For many residents of Electchester and Hillcrest, the initials CVS could now easily stand for “Community Versus Substitution,” as they, along with elected officials, try to prevent the national pharmacy from taking over a space long occupied by their neighborhood Key Food supermarket. A rally was held last week outside the store at 164-05 69 Ave. in Flushing, involving several dozen area residents and community leaders, including Assemblymen Michael Simanowitz (D-Flushing) and Rory Lancman (D-Fresh Meadows), state Sen. Toby Stavisky (D-Flushing) and Councilman Jim Gennaro (D-Fresh Meadows).
State Sen. Toby Stavisky (D-Flushing) started her career as a teacher, but she wouldn’t want to be one today because of mayoral control of city schools.
That comment from the former social studies teacher touched on one of several topics covered, ranging from education to co-op assessments, during a sit-down with the Queens Chronicle staff on Friday.
Community Board 7 took favorable positions on a women’s center, a bocce court and the historic Bowne House at its meeting Monday night in Flushing.
CB 7 Chairman Gene Kelty pointed out that the board was voting to either recommend or disapprove the plans because “Parks Department projects are major decisions and we want to voice our opinions on them. But it’s only a recommendation.”
A neglected Flushing lot that had turned into a junkyard has been cleaned up after pressure from an elected official and a civic leader.
Last Friday, state Sen. Tony Avella (D-Bayside) and Peter Brancazio, president of the North East Flushing Civic Association, met with representatives of the departments of Buildings, Sanitation, Finance and Fire to discuss the lot at 24-19 Francis Lewis Blvd.
The buzz in Flushing these days is about Jeremy Lin and residents can’t get enough of the Chinese-American basketball star who is leading the Knicks to victory.
Since his meteoric rise, Lin has led the team to six victories in a row — including Tuesday’s dramatic contest against Toronto that he won in the final second — and even his teammates are calling him inspiring.
Bayside activist Mandingo Tshaka is at it again and this time he has the White House in his sights.
Tshaka wants the federal government to acknowledge the work of enslaved African Americans who helped build the White House. He has gotten support from Congressman Gary Ackerman (D-Queens, Nassau), who wrote a letter to President Obama asking for a public display at the president’s residence recognizing the role of slave labor in building it.
In a small room above an American Legion post in Whitestone three members of the North Shore Marine Corps League packed boxes with supplies last Thursday to send to servicemen and women stationed in Afghanistan. It is something the group has done for years, and members say its neccessity has never declined.
Each week several of the 30 Marines who volunteer to participate in the program — there are 95 members in the organization — send out a minimum of 24 boxes to individual troops in every branch of the service, whose names they obtain from military sources.
A woman in her 40s was killed by a city bus on Wednesday morning while crossing Northern Boulevard at Union Street.
City Comptroller John Liu’s top fundraiser, Xing Wu (Oliver) Pan pleaded not guilty Saturday to conspiracy and wire fraud charges in Federal District Court in Manhattan.
The Kid went home on Thursday.
A computer teacher at PS 174 in Rego Park with a confirmed case of touching children inappropriately at another school is out on bail after being arrested on Thursday for allegedly touching two male students.
Come spring, Flushing will be getting its first Community Support Agriculture group that provides fresh organic produce to participants.
The Flushing group will join 13 other CSAs in Queens, located from Astoria to Douglaston.
Promises were made for a brighter, cleaner Flushing at a meeting held Friday by the Flushing Business Improvement District to tout the group’s new sanitation program.
The meeting, which was attended by City Councilman Peter Koo (D-Flushing) and Assemblywoman Grace Meng (D-Flushing), focused on the BID’s efforts to keep downtown Flushing clean and hospitable. Flushing BID Executive Director Dian Yu specifically spoke about a new program that cleans dirt and grime off garbage cans and mailboxes.
BMD Marketing Company in collaboration with the Queens Chronicle invites you to attend a free Queens Senior Health Expo and Conference on Tuesday, March 20, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Adria Hotel and Conference Center, 220-33 Northern Blvd. in Bayside. The exhibit hall is open to all senior citizens.
First-rate companies will provide knowledge of healthcare and quality of life matters for senior citizens, as well as their adult children, family members and caregivers. Connections made here can help seniors on their path to optimal wellness.
Just when you thought it was safe to go back to your polling place, Assembly Democrats and state Senate Republicans are divided over just when they should hold primaries for their seats.
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver (D-Manhattan) has introduced a measure, A.9271-A, that would tie state law to a recent federal court decision setting the primary for congressional races on June 26, the fourth Tuesday of the month.
Seniors and elder advocates blasted the MTA’s Access-A-Ride program at a meeting of the Queens Interagency Council on Aging on Feb. 8, at Queens Borough Hall. They cited late pickups, rude phone operators and poorly marked vehicles among other problems.
A spokeswoman for the agency said it works diligently to address such concerns.
Two Queens parents are suing the Department of Education over what they perceive as an infringement of their religious beliefs.
Nicole Phillips and Fabian Mendoza-Vaca have filed lawsuits claiming that their schools are depriving their children of a free education and discriminating against their religious beliefs.
The group that filed a lawsuit last year accusing five Queens judges of being biased against borough residents applying for Social Security disability benefits recently presented oral arguments before the judge who will decide whether or not to grant the federal government’s request to dismiss the case.
“It went really well,” said Emilia Sicilia, a senior attorney at the Urban Justice Center, which, along with the law firm of Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher filed the suit in Federal District Court in Brooklyn in April. “It was very clear the judge is taking the case really seriously. She has not issued a decision, but she expressed serious concerns with the defendants.”
Assemblyman Mike Miller (D-Woodhaven) is calling on Mayor Bloomberg to reverse field and hold a parade for veterans of the war in Iraq.
Bloomberg said on Jan. 27 that he would not do so, largely at the behest of the Pentagon and Joint Chiefs of Staff, which cited the ongoing conflict in Afghanistan and the high number of Americans still serving abroad.
Over the next three months, New York homeowners facing foreclosure will learn if they are covered by a sweeping settlement with five major banks announced on Feb. 9.
State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, who had been pursuing payments from banks for alleged misconduct since taking office in 2011, announced on Feb. 9 that the state would receive $136 million as part of a $26 billion settlement with Bank of America, Citi, Chase, GMAC and Wells Fargo.
Assemblyman Rory Lancman began the process Tuesday to run for Congress against Republican incumbent Bob Turner by filing papers with the Federal Election Commission to form an exploratory committee.
In a telephone interview, Lancman (D-Fresh Meadows), said the timeframe is very short and he wants to be ready to officially file when the redistricting boundaries are announced. Should Turner’s district be retained, the Democrat will run.
In his State of the Union Address last month, President Obama spoke at length of the interrelation between the housing crisis and the economic crisis.
And among the discussion of new and future regulations aimed at improving things, he recommended that homeowners consider refinancing their mortgages.
Four brick attached houses constructed in 2005 but never completed stand on a garbage-laden ungraded lot in Auburndale. Frustrated neighbors call it an eyesore, while elected officials try to remedy the situation.
“This is the worst abandoned property I have seen in the 11th Senatorial District,” said state Sen. Tony Avella (D-Bayside), who is working with civic groups on a list of neglected locations to find solutions for them.
Sound the fire alarms — again.
As he has since taking office, Mayor Bloomberg is threatening to throw a number of fire companies into the furnace, and Queens legislators are gearing up for what has become an annual budget battle that typically results in no, or few, units being disbanded.
In 2012, New York State officials are preparing for primaries and elections for the state legislature, Congress and President of the United States, a process that is undertaken every four years.
What could possibly go wrong?
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