Other Pages on This Blog

Pages

Sunday, January 31, 2021

DSNY ISSUES ‘SNOW ALERT’ FOR SUNDAY, JANUARY 31 AT 7 P.M.

 

Update: "Mayor De Blasio Cancels Schools [buildings will be closed; remote learning for all], Alternate Side Parking, and Vaccines Tomorrow Because of Snowstorm"
https://boropark24.com/news/mayor-de-blasio-cancels-schools-alternate-side-parking-and-vaccines-tomorrow-because-of-snowstorm
 
 --------------------------------------
 
DSNY Issues ‘Snow Alert’ for Sunday, January 31 at 7 p.m. 
Sunday, January 31st, 2021
For Immediate Release

Roadway Dining is Suspended Monday

Alternate Side Parking Suspended on Monday, February 1 and Tuesday, February 2; Meters will be in effect

The New York City Department of Sanitation has issued a Snow Alert for Sunday, January 31 beginning at 7 p.m.

Based on current forecasts, the Department expects snowfall beginning Sunday evening and continuing in to Tuesday morning. Total accumulations in the forecast of up to 18 inches are possible at this time. All winter weather information and information about the City’s response to the storm can be found by visiting the City’s Severe Weather website at www.nyc.gov/severeweather or by calling 311.

In a Snow Alert, the Department coordinates with NYC Emergency Management and the Department of Transportation on snow clearing protocol in accordance with each agency’s written snow plan. All relevant city agencies have been notified of the snow alert.

Operations Update

The Department is expecting significant snowfall, and its workers and equipment are prepared. Salt spreaders are filled and ready to go and will start pretreating roadways ahead of the snowfall this afternoon. Additionally, the Department’s collection trucks have been turned into snow plows, ready to plow once two inches of snow has fallen. The Department has more than 2,000 total vehicles equipped with plows, including salt spreaders. Further, the Department used its “brine trucks” to apply liquid salt to some roadways and bike lanes starting Saturday evening. The brine, spread only before precipitation begins on dry streets, forms a barrier on the streets and helps keep snow and ice from accumulating.

Trash/Recycling Collection:

The Sanitation Workers who collect trash and recycling are the same Sanitation Workers who plow and salt the streets, therefore trash and recycling collection will be delayed during and after snow operations. While residents may put material out at the curb following their normal schedule, snow operations take priority and delays are to be expected.

Alternate Side Parking

In order to facilitate roadway clearing, Alternate Side Parking regulations will be suspended Monday, February 1 and Tuesday, February 2. Meters will be in effect.

Guidance for Open Restaurants 

Open Restaurants roadway dining is SUSPENDED all day Monday, February 1. Additionally, restaurants should remove or secure furniture, and remove electric heaters. Remove the tops of structures if possible or regularly clear snow off of structures to prevent damage. The City will notify restaurants when they may reopen roadway seating for outdoor dining. Based on the current forecast, the City estimates that roadway dining may resume Tuesday, but this may change based on actual accumulations and roadway conditions.

Restaurant owners may find additional information to prepare their spaces for snow at https://www1.nyc.gov/html/dot/html/pedestrians/openrestaurants.shtml.

Protected Bike Lanes

The Department used its “brine trucks” to apply liquid salt to some roadways and bike lanes starting Saturday evening. The brine forms a barrier on the streets and helps keep snow and ice from accumulating.

The City takes the safe passage of our bicycle facilities seriously, especially for the essential workers who need to be out in any weather. However, the Department’s initial focus during an active snow event is to keep our roadways clear for emergency vehicles to ensure New Yorkers never lose access to critical medical, fire and police services. Plowing and salting of bike facilities will begin after the emergency roadway work is underway. Protected bike lanes on main avenues will be addressed first after the end of snowfall, and PBLs on other streets will be addressed within 24-72 hours.

Snow Clearing Information

As a reminder, property owners, including restaurants with outdoor dining structures, may NOT push snow into the street, including bike lanes. This impedes snow clearing operations and is illegal. Snow may be moved against the building, to the curb line, or areas on private property. Sidewalks should be passable for all pedestrians, including a minimum 4-foot clear path, where possible.

New Yorkers are also encouraged to sign up for Notify NYC, the City’s free emergency notification system. Through Notify NYC, New Yorkers can sign up to receive phone calls, text messages, and emails alerts about severe weather events and emergencies. To sign up for Notify NYC, call 311, visit www.nyc.gov or follow @NotifyNYC on Twitter.

Find information on Sanitation snow operations along with residents’ responsibilities during and after snow at nyc.gov/snow.

About the New York City Department of Sanitation

The Department of Sanitation (DSNY) keeps New York City healthy, safe and clean by collecting, recycling and disposing of waste, cleaning streets and vacant lots, and clearing snow and ice. The Department operates 59 district garages and manages a fleet of more than 2,000 rear-loading collection trucks, 450 mechanical brooms and 705 salt spreaders. The Department clears litter, snow and ice from approximately 6,500 miles of City streets and removes debris from vacant lots as well as abandoned vehicles from City streets.
 

Thursday, January 28, 2021

VIRTUAL COFFEE HOUSE: MUSIC AND POETRY, COFFEE AND SOLIDARITY (FREE)

 
Virtual Coffee House
Saturday, January 30th, 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
 
PRESS RELEASE
from Kensington/Windsor Terrace Mutual Aid


Music & Poetry, Coffee and Solidarity!

Kensington-Windsor Terrace welcomes its first Virtual Coffee House!

Something  new is coming to the neighborhood: Kensington / Windsor Terrace Mutual Aid is sponsoring its first Virtual Coffee House.
 
The group is putting out the call to poets, spoken word artists and musicians to join them on Saturday January 30th @ 7:00 PM EST for an hour or more of art and community. Members of the neighborhood who just want to listen and enjoy artists from our neighborhood and beyond are warmly invited to attend.

Poets and spoken word artists are welcome to share something of their own or a favorite piece by someone else. Musicians who wish to send a video link, to be played at the event, may do so beforehand.  The event will feature an open mic, time providing, but artists may wish to contact the group ahead of time.

Zoom link to the event 

Meeting ID: 973 1219 3008
Passcode: 718787

One tap mobile
+16465588656,,97312193008#,,,,*718787# US (New York)


To RSVP and find out more about the event, please go to our Facebook Event Page.
 
In addition to its important goals of building community and bringing together artists, the Virtual Coffee House will be a fundraiser for KWT Mutual Aid. KWTMA is an all-volunteer group that raised over $100,000 since its creation in March 2020. The group has been supplying grocery support and emergency cash stipends to neighbors hard hit by the pandemic.
 
Find everything about KWTMA at https://linktr.ee/kwtmutualaid.

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

AGENDA AND HOW TO JOIN COMMUNITY BOARD 12'S ONLINE PUBLIC MEETING TONIGHT


E-mail from Community Board 12 about tonight's online public meeting:

------- Message --------
Subject: January Board Meeting Agenda & Information
Date: Tue, 26 Jan 2021 12:03:04 -0500
From: Community Board 12 <bkcb12@gmail.com>

Dear Board Members, Elected Officials & Interested Parties,       
Our January board meeting is scheduled for today at 7:00 on Zoom.

Please click the link below to join the meeting:
https://zoom.us/j/94630923615

If you are calling in by phone please dial one of the following numbers and then enter the Webinar ID:
(646) 558-8656  or  (301) 715-8592  or  (312) 626-6799  or  (253) 215-8782  or  (346) 248-7799  or  (669) 900-9128
Webinar ID: 946 3092 3615

To speak at the public session, please click on the following link and fill out the form:

Thank you.
 

Monday, January 25, 2021

DRIVERS GET A SNOW DAY ON TUESDAY

 

 

Alternate side of the street parking (street cleaning) regulations will be suspended on Tuesday, January 26th, for snow operations.

All other parking regulations, including those for parking meters, will remain in effect.
 

Saturday, January 23, 2021

STAND UP FOR YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD. APPLY FOR MEMBERSHIP ON YOUR COMMUNITY BOARD.

 

 
Make a difference for your neighborhood by serving on a community board, the voice of the people who live or work in the neighborhoods that the board represents.
 
To qualify, you have to live in New York City, be age sixteen or over, and live, work, or have a "professional or other significant interest" in the district that you want to serve in.
 
Community boards are the link between the neighborhood and city agencies and elected officials. An all-volunteer board with a maximum of fifty members represents each neighborhood in New York City, with each board representing a maximum of 250,000 people. Twenty-five members get appointed or reappointed each year.
 
Meetings are open to the public. They're held once a month from September through June. During the pandemic, they've been held online.
 
The Borough President appoints members to the board. City Council members for the district nominate half of the people who get appointed. The number that each City Council member can nominate is based on how much of the district's population that member represents. Terms are for either one year or staggered two-year terms. They start on April 1st.

Some of the committees that board members can join are Economic Development, Education, Health and Mental Health, Housing, Immigration, Land Use/Landmarks, Libraries and Cultural Affairs, Parks, Public Safety, Sanitation, Transportation, and Youth Services.
 
You can apply for membership on a community board by Friday, February 12th, on the Borough President's website here. But first, contact your City Council member to see if they'll nominate you. Their names, the neighborhoods they represent, and their e-mail addresses are posted on the City Council website here.

Friday, January 22, 2021

KENSINGTON DOG RUN VIRTUAL TOWN HALL: PLANNING THE DOG RUN'S FUTURE

Kensington Dog Run Virtual Town Hall
Thursday, February 18th, 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

From the Kensington Dog Run Association:
This meeting is open to everyone who uses the Kensington Dog Run and is interested in contributing to the future of the park. We encourage you to come and share your ideas for the dog run.
 
Additionally, we hope that after this meeting you will sign up to become a member of the association, and contribute to events like our spring cleanup. Thank you for coming and we are excited to see you soon!

You are invited to a Zoom meeting.
When: Feb 18, 2021 07:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
 
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
-------------------------------------------------------
 
Grassroots planning and organizing by neighborhood residents brought the idea of the Kensington Dog Run to fruition. In 2014, dog owners in the neighborhood started talking with each other about creating a nearby dog run where dogs could enjoy the benefits  of exercising, socializing, and breathing fresh air off-leash. First they talked as individuals, then they met as a group, and then they formed the Kensington Dog Run Association and became a 501(C)(3) non-profit organization.
 
The Kensington Dog Run had its grand opening in Prospect Park Parade Ground on Monday, July 6, 2020. It is open seven days a week, from 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.

Within the 7,000 square feet of fenced-in space are separated areas for large dogs and small dogs, canine-friendly turf, benches made from reclaimed wood, water fountains, new trees, dog-waste-resistant shrubs, and
waste receptacles.
 
The Kensington Dog Run Association is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit.
 
Location
Kensington Dog Run
397A Coney Island Avenue
between Kermit Place and Caton Avenue
Kensington, Brooklyn
(map)
 
https://twitter.com/KensingtonDog  @KensingtonDog
 

GREEN-WOOD CEMETERY FREE MAGAZINE POSTED ONLINE

 

The 2020 edition of Green-Wood Cemetery's free magazine "The Arch" is now posted on its website.
 
During two normal months and ten months of a pandemic, a record number of visitors--590,000--took advantage of this peaceful, historic, and beautiful neighborhood treasure.
 
Articles featured in the magazine include
  • Art Exhibitions--"Cemetery as Muse: Artists Interpret Green-Wood and Its Themes"
  • Climate Change Action--"Taking Action on Climate Change: Think Globally. Act Locally."
  • Essential Workers--"Coming Together During Crisis: Green-Wood’s Invaluable Essential Workers:
  • Open Gates--"Green-Wood: A Peaceful Oasis in an Uncertain World"
  • Virtual Programs--"Public Programs Go Virtual: Socially Distant Shared Experiences"
  • Veteran Trees--"Respecting Our Elders: The Wisdom and Value of Green-Wood’s Veteran Trees"
  • Gilman Restoration--"Restoration at Green-Wood: The Gilman Mausoleum"
  • Remote Education Resources--"Green-Wood is my Classroom: Online Resources for Distance Learning"

Monday, January 18, 2021

COMPARISON OF COMMUNITY BOARD 12 MEMBERS, 2010 AND 2020


Find out the name of every member of every Brooklyn community board by clicking on "CB __ Membership List" at the bottom of each board's entry at https://www.brooklyn-usa.org/community-boards/. You can also see which
City Councilmember nominated each member, the Borough President's choices, and when their terms expire.
 
A community district can have up to fifty volunteer board members. For each district, the Borough President solicits nominations for half of the appointees from the City Council members who represent that district; the number each councilmember can nominate is based on how much of the district's population each councilmember represents. The Borough President can accept or reject a nominee. The Borough President also chooses the other half of the appointees. 
 
Until April 2019, board members didn't have term limits. As of that date, board members are permitted to serve four consecutive two-year terms, take off two years, serve another four consecutive two-year terms, take off two years, etc., etc., etc. However, the terms they served prior to April 2019 aren't counted toward their term limits, so people who had already served for a very long time were still eligible to serve for another eight years after April 2019, take two years off, etc., etc., etc.
 
In 2010, the New York City Councilmembers who represented Community District 12 were
 
  • Sara Gonzalez (District 38),
  • Brad Lander (District 39), and
  • David Greenfield (District 44).
 
Of the fifty Community Board 12 members listed below,
  • Sara Gonzalez nominated four members. They have (38) next to their names.
  • Brad Lander or his predecessor, Bill de Blasio, nominated ten, marked with (39).
  • David Greenfield or his predecessor, Simcha Felder, nominated eleven, and (44) is next to their names.
  • Borough President Marty Markowitz chose he twenty-five, marked with (BP).
  
CB 12 Board Members, 2010

Term expires March 31, 2011
1. Tamar Abraham (44)
2. Yeruchim Silber (BP)
3. Chaim Israel (39)
4. Fredrick Cassera (39)
5. Raymond Lee (BP)
6. Joan Pastore (38)
7. Alan Dubrow (BP)
8. Roberta Feinstein (BP)
9. Jacob Hass (39)
10. Jacque Friedman (BP)
11. Martin Katz (BP)
12. Abu Khalquzzam (39)
13. Tahir Bhutta (44)
14. Edward Handler (BP)
15. Lan Chen (BP)
16. John Moroni (BP)
17. Samuel Israel (BP)
18. Andrew Kohen (44)
19. Mordechai Schwartz (44)
20. David Shlomovich (44)
21. Elliot Rosman (38)
22. Morris Senderovic (BP)
23. Eli Oiring (39)
24. Moshe Wieder (BP)
25. Joshua Weinstein (BP)
 
Term expires March 31, 2012
1. Sandy Aboulafia (BP)
2. Sol Wahba (39)
3. Yakov Abramou (BP) (new appointee)
4. Margaret Tobin (39) (new
appointee)
5. Jules Fleischer
(BP) 
6. Bernard Freilich (BP)
7. Edgar Gluck (39)
8. Tzvi Englard (BP)
9. Anna Cali (44) (new
appointee)
10. Joseph Jacobs (BP)
11. Larry Jayson (39)
12. Lily Marinelli (38) (new
appointee)
13. Mendel Reiner (44) (new
appointee)
14. Douglas Jablon (BP)
15. Sharon Fuchs (BP)
16. Mordechai Katz (44)
17. Morton Pupko (BP)
18. Peter Rebenwurzel (44)
19. Mendel Zilberberg (BP) (new
appointee)
20. Joel Eisdorfer (44)
21. Jacob Daskal (44)
22. Samuel Stober (39)
23. Stanley Sussman (BP)
24. Howard Klayman (BP)
25. Amy Sicignano (38)


CB 12 Board Members, 2020

In 2020, the New York City Councilmembers who represented Community District 12 were
  • Carlos Menchaca (District 38),
  • Brad Lander (District 39),
  • Mathieu Eugene (District 40), and
  • David Greenfield (District 44).
 
Of fifty Community Board 12 members,
  • District 38 can have four members. Two people have (38) next to their names, and the other two slots are vacant.
  • District 39 can have seven. Five people are marked (39), and two slots are vacant.
  • District 40 can have one. He has (40) next to his name.
  • District 44 can have thirteen. Ten people are marked (44), and three slots are vacant.
  • Borough President Eric Adams chose the twenty-five with (BP) next to their names.

Expires March 31, 2021

1. Morris Senderovic (BP)

2. John Talmadge (BP)

3. Yeruchim Silber (BP)

4. Jacob Askal (BP)

5. Miriam Hwesko (BP)

6. Jacque Friedman (BP)

7. Yonah Moses (BP)

8. Avrohom Wolfson (BP)

9. Alan Dubrow (BP)

10. Yidel Perlstein (BP)

11. Edgar Gluck (BP)

12. Sahibzada Shabir Ahmad (BP) (new appointee)

13. Ellie Kastel (BP)

14. VACANT (38)

15. VACANT (38)

16. Jacob Hass (39)

17. VACANT (39)

18. Mamnunul Haq (39)

19. YitzchokMoskowitz (39) (new appointee)

20. David Friedlander (44)

21. Naftali Tessler (44)

22. Jeffrey Dweck (44)

23. Chesky Blau (44)

24. Avi Greenstein (44)

25. David Shlomovich (44)

Expires March 31, 2022

1. Jacob Eisdorfer (BP)

2. Peter Rebenwurzel (BP)

3. Shlomie Rieger (BP)

4. Douglas Jablon (BP)

5. Sharon Fuchs (BP)

6. Yitzchok Itzkowitz (BP) (new appointee)

7. Yechiel Malik (BP)

8. Jules Fleischer (BP)

9. Morton Pupko (BP)

10 .Adam Cohen (BP)

11. Bernard Freilich (BP)

12. Rochelle Zami (BP)

13. Lily Marinelli (38)

14. Monique (Yocheved) Wallace (38)

15. Larry Jayson (39)

16. Samuel Stober (39)

17. VACANT (39)

18. Joseph Gross (40) (new appointee)

19. Sol Wahba (44)

20. Anna Cali (44)

21. VACANT (44)

22. VACANT (44)

23. VACANT (44)

24. Yaakov Kaplan (44)

25. Yaakov Schapiro (44)

Friday, January 15, 2021

AGENDA FOR COMMUNITY BOARD 7 (WINDSOR TERRACE, SUNSET PARK) ONLINE PUBLIC BOARD MEETING (FREE)

 

 
Update, 1/20/21: Today, CB 7 provided the link to the Public Comment Sign Up Form. If you'd like to make a comment at tonight's meeting, fill out and submit the form at https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSege3WL5N3wdfhFyKbxEz4zdyw8Gz2bWFNvnpwsSsIJouuWww/viewform?fbclid=IwAR3cZLxDXuBAFe2MYP_DiZD3Y3hKYXFaILjplG0QNmGttnUXrVbI41n4TB0.

--------------------------------------------
 
Update, 1/19/21: CB 7 provided the wrong Zoom link the other day for the meeting. Today, they provided the correct link: https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Ud6-l8ovRlGL6RrPV0uBcg. If you'd already registered at the link posted below, you have to re-register at https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Ud6-l8ovRlGL6RrPV0uBcg.
 
-------------------------------------------------------
 
Brooklyn Community Board 7 Online Public Board Meeting
                           Wednesday, January 20th, 6:00 p.m.
 
The monthly public meeting of Brooklyn Community Board 7 (covering Windsor Terrace and Sunset Park) will be held online via Zoom on Wednesday, January 20th, at 6:00 p.m.
 
If you have any concerns, questions, solutions, needs, or problems that you'd like the community board to address, you can speak during the public session. You'll have three minutes to present your topic.
 
Public meetings of Community Board 7 are normally held on the third Wednesday of the month, from September through June, from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., but the dates are subject to change.

Every neighborhood in New York City is represented by an all-volunteer community board, which serves as the neighborhood's liaison to city agencies. Board members are appointed by the neighborhood's city councilperson and the borough president.

 
Proposed Agenda

1. Opening of the meeting
2. Adoption of the agenda
3. Adoption of the minutes of the Board Meeting of December 16, 2020
4. Public Comment (3 minutes to speak regarding the topics of the committee reports on this agenda)
5. Committee Reports:
    1. By Laws Committee (No Vote Required)
     Discussion on feedback from attorney on by-law                 amendments
    2. Economic Development Waterfront (No Vote Required)
    An introduction to Equinor and the plan for an offshore wind     industry hub at South Brooklyn Marine Terminal  
6. Elected Officials & Representatives
7. District Manager’s Report
8. Chairperson’s Report
9. Old Business
10. New Business
11. Public Comment (3 minutes to speak on any subject)
12. Adjournment

To register for the meeting, go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_IyRjN7FOQg6b4ay4U2AKlw. After you register, you'll receive a confirmation e-mail that contains information about joining the webinar.
 

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

ALTERNATE SIDE PARKING SUSPENDED ON MONDAY

 


Alternate side of the street parking (street cleaning) regulations will be suspended on Monday, January 18th, for Martin Luther King Jr.'s Birthday.

All other parking regulations, including those for parking meters, will remain in effect.
 
Parking meter regulations are only suspended on these major legal holidays: New Years Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas.
 

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

66TH PRECINCT'S NEW COMMANDING OFFICER

 

Captain Jason Hagestad

UPDATE, 7/30/21: Captain Hagestad has been promoted to Deputy Inspector.

---------------------------------------------
 
UPDATE, 1/17/21: Information on how to join the meeting via Zoom :
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86901713552

Meeting ID: 869 0171 3552
One tap mobile
+19292056099,,86901713552# US (New York)

Dial by your location
        +1 929 205 6099 US (New York)
Meeting ID: 869 0171 3552
Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdRh3iuHhY
 
----------------------------------------
 
66th Precinct Community Council Public Meeting
Thursday, January 21st, 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
 
The 66th Precinct has a new Commanding Officer, Captain Jason Hagestad. He was appointed in early January 2021. The precinct covers Kensington, Borough Park, and part of Midwood.
 
Captain Hagestad's previous post, his first as a Commanding Officer, was at Brooklyn's 78th Precinct, which serves Park Slope and Prospect Park. He took command in March 2018.
 
The captain began his career with the NYPD in 2003. In 2009, while stationed at the 66th Precinct, he was promoted to sergeant. He was promoted to lieutenant in 2013 and to captain in 2015.
 
The 66th Precinct Community Council will meet on Thursday, January 21st. These meetings provide an opportunity for neighborhood residents and business owners to talk with the precinct's Commanding Officer as well as other officers. Your input on crime and other policing issues is crucial.
 
Community Council meetings are normally held on the third Thursday of each month from 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., from September through June. During the pandemic, they have been held online via Zoom.
 
66th Precinct Community Council
@66precinctcc
 
--------------------------------------------------------

Contact information for the 66th Precinct:
phone: (718) 851-5611
5822 16th Avenue
between 58th and 59th streets
Borough Park, Brooklyn
e-mail: 66precinctcc @ gmail.com
website: http://www1.nyc.gov/site/nypd/bureaus/patrol/precincts/66th-precinct.page
Twitter: https://twitter.com/NYPD66Pct or @66precinctcc

Monday, January 11, 2021

KENSINGTON AND WINDSOR TERRACE COMMUNITY CLEANUP

 
UPDATE: A meetup location that focuses on Windsor Terrace has been added. Meet at noon at the Windsor Terrace Library (Fort Hamilton Parkway at E. 5th Street).
 
-----------------------------------------------------------
 
Kensington Street Cleanup
Sunday, January 17th, 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
 
An announcement from Robert Elstein
To the People of Kensington, 
We are going to be walking down each & every block of Kensington, cleaning all of the trash we encounter on Sunday 1/17 beginning at 11:00 a.m.!

We will clean all of Kensington in only 90 minutes!

We need 28 volunteers for the job! We will set up 14 teams of partners who will walk together with a garbage bag or two & gloves. Bring a friend! Or, come prepared to meet someone new! Or, perhaps meet lots of new people! 
Meet up at McDonald and 18th avenues.
Cleanup is the most fulfilling way to make a quick impact on our environment. It’s also a great workout & good socializing! However, due to the pandemic all participants must be physically distanced & masked.

We will have extra masks & garbage bags but please bring your own gloves & hand sanitizer.

(Gloves: we recommend a cheap pair of water resistant, large-fitting gloves, such as the $3.99 ones you can get at the 99 cent store. Plastic disposable gloves are often hard to put back on if you take one off.)

Grabbers and plastic buckets are also great tools for the trade, if you have them!

This whole thing is inspired by you, the incredible people of Kensington, because we all deserve way better than the City is providing.

A cleaner environment in Kensington can improve our emotional well-being, our creativity, even our relationships to others in our community. What we do on Sunday will have a long lasting effect.

I would like to recruit several volunteers to serve as block captains for the day. If you would like to help out in this way, please reach out to me at robert.elstein@gmail.com

Let’s do this!

Sincerely,
Robert Elstein