misleading company policies.

It is not the first time FreshDirect is under fire for its dubious labor practices and once again solidifies even more why the majority of residents do not want FreshDirect to relocate to our waterfront.

Back in 2007 FreshDirect fired scores of immigrant workers because of a pending unionization vote.

When the deal to move to the South Bronx waterfront was announced 2 years ago as almost a done deal with no public hearing or input, Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito wrote in a letter addressed to the IDA (New York City Industrial Development Agency, a division of the New York Economic Development Corporation) stating, among many issues with the deal, the labor problems at FreshDirect.

In the letter, Mark-Viverito says:

“Fresh Direct’s labor practices have concerned me since a number of troubling allegations were first brought to my attention as a member of the Black, Latino and Asian Caucus.  According to Teamsters Local 805, Fresh Direct has made concerted efforts to block the union from organizing in their workplace, including holding anti-union meetings, passing out misinformation on what union representation means, and making threats.  As the unionization campaign was gaining steam several years ago, ICE initiated an audit of the legal statuses of Fresh Direct employees, causing around 200 workers to leave; many believe this action was an attempt to squash the organizing drive.  Fresh Direct has reportedly also refused to enter into a neutrality agreement with Local 805 to allow the organizing efforts to proceed without interference. This is also a serious concern. Given the nature of the working conditions at Fresh Direct – employees can sometimes be asked to work upwards of 16 hours in a facility refrigerated to 38 degrees – it is perfectly reasonable that this workforce would seek labor protections. Fresh Direct should not stand in the way of unionization, if the employees freely choose that route.”

[Read the full letter here]

Bronx residents are constantly being told that this vulgar sweetheart deal worth over $130 million will bring a thousand new jobs to the borough. I won’t deny that we desperately need jobs, however, we need quality, living wage jobs where our residents do not have to also collect food stamps and welfare benefits because their wages aren’t enough — something many workers at FreshDirect qualify for because the wages are so low.

All these aforementioned reasons and the fact that over 50 community based organizations and the majority of Bronxites oppose this deal (only a handful of Bronx based organizations are on board with this move) is more reason why this deal must not happen.

The Bronx deserves better and we can only hope that borough president Ruben Diaz Jr is listening to us as well as all these negative issues surrounding FreshDirect.

It also should be noted that the proposed FreshDirect site is immediately adjacent to the Bronx Harlem River Waterfront District Plan which if and when completed will bring over 1,500 units (2,100 if the Magnusson plan is carried out) and thousands of residents and people to the area.

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Southern plan for the Special Harlem River Waterfront District Plan in the Lower Concourse Rezoning District of the Bronx. Note FreshDirect's proposed location in relation to the site.

The truck traffic from a major operation such as FreshDirect will not fit in with the ever-growing residential, commercial and community based nature of the Harlem River Waterfront District Plan. Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr should dump FreshDirect and call it a loss yet it would be a big win for the people. It would mean that our elected officials heard the majority and sided with public interest and needs versus corporate.

Ruben Diaz Jr, if you’re reading this, I sure hope you consider that Mott Haven and Port Morris residents have diligently worked on a comprehensive waterfront plan that the residents want, need, and deserve and should be included within the Bronx Harlem River Waterfront District Plan.

The following is from Grub Street:

FreshDirect Drivers File Class Action Lawsuit Over Delivery Gratuities

A lawsuit filed yesterday in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York alleges that imprecise language on FreshDirect’s website has been misleading customers into thinking that the service’s “Delivery Charge” — currently $5.99 a pop — is actually a tip for FreshDirect drivers. Here’s the argument: Because the home grocery delivery service already has a fuel surcharge in place and also does not explain the purpose of the delivery charge on its website, consumers may be confused. Additionally, because employees are not allowed to ask for tips and are not generally tipped, legal papers contend, FreshDirect continues to profit while its drivers are stiffed out of gratuities.

Two firms, Bronson Lipsky LLP and Gottlieb & Associates, represent the class, which may grow in size to include any FreshDirect delivery drivers working for the company as of March 19, as well as all those who worked in that capacity since March of 2008. Bronson Lipsky estimates 300 delivery personnel making 50 deliveries per day translates to $23,400,000 per year in “lost” gratuities, so the larger estimate may easily stretch beyond $100 million. Lawyers allege FreshDirect acted in violation of New York Labor Law and the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act, the latter of which is being used in an effort to “recover the difference between the overtime rate at which they were paid and should have been paid,” one that includes the delivery charge.

The Bronx Blogging Community’s Networking Event At the Gun Hill Brewing Company Was A Hit!

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Look at all that Bronx Brewed Beer! ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

This past Tuesday night, the Bronx blogging community and photographers descended upon the Gun Hill Brewing Company on Laconia Avenue for Brewers and Bloggers Networking event bringing many talented voices together.

The crew attending the event was as diverse as our beautiful home borough of the Bronx is and provided for an exciting evening filled with laughter, reunions and folks finally meeting in real-time after knowing each other for so long in the online world.

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Such events like Brewers and Bloggers serve to solidify these relationships we often form online without ever meeting in person. There is something to be said about meeting the “man behind the curtain.”

A big shout out goes to the folks at the Gun Hill Brewing Company for hosting us in their new space before their official opening (which BTW is this Saturday, March 22nd).

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©Welcome2TheBronx.com

I’m not a beer drinker but I do occasionally enjoy a few here and there. It’s never been my thing but I must say that the 3 varieties which I tasted had me SOLD! I tried the Gold, the IPA, and the Stout. The latter was very delicious with a slight chocolaty taste.

The event also couldn’t have been possible without our sponsors Pretzel Crisps, and of course our very own Tosca Cafe of Throgs Neck, home of one of the best brunches in the Bronx! Oh and a special thank you goes to Sal Conforto Founder and Publisher of The Bronx Chronicle for providing the wonderful Gun Hill Brewing Company merchandise for the raffle!

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One of our amazing sponsors, Pretzel Crisps. Check them out, great flavors! ©Welcome2TheBronx.com
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Mmmmmmmmm more beer! ©Welcome2TheBronx.com
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©Welcome2TheBronx.com
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©Welcome2TheBronx.com
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Our amazing "beerista" Rita! ©Welcome2TheBronx.com
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Our very own TastyLady! ©Welcome2TheBronx.com
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Bronx Culinary Ambassador and the Cooking Channel's Baron Ambrosia and Marlene Cintron, executive director of the Bronx Overall Economic Development Corporation made a surprise visit and were thrilled with the Gun Hill Brewing Company! Here they are posting with our Brewers and hosts! ©Welcome2TheBronx.com

If you didn’t make it to this one, fret not for we shall continue these events in the very near future.

The Bronx Harlem River Waterfront District Plan: An In Depth Analysis

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Last month during the State of the Borough address by Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr, he unveiled plans to create a waterfront district along the Harlem River in the Lower Concourse Rezoning District.

We have received a copy of the 55 page report by Magnusson Architecture & Planning, LP on behalf of the South Bronx Overall Economic Development Corporation (SoBRO) and have read the entire document and will provide a more detailed analysis than has been provided by the mainstream media.

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One of the most important and striking components of the Special Harlem River Waterfront District Plan as developed by Magnusson is that it proposes a mixed use and mixed income approach providing for all types from affordable to market rate housing.

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When the plan was revealed, many folks, including myself, were immediately on alert because there was no mention of mixed income affordable housing and the media pretty much played into the gentrification hype.

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Currently, the 2009 rezoning of the Lower Concourse allows for over 3,000 residential units, more than 1.5 million square feet of commercial space, and over 3 million square feet of community facility space just in the Special Harlem River Waterfront District alone.

According to the report:

“Rather than using these maximum numbers above, our recommended approach is a zoned development area that will create a sustainable community that meets the needs of the future residents, visitors, and businesses; while impacting the surrounding neighborhoods in a positive manner.  We have begun to adjust these maximum numbers by implying program (housing, supermarkets, entertainment, schools, cafes, pharmacies, dry cleaners, parking, etc.) across all the parcels located within the conceptual site plan.”

The Magnusson plan calls for 2,100 residential units, 1 million square feet in commercial space and just 350,000 feet of community facilities. This latter part should be increased and equal the commercial space due to the lack of community oriented spaces in the South Bronx and the borough as a whole.

The report goes on to discuss each parcel at length and is as follows:

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Magnusson

Program Analysis
Parcel 1

The base zoning for this site is commercial (C4-4) which has a residential equivalent of R7-2.  The commercial uses would be focused around entertainment uses – movie theater complex, gallery, and potential indoor sports such as bowling or gymnasium, dining (indoor and outdoor) cafes and/or pubs possibly with live entertainment, food for consumption along the outdoor promenade.  Uses might also include specialty shopping such as clothing, baby products, and toys.  Residential towers will rise above the commercial base.  The area on the eastern boundary of Parcel 1 is an easement for maintenance and expansion of the Expressway.  This area can become a public plaza with vendor cart locations, planting and sitting areas.

Parcel 2 and Parcel 3

These two sites are grouped together, since the two property owners are looking at doing a joint development.  The base zoning for Parcel 2 is commercial (C4-4) which has residential equivalent of R72.  The base zoning for Parcel 4 is residential (R7-2) with a commercial overlay (C2-4).  The commercial uses for Parcel 2 would be focused around the needs of the residential community such as supermarket and/or specialty food shops, pharmacy, laundry, dry cleaner, other convenience retail and possibly specialty shopping, cafes and restaurants that would permit take-out orders.  Parcel 3 would house community facilities within its base, such as a preschool and elementary school, and medical offices.  Residential towers would rise above the bases.

The proposed public park for this community, as per the SHRWDE, is located between Parcel 1 and 2.  The commercial uses, particularly food services should be organized to work with the park.

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Parcel 4, Parcel 5 and Parcel 6

The base zoning for these sites is residential (R7-2) with a commercial overlay (C2-4).  The base of these buildings could house community facility uses such as day care, elder care, social service offices, and medical offices.  General retail/small food shops could be located along the base, particularly fronting the shoreline walkway.  Residential towers will rise above the base, possibly some supportive housing, and/or senior housing. The intersection of Exterior Street and East 138th Street and the Madison Avenue Bridge forms ‘boundary’ within the Special Harlem River Waterfront District, effectively subdividing the study area into a north and south zone. East 138th Street is an extremely dangerous intersection for pedestrians.  It is an exit and an entrance to the Major Deegan (I-87) Expressway as well as providing access to Manhattan via the Madison Avenue Bridge and the Third Avenue Bridge.  This intersection has high volumes of vehicular traffic, particularly during morning and evening rush hours, with multiple turning lanes and complex traffic signaling.  It effectively forms an “invisible yet tangible” barrier separating the neighborhoods between the north side and the south side of the intersection.

Parcel 7, Parcel 8, and Parcel 9

These sites, zoned residential (R7-2) with a commercial overlay (C2-4) are separated by ‘natural’ barriers on their north and south sides.  On the north, East 138th is the barrier.  On the south side, the land, owned by MetroNorth, is an undeveloped area that is the most natural shoreline frontage of all the sites.  This area should be stabilized and preserved as a wetland and public open space.  This area is also where the rail line engages the land and railway signaling and traffic control devices will have to be installed to protect the public as well as the trains. As these sites are somewhat insulated from the area to the north and south, development should focus on residential development above commercial bases.  Commercial activity should consist of general retail needs for the residential community.  Community facility space could be devoted to educational purposes with a focus on the potential wetland/public open space on its southern boundary.

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ASSEMBLAGE SITES

The assemblage sites are those located between the Metro North railroad bridge (the southern boundary of Parcel 9 SHRWD) and the Third Avenue Bridge.  The current zoning for these is mixed use MX: M1-3/R8.  The current land uses are compatible with the zoning and can remain and continue to grow.  However, a major land use along the shoreline is for industrial storage and personal storage.  This is not necessarily the most productive use of the land and is inconsistent with the new residential and mixed use district planned for the SHRWD.  As the area below the Third Avenue Bridge has slowly been developing with old warehouse buildings being converted to residential, new stores and restaurants, artists and antiques dealers occupying former industrial spaces, we thought to reorganize the area to make it more accessible and to bring a greater mixed use density to the sites.  Commercial activities should focus on a major retail supermarket that would also serve the community south of the Third Avenue Bridge.  Community Facility uses could focus on the burgeoning artist’s community south of the Third Avenue and provide gallery space, retail outlets devoted to arts and antiques and artist live/work housing.

The Magnusson Report ends with the following important summary which residents should be aware of:

SUMMARY

The following issues, as delineated in this report, have surfaced during our study: 

—What is the impact of the development area on existing energy, water management, communications, and solid waste infrastructure?

o Can the existing wastewater treatment plants handle the additional load? o Can the existing power plants handle the additional load?

o Can the existing water treatment plants handle the additional load  

—What is the scope of environmental mitigation of contaminated soil?

—What is the long-term value of the existing rail line and its affect on waterfront access?

—Can a consistent and resilient shoreline protection strategy be developed that unites all the sites?

—The parcels within the Special Harlem River Waterfront District all front (Exterior Street) on the underside of the Major Deegan Expressway.  This area will need to be ‘renovated’ with sound vibration/absorption material under the roadbed structure, new lighting and new Exterior Street roadway paving

—How should legal grade be established at or above ABFE that can be a benchmark for all development

— What are the cost implications and regulatory sign-offs that are necessary to move the utility point of service at or above the ABFE?

—What are the traffic impacts on the Major Deegan (I-87) Expressway and the redesign of the following intersections?

o East 138th Street and Madison Avenue Bridge, including on and off ramps to the highway and local access streets

o East 149th Street and the 145th Street Bridge 

—What are the regulatory sign-offs that are necessary to create a public or private shuttle bus and/or reroute existing bus routes. 

—What are the regulator sign-offs that are necessary to receive a parking requirement reduction?

—What is the cost impact for insurance on a project in a flood zone (during construction and post occupancy)? 

—Individual site development without the support of a publicly approved plan versus a plan that has been taken through a public approval process allowing flexibility on individual site development

As the questions poised above indicate, the development of the Bronx shoreline of the Harlem River presents many challenges.  As the City of New York continues to grow, as once affordable neighborhoods in Queens, Brooklyn and northern Manhattan continue to ‘gentrify’, opportunities for affordable housing, sustainable development, and mixed use development become increasingly difficult to achieve.  The Harlem River shorefront, between 149th Street and the Third Avenue Bridge, is a significant opportunity to develop a new mixed-use community in a unique location and, as an aspect of development, strengthen shoreline protection, provide important public amenities and open space to this underserved portion of the Bronx, build on the strength of the existing commercial and institutional presence – the Gateway Mall, Hostos College, Lincoln Hospital – and provide a significant amount of housing of varied typology and diverse income affordability.

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We would also recommend that a development phasing plan be explored.  As the area breaks down into three zones – The Special Harlem River Waterfront District can be divided into 2 zones, north and south of the Madison Avenue Bridge with the third zone being the area we have noted as the ‘Assemblage Sites’ (a portion of this area was examined in an earlier report to SoBro as a planning study for 2401 Third Avenue).  Each zone should be looked at as unique and, to a limited extent ‘stand-alone’, for their development of new residential, commercial and community facility uses; tied together by the are 3 significant places for public access and open space – the shorefront public walkway, the proposed public park between SHRWD Parcel 1 and 2 and the potential wetlands open space at the south end of SHRWD Parcel 9.  Furthermore, each of the zones can be tied together visually though urban design standards for paving, lighting, and graphics.

Shoreline protection and resiliency along with infrastructure should be developed comprehensively and phased into place so that site development can proceed in as flexible manner as possible.  Comprehensive planning that engages all stakeholders and sets urban design standards coupled with sustainability and resilience standards needs to be adopted to insure that these difficult sites have the framework for successful and financially strong development.

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Together, as a community, we can unite and decide the date of our waterfront and address our needs as a borough and this plan offers just that as well as calls for community input.

It should be noted that it was Magnusson’s master plan that rebuilt the northwestern section of Melrose almost from the ground up adding over 3,000 units of housing.

Melrose Commons eventually became the ONLY LEED Certified Neighborhood district in the entire State of New York.

Magnusson already has a proven track record of planning sustainable development and communities and I welcome the opportunity to work with our fellow residents, politicians, and developers in creating a brighter future for our borough.

¡Lucha Libre! Bronx Wrestlers Punch, Body-Slam for Glory At The Bronx Wrestling Federation

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The BWF is one of dozens of independent wrestling federations, known as 'indies,' across the country. They earn little or no money in the indie matches, which are held in the likes of community centers and billiard halls. Here, Mr. Segundo prepares for a match. Peter J. Smith for The Wall Street Journal

From The Wall Street Journal:

On the second floor of a warehouse in the Bronx’s Soundview neighborhood, men in costumes head-butt, clothes-line, and body-slam each other to the roars and jeers of more than 100 fans.

By day, the men are construction workers and restaurant managers—but by night, they turn into the Caveman and the Big Heavy, all taking part in the monthly spectacle organized by the Bronx Wrestling Federation, or BWF.

Most of the BWF’s performers have full-time jobs and families. They also had childhood dreams of becoming wrestlers that they’re finally fulfilling.

The goal was so strong for Frank Segundo, who grew up in the Dominican Republic, that he founded the BWF in 2010.

When the thick-armed Mr. Segundo steps into the ring, he becomes Bronco Internacional. [Read more and check out the slide show!]

1st Annual Hunts Point Slam Bake Along With Rebuild by Design Meeting Tonight!!

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What better way to bring the community together than with FOOD?!

Join our culinary ambassador and the Cooking Channel’s, Baron Ambrosia, as he hosts the FIRST Annual Hunts Point Slam Bake cooking competition featuring the “bounty, talent, and tastes of Hunts Point.”

The event begins at 5pm with the presentation of the dishes to the judges, then at 5:30pm the public tasting begins (my stomach is growling). At 6:30PM the judges will announce the winners.

Immediately following the festivities, there will be a public meeting to review draft ideas by Rebuild by Design to protect Hunts Point from the next Superstorm. You may recall there was a meeting back in January to gather community input for the project.

The Slam Bake and Rebuild by Design public meeting is Wednesday, March 19th  from 5:00 PM – 8:30 PM in the 3rd Floor event space at the American Banknote building at 1231 Lafayette Avenue.

Bronx News Morning Roundup

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Here are just some of the stories on the Bronx that are circulating today:

Residents at 755 Jackson Avenue are upset that much needed urgent repairs haven’t been made in their building. The building, which was taken over by private equity firm Stabilis Capital Management, is on the city’s Worst Landlord Watchlist. [Read More: Mott Haven Herald]

Meanwhile, the folks over at Crain’s wrote a piece on the increase of life expectancy in the 5 boroughs comparing statistics from 1985 to 2010. In 25 years, life expectancy for males in the Bronx soared dramatically by 10 years. Females also saw big gains as well in the Bronx. Overall, we’re still behind the rest of the city but the gap is greatest between the richest (Manhattan) and the poorest (The Bronx). It is sobering to note that even though there is great income inequality between the two, the life expectancy disparity isn’t anywhere near other places in the country where there’s a tale of two cities. [Crain’s New York]

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Pictured is one of Hauben's works that is on display at Bronx Community College. Photo by Patrick Rocchio./Bronx Times

The Norwood News provides us with an in depth look at artist Daniel Hauben, who’s paintings are quickly recognizable to many Bronxites. [Viewing The Bronx From The Eyes of Daniel Hauben / Norwood News]

Meet Your Bronx Bloggers Tonight At The Gun Hill Brewing Company!

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Back when I first started blogging in 2009, the Bronx pretty much just had a couple of active bloggers — the original BoogieDowners Erin and Lou Cicalese who started actively blogging in 2008 and Nicole Perrino, founder of BronxMama who also started in ’08.

The BoogieDowners were my inspiration to start Welcome2Melrose and begin to tell the narrative of our neighborhood which was being highly distorted negatively by the mainstream media as well as global awareness of the South Bronx.

When Erin and Lou Cicalese made the tough decision to leave the Bronx to be closer to family, they transferred the blog to a new owner (who subsequently transferred it again).

Unfortunately almost immediately the quality of the blog dropped so much that I took the opportunity to expand and began Welcome2TheBronx to create a borough-wide platform with a global reach to continue the success of Welcome2Melrose.

The success of Welcome2TheBronx these past several years has been phenomenal. We have produced dozens upon dozens of stories that eventually were taken up by the mainstream media (Mott Haven Herald, Bronx Times, News12 the Bronx, NY1, PIX11 News, New York Times, Daily News, The Gothamist, Curbed, and the Real Deal just to name a few) and broadcasted to a much wider audience. Positive stories about our borough and its citizens.

During that same time, several other Bronxites, also tired of the negative stereotypes of the Bronx, began their own endeavors in the blogosphere.

Bronxites such as Shannon Lee Gilstad, founder of Bronxcentric, Morgan Powell, founder of Bronx River Sankofa, and Adam Levine-Peres of ProjectBronx just to name a few.

From a few voices, we have grown to well over a dozen and we couldn’t have done it without you, our readers.

That being said, please join us tonight for a networking event sponsored by many of your favorite bloggers, including yours truly, at The Gun Hill Brewing Co. for a networking event. We’ll even have food from Tosca’s and snacks from Pretzel Crisps who have both generously donated to sponsor the event!

The event will be held from 7pm to 10pm and Gun Hill Brewing Company is located at 3227 Laconia Avenue at Boston Road just one block south of Gun Hill Road.

Hope to see you there!