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Thursday, August 23, 2012
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Tracey Towers faces 65% in rent increases
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Tracey Towers faces 65% in rent increases: By Michael Horowitz BRONX, NEW YORK, August 23- The three-percent increase in carrying charges that Co-op City shareholders face pales ...
Tracey Towers faces 65% in rent increases
By Michael Horowitz
BRONX, NEW YORK, August 23- The three-percent increase in carrying charges that Co-op City shareholders face pales in comparison with the increases that residents at Tracey Towers, a Mitchell-Lama development in the Mosholu Parkway area, are facing.
At Tracey Towers, resident are facing rent increases of 65 percent over the next four years under an order from the city agency that oversees the 869-unit development.
Tenant leaders at the second-largest rental property in the Bronx are reportedly weighing a legal action aimed at blocking the increases, which include a 16-percent hike in rent in September.
Tenants at Tracey Towers, for over a year, have been fighting against what they term precipitous rent increases, arguing that the increases will make living in that community unaffordable.
Even without the increases, which the managers of RY Management first applied for in the spring of 2011, rents at Tracey Towers are already significantly higher than carrying charges in Co-op City. The average rent at the Mosholu Parkway property, which has long had door attendants around the clock, is reportedly $1,290 per month.
RY Management, the landlord of Tracey Towers, proposed the rent hikes in the spring of last year, saying that they were needed to pay for capital improvements.
However, tenant leaders, for the last year, have argued that a $4-million loan from the city, which was supposed to be used for roof and façade repairs, was diverted for other purposes.
The city's Department of Housing, Preservation and Development (HPD) has said that the loan money was diverted to pay for emergency heat and hot-water repairs.
Tracey Towers desperately needs roof and façade repairs, HPD has reportedly stated. The agency has promised Section 8 vouchers for eligible residents who need them to stay in the Mosholu Parkway complex.
An RY spokesman reportedly said that his firm will work to prevent displacement of residents and will offer new bathrooms and kitchens to residents.
Residents at the Mosholu Parkway development, saying that they should not be penalized for RY Management's failures at Tracey Towers, are concerned that the impending increases there will destroy their community's affordability.
Jean Hill, president of the Tracey Towers Tenant Association, reportedly told the Daily News, “This (the impending rent increases) is going to put grandma out on the street.”
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): The Boss is Back
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): The Boss is Back: Ramirez Still a Key Player, Helps Lobby for Co-op City Security By Michael Horowitz BRONX, NEW YORK, August 23- Former Bron...
The Boss is Back
Ramirez Still a Key Player,
Helps Lobby for Co-op City Security
By Michael Horowitz
BRONX, NEW YORK, August 23- Former Bronx County Democratic Leader Roberto Ramirez, a lawyer and one of the city's “wheeler dealers,” remains a key player in Bronx politics through the MirRam Group, the consultants who ran State Sen. Adriano Espaillat's recent Democratic Party Primary campaign against Rep. Charles Rangel.
During his days as a political leader in the Bronx, Ramirez played a key role in the political campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer for U. S. Senator, but also played a key role in overturning the state's commuter tax for suburbanites, which provided a key funding source for the MTA.
Ramirez, working with friends and associates from his days as Bronx Assemblyman and Bronx County Leader, founded his political-consulting and lobbying group after leaving Bronx politics in 2000.
The MirRam Group, although influential in the Bronx, is not considered as politically influential as a number of other political-consulting groups in the city.
The former Bronx County Democratic Leader served as the borough's political boss from 1996 to 2000 and as an Assemblyman in the borough between 1990 and 2000. He was the first Latino to be chosen as a county leader for one of the city's boroughs.
Ramirez, who was born in Puerto Rico, remains, today, one of the city's most influential Latinos, many knowledgeable civic and political leaders agree.
The former Bronx County Democratic Leader counts Marion Scott, the major principal of Marion Scott Real Estate, Inc., as one of his many friends and acquaintances, Herbert Freedman, Co-op City's principal spokesman and a major principal of the Scott firm, said, this week, in response to e-mails.
Scott, a former top official of the Philadelphia Housing Authority, counts a number of current and former political leaders within both the Republican and Democratic parties as friends and acquaintances.
Ramirez, for his part, ran former Bronx Borough President Fernando Ferrer's unsuccessful campaigns for Mayor in 2001and 2005.
During his tenure as Bronx County Democratic Leader, Ramirez, somewhat successfully, tried to mend fences among the party's warring factions. He hand-picked political leaders to run for legislative offices and for judgeships. The candidates he supported, owing to the organization's political clout and superior “get-out-the vote” efforts, won far moiré election than they lost.
However, Ramirez's major foray into Co-op City politics as Bronx County Democratic Leader, proved, in 2000, to be unsuccessful.
That year, Ramirez decided to throw his weight behind Larry Seabrook's challenge to Rep. Eliot Engel's continuation as Congressman for Co-op City and surrounding areas in the northeast Bronx.
Engel defeated Seabrook, who was convicted last month on subsequent political-corruption charges, by a whopping margin in the 2000 Democratic Party Primary.
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Ramirez's firm hired to safeguard Security
By Michael Horowitz
BRONX, NEW YORK, August 23- The Riverbay board, last Wednesday night, approved the hiring of Roberto Ramirez's firm of political operatives to help safeguard Co-op City's Public Safety Department.
The MirRam Group LLC, spearheaded by former Bronx County Democratic Leader Roberto Ramirez, will be paid $7,500 per month for one year, starting in September, to lobby state legislators for passage of a bill that would safeguard the power of Public Safety officers to make arrests and function in the role of peace officers in the local community.
State Sen. Jeffrey Klein has agreed to sponsor the legislation, which would be in the form of an amendment to the New York State Criminal Procedure Law, in the State Senate. Assemblyman Michael Benedetto has agreed to sponsor the legislation in the State Assembly.
The vote in support of hiring Ramirez's firm to represent Co-op City's interests was 14-1 when the matter came up for a vote at the July 31. Riverbay board meeting. Evelyn Turner cast the only vote in opposition to hiring Ramirez's firm, which also includes Luis Miranda, a former director of the Mayor's Office of Hispanic Affairs, and Eduardo Castell, a former deputy comptroller of New York City.
The MirRam Group most recently ran State Sen. Adriano Espaillat's unsuccessful campaign against Rep. Charles Rangel in a widely publicized Democratic Party campaign in June.
Co-op City's Public Safety Department and members of the Riverbay board have been persuaded that Riverbay's security department could be in jeopardy. The fear is that the NYPD will eliminate its Special Patrolmen's Division, which currently gives Co-op City's Public Safety Department officers the right to serve in their current capacities.
Co-op City's Public Safety Department currently stands as a last line of defense against crime in the local community, so major limits in the authority for the department's officers could be a major blow to the community.
Without the NYPD's Special Patrolmen's Division, in the absence of the state legislation that has been proposed, the status of the community's Public Safety officers would be reduced to that is security guards.
“Such a development would devastate this department,” Frank Apollo, Co-op City's public safety chief reportedly stated earlier this year. “It would devastate the community because we would no longer be able to maintain the same level of safety and security and very possibly no longer be able to continue as one of the safest communities within New York City.”
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Street Fair’s a bust
Intrepid newsman David Greene captured this photo of a woman who had something to get off her chest. The woman decided to walk through a Norwood street festival topless.
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): News Photog Captures Vicious Pitbull Attack
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): News Photog Captures Vicious Pitbull Attack: (Photos by David Greene) BRONX, NEW YORK, August 22- Dozens of Concourse residents watched in horror as a dog was brutally a...
News Photog Captures Vicious Pitbull Attack
(Photos by David Greene)
BRONX, NEW YORK, August 22- Dozens of Concourse residents watched in horror as a dog was brutally attacked by a pit bull. Two police officers stayed back at a safe distance, one holding a billy club as a half dozen residents separated the two dogs. The critically injured dog was taken by cab to a local animal hospital, its condition was not known. The alleged owners of the pit bull were allowed to take the dog back inside an apartment building and no report was taken or summons issued by police.
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