Archive for May, 2008

FUREE’s 6th Annual Convention

FUREE (Families United for Racial and Economic Equality) is having our 6th annual Convention on May 17th, at PS 67 at 51 St. Edwards Street, from noon to 5 p.m. Lunch will be served from noon to 1 p.m. At 1, we will be ushering all of the community tenants into the auditorium to hold our District leaders and elected officials accountable and have them answer all the questions the community has about the development in Downtown Brooklyn, the problems they are having in their public housing developments, and the lack of services in their community.

Some parts of our community are lacking are a supermarket, laundromat, pharmacy, restaurants, grocery store, retail store, Check Cashing, and fish market. The community also wants the renovated community center to be opened to the people currently living there and, want to be a part of planning of the programs that will be offered there as well.

The community wants the vacant apartments in the Ingersoll and Walt Whitman Houses filled. The Community also wants the condominiums that are springing up around the community to be affordable to the people of the community as well folks earning income ranging from $16,000 to $35,000.
Once the Convention program wraps up in the auditorium, the community members in attendance, FUREE and the Sarah McKinney High School Band will be marching around Downtown Brooklyn!
I had a lot of fun planning the Convention. I got the chance to speak with and invite elected officials like Congressman Ed Towns, State Senator Velmanette Montgomery, State Assemblyman Hakim Jeffries, State Assemblyman Karim Camara, State Assemblyman Joseph Lentol, Council Member Letitia James, Council Member Charles Barron, Councilmember David Yassky, and Mr. Tino Hernandez (Chairman of NYCHA).

In the planning of the Convention, we had a lot of footwork ahead of us. We are putting up flyers all over the neighborhood, door knocking throughout the community and making many phone banking calls to the people in the community to get them to come out and hear their elected officials but also to have their elected officials hear them.

We plan on having at least 500 people at the Convention this year since we had 300 people last year. We are giving out drawstring bags with packets, which will have a lot of information for the people, a FUREE pin so that they can show support, a pen that says FUREE so that we’re always in their creative writing minds and more goodies, just for signing up and coming out. We also had fun making the flyers posters, and FUREE flags because we get a lot of volunteers. We sat around a large table making these and having a lot of fun learning more about each other. At the Convention we will wear our FUREE T-shirts, which come in red, black and white.

The Convention is a very powerful learning session and forum to show that the community cares and wants to be involved in the decisions made about their lives. It iis a space where the community can hold the elected official accountable for their words and actions. It’s important to be able to have these accountability sessions because none of the elected officials come knocking on the community’s doors to give them any answers about what’s going on.

FUREE’s annual Convention is where not only can these sessions can take place, but where these sessions give the community back it’s voice, it’s power to make change and the energy needed to keep on fighting for the rights on the community members.
Everyone is invited to come out and be heard.

This Week in Accountable Development

Real Estate Slump Hits New York (Gotham Gazette)

Negotions Over CBA for Kingsbridge Armory Redevelopment (Daily News)

Bronx Residents Rally Against Plans to Turn Armory Into Mall (NY1)

Delays in $4 Billion Brooklyn Development Are Challenged in Tenants’ Lawsuit (NY Times)

An Open Letter to President Bollinger (Columbia Spectator)

Residents Say Campus is Not Always Welcoming (Columbia Spectator)

Manhattan Community Board 11 General Meeting

Manhattan Community Board 11 (Harlem and East Harlem) holds its general board meetings the third Tuesday of each month at 6:30 p.m.  Call 212.831.8929 or visit the website for location information.

Manhattan Community Board 10 General Meeting

Manhattan Community Board 10 (Harlem and Polo Grounds) holds its general board meetings the first Wednesday of each month at 6 p.m.  Call 212.749.3105 or visit the website for location information.

Brooklyn Community Board 2 General Meeting

Brooklyn Community Board 2 (Brooklyn Heights, Fulton Mall, Boerum Hill, Fort Greene, Brooklyn Navy Yard, Fulton Ferry, and Clinton Hill) holds its general board meetings the second Wednesday of each month at 6 p.m.  Call 718.596.5410 for location information.

Manhattan Community Board 9 General Meeting

Manhattan Community Board 9 (Hamilton Heights, Manhattanville, and Morningside Heights) holds its general board meetings on the third Thursday of each month.  Call 212-864-6200 or visit the website for location information.

MAS: Livable Neighborhoods Program

On Saturday May 10th the Municipal Art Society Planning Center will launch the second annual Livable Neighborhoods Program training at Hunter College. The Livable Neighborhoods Program, which first launched last May at Hunter College, was created to provide communities with the knowledge, tools, and training needed to transform local vision into effective plans. The program provides participants with in person training, a take home comprehensive community planning toolkit and access to a web-based network for ongoing to discussion.

Come join over one hundred New Yorkers from neighborhoods across the city in a discussion about the issues that matter to you and your neighborhood. Facilitators will include Tom Angotti of the Hunter College Center for Community Planning and Development, Anthony Borrelli of the Manhattan Borough President’s Office, Vicki Weiner of the Pratt Center for Community Development and many more.


Chances are, your neighborhood is rapidly growing and changing. The Livable Neighborhoods Program is designed to help you respond to that change and help your community grow in a more equitable and sustainable matter. For more information and to register online, please click here. If you would like to register by fax or mail, please click here to download the registration form. For more information contact Sideya Sherman at ssherman@mas.org or 212.935.3960 x 259.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION:

Date and Time: Saturday May 10, 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Registration Deadline: Wednesday, May 7
Who Can Attend? Registration is open the public, however priority is given to members of grassroots organizations and community boards.
What Is The Cost? Participation in the program is free.
Where Is The Training? The training will take place at Hunter College with special assistance from Hunter College’s Center for Community Planning and Development (CCPD). Hunter College is located at 695 Park Ave (Manhattan). Corner of 68th Street and Lexington Ave.
Will Food Be Served? Yes. We will provide breakfast and lunch.
Can I Bring My Child? Yes. The LNP is designed to be as convenient for participants as possible. We will have a supervised children’s activity room available on both days of training for children school age and up.
How Do I Register? For more information and to register online, please click here. If you would like to register by fax or mail, please click here to download the registration form.

(via Community-Based Planning)

MAS Planning Center Forum: David vs. Goliath

The Municipal Art Society of New York, as part of its Campaign for Community Based Planning, will present a series of panel discussions to promote community-based planning in New York City.The series, titled “Creating the City We All Want: A Roadmap,” will be conducted in conjunction with the release of the Fifth Edition of Planning for All New Yorkers: the Atlas of Community-Based Plans, a resource that compiles all community-based plans undertaken in New York City since 1989. This series will explore the potential of neighborhood-led plans to shape equitable development and growth in the city, from the perspective of elected officials, community advocates, and planners.

Many observers opine that community-driven plans—official and approved through a city process or unofficial but widely recognized—are no real hedge against unwanted development. But in the cases of West Harlem, Midtown East, and Atlantic Yards, would developers have had carte blanche without community plans? How do community planners believe alternative plans can be more effective? How can alternative plans guarantee that future development will fit consensus-based neighborhood visions? We’ll look at some recent cases—West Harlem, Midtown East, and Prospect Heights/Fort Greene—where developer-driven plans threaten to undermine community vision, and examine the place of community-based planning in these struggles.

Panelists:

  • Alberto Vourvoulias-Bush, Executive Director, El Diario/La Prensa (moderator)
  • Anthony Borelli, Director of Land Use, Planning and Development, Office of the Manhattan Borough President
  • Marshall Brown, Architect, UNITY Plan for Atlantic Yards
  • Candace Carponter, Council of Brooklyn Neighborhoods
  • Jordi Reyes-Montblanc, Chairperson, Manhattan Community Board 6

When
May 14, 2008   6:00 pm   
Where
Municipal Art Society
457 Madison Ave. (at 51st Street)
Manhattan
RSVP
E-mail rsvp @ mas . org or call 212-935-2075
More Info
Municipal Art Society

Pratt Institute
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