Wednesday, October 8, 2008

45 South Broadway Chapter 11 Case Dismissed



YONKERS, NY — The Chapter 11 case regarding 45 South Broadway was dismissed exposing  the owners, Cook and partners, to personal liability to the City of Yonkers for the Section 108 loan

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Annabi Seeks Update on Schools to Focus Budget Lobbying Efforts

YONKERS, NY — Yonkers Majority Leader Sandy Annabi, (D – District 2) will be introducing legislation into the City Council at tonight’s Rules Committee meeting, calling for a meeting between the Yonkers Schools Administration and the Council’s Education Committee. As Education Chair, she is seeking an update on the School District’s financial status, future outlook, and planned direction, given the dire economic forecasts and uncertain fiscal climate in the State.

Annabi said, “Our School District provides over
25,000 students with educational services, in conjunction with
initiatives to address student needs in the areas of guidance, social
work, health, and enrichment in the arts and competitive sports. Our
School District has had a long-term struggle with securing funding, and
the current fiscal conditions in New York State deeply affect the
projections for the City of Yonkers and our School District.”
Annabi stressed,  “Now is
the time to gather our resources, and find ways to buttress the
District against the coming financial crisis. To ensure that the
District survives the coming turbulence, Yonkers must plan and
strategize in advance of the worst of the coming budget crunch. The
City Council requires an update on the status of and the projections
for the Yonkers Public Schools, encompassing the remainder of the
current and coming budget year.”
“I have full faith that meeting with the
Superintendent and his budget team to cooperatively review the state
and direction of the School District will enhance and can better focus
legislative efforts to lobby for our School District,” Annabi concluded.
The next Council Rules Committee meeting is set
for 6:30 pm on, Tuesday, October 07, 2008 in the City Council
Conference Room on the Fourth Floor of City Hall.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

PRESS RELEASE: Yonkers Committee for Smart Development to Hold Parade about SFC Project

Saturday, October 4th, from 2 pm – 4 pm  
YONKERS, NY — Yonkers Committee for Smart Development (YCSD) will hold a parade on Saturday, October 4th, from 2 pm – 4 pm, to highlight the potential traffic and safety problems, that the proposed SFC redevelopment project could hold for the downtown and waterfront areas.
In spite of the fact that there are serious and compelling topics which remain unaddressed in the SFC Project proposal, YCSD has elected to introduce a lighthearted note into the increasingly acrimonious citywide debate on the merits of this mega-project. The homespun, highly visual and appealing YCSD Parade will focus on the potential safety and traffic issues that the project may present.
A dozen YCSD volunteers will hoist aloft a 25’
long red fabric fire truck (visualize a Chinese New Year dragon!) and a
correspondingly sized fabric ambulance, and march them from the Main
Street Post Office, under the Metro North trestle, past the Pier and
around to the Sculpture Garden. The intent of the exercise? To
determine if a fabric fire truck, let alone a real one, can make it
around those turns! This legitimate question has been raised by City
Council members; there is a real possibility that emergency vehicles
will not be able to reach health or fire victims in a timely fashion. 
Parade participants will also try to help the
public visualize the precise dimensions of the waterfront space that
has been assigned to the public under the SFC plan to build two
25-story towers and parking garages on city-owned land, “Parcels
H&I”, between Scrimshaw House and the Domino Sugar Plant. 
YCSD, which is a community organization comprised
of citizens from throughout the city, believes that Yonkers can achieve
municipal economic success through Smart development. YCSD volunteers
have scrupulously followed the City Council SFC review process;
attended virtually every council and committee meeting; and read and
commented on the several versions of the Environmental Impact
Statements. The organization believes that serious questions, regarding
matters which may have a permanent negative effect on the
quality-of-life of local residents, remain unanswered in the Final
Environmental Impact Statement. Among the topics:
Tax Incremental Financing (TIF) vs. Payments in Lieu of Taxes (PILOTS)
A switch from (TIF) Tax Incremental Financing to
PILOTS (Payments in Lieu of Taxes) has been proposed at the eleventh
hour in this project. Members of the public are uninformed about these
proposed changes. TIF, originally declared by SFC to be the only choice
to fund the needed infrastructure improvements, now may be dismissed
with no public dialogue or explanation. As we have learned from White
Plains and New Rochelle, redevelopment projects sold to the public as a
means of controlling property tax increases do not necessarily achieve
that goal. The financials for the SFC project could well have a direct,
negative effect on our property taxes as Yonkers residents absorb the
costs of bond issues and / or considerable tax relief for the
developer. 
Yonkers City Tax Revenues
The SFC Draft Environmental Impact Statement
states that Yonkers can expect to earn annual tax revenues of
approximately $9 million from this $1.6 billion project. The council’s
own analysts are concerned that revenues may not even reach $5 million
a year. The enormous SFC project will not only displace existing
residents and businesses, but cause dramatic social, environmental and
quality-of-life upheaval that will reverberate throughout the city. The
costs of additional city services have not yet been calculated. Is a
project of this magnitude really necessary for an estimated annual
return of $5,000,000, which represents only 0.5% of the annual Yonkers
budget? 
TIF “Soft Costs”
It was recently announced that, should it be used,
the projected $165,000,000 TIF will require an additional $52,000,000
in “soft costs” that will have to be funded somehow… does this mean by
the city – i.e., the taxpayers? 
Fire Department
The Yonkers firefighters’ union has expressed grave reservations about the

Yonkers Fire Department’s ability to handle fire emergencies in what they

term “super” high rises.
Affordable Housing
SFC has stated that no affordable housing units
will be contained in their luxury buildings. “Off-site” units will
comprise only a fraction of approximately 1600 new apartments. White
Plains is still waiting for its Cappelli-contracted affordable
housing.   
Ball Park
The Ballpark
The “Minor League” ballpark is formally
acknowledged as a money loser; nevertheless, plans proceed to perch it
on top of an eleven story shopping mall in the heart of the city’s
historic low-rise downtown.
87 Nepperhan Avenue (Health Services Building) and the new Cacace Center
SFC intends to demolish the Health Services
Building at 87 Nepperhan Avenue, which was declared a city landmark
last night by the Landmarks Preservation Board. The valuable Art Deco
building would be replaced by a parking garage and the city departments
which are housed in the building would be moved to the planned Cacace
Center across Nepperhan Avenue, where Yonkers would pay to lease 90,000
square feet of office space to replace the free space in its
own building. SFC states in the draft version of the Final
Environmental Impact Statement that the loss of rental income from the
city would compromise the economic viability of the entire project. In
other words, the city taxpayers are again asked to subsidize the SFC
project and to absorb its negative impact on the city budget.
Quality-of-life; traffic; environmental
sustainability; social and environmental justice topics – YCSD calls
upon the Yonkers City Council to more carefully study all these major
issues confronting the city in the light of this enormous development
proposal.
In the meantime, come and enjoy the YCSD Fire Truck Parade!
SOURCE: Yonkers Committee for Smart Development (YCSD)

YONKERS TRIBUNE: Jim Bostic Allegedly Delinquent in Paying Staff at Nepperhan Community Center



YONKERS, NY — Jim Bostic, sacred cow and director of the Nepperhan Community Center (NCC) is again allegedly delinquent in paying his staff. Funding for NCC is comprised of Community Development Block Grants and other subsidies.

Bostic has proven himself to be a poor manager over his cash flow needs, evidently incapable of planning to meet the recurrent remuneration requirements to pay his staff. This is the second situation for which Bostic is allegedly responsible and for which he has not responded.

Read the June 6, 2008 story published in the Yonkers Tribune Website entitled, Nepperhan Community Center in Arrears Paying Staff By Hezi Aris.

An inquiry and request for response was left at NCC at 4:00 pm with no reply yet. Similarly, a request of Councilmember Patricia McDow through her City Council aide has yet to be returned on this issue.

Another situation for which there is community silence, is the allegation that there was a one-time incident in which 300 some-odd gang members met at the Glenwood Power Station for the sake of gang
initiations allegedly during May or June 2008.

The Yonkers Police Gang Unit has during the last few months not been able to corroborate any semblance of the allegations made at public hearings held at the NCC, and postulated by Jim Bostic, and Councilmember Patricia McDow.

Again, no corroboration from either of these so-called community “leaders.”

http://www.yonkerstribune.com/2008/10/jim-bostic-alle

Westchester County Association Strongly Urges Yonkers City Council to Approve SFC Redevelopment Proposal

WHITE PLAINS, NY — The Westchester County Association (WCA) today strongly urged the Yonkers City Council to approve the Struever Fidelco Cappelli (SFC) proposal to redevelop downtown Yonkers. The Council members are expected in the near future to vote on acceptance of the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS), a key step in moving the project toward final approval.

 “At a time when the overall economy is struggling, we in the business
community can’t think of a single redevelopment project that is as critically
important to the future of Yonkers and the entire regional economy as the SFC
proposal, “ said William M. Mooney, Jr., WCA President. “In both size
and scope, this plan holds the most promise for bringing redevelopment
to downtown Yonkers along with opportunities for long-term employment,
revenue generation and numerous quality-of-life benefits for Yonkers.”
Mooney said the Council had undertaken an 
appropriate two-year intensive and thorough review of the SFC proposal.
He commended SFC for conducting an extensive outreach program to
reflect the concerns and issues of the community in the planning
process. “The public has weighed in and helped to shape the plan. The
time has come to move the project along.”
 “Clearly, recent events have cast a very dark shadow across the economic
landscape. But, with financing in place for the SFC plan, any further delay
 in the vote could put the future economic vitality of downtown Yonkers in
jeopardy.The approval to move the SFC project forward will serve as a very
bright beacon of hope for both the City of Yonkers and the entire
Westchester community,” Mooney stated. 
The Westchester County Association (www.westchester.org)
is the preeminent business membership organization in Westchester
County.  The Association is committed to business advocacy, economic
vitality and to providing a strong and clear voice for the interests of
businesses on the regional, national and international levels.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Landmarks Preservation Board Approves Landmark Status for 87 Nepperhan Avenue

YONKERS, NY – The Landmarks Preservation Board, in a 6 to 2 vote, approved the landmark application for 87 Nepperhan Avenue. The Landmarks Preservation Board decision causes final landmark status approval to come before the Yonkers City Council for the final hurdle before acquiring landmark status designation.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Mexican Gang Members Arrested in Yonkers and New Rochelle

YONKERS, NY — On July 24, 2008 at approximately 6:00 a.m. members of the YPD Narcotics/Gang Unit in conjunction with Immigration and Customs Enforcement took part in “ICE Surge 2008”, an operation to remove alien gang members from the United States.  Six locations were checked in Yonkers.  Two locations were checked in New Rochelle by I.C.E. and Westchester County Probation. The following Mexican Gang members were arrested on I.C.E. Administrative warrants:

Yonkers Results:
Albarto Gonzalez, 18 year old male of 114 Beech Street (Cholos 18)
Edgar Juarez, 18 year old male of 28 Purser Place (Vatos Locos)
Raymondo Lopez, 22 year old male of 25 Palisade Avenue (Cholos 18)
Carlos Mejia, 19 year old male of 77 Waring Place (Vatos Locos)
Victor Onofre, 24 year old male of 33 Oak Street (Aztek Pride)
New RochelleResults:
Juan Valdovinos, 18 year old male of 55 May Street, New Rochelle
Sereriano Valdovinos, 19 year old male of 55 May Street, New Rochelle

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Joan Gronowski: A New Political Model for Yonkers



If there is one political office where change can be affected and the voters truly have a choice, it is in the race for the council person of the 3rd district.

Facing long odds and continued backstabbing by her own party, Joan Gronowski has managed what in Yonkers is the near impossible.

She has so far beaten the “Democrat Party Clubhouse” to win the BLANK endorsement to be on the ballot line of the Democrat Party in November.

She will will face her “old friend” Sam Borelli who has three party lines and Dick Halevy, the Republican. Both of these men are as entrenched as the problems they seek to solve. In essence, more of the same.

Ms. Gronowski’s service to her community and experience comes over a lifetime in the City of Yonkers. She has been active and engaged in public service, government, politics, and community. She does what others talk about.

For that, and her integrity, and speaking truth to power, Ms. Gronowski has suffered at the hands of and even some of her own friends.

Why? Because she was willing to speak up and speak out.

Since politics in Yonkers has become so personal, she was fired, deprived of her pension and livelihood, and needed to fight back with a lawsuit.

After several years, she won. Even though a Pyrrhic victory – a victory, never the nevertheless. If anyone brings experience, integrity, and perseverance to her constituency, it’s Ms. Gronowski.

If anyone deserves to be elected, it’s Ms. Gronowski. If voters want to make a difference, they can. The choice is easy. In the third district, it’s Joan Gronowski.

Thursday, November 16, 2000

'The Polish Church'

A neighborhood landmark, St. Casimir's in Yonkers celebrates centennial 
By MARY ANN POUST

The butcher shops piled high with kielbasa are gone from the Hollow/Nodine Hill section of Yonkers, and talk on the streets these days is more likely to be conducted in Spanish than in Polish.
But majestic, twin-towered St. Casimir's Church is still standing tall--a living monument to the Polish immigrants whose hard work helped build Yonkers a century ago, their descendants who have carried that spirit forward and the new Poles, better educated and more affluent, who continue to arrive.
"Ask anybody in Westchester if they've heard of St. Casimir's Church in Yonkers and they'll say, 'It's the Polish church,' " said Peter P. Wendolski, a lifelong parishioner.
"We've kept it up," he said, with more than a touch of pride, "even during hard economic times."
St. Casimir's parish, celebrating its 100th anniversary, was founded when Yonkers was a fast-growing industrial city dominated by the Otis Elevator plant and the giant Alexander Smith carpet factory, which was practically in the parish "backyard."
Italian and Irish immigrants lived in their own enclaves, and the large number of Poles--along with Russians and other Eastern Europeans--lived in theirs. Most found work in one of the other bustling factories attracted to Yonkers for its willing labor pool, good rail freight connections and Hudson River location.
But as industry began moving south after World War II, and the immigrants' children moved to newer parts of Yonkers or the suburbs, the parish went through the same wrenching changes as downtown, inner-city parishes did throughout the Northeast.
Besides that, St. Casimir's went through an upheaval unique to the parish caused by a major road-widening project in the early 1970s that literally ripped the community apart.
Yet, St. Casimir's has survived--smaller but no less friendly--to begin the new century with a loyal core of longtime parishioners as well as Polish newcomers who travel from throughout the metropolitan area because they crave a taste of home.
"The 10 o'clock Mass in Polish is the most crowded one every Sunday," said the pastor, Father John A. Michalak, O.S.P., a member of the Pauline Fathers from Poland, who has been at St. Casimir's since the Pauline order took over its administration in 1997.
He's quick to point out, however, that despite the strong Polish identity of the parish, "we welcome everyone."
The Polish Mass, which attracts some 400 people, is one of four weekend Masses at the parish. The others are celebrated in English and draw some 120 people each--a stark reminder that the parish, which has 495 families registered, has suffered losses along with the neighborhood. In the early 1970s, before the Nepperhan arterial roadway was built, there were 1,100 families on the rolls.
People turn out in force, however, whenever there's a Polish-oriented event, such as the Easter basket blessings on Holy Saturday.
A tradition in Poland, the ceremony involves families bringing baskets filled with their holiday foods--ham, kielbasa, Easter eggs and breads--to the school gym for a blessing. It is so popular that Father Michalak schedules four ceremonies during the course of the day to accommodate everyone.
"We get thousands," he said.
Another popular offering is the Saturday Polish school, under the direction of Eva Krzeminski, which has an enrollment this year of 60 children ages 5 to 14. In a day that begins at 10 a.m. and ends at 2 p.m., they study the Polish language and Polish history and dance and religious education.
"We keep up the Polish culture for them," Father Michalak said.
The Polish language is no longer taught at the parish school, which has maintained a sizable proportion of Polish-American students, but now has an enrollment that reflects the neighborhood.
Under the direction of principal Paul J. Henshaw, the school has pulled its enrollment up to 178 kids this year from a low of 97 in 1997 (it was 700 at its peak in 1959) after the departure of the Sisters of the Resurrection, who had served parish children since 1910. At the time, talk that the school might merge with another caused parents to remove their children and exacerbated an already sinking enrollment.
But the archdiocese decided to keep the school going, and Henshaw was brought on board to run it with a lay staff. Since then, the school building has been completely repainted and modernized, a cafeteria and hot lunch program added, prekindergarten and after-school programs started and a grant obtained to buy 70 new computers.
"Those kinds of things convinced parents that the school's not moving anywhere," Henshaw said.
Father Michalak, who encourages the involvement of children in parish life--including a monthly Polish-theme Mass planned by children--is delighted with the turnaround. "Our school is at such a high level, educationally, now," he said. "That's my message: Come back, children, to our school and our church."
Father Michalak is assisted by Father Jerzy Maz, O.S.P., parochial vicar, and Deacon John Radzilowicz.
Parish organizations include the Holy Name Society, the Ladies of the Immaculata and weekly prayer groups in Polish and English.
The parish properties are the church, an attached school, a rectory and a convent building currently rented to a Franciscan priest and several brothers in New York for studies.
A few blocks away is the 17-story St. Casimir's Tower, parish-sponsored senior citizen housing built in the early 1970s under a public financing program.
Archbishop Egan celebrated the centennial Mass at the parish Oct. 22. The Mass was followed by a reception at the Polish Community Center in Yonkers.
Other centennial events have been a parish picnic and luncheon, a scholarship breakfast and a concert with an exhibit of parish historical items.
The parish was founded to serve the Polish immigrants of Yonkers who were traveling to Polish parishes in Manhattan or to St. Valentine's parish in the North Bronx for Mass in their native language. Eventually the Bronx pastor, Father Joseph Dworzak, agreed to petition the archdiocese on behalf of a Yonkers group that wanted a Polish parish in that city.
Archbishop Corrigan granted the request in September 1899, and Father Dworzak was named the first pastor of the new St. Casimir's parish while still maintaining duties at St. Valentine's. Within a year, Father Michael Slulpek was appointed the first resident pastor.
Mass was celebrated at first in a side chapel of Immaculate Conception Church (St. Mary's) on South Broadway, until a church for St. Casimir's was built in 1903. Father Dworzak, again the pastor, celebrated the first Mass in the church. He was pastor until his death in February 1951.
Father Vincent Raith, pastor from 1951 to 1969, guided the parish through continued growth. A new convent for the sisters opened in 1954.
Msgr. Edmund A. Fabisinski followed as pastor from 1969 to 1977. Pastor for the next 20 years was Father Eugene A. Kosnik, now pastor of St. Charles Borromeo in Gardiner, who oversaw construction of a parking lot and extensive renovations to the church and school.
The present church, completed in 1927 near the old one, features stained-glass windows by Bavarian artisans and a hand-carved relief depicting the souls in purgatory above a side altar. In 1966, for the 1,000th anniversary of Christianity in Poland, a shrine of Our Lady of Czestochowa was added.
Father Michalak said ground was broken for the church in 1925, and it was completed in less than two years, thanks to the support of its hard-working though poor immigrant parishioners.
"Here, we honor people who are poor," he said. "They built this beautiful church, this school, because they believe in God. They love God."