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Volunteer as a Mock Juror to Train Bronx ADAs

Do you want to contribute something to the community? Unable to donate money, lift heavy objects, or stand for long periods? You can also volunteer your mind and time.

The Office of the Bronx District Attorney (DA) is always in need of volunteer mock jurors for their felony trial training programs’ jury days, which are held once per year in June at their offices on 161st Street.

Each year, this program trains attorneys to become new assistant district attorneys (ADAs), so they can prosecute felony cases in Bronx courts on behalf of the DA. The mock jury day is one small — but very important — part of the months-long training for ADAs.

I first heard about this program a few years ago when I attended one of my local police precinct’s community council meetings. Raeshawn Horry, Community Engagement Coordinator in the DA office’s Community Affairs Unit, invited community members to participate in the training program as mock jurors.

Ms. Horry and her co-workers attend all the police precincts’ community council meetings throughout the Bronx each month (at those meetings, residents can voice concerns to the police, politicians, and the DA office). They also recruit volunteers at local community centers, clergy meetings, and neighborhood associations.

Each year up to 100 volunteers from all Bronx neighborhoods take part in the event. I have participated as a mock juror for the past three years.

Volunteers are divided into groups for morning and afternoon sessions. Most mock jury selections are held in conference rooms, but one fortunate group even occupies a small mock courtroom in the DA office.

It includes actual jury seats, a witness stand, and a judge desk/bench. As I hadn’t yet served on a real jury, this gave me familiarity with what a real courtroom felt like.

One of the staff, acting as a mock judge, then asks the volunteer jurors many of the same questions a real judge would ask potential jurors to prequalify them to serve: about your neighborhood and job and your previous experience serving on a jury.

Jurors are also asked if any family members work in law enforcement and if anyone you know, or you yourself, ever have been a victim of crime — and whether that would prevent you from objectively listening to police testimonials on the witness stand and fairly rendering a verdict based on the facts.

Each ADA trainee is then given 10 to 15 minutes to “interview” the mock jurors. Some use real-life felony court cases (without revealing identities or specific details) to ask hypothetical questions such as how much evidence you as a juror need, whether you can evaluate an incident on certain key facts, render a verdict following the law, etc.

There are no right or wrong answers — the ADAs simply want to determine whether you would be a good fit as a juror for their specific cases.

At the conclusion of each ADA trainee’s presentation, we give feedback to them on how effective their presence and questions were and how they could improve.

Staff who coordinate the program have repeatedly told us in the past years that our feedback is very valuable to their trainees and the program could not be completed without our participation.

Last year I noticed that the DA office added their interns to our jury groups as well. Ms. Horry informed me that this was intended to diversify the mock jury pool so all age groups are represented. In the past, mostly retirees served as mock jurors. Just a few younger adults were able to take a day off work to participate in the program.

At the end of the day, each volunteer “juror” receives a “Certificate of Participation” proving they volunteered that day in the Bronx DA office.

When I first participated, we even met then-DA Robert Johnson; and two years ago, we were greeted by our borough’s new DA Darcel Clark. Both thanked us for our volunteering service.

It felt great to volunteer my time and input to government and the community. By helping to train our borough’s future prosecutors better, we help ensure fair trials and that justice is served. (The DA’s Public Information department wasn’t able to give feedback in time for my publication deadline.)

This year’s felony trial training program jury day will be held on Tuesday, June 19th, 2018, from 8:00 A.M. through 4:00 P.M.

If you’re available and interested to serve as a mock juror, please register your attendance by calling the DA’s Community Affairs Unit at (718) 590-2272. Volunteers are served breakfast and lunch.

About the author:

R.M. Thomson is a freelance writer, author, and artist, who moved to and has lived in the Bronx, NY, for the past 23 years. He attends classes and writer groups in several library branches as well as the Bronx Writers Center, and moderates the biweekly meetings and special events of the Yorkville writing circle in Manhattan. His short memoir story “Basement Buddies” has been published in the 2018 book anthology “Bronx Memoir Project Volume 2,” and his artwork collage “Build a Better World” was featured on the cover of the fall 2017 magazine edition of “Library Zine!” His other publications in 2017 and 2018 include poems and op-ed letters in the “Riverdale Press” and the former Sunday Magazine of “This Is The Bronx.” Twitter: @rm_thms

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

New Development to Be Built on NYCHA Land in Melrose

A new 11 story development has been announced to be constructed at the misnomered Morrisania Air Rights in Melrose right next to the Melrose Metro North Station.

The land is currently occupied by a trash compactor so no recreational space will be taken away like other developments on NYCHA land.

Artist rendering of the new proposed new development in Melrose/(Curtis + Ginsberg Architects LLP)

30% of the units will be set aside for homeless families and an additional 30% will go towards survivors of domestic violence. Residents of NYCHA will get a preference for 25% of the units but that’s not guaranteed since they would have to qualify.

No set date on when construction will begin but as always, we’ll keep you posted.

How do you feel about developments being constructed on NYCHA land? Does your opinion differ if they’re market rate or affordable?

Comment below or on our Facebook page.

The Bronx to Host NYC’s FIRST Latin American Photo Festival

As the most Latino borough of NYC with over half the population identifying as such, it is only fitting that The Bronx will host New York City’s first ever Latin American Photo Festival.

The Bronx Documentary Center will transform the Melrose neighborhood of our borough into a gallery with installations in storefront windows, churches, sidewalks with an estimated 50,000 residents and visitors who will get to see this exciting event.

The BDC writes:

This July, the Bronx Documentary Center will create the first ever Latin American Photo Festival held in New York City. This festival will bring award-winning photographers from throughout the Caribbean and Latin America to exhibit their photographs, create installations and hold workshops and panel discussions.

© Carlos Villalon
© Sharon Castellanos

The event will take place in the Bronx’s Melrose neighborhood, one of New York’s fastest growing and most dynamic neighborhoods. With many installations in storefront windows and along city sidewalks as well as in galleries and churches, an estimated 50,000 residents and visitors will see what is sure to be one of New York’s most exciting cultural activities.

Curated by Michael Kamber and Cynthia Rivera.

The Latin American Photo Festival is made possible by BronxCare Health System and BronxWorks.

We can’t wait for this exciting event!

Opening reception will be on Thursday July 12 at 6pm at The Bronx Documentary Center located at 614 Courtlandt Avenue at 151st Street and will remain on view through July 22nd.

Old Historic Bronx Building to be Demolished to Make Way for Affordable Housing

The destruction of Bronx history to make way for “progress” is quite fatiguing.

This time we’re losing a historic treasure in West Farms which once housed elderly and poor women.

You’ve seen the structure countless times at 2064 Boston Road and E 179th Street whether walking or driving by or like me, above from the 2 and 5 line as the train snakes across the Bronx River to and from the E 180th Street station.

As a child heading to school, the building always reminded me of some sort of glamorous mansion but little did I know then that this edifice had a more humble purpose when it was completed in 1902.

Now Communilife has filed plans for its demolition to make way for a 78 units of housing.

That’s it.

It’s not even being demolished for hundreds of units but we’re losing this historic, although not landmarked, structure for just 78 units of housing.

Is that the price of our history these days?

We’re not saying no to progress but simply why must we continue to sacrifice it all to move forward? We’ve lost so much in the past, not to mention the beloved PS 31 aka Castle on the Concourse to greedy developers who build in the name of “affordable” housing yet it’s never affordable to the most vulnerable in the communities they build.

Elements of the building will be incorporated into the new structure that will take its place according to The Bronx Times.

But hey, at least we’re getting “affordable” housing no?

 

In a Hypothetical Civil War, The Bronx Would Squash the Other Boroughs in Victory

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Vice recently asked journalists which borough would come out victorious if civil war (perish the thought) broke out between the five boroughs and one name popped up more than most: The Bronx.

Are we surprised?

Absolutely not because we are a borough still relatively made up by its original residents and not weak hipsters.

I mean, besides our geography which places us on the mainland, The Bronx is made up of a very hardy and resilient people who know how not only to defend themselves but to come out on top in times of adversary.

We are survivors.

The article in Vice writes about The Bronx coming up as the victor:

Up north, the Bronx is the only borough on the North American mainland; elevations heighten west of the Bronx River and in the north, making it ideal terrain for frontal defense, and retreat.

In order to survive, New York would have to return to its agrarian roots. That would happen most notably in Queens and the Bronx. Queens, which was once wealthy Manhattanites’ “rural escape” from the city, still has a number of farms active in the east that would have to be readjusted to wartime production. However, according to experts at CUNY’s Gotham Center the Bronx has the most farmable parkland in the five boroughs, providing it with the best opportunity to produce for the population. The question is how long this would all take to develop.

“Bronx wins. The rest of us starve in just weeks as they cut off the food chain, and also blow up the system bringing water down.”
–Harry Siegel, senior editor at the Daily Beast and Daily News columnist

But the most immediate threat is water. This entire scenario could shake out to a battle for New York’s H2O, all of which comes through aqueducts located in the Bronx, which can basically hold the city’s water supply hostage, forcing the other boroughs to either invade, or die of dehydration.

With its hilly terrain, island defenses, significant population, and control of the vital water supply, the BX could solidify its forces up north, and hold down the fort. But, I think, the real moral of this story is that for all of Manhattan’s wealth, power, and global influence, it doesn’t mean a thing once shit hits the fan. Honorable mention to Staten Island, who, in this war, would not be forgotten.

Up The Bronx!

Read the full piece over at Vice.

NYCHA Getting $2 Billion To Fix Health and Safety Issues; Federal Monitor Will Oversee Work

A deal has been struck between the city and the federal government that will not only force the city to pay $2 billion for needed repairs but also basically relinquish control to the federal government for a decade who will oversee the work.

Sadly, this is but a drop in the bucket to truly address the deplorable conditions at NYCHA which needs $25 billion to address all necessary repairs.

That number is a stark increase from the $6 billion needed back in 2005.

Councilman Ritchie Torres of The Bronx came out hard against the Mayor and the agreement saying in a statement:

“The findings of the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District exposes systemic falsehood and failure at the highest levels of the de Blasio Administration and the New York City Housing Authority. The more than half a million New Yorkers who call NYCHA home were systematically misled by the very government entrusted with their health and safety.

The consent decree is the culmination of decades of federal disinvestment and local mismanagement. ‎But just as troubling as the lack of money and management is the lack of truth and transparency–until now.

Today is a dark moment for public trust in government. Never in the history of New York has the City been subject to a consent decree that imposes both a federal monitor and a multi-billion dollar payment, one that surrenders both local control and local dollars to federal power. The mismanagement of NYCHA, as well as the attempt by the de Blasio Administration to mislead the public about the full nature and extent of that mismanagement, will be remembered as a blight on the legacy of our current Mayor and those who came before him.

‎New Yorkers have every right to feel betrayed by a government that not only lied to them but also put their health and safety at risk. As a product of public housing, I surely do.”

And yes, we were lied to by disgraced ex-NYCHA chair Shola Olatoye who LIED to the feds about laid paint inspections that were never conducted leaving thousands vulnerable in our city’s crumbling public housing projects.

Now we pay the price by having a federal monitor watch over repairs at NYCHA for the next decade under an administration that clearly has shown they do not care for the most vulnerable.

The New York Times writes: “The federal government on Monday delivered a withering rebuke of New York City’s housing authority, accusing officials of systematic misconduct and indifference in the management of the city’s vast stock of public housing. The failures endangered tenants and workers for years and potentially left more children than previously known poisoned by lead paint in their apartments.”

How are we to trust them when they are out to defund public housing across the country?

Follow the full coverage in the linkage below:

Historic Dewitt Clinton High School Murals Destroyed by Incompetent Department of Ed

In an exclusive story, The New York Daily News has reported that the famed and historic New Era Deal murals at Dewitt Clinton High School have been destroyed.

The culprit? The Board of Ed.

Someone thought it would be a good idea to cover up the historic murals and just paint right over them with a wretched blue paint.

The repainted ceiling at DeWitt Clinton High School. (Obtained by Daily News)

I mean, really the color doesn’t matter at this point because what matters is that someone idiot (yes, you’re an idiot) decided to do such a thing without even consulting with anyone else.

DOE tells the New York Daily News that workers merely painted over it as they made repairs to damage to the school building but that’s still a load of crap and trying to shrug off responsibility.

The News writes:

“Constellations” by German-born painter Alfred Floegel was installed on the ceiling outside DeWitt Clinton’s library in 1940. It depicted the stars in the heavens alongside another large-scale Floegel mural called “History of the World.”

The paintings, deemed Floegel’s masterpieces, were both used in history lessons. They also appear in the Department of Education’s online art collection, “Public Art for Public Schools.”

“It is a kind of Sistine Chapel of New Deal artworks,” wrote Richard Walker, a University of California/Berkley professor who directs the Living New Deal project, which aims to preserve New Deal-era artworks.

Luckily the entire work of art wasn’t destroyed as it was only the constellation mural on the ceilings but it’s still a huge loss nevertheless.

DOE is reportedly looking at ways to restore the work.

Read the full story over at The New York Daily News.

A Bronx Thank You For Anthony Bourdain

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The news of Anthony Bourdain’s death by suicide today caught us off guard completely.

In 2013  Bourdain announced that the prospect of doing a full hour episode in The Bronx appealed to him.

We immediately wrote that should he decide to come to The Bronx that he would have to do so with Baron Ambrosia, our culinary ambassador.

In an interview with Gothamist  Bourdain said when asked if he would be interested in doing an NYC focused show:

I’m looking at the Bronx now. There’s been very little attention paid there. Other than Arthur Avenue there’s been very little attention paid to the Bronx as a borough. Queens is already pretty well acknowledged, at least, as a foodie paradise because of all the great Chinese and Korean places. That alone is enough to make it a kind of powerhouse of gastronomy.

And Brooklyn, you know, arguably we’re looking at the Brooklynization of the world at this point. Everywhere you go, whether you’re in Australia or England or Paris even, they’re referencing Brooklyn in some way. But the Bronx, I think that would be a really interesting challenge. A full hour in the Bronx really appeals to me.

The following year in the fall, Anthony Bourdain’s Parts Unknown took the world to The Bronx and he brought the Bronx to the world.

Shortly before the premier of the show he told WNYC that, “…The Bronx is a magical place. ”

Who were we to argue with him?

After the episode aired, many Bronx residents were disappointed because he didn’t visit Little Italy or any of the other spots many people were familiar with but the fact of the matter was that he was interested in the UNKNOWN and not what people already knew about.

And for that we thank Bourdain for showcasing the best of our beautiful Bronx showing its diversity in full technicolor glory.

Welcome2TheBronx loves to showcase that side of the Bronx that the world doesn’t know about so we loved the episode regardless of whatever flaws it may have had.

But that’s not all we want to say.

Bourdain’s death by suicide is a topic that’s considered taboo for many and by others who have lost someone.

As we mourn the deaths by suicide of two celebrities, Anthony Bourdain and Kate Spade, let us not forget the countless regular Janes and Joes who have committed suicide and those suffering with severe depression and contemplate killing themselves daily.

Remember them, be there for the loved ones they left behind wondering in anguish why?

Be there for your friends; Check in on them and see how they are. Tell them you love them. Maybe just hearing it enough can help. Who knows? I don’t have the answers only know that love is the most important thing in the world.

PS: If you know someone who is battling depression and has contemplated suicide, know that these high profile events can be very triggering for them.

BE there with them. Hold them.

Watch: Bronxite Opening New Hip Hop Restaurant Celebrating the Global Phenomenon

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Bronxite Alfredo Angueria is opening up a new restaurant called Beatstro in Port Morris which will celebrate Hip Hop and our borough’s place in the global phenomenon which is now the number 1 genre in the world.

Watch the video below from Pix11 News:


 

Watch: Take a Tour of Where The Bronx’s Delicioso Coco Helado Comes From!

Vice recently toured a beloved Bronx institution, the headquarters of Delicioso Coco Helado which floods our streets with street carts selling coquitos.

When I was a kid, I remember you could snatch a big creamy coconut one for just 25 cents, now they’re about double that for the smallest size.

Check out the video below from Vice on these tasty treats!

 

New Analysis Shows The Bronx Leads NYC In Housing Code Violations Accounting for 33% of Cases

Localize.city, a new AI-driven site which delves into city data and makes sense of the massive web of information available, has found that The Bronx leads NYC in housing code violations with 33% of cases in our borough.

Furthermore, the new analysis reveals that low-income neighborhoods where the median yearly income is below $30K a year have 8x more housing violations than higher income neighborhoods where the median yearly income is over $80k.

The analysis reports:

Darlene Wallace’s 25-unit walk-up at 1090 University Ave., in the Highbridge section of the Bronx, has heat and hot water problems, roach infestations and moldy bathrooms. It is also overrun by mice. One frigid February morning last year, Wallace’s 12-year-old daughter was bitten by a mouse that had burrowed in her coat sleeve.

Localize.city found that renters in the city’s lowest-income neighborhoods like Highbridge are exposed to dramatically higher rates of dangerous housing conditions jeopardizing their health and quality of life.

Sadly, for many Bronxites, this new report isn’t a surprise.

Just last week a building in The Bronx was noted as having the most rat complaints in the city not to mention The Bronx also being home to more buildings with violations and the city’s worst landlords than any other borough.

It should be noted that this data does NOT include NYCHA violations as these not counted in the city’s 311 database so we can only imagine that The Bronx’s share would rise much higher.

As you can see from the map below, most Bronx neighborhoods registered above average violations.

The larger the circle the more violations and the deeper red the lower the income in that area.

South Bronx and West Bronx neighborhoods had the highest concentration of violations which again isn’t a surprise to anyone living here.

As for Localize.city, we took it for a spin and the wealth of information it provides is pretty spot on.
Localize.city is a website that uses artificial intelligence to provide buyers and renters with critical details for every home. This report builds upon Localize.city’s machine-learning technology, which exposes housing violations at every building in New York City.

We inputted a few random addresses around The Bronx and found that the information they came up with was pretty concise and accurate reflection of what is going on in those neighborhoods we tested.

Make sure you take a look for yourself and we look forward to providing you with more relevant news in the future.

Plans Filed for Yet ANOTHER Development in Jerome Avenue Rezoning Area

Developers didn’t wait too long for the ink to dry after the Jerome Avenue Rezoning was approved back in March of this year.

Maddd Equities has filed plans for a 17 story building at 1164 River Avenue next to the site of another development planned by the same developers which would include two 17 story buildings across the street from each other.

The building is slated to have 250 residential units across a little over 274,000 square feet.

No further details have been released such as renderings or whether or affordability.

The site is currently a 1 story building.

Say goodbye to the area as we know it…

As always, stay tuned for more details.