The View from My Block

Monday, July 20, 2009

Angela's Son Passes

Irish-American memoirist Frank McCourt, author of Angela's Ashes, has died at age 78.

Angela's Ashes, which won a Pulitzer prize, recalls McCourt's woeful Irish childhood in the 1930s.

Born in Brooklyn to a large Irish Catholic family, McCourt returned to Ireland with his family when his father could not find work in New York City.

But things only got worse in Limerick, where the family settled. McCourt's alcoholic father stayed unemployed as the family faced increasingly desperate poverty. Three of McCourt's siblings died in childhood.

The warmth and humor of McCourt's literary voice made Angela's Ashes, despite its grim subject, a literary sensation.

McCourt, who dropped out of high school at 13 and later went to NYU after a stint in the service, worked for 27 years as a teacher in the city school system -- the subject of his bestselling book Teacher Man, published in 2005.

The article from Yahoo.

Rosemarie O'Keefe Passes

NYC.Gov reports the passing of prominent Bay Ridge civic activist Rosemarie O'Keefe, wife of NYPD and FDNY veteran Bill O'Keefe.

Rosemarie served as the Commissioner of the Community Assistance Unit under Rudolph Guiliani and was instrumental in the city's response to the 9/11 tragedy, opening a center to assist victims' families.

Mayor Bloomberg memorialized O'Keefe as a dedicated and tireless commissioner, and expressed gratitude for her help to him when he entered public life.

Many in city government, said Bloomberg, have fond memories of Rosemarie.

O'Keefe, a Republican, ran against Vincent Gentile in the 2003 special election for City Council.

The press release from NYC.Gov.

Rosemarie O'Keefe's obituary, from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

More from the Brooklyn Paper.

More from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Jane Jacobs Way

The city has designated the southwest corner of Hudson and West 11th Street, location of the historic White Horse Tavern, "Jane Jacobs Way" in honor of the iconic Hudson Street resident who fought epic battles against urban renewal and championed neighborhoods and street life.

Jacobs lived with her family at 555 Hudson St. when she led the fight against Robert Moses’ 1962 proposal for a Lower Manhattan Expressway through the Village.

Doris Diether, who has served on the local community board since 1964 and was Jacobs' close ally, was guest of honor at the naming ceremony.

Jacobs' first book, “The Death and Life of Great American Cities”, transformed urban policy by identifying the role of diversity in the urban dynamic.

Andrew Berman, director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, was not at the street-renaming ceremony because he didn't get timely notice, even though it was the GVSHP that proposed the street renaming after Jacobs died several years ago.

Before her death, Jacobs contributed an oral history to GVSHP, which is available on the society’s Web site, www.gvshp.org.

Jacobs moved to New York in 1934 after graduating from high school in Scranton, Pa. and soon discovered Greenwich Village. She married architect Robert Hyde Jacobs in 1944.

Jacobs and her family emigrated to Canada in 1968 to avoid her sons being drafted into the Vietnam War. Jacobs continued her work in Toronto, where she lived for the rest of her life.

The article from Downtown Express.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Stella D'Oro Strike Gets Uglier

Crain's New York Business reports that union workers at the Stella D'Oro Bisquit Company have turned to the federal and city governments to stop private equity firm Brynwood Partners, owner of the Bronx factory, from shutting it down.

The threat comes in the wake of a federal judge's decision that Stella D'Oro violated the labor law and must reinstate its workers.

The 136-member union has filed a National Labor Relations Board complaint to stop the shutdown, is seeking a federal injunction, and has asked the city to rescind city tax abatements to Stella D'Oro.

The workers have been on strike since last August.

A federal court ruled last month that the company had violated the labor law and ordered the workers reinstated with back pay to May 6. But when workers returned to their jobs last week, Stella D’Oro announced it was shutting the factory due to the union's refusal to make cost concessions.

The Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers Local 50, saying that the company cannot simply blow off a federal judge, is seeking to reopen negotiations.

Brynwood accuses the union of failing to grasp the bottom line and claims that its actions are motivated only by the economic realities -- not union-busting.

Mayor Bloomberg's office said that the tax abatements given to Stella D’Oro were not contingent on creating or maintaining jobs.

The article from Crain's.

Obama Gives Nod to Thompson

President Obama, speaking at the NAACP Centennial Convention last week, gave a nod to Democratic mayoral candidate Bill Thompson, quoting a report published by Thompson's office detailing how, in the last year of Michael Bloomberg's second term, the city has lost more than 100,000 jobs.

While every neighborhood has been impacted, the city's job losses have hit hardest in the Hispanic, African American and Asian communities.

Watch President Obama's speech.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Joblessness Hits 12-Year High

It looks like New York City is no longer trailing the rest of the country when it comes to unemployment.

The city’s unemployment rate has jumped to 9.5% and now matches the national rate, which probably means the city’s economy is still weakening a year-and-a-half into the national recession.

It's been almost 12 years since the city has seen this level of joblessness.

While the city’s unemployment rate was higher in 1997 than today, the overall job market is weaker now. Mounting job losses in financial services and other professions foretell weak job growth going forward.

Construction and retail were slow in June, while leisure and hospitality, in part because of deep tourist discounts, rebounded.

The private sector has lost 235,900 jobs since last August.

Nearly half of all unemployed New Yorkers were earning less than $23,000 a year.

The state’s unemployment insurance trust fund is “broke", and the state will borrow about $3 billion from the federal government this year to pay unemployment benefits.

New Yorkers can now collect as long as 79 weeks.

While new unemployment claims fell nationally, they have risen in New York in the past several weeks. Only in California did more people file more new unemployment claims last week.

The article from the New York Times.

The Strays of Willets Point

Joaquin (Joe) Mora, in a city Animal Care and Control Uniform, prowls Long Island City in a white subcompact with an ACC bumper sticker, looking for strays.

The 54-year-old Mora calls himself a "different kind of animal control officer". Instead of waiting to be called, he goes out and finds the animals in need of rescue.

A dedicated volunteer who puts in 40+ hours a week, Mora has taken part in some of the city's most notable animal rescues.

Rescue groups across the city call Mora at all hours to ask for his help in rescuing all kinds of animals.

Mora's work was acknowledged last month by President Obama, who awarded him the Presidential Call to Service Award.

Mora's mission these days is to call public attention to the plight of the feral dogs, cats and chickens who live among the rutted roads and auto repair shops of Willets Point, across from the new CitiField in Queens.

As a part of the Willets Point redevelopment plan, the city is relocating the businesses in Willets Point, and Mora fears that when those businesses go, the animals will be left behind.

That's why Mora wants to bring attention to this issue now, before Willets Point becomes a demolition site, so that maybe the animals can be saved.

The article from the Daily News.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Whole Foods Bails

The Brooklyn Paper reports that Whole Foods no longer plans to open its first Brooklyn branch on Third Avenue near the Gowanus Canal.

The grocery chain still hopes to come to Brooklyn, but not to Third Street.

The property will apparently be sold.

For the time being, Brooklyn's gourmet options will be limited to Fairway and Trader Joe’s.

The proposed site, between Park Slope and Carroll Gardens, was controversial from the start, because of its proximity to the toxic Gowanus and because of the uber-suburban proportions of the planned 420-space parking lot, a turnoff for the locals.

Due to the environmental hazards and tight credit, work at the site had been stalled for years.

The article from the Brooklyn Paper.

Tip of the Iceberg

According to True News, the abrupt resignation of Council Member Miguel Martinez, facing federal indictment for his role in the City Hall slush fund scandal, is making some of his colleagues very nervous.

What Martinez did -- steering hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars into a not-for-profit organization for which his sister served as a board member -- looks to be almost standard procedure. Dozens of Martinez' colleagues, including Speak Christine Quinn, have been under investigation for the past year for similar abuses of "member items" a/k/a earmarks.

Even more nervous-making for his colleagues is the fact that Martinez appears ready to cop a quick guilty plea, meaning he'll probably turn prosecution witness in exchange for a sentencing deal.

Maybe, says True News, the FBI, with Martinez' help, will finally get to the bottom of the scandal, which the mainstream media has ignored.

The post from True News.

Martinez cops a plea, from the Daily News.

Will Maria Del Carmen Arroyo be next?

Green Church Bulletin

I thought, when life interrupted my blogging last night, that I would have the luxury of a day's lead, but when I got home from work today, I noticed I'd been scooped by Beehive Hairdresser and Brownstoner on the stop work order the DOB has posted at the Methodist Sunday school demolition site.

Dag.

Details of the stop work order -- a report of the "adjacent building shaking" -- at the demo site, with thanks to DK.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Bloomberg Wants Another Party

Democrat-turned-Republican-turned-independent Michael Bloomberg already has two ballot lines -- the Republican and Independence -- for the mayoral election this fall. But the billionaire mayor, who lost the Working Families Party line to Bill Thompson, wants more.

The Bloomberg campaign is collecting signatures for a new party, to be called "The Jobs and Education Party".

Why is he doing this? Apparently to tart up the ballot lines on which he is already running by adding the words "Jobs and Education", which are primary concerns for New York City voters.

The ballot would say "Republican/Jobs and Education" or "Independence/Jobs and Education."

The Bloomberg campaign calls it "just another way to communicate."

The article from WOR radio.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Owl's Head Revisited

The Courier reports that Owl's Head Park (a/k/a Bliss Park) will undergo a $1.35 million renovation, starting this summer with the refurbishment of the park’s scenic overlook.

The project should be completed within the year.

The renovation does not address the “very serious" problem of erosion in the park, but Representative Michael McMahon is working on getting funding for that project.

The article from the Courier.

Get a Green Job

The Brooklyn Public Library will sponsor two workshops this summer on how to find a next-generation job in the growing "green" economy.


Find out which types of businesses are hiring green workers and what kind of training and skills you need to get a green job.


The program will be presented on Tuesday, July 28, 6 – 7:30 PM at the Brooklyn Business Library, 280 Cadman Plaza West, Brooklyn Heights, and again on Tuesday, August 18, 6 – 7:30 PM at the Brooklyn Central Library, 10 Grand Army Plaza, in the Second Floor Meeting Room.


Register online at http://www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/business/programs/events.jsp or call 718.623.7000 (select option 4).

Blind Pig on the Roof

In a first-time partnership, Rooftop Films and the International Film Festival of Rotterdam will present the U.S. premiere of the award-winning Indonesian film Blind Pig Who Wants to Fly.

The film will be screened at 9:oo PM this Friday, July 17th on the roof at the Old American Can Factory, 232 3rd Street @ 3rd Avenue in Gowanus/Park Slope. (Take the F/G to Carroll or the M/R to Union.)

The film depicts a "stunningly strange" series of interweaving sketches -- including a singing dentist, a firecracker-eater and a
pig -- exploring alienation, politics, love and lust.

Doors open at 8:00PM. At 8:30PM, Sound Fix Records presents live music by Kelli Rudick. Q & A with the filmmaker at 10:30PM. Reception in the courtyard with free Carlo Rossi sangria from 11:00PM–12:30AM.

Tickets are $9-$25 at the door or online.

For more information or to purchase tickets: www.rooftopfilms.com.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Thompson Gets WFP Line

Mayor Bloomberg, who lobbied his way onto the Republican and Independence Party lines, wasn't able to close the deal for the Working Families Party endorsement.

In a surprise to some, Democratic front-runner Bill Thompson grabbed the progressive, union-backed WFP line by just 2 votes this week.

According to the Times, Sheldon Silver, the Democratic speaker of the State Assembly, may have delivered the necessary votes by lobbying the Public Employees Federation, a major union within the WFP.

Thompson's five-borough commitment was a major reason for the WFP endorsement:

"In a Thompson administration, Wall Street won't be the only street that matters anymore. Flatbush Avenue, Queens Boulevard, The Grand Concourse, Victory Boulevard, and 125th St. will have a real voice in City Hall."

The Bloomberg campaign downplayed the hard-won WFP endorsement, calling it a weak victory.

Thompson's campaign stepped it up this past weekend, launching a 5-borough campaign tour.

Michael Bloomberg's campaign tab has reached a jaw-dropping $36 million.

The New York Times article.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Angotti: "He's No Populist"

Tom Angotti, who teaches urban affairs and planning at Hunter College and recently published New York for Sale: Community Planning Confronts Global Real Estate, interviewed a fictional liberal in a recent Brooklyn Rail post and concluded that Michael Bloomberg's "populist" image is just a cloak.

Bloomberg is seen as the "anti-Guiliani", says Angotti, but under Bloomberg more minorities have been stopped and frisked than in "Guiliani Time". And what about Sean Bell, Omar Edwards, the Republican Convention crackdown, and the crackdown on Critical Mass?

If Bloomberg is a "good manager", why then, wonders Angotti, did we get into this fiscal mess? Most mayors may not have foreseen the collapse of Wall Street, but Bloomberg, one of the wealthiest men in the world, is supposed to be a financial wizard. Why didn't he see the crash coming? Why didn't he wean the city off Wall Street revenues? Why did he subsidize downtown development and new stadiums for the Yankees and the Mets, then cut city services when the crunch came?

The 311 system may be making government more efficient, says Angotti, but it has been used as an excuse to trim the community boards' budgets.

Some praise Bloomberg for getting rid of the school bureaucracy, but, says Angotti, he has also tried to bust the teachers’ union, dominate parent councils, turn principals into CEOs and turn teachers into test administrators.

Bloomberg is seen as supporting "affordable housing", but Angotti sees it as a cover for zoning schemes that have gentrified New York neighborhoods. The city has in fact lost more affordable units under Bloomberg than it has gained.

Bloomberg has done nothing, says Angotti, to support rent and eviction controls, has let equity funds take over buildings, and has ignored the predatory lending practices that have brought down many of the city's homeowners.

Why, wonders Angotti, has Bloomberg, supposedly an independent free of the taint of special interests, been forgiven for enabling Big Real Estate?

Bloomberg, says Angotti, oversaw the transfer of Hell’s Kitchen -- now a new luxury neighborhood, underwritten by tax-exempt bonds, called "Midtown West" -- to landowners who included Bloomberg's personal friends.

Developers don't have to buy influence from the Bloomberg administration, says Angotti -- they get it for free.

The jobs New York now sorely needs, says Angotti, were pushed out of the city when Bloomberg converted industrial zones to luxury highrises that sit empty and unsold.

As for Bloomberg's "green" legacy, PlaNYC, Angotti calls the plan itself "unsustainable" because Bloomberg refused to submit it to the community boards, the City Planning Commission and the City Council. PlaNYC was outsourced by the Bloomberg administration to a global management firm.

Angotti calls PlaNYC a "green"-branded real estate estate scheme created to siphon tax dollars into building infrastructure for developers, ignoring the future of the city's poor and immigrant populations.

Bloomberg is seen as a supporter of mass transit, but, says Angotti, we don't need the #7 extension -- the most expensive one-mile subway project in history -- which exists only to serve the Midtown West development.

The post from the Brooklyn Rail.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Brooklyn Preservation Council Meets

The Brooklyn Preservation Council/Foundation will meet at 6:30 PM on Tuesday, July 14 in the Second Floor Conference Room at Brooklyn Borough Hall.

For more information about the BPC or its projects, contact:


Robert Furman
P.O. Box 23365
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11202
(917) 648-4043 /(212) 751-0038
bobfurman1@juno.com



Harvey Low Simons at Stux

Harvey Low Simons is a brilliant painter, and his upcoming one-man show at the Stux Gallery,

530 West 25th Street,
New York, N.Y.
212-352-1600
www.stuxgallery

from July 23rd through August 22nd, is essential.

This will be Simons' second one-person show at Stux in New York.

His beautiful, visionary paintings are created with brush and palette knife. Their rich, shimmering surface and dreamlike quality have been compared to the work of Odilon Redon.


Simons
lives and works in the Boston suburb of Newtonville.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Nassau County Run

As Bronx State Senator Pedro Espada Jr. ended a month-long shakedown by rejoining the Democrats, Nassau County Republican State Senator Dean Skelos ran to State Supreme Court in Nassau County to try to stop Governor Paterson's appointment of former MTA chairman Richard Ravitch as the state's lieutenant governor.

The position been vacant since March, 2008.

While Ravitch was being sworn in in Brooklyn, Skelos's lawyers were driving to Supreme Court in Mineola to argue that the Ravitch appointment violated the state constitution.

In the wee hours, on-call Supreme Court Justice Ute Wolff Lally issued a TRO and scheduled a hearing for Republicans to apply for a permanent injunction stopping Ravitch, who they called "the interloper", from taking office.

The Appellate Division lifted Lally's TRO, but allowed the hearing on the merits to proceed before another judge.

Paterson's lawyer said the Appellate Division's ruling gives the governor a chance to prove that the state constitution authorizes him to make the appointment, and that Nassau County is the wrong venue.

Democrats accused Skelos, who took the case to his home county and a Republican judge, of trying to engineer a result. Skelos said he filed in Nassau County because he lives there.

If he wins, Paterson will keep Ravitch as lieutenant governor regardless of what happens in the state senate.

Queens State Senator Malcom Smith has given the majority leader's title to the despicable Espada as the price of getting Espada back and restoring a 32-30 Democratic majority.

Skelos has reverted to minority leader.

According to the governor, the state Public Officers Law §43 lets him fill some vacant elective posts pro tem, and there is no state statute -- and nothing in the state Constitution -- that explicitly rules out his naming a lieutenant governor.

The article from the New York Law Journal.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Cumberland










I visited Cumberland, the small Western Maryland city where I was born, over the 4th of July weekend. The friend I was visiting has moved back there and has renovated the Embassy, the Art Deco movie theater in the photo above, now in use again as performance space.

When I was growing up, Cumberland was a thriving city. The railroad and the good manufacturing jobs, like Kelly Springfield, are gone now, and Cumberland's biggest employer is the local state prison.

We used to drive the 25 miles into Cumberland every month to do major shopping, like school clothes and Christmas presents. At that time, Baltimore Street, Cumberland's main commercial street, was a busy thoroughfare. The town center has now been malled and is closed to through traffic.

The old signs downtown are so deeply familiar to me. We shopped for women's clothes at Lazarus' and men's clothes at Schwarzenbach's. Before heading home, we'd always stop by Curtis' Famous Weiners for a chili dog.

Some historic buildings in Cumberland, like the Romansque bank building in the third photo from the top, have been beautifully preserved. Many others have been senselessly demolished.

In the top photo, Cumberland's historic Episcopal Church sits majestically at the head of Baltimore Street -- a perfectly sited building.

Warning Signs

As the city's Parks and Recreation Department prepares to post 250 new signs warning people about the hazards of eating the fish taken from New York waters, the Times wonders where the old ones went.

Two years ago, the city's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene asked Parks to install signs on the waterfront warning residents that eating local fish might be a health hazard.

But some of the signs have disappeared -- they may have been used to cut bait on -- and the Daily News reported this week that more poor people are consuming locally-caught fish, which are potentially hazardous to women of childbearing age.

In Brooklyn, new signs will go up at Coney Island Steeplechase Pier, Valentino Pier, 69th Street Pier in Bay Ridge, the Shore Road Bike Path, Avenue U and Burnett Street in Marine Park, and Kaiser Park.

I've never noticed any signs along the Shore Road Bike Path or on the 69th Street Pier, where there are always plenty of people fishing. I doubt that new signage will deter hungry people from eating the fish they catch.

The post from the New York Time Cityroom Blog.

More from the Daily News.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Will WFP Roll?

When the mayor, through the agency of the City Council, did away with term limits, the Working Families Party and a good government coalition led the opposition, calling term limits extension a "power grab, plain and simple".

The party circulated petitions opposing the mayor's bill and posted his own damning term limits quote -- "I think it would be an absolute disgrace to go around the public will" -- on their masthead.

What a difference 10 months makes. The rancor over term limits had apparently been forgotten last week at the Hotel Trades Council on West 44th Street, where the party gathered for a candidate forum.

Bloomberg faced the same list of canned questions as rival candidates Comptroller William Thompson and Queens Council member Tony Avella, the only non-scripted items coming from the party's co-chairperson and its chief.

Bloomberg punted on "green" jobs and extending paid sick days, passed on extending prevailing wages to all city projects, called schools chancellor Joel Klein "the right guy" for the job, opposed federal housing vouchers to the homeless, saw no harm in putting charter schools into public school buildings, opposed city rent regulation reform, rejected raising taxes on the wealthiest New Yorkers, and countered campaign finance reform questions by asserting that he had "made every dime" he had and that elections could never be totally fair.

One party member, citing Bloomberg's "arrogance", said she'd quit the party if it endorsed him.

Bill Thompson got a positive response when he told the members that the Working Families line "means something....principles...core beliefs" he felt he represented.

So, will the high-minded WFP join the Republicans in the Bloomberg pimpwagon?

Party leaders say the only question is whether they'll endorse William Thompson or leave the party's ballot line blank, as when Democrat Freddy Ferrer ran against Bloomberg in 2005.

But Bloomberg's friends have been dropping major contributions on the WFP, and some union-affiliated members say that Bloomberg will get the party's endorsement.

The Tom Robbins Running Scared post from the Village Voice.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Brooklyn Home Prices in Free Fall

According to a report published this week by appraisers HMS Associates, Brooklyn home prices are in free fall, with the average sale price dropping 18% in second quarter 2009 as against the same quarter last year.

Last quarter, the total number of sales — a barometer of prevailing price trends, dropped 52% compared with the same period last year.

Sales this quarter rose 8% over the first quarter of 2009, as prices continued to decline.

The biggest price drop was in DUMBO, Boerum Hill and Downtown Brooklyn, glutted with luxury highrises, where the average price crashed 22%.

Prices in Greenpoint fell 20%.

Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill and Fort Greene held steady.

The article from the Brooklyn Paper.

"Stealth Candidate" at Borough Hall

On Saturday, July 11 Comptroller and Democratic mayoral candidate William Thompson will be at Brooklyn Borough Hall from 11 AM to 12 PM for a five-borough campaign kickoff event.

The New York Times calls the low-key Thompson, not yet advertising and trailing in the polls, a "stealth candidate".

Incumbent mayor Michael Bloomberg is everywhere: TV, the Web, your mailbox. By contrast, the wonkish, careful Thompson is holding back, conserving his limited campaign funds and waiting to launch a full-on assault in the run-up to the election this fall.

Democrats, seeing Bloomberg racking up endorsements from groups and individuals traditionally allied with the Democratic Party, are concerned that Thompson is too laid-back. But Thompson says there's no way he can compete with Bloomberg's media blitz. Instead, he's doing the grass-roots circuit, hitting union halls and neighborhood Democratic clubs, testing his message.

In his stump speech, Thompson attacks the mayor for killing democracy in New York City and only caring about rich people.

According to a recent poll, Bloomberg is vulnerable. He may have a good approval rating, but voters resent his imperious tone and his undemocratic ways.

Thompson has the strategic advantage of a clear shot at the September primary. His long-shot opponent, Queens City Council Member Tony Avella, has raised less than $250,000.

Thompson is modeling Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter of Philadelphia, another low-key by-the-book politician running against a billionaire who pulled off an unexpected Democratic primary victory in 2007.

The article from the New York Times.

Thompson's campaign site.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Rev Billy Petition Drive

Reverend Billy Talen, running for mayor of New York City on the Green Ticket, is calling for volunteers to collect the 20,000 signatures the Rev. needs to get on the ballot this fall.

The drive begins on July 7. For more information and training, contact Austin@VoteRevBilly.org or call 917 952 1842.

To be eligible to sign, you must be a registered New York City voter and not have signed any other mayoral candidate's petition.

If you are ineligible to sign, you can help in other ways. Click here to make a donation or volunteer.

Boro Threads

It started on Craigslist.

Marcos Salazar and Gabriel Barbaro met in the spring of 2008 when Marcos, who needed to move out of his overpriced Park Slope apartment for a month, sublet a bedroom in Gabriel's apartment.

Marcos and Gabriel began hanging out, and continued their friendship after Marcos moved out.

One fall day at the Cocoa Bar in Park Slope, they began talking about Marcos’ DC based t-shirt business DistrictTees.com and decided they could do something similar in New York.

After months of planning, designing and coding, BoroThreads was born.

Find out more about BoroThreads -- and follow Marcos and Gabriel on their hyperlocal BoroThreads Guys Blog -- here.

Skaller House Party

Josh Skaller is a progressive Democrat who is running for City Council in Brooklyn's 39th council district. Skaller has been a strong advocate for the environment, education and responsible development.

Raul Rothblatt, active in the fight to Superfund the Gowanus Canal, calls Skaller's campaign "one of the best I've ever seen".

To date, Skaller has racked up:
  • more individual donors than any other Brooklyn candidate for City Council;
  • more endorsements from elected officials in-district than any other candidate;
  • the biggest volunteer operation in the district;
  • a strong petitioning operation;
  • a clear message of reform and support for community-based planning.
Skaller is trying to maximize the amount he can leverage under the City's campaign finance laws.

Click here to donate to the campaign.

If you'd rather make your donation in person, there will be a house party for Josh on July 9 from 7 PM to 9 PM at the home of Candace Carponter, 299 13th Street Apt. 4A, Brooklyn.

The Gowanus Superfund Comment Period ends on July 8

For more information click on SuperfundGowanus.org.

Freddy's Brooklyn Roundhouse has posted the following 2 videos on the Gowanus:

Thursday, July 2, 2009

On Vacation

I'll be away until Monday evening.

Have a happy Fourth of July.

Bad Timing

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle reports that the U.S. Postal Service is considering closing the Ovington Retail Station in Bay Ridge and is looking at "consolidating" all 18 retail branches in Brooklyn.

As many as 3,000 post offices could close nationwide.

According to the Eagle, there is a mounting neighborhood effort -- petitions and protests -- to prevent closure of the Ovington Avenue Station. I haven't seen any online petitions yet, but I would be happy to post a link here.

Congressman Michael McMahon says he's following the situation.

A spokesperson for State Senator Marty Golden said that petitions would be made available for the public to sign and that Golden had written a "letter of concern" to the Brooklyn Postmaster.

Council Member Vincent Gentile has also written a letter to the Brooklyn Postmaster, citing the job losses and inconvenience that closure would cause.

State Assembly Member Janelle Hyer-Spencer stressed the need, given the fact that this is a federal issue, for a coordinated local response.

The article from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

More from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

More from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

More from the Daily News.

More from the Bay Ridge Blog.

More from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. (The retail station will stay open.)

(Eagle photo.)

Propaganda Statement

From fellow Bay Ridge blogger Mark Brown:


"The Ministry of Propaganda is proud to announce another thrilling victory for the august and monumental musical, China - The Whole Enchilada...Amazon.com!


...Worship at our victory site by clicking here...


...Leave a positive review for China - The Whole Enchilada at Amazon...


Celebrate the birth of the Communist Party of China with a copy of the Award-Winning musical, China - The Whole Enchilada."

Rooftop Films

On Friday, July 10, Rooftop Films will present The Way We Get By, an inspiring and heartbreaking documentary about 3 elderly people who transform their lives through greeting returning troops at a tiny Maine airport.

Venue: On the lawn of Automotive High School
Address: 50 Bedford Ave. @ North 13th St. (Williamsburg, Brooklyn)
Directions: L to Bedford Ave. or G to Nassau Ave.
Rain: In the event of rain the show will be held indoors at the same location
8:00PM: Doors open
8:30PM: Live music presented by Sound Fix Records
9:00PM: Film
10:30PM: Filmmaker Q & A
11:30PM-1:00AM: After-party: Open Bar at Matchless (557 Manhattan Ave.
@ Driggs) Courtesy of Radeberger Pilsner
Tickets: $9 at the door or online at
http://newyork.going.com/event-618864;Rooftop_Films_The_Way_We_Get_By#

On Saturday, July 11 Rooftop will screen the award-winning documentary 45365, a luscious and gritty verite film that captures the mood and melody of Midwest life.

Venue: On the roof of the Old American Can Factory
Address: 232 3RD St. @ 3rd Ave. (Gowanus/ Park Slope, Brooklyn)
Directions: F/G to Carroll St. or M/R to Union Ave.
Rain: In the event of rain the show will be held indoors at the same location
8:00PM: Doors open
8:30PM: Sound Fix Records presents live music by Like Bells
9:00PM: Film
10:30: Filmmaker Q and A
11:00PM–12:30AM: Reception in courtyard including free sangria
courtesy of Carlo Rossi sangria
Tickets: $9-$25 at the door or online at
http://newyork.going.com/event-618867;Rooftop_Films_45365#

For more information, visit the Website.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Green Church Bulletin





The Sunday school building is demolished.

There is still an open violation for the fence.

Method in Their Madness?

Going behind the tabloid spin, Village Voice columnist Tom Robbins sees the rogue legislators who have shut down Albany playing a high-stakes power game funded by billionaire Tom Golisano and a team of lobbyists.

The Republican coup was launched on June 8, the day before the Senate's housing committee was due to take up legislation curbing rent hikes on hundreds of thousands of apartments in New York City -- a move bitterly opposed by the landlord lobby that, until last fall, had dominated Albany for 40 years.

The State's traditional powerbrokers targeted the Democratic majority because, when they did vote together, they posed a real threat to conservative policy --as in the repeal of the infamous Rockefeller Drug Laws. Senate Republicans voted en bloc to keep the hated laws on the books.

When Democrats voted to raise the minimum public assistance grant, Republicans opposed it. When Democrats passed a measure barring the shackling of female inmates during childbirth, Republicans opposed it.

On May 29, just before the coup brought Albany to its knees, Harlem Senator Bill Perkins held a first public hearing on Forest City Ratner's Atlantic Yards Project. According to Robbins, Bay Ridge Senator Marty Golden burst into the hearing late, and backed by cheers from building trades workers, proceeded to mock Perkins and Velmanette Montgomery -- in whose district Atlantic Yards is located -- for "holding the project hostage."

Democratic efforts to reform the state's campaign finance laws, to provide wage protection for domestic workers, and to upgrade the forensic technology used to trace fired bullets were also ended by the coup. (Why, I wonder, wouldn't the NRA like technology that tracks bullets back to the gun that fired them?)

The column from the Village Voice.

Whitman's Fort Greene, Nickel Empire's Last Year

Walt Whitman's Fort Greene Park

On Sunday, July 12, the Fort Greene Park Conservancy will sponsor Walt Whitman's Fort Greene Park at 1:00 p.m.

Poet Walt Whitman had an intimate connection with Fort Greene, Brooklyn's first official park.

The tour features readings from Whitman's writings, as well as a discussion of the Wallabout Martyrs and the monument dedicated to their memory.

Greg Trupiano, Artistic Director of the Walt Whitman Project, will guide.

The tour ends with a walk up Myrtle Avenue to 99 Ryerson Street, the last place Walt Whitman lived in Brooklyn still standing.

The event is free and will take place rain or shine. Call 718-391-8824 for Information & Reservations (limited to 25 people).

More Whitman events from the Whitman Project.

"The Nickel Empire" Tour

This could be the last year of Coney Island -- the "Nickel Empire" -- as we have known it.

On Sunday, July 12 and Sunday July 26, Urban Park Rangers will lead Journey through Time: Coney Island, a tour of the Coney Island Boardwalk.

Meet at 10:00 AM in front of the Parachute Jump at W 19 St.

Bring water and wear comfortable walking shoes. The tour takes about 2 hours.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Summer Streets Redux

The city's second annual Summer Streets program will expand this year to 14 temporarily car-free locations.

Events in Brooklyn include:
  • Williamsburg Walks – Bedford Avenue between North 4th and North 9th Streets, Saturday July 4th and 11th, 12 p.m.- 9 p.m.
  • Summer Plazas on Fifth -- 5th Avenue between 48th and 52nd Streets, Sunday July 19th, 26th and August 2nd, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.
  • Sunday Scene on Knickerbocker – Knickerbocker Avenue between Suydam and Starr Streets, Sunday July 19th, 26th and August 2nd, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.
  • Pitkin Saturday Plazas – Pitkin Avenue between Strauss and Thomas Boyland Streets, Saturday September 12th, 19th, and 26th, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.
  • Move About Myrtle – Myrtle Avenue between Clinton Street and Emerson Place, Sunday September 6th, 13th, 20th, and 27th, 11 a.m. - 7 p.m.
Calendars are available on http://nycgo.com/

The press release from NYC.Gov.

Monday, June 29, 2009

The 69th Street Pier at Dusk






Digital Vampire?

Crain's New York reports that, in a recent speech, Dow Jones CEO Les Hinton, publisher of the Wall Street Journal, called Google a "vampire sucking the blood" out of newspapers -- and said that big media is sharpening a stake.

Hinton sees the newspaper industry, by allowing free access to its content on the Web, as offering its virtual neck to Google's "fangs".

Hinton's speech reflects the growing outrage of newspaper publishers about Google making money from their content. They are trying to find ways to start charging for access, like the Wall Street Journal does.

Hinton says his division is developing a new Web-based business platform that will essentially bundle subscriptions to the Journal and other publications.

The article -- free for now -- from Crain's NY.

A Gift to the Community

OTBKB reports that Old First Reformed Church in Park Slope, with the help of 39 volunteers from a sister church in Ohio, is restoring its historic sanctuary.

The volunteers include 30 youth and 9 adults from New Hope Reformed Church of Powell, Ohio, who arrived on Saturday, June 20 to work for a week painting the sanctuary.

The Gothic Revival Old First was dedicated in 1891. Its interior is considered one of the finest examples of arts and crafts design in the U.S.

The plan calls for restoring the walls to their original earthy Florentine tones .

Through the Reformed Church’s "Project Samuel", volunteers from across the U.S. work on church renovations and in shelters, soup kitchens, and missions.

Old First is regarded by its members as a spiritual offering to the community and as a sanctuary for all.

The public is welcome to stop by the watch the restoration work.

Uncle Bernie Gets the Max

AP reports that disgraced 71-year-old fraudster Bernie Madoff has been sentenced to 150 years in federal prison.

U.S. District Judge Denny Chin called Madoff's fraud so "extraordinarily evil" that he wanted to give Madoff's victims satisfaction -- and send a message to potential copycats.

Scattered applause and whoops of joy broke out in Judge Chin's packed Manhattan courtoom when the sentence was delivered.

Chin brushed off Madoff's requests for leniency, characterizing Madoff's crime as "staggering": Madoff's victims lost more than $13 billion.

Madoff showed no emotion as 9 of his victims testified, some weeping openly.

Allocuted by the court, Madoff minimized his crimes, and his wife, Ruth, claimed she was a victim, too.

A $171 billion forfeiture order has stripped Madoff of all his property. A $7 million Manhattan apartment where Ruth Madoff still lives, an $11 million Palm Beach estate, a $4 million home on Long Island, and a $2.2 million boat will be liquidated.

Once a trusted money manager, Madoff confided to his sons last year as Wall Street tumbled that it was "all just one big lie."

Madoff pleaded guilty in March to securities fraud and related charges.

Madoff's liquidated assets will be used to compensate the thousands of victims who have filed claims, but only a fraction of their losses will be covered.

Madoff never invested any of the money entrusted to him.

The article from the AP.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Coney Island Hot Dog Eating Contest

South Brooklyn is fast becoming a competitive eating destination.

On July 4th, Nathan's hot dog stand will again host the Coney Island Hot Dog Eating Contest.

Title-holder Joey "Jaws" Chestnut will face veteran champion and arch rival Takeru Kobayashi.

Last year, the two champions tied at 59 frankfurters in 10 minutes and ended up in a 5-dog overtime munchdown.

Italian national champion Franco Camerini and graduates of Nathan's 16-city American farm system will also compete, but Chestnut and Kobayashi are expected to dominate the contest for the mustard belt.

In the runup to the main event on July 3rd, a team of three humans will face down a three-elephant team from Ringling Brothers Barnum & Bailey Circus in a hot dog bun eating contest.

The post from Serious Eats.

Second Annual Fourth of July Picnic

If you plan to be in town 4th of July weekend, stop by the 2nd Annual Bay Ridge Fourth of July Picnic at the 82nd Street Field @ Shore Road.

The event, hosted by State Senator Martin Golden and sponsored by Ben Bay Kiwanis, Super-Roofer and Frankie Marra, will take place from 11 AM to 9 PM on July 4th.

In addition to music, food, games and prizes, there will be sprinkers and rides for kids.

Admission is free.

Bring a picnic or buy hot dogs, hamburgers, sausages, drinks, ice cream and more from the outdoor grill.

Blankets, chairs, family and friends are welcome -- but please don't bring your grill or beach umbrella.

Music will be provided by 7 live bands: Pill Hill Radio, High Tides, The Ridge, John Lepore & the Silver Falcons, The Rockinghams, Prodigal Child -- and of course, Frankie Marra and his band.

The proceeds will be donated to the 68th Precinct Youth Council , CERT 1 NYC and Bravo.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Rainbow on the Block

Just as I was coming out of the subway on Friday evening, the sun came out while it was raining, a phenomenon my grandmother used to call "the Devil meeting his wife".

As I turned the corner on Fourth Avenue, I saw a rainbow over my block, which seemed to be a good-luck sign.

Later, walking toward Dyker Heights, I saw these uniquely-formed clouds illuminated by the sunset.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Only Himself to Blame?

Michael Bloomberg calls the city's pension system "out of control", accusing it of threatening to bankrupt the city.

But the New York Times says that, while he blames Albany and the city's unionized workers, Bloomberg himself is most responsible for the growth in city pension costs over the last 8 years.

Since he took office, the city's pension contributions have quintupled from 1.4 to to $6.3 billion and now account for one out of every 10 dollars in the city budget.

How did this happen? In a word: pay increases. Bloomberg has approved salary increases that account for almost 30% of the spike in city pension costs from FY 2002 through 2008 — about $1.2 billion.

Bloomberg blames the spike on the economy, Albany, and the unions, but in fact, he has supported state legislation sweetening pensions for uniformed city workers and offering teachers early retirement.

The mayor’s biggest contribution to pension costs has been the pay increases he claims have raised "productivity" and attracted "more qualified" job candidates to the city workforce.

In his first term, Bloomberg bargained hard with city unions, demanding lower starting salaries and fewer sick and vacation days. But in his second term, his stance softened, and Albany and the city's unions are not likely to give back his concessions now.

Bloomberg's critics accuse him of using collective bargaining concessions to buy union votes.

The article from the New York Times.

Queens Crap, via Room 8, characterizes Bloomberg as a "vile little man".

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Link Roundup

Bay Ridge post office faces closure. Marty Golden writes a letter.

More on the post office closing.

The Brooklyn Fourth of July Parade.

The latest front in the Bay Ridge food cart wars.

Vanishing New York's Michael Jackson tribute: The Wiz

Cityroom post on IPod volume garners 111 comments.

The 68's Fourth of July fireworks crackdown.

Fifth Avenue Festival the best ever.

Flikr slideshow of the 2009 Coney Island Mermaid Parade.

The latest on the Bay Ridge spite wall -- Gershon vs. Cunningham.

The N and R trains fare poorly on a Straphanger survey.

Paterson goes to court seeking help in ending the three-week standoff in the State Senate.

Michael Jackson tribute at Dreamland Roller Rink in Coney Island.

Prospect Heights Landmarked

The city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission has designated a new historic district in Prospect Heights encompassing some 850 single-family row houses, apartment houses and institutional and commercial buildings built between the mid-19th and early 20th centuries.

The Prospect Heights Historic District is the largest created since the Upper West Side-Central Park West Historic District was designated in 1990.

The new district, north of Prospect Park, is bounded by Atlantic Avenue, Eastern Parkway, Flatbush Avenue and Washington Avenue.

The Prospect Heights neighborhood was developed after the completion of the 585-acre Prospect Park in 1873 -- and the coming of rapid transit.

Two 1850s frame buildings at 578 and 580 Carlton Avenue are the earliest structures in the neighborhood. The earliest row houses, mostly in the neo-Grec, Italianate, Anglo Italianate or Second Empire styles, date from the mid-1800s, with later Romanesque and Renaissance Revival style houses dating from the late 1800s. Several buildings are in early 20th century retro styles like Colonial Revival and neo-Georgian.

The district includes the Romanesque Revival Duryea Presbyterian Church, the 1885 Public School 9 Annex and the 1938 Art Moderne Mount Prospect Laboratory, which now houses Community School District 13.

The article from the Times Cityroom Blog.

Mayor Bloomberg's press release on the new historic district, from NYC.Gov.

Queens Crap puts the new landmark district in context.

Record Year for Construction

According to the New York Building Congress analysis, a record $31.8 billion was spent on construction in New York City in 2008.

Public sector projects funded by city, state and federal agencies and state and regional authorities accounted for $15.0 billion -- or about half of all construction spending for the year.

Non-residential construction -- office space, institutional development and sports/entertainment venues -- has more than tripled in the past 5 years.

Residential construction also boomed last year, with the number of new units produced topping 30,000.

Construction employment was up for the 11th straight year in 2008, with more than 100,000 workers engaged.

This year? An estimated 17 big projects are stuck in the pipeline.

The article from New York City Construction Outlook.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Fort Greene Building Collapse

Monsoon rains, neglect and poor enforcement have put the former residents of 493 Myrtle Avenue, a 4-story apartment building in Fort Greene, on the street with little more than their lives.

The city's Department of Buildings will now determine what caused the building to fall down.

A DOB inspector issued a violation on May 1 because of a longstanding crack running all the way from the first floor to the roof of the building, finding it was not necessary to evacuate.

The contractor hired by the owner to fix the crack covered the whole side of the building with scaffolding, which may have put too much weight on the building.

Neighboring 491 Myrtle now has to be demolished, and two other buildings, 489 and 497, remain vacant after evacuation.

Former residents of 493 told the Post that the landlord had known about the crack for years.

The article from the Post.

Unbought

As Theodore Hamm, editor of the Brooklyn Rail, points out, we have a 1976 U.S. Supreme Court case, Buckley v. Valeo, to thank for the fact that Michael Bloomberg can spend unlimited cash to buy a third term in office.

The estimable Thurgood Marshall, dissenting from that portion of the Buckley opinion dealing with self-financed campaigns, advocated financing restrictions to reduce the "natural advantage of the wealthy candidate" and promote equal access by all qualified political candidates.

Marshall's words strike Hamm as "quaint" in Post-Reagan America.

The city’s public financing system, which provides matching funds at a ratio of up to 6-1 in mismatched elections like this year's mayoral race, aims to level the playing field, but self-financed political campaigns like Bloomberg's are protected by Buckley as "free speech" under the First Amendment.

Of course Bloomberg's speech isn't free: it's all paid for.

Now that Bloomberg has bought his way around term limits, our last defense against his financial might, and owns the mainstream media, why, wonders Hamm, would he bother beating up on reporters who dare to ask him challenging questions?

Maybe because he's reminded that there is something he can't buy: a free press.

The link.

Bennett House

Once in a blue moon, Bay Ridge gets historic preservation right.

The wood-frame Greek Revival Joseph Bennett house, originally built around 1847 on Shore Road overlooking the Narrows, was moved to 199 95th Street in 1913.

The house, with Fort Hamilton, is one of the few buildings that predate the development of Bay Ridge in the 1930s.

The Delliturri family, which bought the house in 2000, has fully restored it -- with the help of the New York Landmarks Conservancy Historic Properties Fund.

When the previous owner died in 1997, the estate put the property on the market. Astute neighbors, knowing it was a prime development site, got in touch with the New York Landmarks Conservancy, which advocated with the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission to designate the house as a local landmark.

The house was designated as an individual landmark in 1999.

The Delliturris have restored it in stages. The architect they used for the exterior restoration, referred by the Conservancy, encouraged them to apply to the Historic Properties Fund.

They were approved for a $200,000 loan in April, 2003.

Using historic family photos, the architect prepared plans and specs for the work, including a new roof, skylight, drainage systems, window restoration, shutter replacement, clapboard repair, exterior repainting, porch restoration, stucco removal, and historic brick restoration.

The Delliturris chose to rebuild the historic parapet, which runs along the roofline and at the front and rear porches, as seen in historic photos of the house.

The link.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Kunstler Documentary

On Thursday, June 25th, Rooftop Films will screen the documentary film William Kunstler: Disturbing the Universe, an intimate look at famed civil rights lawyer William Kunstler, arguably the most loved and hated celebrity lawyer of all time.

The film will be screened in the parking lot across from BAM Cinematek @ Fulton and Ashland in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. Take the 2/3/4/5/B/Q to Atlantic Ave or D/M/N/R to Pacific St.

Doors open at 8 PM; live music at 8: 30 PM; screening at 9:00 PM; after-party from 11:00 PM–12:30 AM.

Tickets are at $11 and can be purchased online.


On Saturday, June 27th, Rooftop Films presents Voices from El-Sayed, a documentary about the impact of technology on
the world’s largest community of deaf people in Gowanus, on the roof of the Old American Can Factory, 232 3RD St. @ 3rd Ave. in Gowanus/ Park Slope, Brooklyn. Take the F/G to Carroll St. or the M/R to Union Ave.

Doors open at 8:00 PM; live music at 8:30 PM; screening at 9:00 PM; reception from 11:00 PM–12:30 AM.

Tickets are $9-$25 and can be purchased online.


The July schedule for Rooftop films.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

First Dad Obama on Fatherhood

"As the father of two young girls who have shown such poise, humor, and patience in the unconventional life into which they have been thrust, I mark this Father’s Day—our first in the White House—with a deep sense of gratitude. One of the greatest benefits of being President is that I now live right above the office. I see my girls off to school nearly every morning and have dinner with them nearly every night. It is a welcome change after so many years out on the campaign trail and commuting between Chicago and Capitol Hill.

But I observe this Father’s Day not just as a father grateful to be present in my daughters’ lives but also as a son who grew up without a father in my own life. My father left my family when I was 2 years old, and I knew him mainly from the letters he wrote and the stories my family told. And while I was lucky to have two wonderful grandparents who poured everything they had into helping my mother raise my sister and me, I still felt the weight of his absence throughout my childhood.

As an adult, working as a community organizer and later as a legislator, I would often walk through the streets of Chicago’s South Side and see boys marked by that same absence—boys without supervision or direction or anyone to help them as they struggled to grow into men. I identified with their frustration and disengagement—with their sense of having been let down.

In many ways, I came to understand the importance of fatherhood through its absence—both in my life and in the lives of others. I came to understand that the hole a man leaves when he abandons his responsibility to his children is one that no government can fill. We can do everything possible to provide good jobs and good schools and safe streets for our kids, but it will never be enough to fully make up the difference.

That is why we need fathers to step up, to realize that their job does not end at conception; that what makes you a man is not the ability to have a child but the courage to raise one.

As fathers, we need to be involved in our children’s lives not just when it’s convenient or easy, and not just when they’re doing well—but when it’s difficult and thankless, and they’re struggling. That is when they need us most.

And it’s not enough to just be physically present. Too often, especially during tough economic times like these, we are emotionally absent: distracted, consumed by what’s happening in our own lives, worried about keeping our jobs and paying our bills, unsure if we’ll be able to give our kids the same opportunities we had.

Our children can tell. They know when we’re not fully there. And that disengagement sends a clear message—whether we mean it or not—about where among our priorities they fall.

So we need to step out of our own heads and tune in. We need to turn off the television and start talking with our kids, and listening to them, and understanding what’s going on in their lives.

We need to set limits and expectations. We need to replace that video game with a book and make sure that homework gets done. We need to say to our daughters, Don’t ever let images on TV tell you what you are worth, because I expect you to dream without limit and reach for your goals. We need to tell our sons, Those songs on the radio may glorify violence, but in our house, we find glory in achievement, self-respect, and hard work.

We need to realize that we are our children’s first and best teachers. When we are selfish or inconsiderate, when we mistreat our wives or girlfriends, when we cut corners or fail to control our tempers, our children learn from that—and it’s no surprise when we see those behaviors in our schools or on our streets.

But it also works the other way around. When we work hard, treat others with respect, spend within our means, and contribute to our communities, those are the lessons our children learn. And that is what so many fathers are doing every day—coaching soccer and Little League, going to those school assemblies and parent-teacher conferences, scrimping and saving and working that extra shift so their kids can go to college. They are fulfilling their most fundamental duty as fathers: to show their children, by example, the kind of people they want them to become.

It is rarely easy. There are plenty of days of struggle and heartache when, despite our best efforts, we fail to live up to our responsibilities. I know I have been an imperfect father. I know I have made mistakes. I have lost count of all the times, over the years, when the demands of work have taken me from the duties of fatherhood. There were many days out on the campaign trail when I felt like my family was a million miles away, and I knew I was missing moments of my daughters’ lives that I’d never get back. It is a loss I will never fully accept.

But on this Father’s Day, I think back to the day I drove Michelle and a newborn Malia home from the hospital nearly 11 years ago—crawling along, miles under the speed limit, feeling the weight of my daughter’s future resting in my hands. I think about the pledge I made to her that day: that I would give her what I never had—that if I could be anything in life, I would be a good father. I knew that day that my own life wouldn’t count for much unless she had every opportunity in hers. And I knew I had an obligation, as we all do, to help create those opportunities and leave a better world for her and all our children.

On this Father’s Day, I am recommitting myself to that work, to those duties that all parents share: to build a foundation for our children's dreams, to give them the love and support they need to fulfill them, and to stick with them the whole way through, no matter what doubts we may feel or difficulties we may face. That is my prayer for all of us on this Father’s Day, and that is my hope for this nation in the months and years ahead."

Lady Gaga -- Bad Romance


"Life is like a bicycle. To keep your balance, you must keep moving." -- Albert Einstein
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"I am certain of nothing but of the holiness of the Heart's affections and the truth of Imagination..." John Keats
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