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Monday, February 27, 2023

NEIGHBORHOOD CLEAN-UP IN KENSINGTON


Clean Up Kensington
Sunday, March 5, 10:00 a.m. to noon 

Join Clean Up Kensington next Sunday, March 5th, from 10:00 a.m. until about noon for a quick and easy volunteer street clean-up. Stay for as long or as short a time as you like.

This clean-up will follow a different route than the three previous meet-ups, starting at the corner of Cortelyou Road and E. 5th Street and working its way down Cortelyou toward Coney Island Avenue. You can see the route on the map at the top of this blog post.

Gloves, trash bags, and a limited number of trash pickers, brooms, and dustpans will be provided, but you're welcome to bring your own reusable gloves and picker, if you have them.

Everyone who participates in the clean-up will get a free scoop of gelato at Sweet Lea afterward.

Jenny, the founder of Clean Up Kensington  (https://www.instagram.com/cleanupkensington/?hl=en) writes
"Clean Up Kensington is a volunteer-driven community group that meets to clear litter and care for street trees in Kensington. 

I had been going out once or twice a week and picking up litter around our block while listening to podcasts for about a year, and I kept running into friendly neighbors who wanted to help out, too, or asked if I was part of a group they could join. I was also feeling inspired after joining the New York Parks Stewardship program and taking a class on street tree care. 
I welcome the partnership and expertise of anyone who's already been doing work in this space."

 

Thursday, February 16, 2023

REMINDER: THE IMPACT OF THE BROOKLYN BUS NETWORK REDESIGN ON THE NEIGHBORHOOD'S BUS SERVICE

 

"BROOKLYN BUS NETWORK REDESIGN" (DRAFT PLAN)

Zoom meeting dates for Community Board 6, 7, 12, and 14:
CB6 - THURSDAY, JAN. 26TH
CB7 - TUESDAY, JAN. 31ST
CB12 - THURSDAY, FEB. 16TH
CB14 - THURSDAY, FEB. 23RD

The MTA recently released its proposal to revamp and improve bus routes in Brooklyn.  This follows the recent implementation of a redesigned Bronx Bus Network and approaching closure on the Queens Bus Network component.  The full "BROOKLYN BUS NETWORK REDESIGN" (DRAFT PLAN) can be seen and reviewed with these links...



There are many ways to comment, to protest or applaud the proposed changes (and to make suggestions of your own!).  An array of upcoming MTA 'listening sessions" via ZOOM is underway, arranged in numerical order of the Community Boards served by MTA / NYC Transit.  (*See list below for the schedule and how to participate*)

In addition to eliminating hundreds of bus stops throughout Brooklyn (details under the individual bus route), many route adjustments have been proposed under the MTA's Draft Plan...including significant route modifications, truncations AND eliminations.  A handful of NEW routes are also in the "Draft Plan."  Some key examples follow:

*The B16 - Would turn at the busy Church and McDonald Avenue intersection, eliminating service on 12th Avenue/Dahill Road (See which northbound and southbound stops would be added, kept, or removed at https://new.mta.info/document/101241);

*The B69 - This route would no longer be available in KENSINGTON and most of WINDSOR TERRACE on McDonald Avenue, terminating instead at Prospect Park West and 19th/20th Streets;

*The B103 - This Limited Stops, "one-seat-ride" (via the Prospect Expressway and 3rd/4th Avenues) - between KENSINGTON, Midwood and points east in Brooklyn and DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN /Civic Center/Courthouses/Borough Hall, etc. - would be ELIMINATED between the Flatbush/Nostrand "Junction" and Downtown.  (Since the B103 is a fully-accessible, equitable and swift ride, serving many diverse neighborhoods, it is the opinion of many that this would be a shortsighted MTA proposal);

*The BM1,BM2, BM3, BM4 Express Buses - They would no longer operate on Weekends...and with reduced frequency on Weekdays;

NOTES:  

(1)  There is a proposed NEW "B81" route - This line would partially replace the "B69" - on McDonald Avenue - then turn west on 9th Street towards RedHook, essentially reducing service to the heart of Park Slope and the Grand Army Plaza area by half, leaving only the B67 on 7th Avenue (every 30 minutes most hours);  On the plus side, the "B81" would restore service and bus stops on Cortelyou Road between McDonald Avenue and the Flatbush "Junction" - once served by the "B23" (also discontinued in June 2010), now by the "B103";

(2)  A NEW ROUTE (replacing and extending the B35/Church Avenue LIMITED bus) would be the "B55XT," a "Crosstown", similar "Limited" line - with service between Church & McDonald and J.F.K. AIRPORT.  This represents MTA innovation at its best, and should be enthusiastically applauded!

(3) There was no consideration given to resurrecting the B71 / Union Street bus, a victim of the massive MTA service cuts in June 2010.

Residents, Community Organizations, Elected Officials, Community Boards and other interested parties in KENSINGTON, WINDSOR TERRACE and other neighborhoods are invited (and encouraged!) to participate...Here are the dates for the MTA's upcoming "virtual" / ZOOM meetings...MTA officials and staff are available to answer questions, and will note suggestions placed in the Zoom "CHAT" feature...

CB6 - THURSDAY, JAN. 26TH
CB7 - TUESDAY, JAN. 31ST
CB12 - THURSDAY, FEB. 16TH
CB14 - THURSDAY, FEB. 23RD

To join the meetings, use the ZOOM link and details below...

Public workshops

We're planning a better bus network for Brooklyn, and we want 

to hear from you. Please join us for your community 

event! 

 
All workshops will happen from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Sessions will 

begin at 6:30 and 7:30 p.m., though you can join at any time. 


Please use this link to register for your community 

workshop. 


If you can’t make the workshop for your 

neighborhood, you can sign up for a different one. 

 

Each workshop will be conducted in English. Additional 

language interpreters as well as ASL and CART can be made 

available upon advance request via the registration form. 

Requests must be received no fewer than five business days 

before the workshop you want to attend. 


Please join Virtual Workshop on the date for your community 

via Zoom: 

https://mta.zoom.us/j/87221443989?pwd=L014cXlGQittY2p

ML3pSNlk1UTVjdz09 

Meeting ID: 872 2144 3989 

One tap mobile 

+19294362866,,87221443989#,,,,*5795343238# US (New 

York) 

+16465189805,,87221443989#,,,,*5795343238# US (New 

York) 

Date

Community district

Neighborhoods covered

Wednesday, January 11

Community District 1

East Williamsburg, Greenpoint, Northside, Southside, Williamsburg

Thursday, January 12

Community District 2

Boerum Hill, Brooklyn Heights, Clinton Hill, Downtown Brooklyn, DUMBO, Fort Greene, Fulton Ferry, Navy Yard, Vinegar Hill

Tuesday, January 17

Community District 3

Bedford-Stuyvesant, Stuyvesant Heights, Tompkins Park North

Thursday, January 19

Community District 4

Bushwick

Tuesday, January 24

Community District 5

Broadway Junction, City Line, Cypress Hills, East New York, Highland Park, New Lots, Spring Creek, Starrett City

Thursday, January 26

Community District 6

Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill, Columbia St, Gowanus, Park Slope, Red Hook

Tuesday, January 31 

Community District 7

Sunset Park, Windsor Terrace

Thursday, February 2 

Community District 8

Crown Heights, Prospect Heights, Weeksville

Tuesday, February 7

Community District 9

Crown Heights South, Prospect Lefferts Gardens, Wingate

Thursday, February 9

Community District 10

Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, Fort Hamilton

Monday, February 13

Community District 11

Bath Beach, Bensonhurst, Gravesend, Mapleton 

Thursday, February 16

Community District 12

Borough Park, Kensington, Ocean Parkway

Tuesday, February 21

Community District 13

Brighton Beach, Coney Island, Gravesend, Homecrest, Sea Gate, West Brighton

Thursday, February 23

Community District 14

Ditmas Park, Flatbush, Manhattan Terrace, Midwood, Ocean Parkway, Prospect Park South

Wednesday, March 1

Community District 15

Gerritsen Beach, Gravesend, Homecrest, Kings Highway, Manhattan Beach, Plumb Beach, Sheepshead Bay

Thursday, March 2

Community District 16

Broadway Junction, Brownsville, Ocean Hill

Tuesday, March 7

Community District 17

East Flatbush, Farragut, Flatbush, Northeast Flatbush, Remsen Village, Rugby, Erasmus

Thursday, March 9

Community District 18

Bergen Beach, Canarsie, Flatlands, Georgetown, Marine Park, Mill Basin, Mill Island, Paerdegat Basin



The information was submitted to the KARMABrooklyn blog by Mike Rosenbluth.

Friday, February 10, 2023

SOME OF US IN WINDSOR TERRACE AND KENSINGTON COULD GET SLICED OFF FROM THE REST OF YOU


The streets in the red areas on the map would no longer be in Assembly District 44.


Submit comments online by April 1st at https://www.nyirc.gov/participate.

-------------------------------------------------

Update, February 15, 2023: Today's Kings County hearing is archived at totalwebcasting.com/view/?func=VIEW&id=nysirc&date=2023-02-15&seq=1.


-------------------------------------------------------

Most of Kensington and the entirety of Windsor Terrace have been in the same Assembly District for decades. In spite of that, the Independent Redistricting Commission has proposed a plan that would chop off several streets in both neighborhoods and stick them in a different Assembly District, where they'd be overwhelmed by the needs of the larger neighborhoods of Red Hook and Sunset Park. 

Residents living between Caton Avenue and 8th Avenue, from McDonald Avenue to the Prospect Expressway, and residents living between Fort Hamilton Parkway and 15th Avenue, from Dahill Road to 39th Street, would be moved out of Assembly District 44. 

As we're hearing the bad news about part of us getting dumped into AD 51, Park Slope is getting this good news: the redrawn map greatly expands the boundaries of District 44 so that it includes the bulk of Park Slope. ("See How Park Slope's Assembly Districts Change In New Maps" https://patch.com/new-york/parkslope/see-how-park-slope-s-assembly-districts-change-new-maps)

So, not only will the southwest portion of Windsor Terrace be negatively affected, but the portion of Windsor Terrace that remains in AD 44 will be too, as AD 44's Park Slope constituency grows and yours shrinks. Park Slope will get even more of a voice as you get less, simply because of its size.

This is we need: people who will testify in favor of keeping Kensington and Windsor Terrace whole, either in person or by submitting a comment online. When you can do either of those--testify in person or submit a comment online--please notify Dan Campanelli at the office of 44th District Assemblymember Robert (Bobby) Carroll. Dan's phone number is 917-586-7182.

From Assemblymember Carroll's office:
The IRC (Independent Redistricting Commission), in their proposed draft Assembly Plan, cut Windsor Terrace in half and put them in the 51st AD. It's really important we have people testify to the commission on February 15th to make sure they know how important it is that we keep Windsor Terrace with Park Slope and Kensington in one contiguous district, as has largely been the case for 30+ years. 

Here is some background, with information about the hearing below and some sample testimony and a copy of the map with the portions they've drawn out highlighted in red.

The ongoing redistricting process for Assembly District lines is continuing. While our lines for 2023-2024 are set, due to a court order, the lines for the following eight years (2025-2032) still need to be drawn. On December 1st, New York’s redistricting commission released their proposed Assembly District Map.

There are a number of issues with the map, but the biggest for the 44th Assembly District is that the commission cuts Windsor Terrace into two Assembly Districts, by making the Prospect Expressway the dividing line, rather than the natural boundary of Green-Wood Cemetery. Additionally, the commission draws a dividing line at Dahill Road instead of Fort Hamilton Parkway, cutting out several blocks in Kensington, which have been in the 44th AD for decades.

We are asking the commission to restore Green-Wood Cemetery along 20th Street to be the western border of the 44th AD, not the Prospect Expressway as in the draft plan, and Green-Wood Cemetery along McDonald Avenue and Fort Hamilton Parkway out to 39th Street as the northern boundary between the 44th and 51st ADs. 

This is a shift of only a few blocks but makes complete sense geographically. Without this change, the portions of Kensington and Windsor Terrace cut out of the 44th AD will be a small afterthought in the 51st AD, divided from that district by the hundreds of acres of Green-Wood Cemetery.

The 51st AD contains most of the thriving neighborhood of Sunset Park and Red Hook, and those neighborhoods historically dominate that district. The inevitable result of the draft plan is that the few blocks of Windsor Terrace and Kensington attached to the vast bulk of Sunset Park and Red Hook will be underserved.

Beyond that, there are some blocks in Prospect Park South that they cut out, particularly Westminster Road to Rugby Road between Church Avenue and Albemarle Road, which could be restored by simply drawing the dividing line on Church Avenue rather than Albemarle Road. 
In addition, there are a number of blocks in Kensington and West Midwood that have been cut out, even though they have also been in the district for 30 years.

Here [at the top of this blog post] is a map of the IRC-proposed district, with the areas that they intend to remove highlighted in red.

The Commission is holding public hearings around the state to get input from New Yorkers. The hearing for Brooklyn is taking place on February 15th at Medgar Evers College, and it would help a lot if you would come out and testify to keep Windsor Terrace and Kensington together with Park Slope in the 44th Assembly District.


While it would be best for you to attend in person, if you cannot, you may still participate by submitting a comment here (https://www.nyirc.gov/participate) by April 1st.

Wednesday, February 15, 2023
4:00 PM
Kings County Public Hearing
Location: Medgar Evers College (CUNY)
Founders Auditorium 1650 Bedford Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11225 
*Proof of vaccination/negative COVID test within 7 days required.
Please Note: sign-up for this meeting ends at 4:00 PM February 14th 2023.

Thanks, and please let me know if you're willing to testify in person and/or submit comment and let me know if you have questions.

Thanks a lot,
Dan
917 586 7182

-------------------------------------------------------------

Sample Draft Testimony to IRC Members of the Commission 
This can also be adapted for posting comments online.
Windsor Terrace/Kensington 
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak today. My name is ______________. I reside in Windsor Terrace/Kensington and am speaking on behalf of myself and my community.

My comments will focus on your plan for the 44th Assembly District and, specifically, your decision to place portions of the neighborhoods of Windsor Terrace and Kensington in two different Assembly Districts, the 44th and the 51st. We believe both neighborhoods should be wholly within the 44th AD, as they have been historically. 

Your decision to put portions of both Windsor Terrace and Kensington into different Assembly Districts makes both impacted ADs less compact and contiguous and also divides two long-established and discrete communities with common interests, demographics, and a history of positive civic activism. 

Simply stated, it is contrary to many of the bedrock principles which should guide fair redistricting and good government.

Specifically, we ask that you make Green-Wood Cemetery along 20th Street the western border of the 44th AD, not the Prospect Expressway as in the draft plan, and Green-Wood Cemetery along McDonald Avenue and Fort Hamilton Parkway out to 39th Street the northern boundary between the 44th and 51st ADs. This is a shift of only a few blocks but makes complete sense geographically. 

Without this change, the portions of Kensington and Windsor Terrace cut out of the 44th AD will be a small afterthought in the 51st AD, divided from that district by the hundreds of acres of Greenwood Cemetery. 

The 51st AD contains the entirety of the thriving neighborhood of Sunset Park and that neighborhood historically dominates that district. The inevitable result of the draft plan is that the few blocks of Windsor Terrace and Kensington attached to the vast bulk of Sunset Park will be underserved. 

The proposed plan also dilutes the ability of vital neighborhood institutions to advocate on behalf of their respective constituents. Two local elementary schools, P.S. 130 and P.S. 230, several local places of worship, such as Immaculate Heart of Mary Roman Catholic Church, the Flatbush Jewish Center, which, despite its name, is in Kensington, and the Darul Jannah Masjid and Masjid Nur Al-Islam will all see their catchment areas, now wholly within the 44th AD, divided between the 44th and the 51st AD. 

This is especially troublesome with respect to the mosques which serve the growing South Asian community in Kensington and will now have to petition two different Assemblymembers rather than having a single point of contact.

Historically, the entirety of the two discrete, cohesive, and well-defined neighborhoods of Kensington and Windsor Terrace have been in the same Assembly District. This is true since at least the reapportionment following the 1970 census. 

Indeed, the phone number for the local Assembly District Office has remained unchanged since 1974, and many of my friends and neighbors have told me that they have it memorized or on their speed dial. This is not just an interesting but irrelevant tidbit, it is testimony to the fact that, at least in Brooklyn, the Assembly District is the smallest unit of government and, traditionally, the most responsive to local needs.

In the 1950s, Robert Moses built the Prospect Expressway and inflicted a still-obvious scar on Windsor Terrace and Kensington. The people of Windsor Terrace and Kensington banded together and protested Moses’ plan, but unlike more affluent neighborhoods, such as Brooklyn Heights and Greenwich Village, they lost, and the Prospect Expressway was built. 

Moses’ wound, however, drew the Windsor Terrace and Kensington communities closer together, and over the following decades, they jointly fought and defeated repeated ill-advised rezoning proposals to first permit large-scale manufacturing and then residential overdevelopment in these thriving working class neighborhoods. 

We ask that you not reopen the wound Robert Moses inflicted. Please make Greenwood Cemetery, not the Prospect Expressway, the boundary between the 44th AD and the 51st AD. Please keep Windsor Terrace and Kensington intact.

Thank you for your time.

Thursday, February 9, 2023

HALAL PANTRY FOOD: FREE FOR THOSE IN NEED


 

Halal Pantry Food
Wednesday, February 22nd, 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

Pick up free halal pantry food, including vegetables, on Beverley Road. New York City Councilmember Shahana Hanif, in collaboration with Muslims Giving Back, will provide the food to those in need.

To register, scan the QR code in the flyer. 

If you have any questions, e-mail Councilmember Hanif's Kensington Community Liaison, Ali Boivab, at aboivab@council.nyc.gov or call (718) 499-1090.

Location
Beverley Road
between Church Avenue and E. 2nd Street
Kensington, Brooklyn

Wednesday, February 8, 2023

COMMUNITY BOARD 7 MEETING VIRTUALLY (WINDSOR TERRACE, GREENWOOD HEIGHTS, SOUTH SLOPE, AND SUNSET PARK)

 

Community Board 7 Board Meeting
Wednesday, February 15th, 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

Community Board 7 will hold its monthly public meeting remotely on Wednesday, February 15th, from 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

CB 7 is the liaison between city agencies and the residents, business owners, and employees of Windsor Terrace, Greenwood Heights, South Slope, and Sunset Park.

Attendees will have two opportunities to address the board (items 6 and 14 on the agenda below). If you have any concerns, questions, needs, problems, suggestions, or solutions that you'd like to share with CB 7 board members, you can raise them at that time.

Register to join the Zoom webinar from a PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone, Android device, or landline at https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_gJ4Km7umQ8q6wuuC5JXoswOr view the meeting on CB 7's YouTube channel at https://bit.ly/2Rl39PO.


After you register, you'll receive an e-mail confirming that you registered. It will also give instructions on joining the webinar from a PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone, Android phone, or landline/wired phone.


From the website: 
The Board's boundaries are the waterfront on the west, the Long Island Railroad cut to the South (approximately 65th Street); Our boundary extends north on 8th Avenue from 62nd Street to Greenwood Cemetery. We include all of the cemetery and the land between it and Prospect Park to Caton Avenue on the east. Our northern border is on 15th Street from Park Circle to Hamilton Avenue and continues on Hamilton Avenue to the Gowanus Canal.
Every neighborhood in New York City is represented by an all-volunteer community board that serves as the liaison between neighborhood residents and city agencies. Board members are appointed by the borough president.
 
Members of the public are welcome to serve on a committee without being a board member. Descriptions of the committees are posted at https://www1.nyc.gov/site/brooklyncb7/committees/committees.page. Contact the Community Board 7 office to learn more.


Proposed agenda: 


1.   Pledge of Allegiance

2.   Roll Call

3.   Opening of the meeting

4.   Adoption of the agenda

5.   Adoption of the minutes of the January 18, 2023 board meeting

6.   Public Comment (3 minutes to speak on topics covered in the committee reports)

7.   Committee Reports: 

    A) Transportation Committee (Vote required) – 1. Revocable consent for City Harvest to operate at 150 52nd Street, 2. Presentation from NYC Office of Technology & Innovation with Citybridge on the installation of LinkNYC kiosks in CB7, 3. Discussion on neighborhood loading zones in CB7 

    B) Housing Committee (Vote required) – 1. Presentation from the New York Foundation for Senior Citizens on the Home Sharing Program, 2. Presentation from Reside New York on the application process for affordable housing units at 875 4th Avenue, 3. NYC Voluntary Cleanup Program for 179 22nd Street, 4. Presentation from Right to Counsel 
    C) Public Safety Committee (No vote required) – 1. Presentation on the NYU Building Bridges Security Guard Training Program, 2. Meet and greet with Metropolitan Detention Center/BOP staff 
    D) Economic Development-Waterfront Committee (No vote required) – 1. Presentation from Equinor – a. Project overview and local opportunities for engagement, b. South Brooklyn Marine Terminal overview and timeline, c. Operations and maintenance base, d. Plan ahead-Future engagement and timeline 
    E) Ability and Access Committee (No vote required) – 1. Presentation from the Mayor’s Office of People with Disabilities on the services and resources MOPD provides, 2. Raising awareness about the role MOPD play in supporting city agencies 

8.   Roll Call

9.   Elected Officials and Representatives

10. Chairperson’s Report

11. District Manager’s Report

12. Old Business

13. New Business

14. Public Comment (3 minutes to speak on any topic)

15. Adjournment

-----------------------------------------------------------

Community Board 7
4201 4th Avenue (entrance on 43rd Street) (map)
Sunset Park, Brooklyn
phone: (718) 854-0003
fax: (718) 436-1142
bk07 @ cb.nyc.gov


Friday, February 3, 2023

ALBEMARLE NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION MEETINGS AND 50TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION

Congratulations to the Albemarle Neighborhood Association on its 50th Anniversary!

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   The Albemarle Neighborhood Association will hold two meetings this Spring. The first will be on Wednesday, March 15th, 2023 at 6:30 pm. (rescheduled for Wednesday, March 29th). At this time that will probably be a zoom meeting. We will attempt to have issues and guests that are important to our community.

   The second meeting will be held on Wednesday, May 31st, 2023. It will also start at 6:30 pm. We are not certain as to where or how that meeting will take place. There are a few options that may be available to us.

   We chose May 31st for the meeting as it will mark 50 years to the day that our organization was founded. We had our first meeting on May 31st, 1973. A half century of serving our community. This is a milestone that we should all be proud of. We would like to pay tribute to some of those members who helped to make the ANA one of the most successful and longest enduring community organizations in our city.

   If we have this in-person meeting either indoors or outdoors on Albemarle Road, as always refreshments will be supplied by Foodtown.

   Hopefully, this will be an exciting Spring for an organization that has helped shape this area of Kensington. We will invite community leaders and elected officials to the meeting.

Sincerely
Larry Jayson
President

----------------------------------------------------

About Albemarle Neighborhood Association

Albemarle Neighborhood Association (ANA) is the oldest neighborhood association in Brooklyn. Since its founding in 1973, it has worked to advance Kensington's quality of life. ANA's meetings are free and are open to the public. They provide a place for Kensington's residents to address safety, security, and quality of life issues.

ANA helps create a safe and stable neighborhood by working closely with its members, other neighborhood residents, city agencies, and elected officials to address key issues.

The borders of the geographic area that ANA serves are
  • north: north side of Caton Avenue
  • south: south side of Beverley Road
  • west: west side of McDonald Avenue 
  • east: east side of Ocean Parkway