Showing posts with label robert jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label robert jackson. Show all posts

Thursday, May 19, 2011

NY City Council Hearing on the Living Wage Bill - May 12th, 2011


Over 400 people turned out to the high-energy rally. Kimberly Ortiz, a member of the Retail Action Project, testified about working at a concession stand at the Statue of Liberty for $9.00 an hour. "Does that sound like life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness to you?" she asked. Council Member Darlene Mealy, who hosted the hearing as Chair of the Contracts Committee said "Our rents keep going up, food keep[s] going up, gas keep[s] going up, but our salaries don't go up." The rally culminated in a powerful moment of prayer during which the clergy marched across to 250 Broadway and the crowd turned to face the building. We raised up our hands and shouted for the walls of oppression to come tumbling down like the walls of Jericho, while the Shofar sounded seven times.


An extraordinary number both supportive and undecided council members participated in the hearing, a testament to the importance of this issue. For two and a half hours they went toe to toe with Bloomberg's representative Tukombo Shobowale. Citing the bogus million dollar study, he painted a doomsday scenario of tremendous job loss and stalled development in the outer boroughs. Council members did not buy it. Brad Lander called the study a “$1 million whitewash.” Charles Barron said "Wall Street profits, while we suffer. The study is a lie. You can alter a study to say anything." And Robert Jackson asked the Economic Development Corporation to try living on a salary of $20,000 a year.



Our team provided powerful testimony. Linda Archer, a McDonald's worker who was only given a 20 cent raise and a "rising star" t-shirt for her stellar job performance at the fast-food chain told the council they would be "rising stars" if they passed the bill. We also heard from Caitlin Kelly, author of the book "Malled: My Unintentional Career in Retail," Rev. Stephen Phelps of the Riverside Church, Dr. Ray Rivera of the Latino Pastoral Action Center and our excellent team of policy experts, including an expert from LA, testified that this law will help lift people out of poverty without all the negative consequences Bloomberg claims. Scroll down for links to media coverage.



Upcoming Event in Queens:
Mall Workers Speak Out for a Living Wage!
This Saturday May 21st, 3-5pm
St. Paul The Apostle Church
98-16 55th Ave., Corona
M/R train to Woodhaven Blvd

Media Coverage:

Thursday, January 27, 2011

More Elected Officials Announce Their Opposition to Wal-mart

Wal-mart Faces Growing Resistance As More Sign Up to Say ‘No’ To Job Killing Megastore

Wal-mart Free NYC today announced today that Councilmembers Letitia James, Robert Jackson, Dr. Mathieu Eugene and Jumaane Williams have declared their opposition to Wal-mart and will fight to keep the job-killing mega store out of New York City.

The elected officials join a growing list of elected officials, community leaders, clergy, and small businesses throughout the borough who oppose the Arkansas-based big box retailer’s plans to move into Brooklyn, and displace homegrown stores and good local jobs. 

Just this week National Organization of Women’s New York City chapter announced their opposition to Wal-mart saying ,“This is an employer who takes advantage of its workforce at every opportunity. The women of New York City deserve better.”

Councilmember Letitia James said: “Small businesses are the engines of the New York City economy, creating jobs, spending locally and keeping our dollars in the community. Wal-mart could put those small businesses out of business, costing us valuable jobs, as well as hurting our economy while doing so. For these reasons, New York must say no to Walmart.”

Councilmember Robert Jackson said: “Mom and pops need Wal-mart about as much as New York needs another blizzard. Wal-mart puts small businesses out of business, especially in tough times like these.”

Councilmember Dr. Mathieu Eugene said: “We need to do everything possible to help small businesses thrive. I am concerned that Wal-mart coming to Brooklyn will hurt businesses already struggling in this tough economy.”

Councilmember Jumaane Williams said: "Wal-mart is selling false promises. They promise jobs, but they kill three jobs for every two they 'create.' And the jobs they 'create' pay, on average, 18 percent less than the jobs they destroy. My community deserves jobs with livable wages. They shouldn't have to settle."

Studies have shown that Wal-mart destroys small businesses and jobs when it opens up in urban neighborhoods. A study published by the Center for Urban Research and Learning Loyola University Chicago found that after a Wal-mart store opened in the Austin neighborhood in 2006, over 25% of area businesses closed. Stores that were near Wal-mart were “more likely to go out of business eliminating the equivalent of about 300 full time jobs—about as many as Wal-mart initially added to the area.”

An author of that study found that, Wal-mart stores absorb sales from other city stores without significantly expanding the market.” In addition, the study found that there was no increase in retail activity or employment opportunities.

About Wal-mart Free NYC

Wal-mart Free NYC is a coalition of workers, small business owners, community leaders, clergy and elected officials who are committed to increasing economic opportunities, preserving local businesses, and creating more jobs in communities across New York’s five boroughs.

Wal-mart IMPACT STUDIES

The Impact of an Urban Wal-Mart Store on Area Businesses: An Evaluation of One Chicago Neighborhood’s Experience.” Davis, Julie, David Merriman, Lucia Samayoa, Brian Flanagan, Ron Baiman, and Joe Persky, December 2009. Center for Urban Research and Learning Loyola University Chicago.

The Effects of Wal-mart on Local Labor Markets.” David Neumark, Junfu Zhang, and Stephen Ciccarella. October 2005. Public Policy Institute of California.

The Effect of Wal-mart on Businesses in Host Towns and Surrounding Towns in Iowa.” Kenneth Stone. Iowa State University. November 1988.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Cathie Black Press Conference at Tweed Courthouse


Activists Protest Cathie Black Becoming Next Schools Chancellor - NY1.com

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Parents, educators and civil rights advocates held a demonstration on the steps of Manhattan's Tweed Courthouse on Sunday against Cathie Black becoming the mayor's replacement for schools chancellor, saying that the publishing executive lacks proper experience in the educational field.
Speaking out at the headquarters of the Department of Education, the protestors said Black was only chosen because she is a businesswoman who is friends with Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
The state education commissioner would need to issue a waiver to allow Black to be the chancellor, because she is venturing for the first time into the educational field.
"Ms. Black appears to lack the educational credentials and qualifications for the appointment to New York City's schools chancellor. Second, there appears to have been no public search, contrary to what Mayor Bloomberg said on Friday," said civil rights attorney Norman Siegel.
"This unlimited claim that Cathie Black is the best is unsupported and untested in any school setting, in any classroom, by any experience on her part as a teacher or a supervisor of teachers," said Michael Meyers of the New York Civil Rights Coalition.
City Councilman Robert Jackson, the head of the council's education committee, said on Saturday that Black should not be allowed to take the post.
Bloomberg has said Black has the managerial skills to run the DOE's $23 billion budget.



Thursday, May 27, 2010

Cuts to City Schools Go from 'Bad' to 'Horrid' by Beth Fertig - WNYC - News

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Back in March, when the city was still trying to get a handle on its education budget, City Councilman Robert Jackson noted that there were two different scenarios for the coming fiscal year: "bad" and "horrid."

Today, the education committee chairman said, there's only one: "horrid."

Jackson repeated that word at least nine times during the education committee's hearing on proposed budget cuts. He said the loss of $500 million in state aid would mean laying off 4,400 teachers, letting another 2,000 go through attrition, and eliminating almost 600 other support staffers and cafeteria workers. Which was why he wanted to know how Chancellor Joel Klein could justify hiring two more deputy chancellors who are each paid almost $200,000 a year, and giving raises to several more. He noted that there are now eight deputy chancellors.

Klein testified that one of those deputies is actually a new Chief Operating Officer and said the job is needed now more than ever because he's cut $38 million from central offices. The chancellor said another deputy is dealing with new schools and enrollment, and said the rest were given promotions. As for the raises, he called them "small adjustments" and said their salaries had been "out of line."

The chancellor insisted he had done all he could to protect classrooms from budget cuts. Several council members expressed great skepticism about his department's contracts with outside vendors at a time when it's projecting teacher layoffs. But Klein said the city retained a $5 million contract with The New Teacher Project to hire new teachers because there aren't enough with special education licenses to meet demand. And he said most of the city's other contracts are for special education services and busing that's legally mandated.

"People throw numbers around that are, I think, designed to confuse the discussion," he explained to Manhattan Councilwoman Margaret Chin.

Klein also defended cutting bus service for 7th and 8th graders, which isn't mandatory, and said that would save over $3 million. He said the students would qualify for free Metrocards (assuming the MTA doesn't cut that service), and told concerned council members from Staten Island that students could apply for yellow bus service if public transit wasn't convenient, or if they live near a dangerous intersection.

But with no budget yet from Albany, the city schools are projected to lose $500 million in state aid. And when you add growing enrollment, pension costs, and other services, Klein said that leaves a $750 million hole in the Department of Education's budget for 2010-2011. He predicted average class sizes would rise from the elementary to high school levels by anywhere from two to five students.

Klein again called on Albany to end the "last hired/first fired" law so that new teachers aren't automatically the first to go. He said low-income communities like the Bronx would lose the greatest number of new teachers, because they had hired so many recently, forcing principals to take more experienced teachers even if they aren't always the best. Councilman Jackson seemed exasperated by the Chancellor's pitch to change the law during his budget hearing. "If you want to change it, go to the table," he told the Chancellor, referring to contract talks with the union.

Those talks, by the way, are now at an impasse and a state-appointed mediator is meeting with the two sides.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Report On The NYC Schools Closing Lawsuit Appeal by Richard Barr - NYC Public School Parents blog...

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Oral arguments in the City's appeal of the State Supreme Court Decision by Judge Joan Lobis -- which blocked the DOE from its threatened closing of 19 schools -- were heard yesterday (5/13) in the State's Appellate Division, at 27 Madison ave., Manhattan. One reason why it was of particular importance to me (neither of my 2 children has attended one of the schools threatened with closure by the DOE) is because I am a graduate of one of those that is -- Christopher Columbus H.S. in the Bronx.

The case is known as Mulgrew vs. Board of Ed.

First up before the 5-judge panel was NYC Corporation Counsel attorney Alan Krams appealing the decision on behalf of the DOE.

Mr. Krams said that in her decision, Judge Lobis -- who had ruled that DOE had provided insufficient notice and impact analysis about its plan to close the schools -- had mistakenly applied the higher standards of environmental statutes (SEQRA, the State Environmental Quality Review Act) rather than education law, which does not require as much in the way of impact analysis.

One of the judges pointed out to him that the extension of Mayoral control of the schools which passed the State Legislature in 2009 was predicated on requirements such as community notification re: school closings.

Mr. Krams acknowledged that DOE had failed to give School Leadership Teams (SLTs) formal notice, but he reiterated that the lower court had treated it like SEQRA and had applied too high a standard for notification. He said that education law gives the school officials the power to make the sole determination about school closings.

A judge pointed out to him that the 2009 education statute requires that educational impact of a decision like this be determined. Various judges expressed skepticism about whether the impact of the closings on students and community was adequately taken into account by the DOE.

Mr. Krams said the process can't work if the DOE must take into account how each student can get the same programs at a new school as he or she had at the school they want to close. He also said that the UFT, the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit against the closings, does not have standing to sue, a claim greeted with skepticism from the bench. The reason, he said, is because the UFT is an unincorporated association, so it would only have standing to sue if ALL of its members were affected.

Now it was the turn of the attorney for the plaintiffs, Charles Moerdler of Stroock and Stroock and Lavan. He said the 2009 statute was negotiated between the DOE and the State Legislature, with the Chancellor having a direct role in the negotiations, and that the DOE was reneging on the agreement in the way they've handled this matter. He said there is no compliance with the requirements of the statute and that the DOE is essentially saying that students and teachers must be held accountable for their behavior and performance, but there is a different standard for us.

Mr. Moerdler said that Judge Lobis had briefly referred to SEQRA in her decision, saying it is instructive in this instance, but that she in no way suggested that its provisions were binding on the process here. He said that the DOE was required to give proper notice to the CECs, and that the CECs and SLTS were supposed to have joint hearings with the DOE on this and they didn't get them.

He said that DOE gave no notice to the Bronx and Manhattan Borough Presidents or the Chair of the City Council Education Committee, all of whom became co-plaintiffs in the lawsuit. He said that of the 19 schools slated for closing, 14 were proficient by the DOE's own measures and 5 of them in every respect. The DOE then, he said, came up with NEW standards to justify the closings.

A judge asked Mr. Moerdler if negotiations between the 2 sides are taking place, and he said they are trying to avoid having to request a contempt motion against DOE (for failure to comply with all aspects of Judge Lobis' order), and are attempting to negotiate an outcome to the suit.

He reiterated that DOE violated a statute they'd jointly negotiated, deliberately failed to comply with it, and had pretty much admitted that they (DOE) had not invited CECs and SLTs to participate in the process because they were afraid that those groups "would thwart the process" of the closings.

Mr. Krams then spoke again, returning to his contention that the UFT had no standing to sue. A judge asked him if he was really saying that a teacher in a school being closed would not be injured by that closing. Mr. Krams said the elected officials did not have standing to sue because they would not be injured themselves by the closings -- only their constituents would. Judges were skeptical of that one as well, as you might expect.

He then said that CECs are not in the picture for the high school closings, because only K-8 schools have CECs. He said high schools are under the sole control of the Chancellor. (This of course leaves out that there are borough-wide high school councils and a citywide council on high schools. I mentioned that to some of the plaintiffs outside the courtroom after the oral arguments were concluded, and they said they were aware of that omission and had mentioned it in their papers.).

Mr. Krams concluded by saying that the public was heard loud and clear in the 19 individual hearings and in the PEP hearing about all 19. (Having attended the December hearing at Columbus for it and a smaller school, Global Academy, which is located in the same building and was also targeted by DOE, and having attended the subsequent P.E.P. meeting, I can say unequivocally that the public may have been heard, but what they said was totally discounted in the decisions, because just about everyone who spoke objected to the closings.)

That was it. It is not known how long it will take for a decision to be announced. For what it's worth, it seemed to me that the judges reacted more positively to the attorney for the plaintiffs than to the attorney for the DOE.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Class Size Makes Biggest Jump of Bloomberg Tenure by Jennifer Medina - NYTimes.com

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Class sizes rose at nearly every grade level across the city last year, according to a report released by the city’s Education Department on Tuesday, the largest increases since Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg took over the school system in 2002.

School officials called the increase “unfortunate” but blamed it on the economy and said class size was largely in the hands of principals.

“Class size is related to the number of teachers schools employ,” said the report, which was sent to the City Council on Tuesday. “The combination of budget cuts and increases in teacher salaries means that principals, while they have continued to hire staff, have been cautious about hiring.”

The largest growth was in the third grade, where the average moved to 21.8 students per class, compared with 20.9 students last year. The city does not calculate an overall average because class sizes vary so much according to age; every increase was a gain of less than a single student. Class size increased even though enrollment in the city’s public schools decreased by nearly 4,000, to 1,019,525, because the number of classes also declined.

Critics of the department said the increases showed that the mayor and Chancellor Joel I. Klein have ignored efforts by the state and the City Council to reduce class size.

“Class-size reduction money has been in place for a long time, and they have done nothing with it,” said Councilman Robert Jackson, the chairman of the Education Committee. “They get an F. They don’t even get an A for trying, because getting an A for trying would mean all of what they had been doing would be geared toward getting the size down, which it has not.”

Mr. Jackson urged the state’s Education Department to take action against the city, including withholding money from its annual budget. Nearly $150 million in state money, part of an infusion that resulted from a longstanding lawsuit over school financing, was earmarked last year for reducing class size, either through creating new classrooms or hiring more staff members to co-teach in a single classroom.

Garth Harries, who oversees class size for the city’s Education Department, said that in an operating budget of nearly $17 billion, that was “at best marginal funds.”

“They are important obviously, but this is a truly massive system and what we put out today are aggregate numbers for that entire system,” Mr. Harries said. “Schools are all working to protect their priorities both in cuts they have already experienced and cuts that they anticipate.”

Mr. Harries emphasized that the increases were not startling, and that in most grades, the current average is below what it was in the 2002-3 school year, when Mr. Bloomberg and Mr. Klein took control of the system.

But many students still attend classes that are more crowded than the city’s stated goals of 20 students per class in kindergarten through third grades (there are no targets for older grades). Roughly 45 percent of kindergarten students, for example, are in classes of 22 to 25, and more than 4,000 of the city’s roughly 61,000 first-graders are in classes with at least 28 students, according to Education Department figures.

The largest average class size, 26.9 students, is in the eighth grade.

Mr. Harries said it would take more time to know whether schools that now receive extra money from the state were able to reduce the number of students in their classrooms.

The report also warned that classes might soon get even bigger, as the department adjusts its five-year class-size reduction plan required by the state to “reflect the worsening economic climate.”

“The school system in the city is fighting to keep our heads at level, so that means that we will have to go back and have to reconsider the plan,” which was written in 2007, Mr. Harries said in an interview.

Randi Weingarten, the president of the teachers’ union, who has long pushed for smaller classes, called the rise “disheartening and inexcusable.”

“The state will not continue sending the city money for class-size reduction if the city continues to defy the terms and intent of the 14-year-old Campaign for Fiscal Equity court case,” she said in a statement. “It’s time for the city to quit making excuses and comply with the law.”

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Residency Bill for DC 37 Workers Rescue on Hold - NY Daily News

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An opportunity to rescue the residency bill from its legislative quagmire in the City Council has failed.

At least for now.

District Council 37 was slated to hold a press conference Tuesday on the steps of City Hall to announce it had a veto-proof majority in the City Council for the bill, which would allow members of the union to live outside the five boroughs.

That press conference was abruptly canceled late Monday. DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts (photo left) and union officials declined to explain why.

The bill, sponsored by Councilman Robert Jackson, is considered the "compromise" legislation. It would allow new DC 37 workers to live outside the city limits after two years of city residency.

It was designed to appease some Council members, including Jackson, who worried that lifting residency requirements would open up vital city jobs to virtually anyone.

"This will not dry up employment opportunities in New York City," said Jackson (D-Manhattan).

The Bloomberg administration has said - repeatedly - it will only support legislation that mirrors the agreement it reached with DC 37 in 2006.

That contract said legislation should lift residency requirements. Period. End of sentence.

The veto-proof majority apparently wasn't enough for Council Speaker Christine Quinn, who reportedly asked all parties to give her more time.

It's not clear whether there is a possible deal in the works with the Bloomberg administration.

Then again, Quinn doesn't need the mayor's approval.

And while she may not want to cross swords with Bloomberg on this issue, many Council members aren't prepared to take her to task either.

The clock is ticking. The next stated City Council meeting is Dec. 18. That's the last chance for the Council to vote in 2008.

Councilman and State Senator-elect Joseph Addabbo said he would like to see the matter settled before takes his new job on Jan.1.

"We're running out of time," said Addabbo, who is chairman of the Council's Civil Service and Labor Committee.

Bringing Christmas cheer to sick kids

Cops from the 102nd Precinct in Queens are determined to brighten the holidays for children with cancer who are stuck in the hospital.

Lt. John McGrorty's 4-year-old son, Matthew, died of the disease this year, but he had nothing but praise for the treatment Matthew received at New York Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center.

So he and his colleagues at the precinct raised $10,500 in a charity golf outing for Hope and Heroes, a children's cancer fund that supports the center's Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital in Manhattan. The money is earmarked to develop better treatment for children with cancer.

McGrorty knew how long the days can be for a child going through cancer treatment. So in addition to the contribution, the officers donated 85 DVD players along with 200 DVDs and games to children at the hospital.

lcolangelo@nydailynews.com

Thursday, October 2, 2008

City Residency Rules Revisited by Lisa Colangelo - NY Daily News

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The two-year legislative logjam over a bill allowing municipal workers to live outside the city has been broken.

A City Council hearing is scheduled for Oct. 6 on two bills that would ease residency requirements for members of District Council 37, the city's largest municipal union, and some other city workers.

While this is the first time the bills will be discussed at a hearing, it doesn't mean there is any agreement between the City Council and the Bloomberg administration.

"We oppose any bill that does not reflect the agreement reached with DC 37 during the collective bargaining process," said Bloomberg spokesman Jason Post.

Two years ago, DC 37 and the city settled a contract. Part of that deal included a provision to lift residency requirements for union members. But some City Council members balked, saying the move would open up city jobs to people who live outside the city.

They wanted city workers to spend at least two years living in the city. But the administration said it wouldn't deviate from the contract.

After two years of inaction, the Council will now review two bills on residency. One is the original bill that lifts residency requirements without limitations. The second bill, sponsored by Councilman Robert Jackson (D-Manhattan), would allow workers to live outside the city after two years of employment.

"This bill means so much to so many people," said Councilman Joseph Addabbo Jr. (D-Queens), who heads the Civil Service and Labor Committee. "The amended version is the only version that saves city jobs for city residents."

Members of DC 37 and smaller unions have been fighting for the right to live outside the city limits for years.

The city's uniformed workers - police officers, firefighters, correction officers and sanitation workers - are allowed to live in surrounding counties.

Teachers and some other city employees in jobs that are considered hard to fill have no residency restrictions. "I have always said this is a very odd way of dealing with the real issue, which is the issue of affordable housing in New York City," said Addabbo.

The hearing will be held at City Hall before Addabbo's committee at 1 p.m..

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Queens Senate Candidate Has Manhattan Support by Jonathan P. Hicks - City Room - Metro - New York Times Blog

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There was a rousing campaign breakfast this morning for City Councilman Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., who is seeking the Democratic nomination to run for the State Senate in Queens against the Republican incumbent, Serphin R. Maltese.

But the breakfast was nowhere near the 15th State Senate District, which stretches from Ozone Park and Howard Beach to Glendale and Maspeth.

Instead, the breakfast was in Manhattan, at Campanile Restaurant on East 29th Street, and it was sponsored by the Manhattan borough president, Scott M. Stringer, and a number of labor unions. The gathering drew a large number of Democratic-elected officials from Manhattan: the City Council members Jessica Lappin, Gail A. Brewer and Robert Jackson; Assemblyman Brian P. Kavanagh; and State Senators Liz Krueger and Bill Perkins.

Why would Manhattan officials and labor leaders pack a restaurant nowhere near the district? Mr. Stringer explained it to the crowd, saying that defeating Mr. Maltese was an important step toward the Democrats’ aim of retaking the State Senate.

“The stakes have never been so high,” Mr. Stringer said. “That’s the reason for this Manhattan mobilization for Joe Addabbo. We have to create the accurate perception that this is a citywide race. What happens in this district will impact thousands if not millions of people in this state.”

Senator Krueger, too, discussed the importance of the race, from the perspective of a Manhattanite: “The Republicans have controlled the Senate since 1938, with the exception of a few months in the 1960s,” Ms. Krueger said. “This has been a long haul. We can and have to take the majority back.”

She explained that it was important for Manhattan Democratic leaders and party foot soldiers to work on behalf of Mr. Addabbo. “You don’t have to live in that district to do phone banking and to help in going door to door. We want to make sure that Joe can win in November against Serf Maltese.”

Of course, to do that, Mr. Addabbo must first win the Democratic primary in that Senate district. He faces Albert J. Baldeo, a lawyer in Queens. Despite being little-known in political circles, Mr. Baldeo came close to toppling Mr. Maltese two years ago.

He came within 900 votes — roughly 2 percentage points — of winning in that 2006 general election.

But this year, many Democratic officials have instead supported Mr. Addabbo, whose father represented southeastern Queens in Congress for a quarter century until his death in 1986.

In an interview after the breakfast, Mr. Addabbo said that he expected to be outspent by Mr. Maltese, a 20-year incumbent, particularly because the Republicans are increasingly “desperate to hold their majority.”

Mr. Addabbo said that Mr. Maltese has shown campaign ads on cable television stations criticizing Mr. Addabbo.

“But all the commercials in the world cannot compete with people power — our campaign is talking about people,” Mr. Addabbo said. “We’re going to beat the money difference with people power.”

Regarding his primary opponent, Mr. Addabbo said that he would rather not compare his views on issues with those of Mr. Baldeo. Despite the fact that he has been endorsed by Democratic leaders throughout the state, the councilman said of his challenger, “I do take him seriously.”

(Photo: Librado Romero/The New York Times)

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Keep the Promises Rally at City Hall on June 16th...

Former CPAC President William McDonald

Ocynthia Williams
Local 32BJ Representative, Doyle

CJE Rep Ernesto Maldonado Coalition for Educational Justice


Council Member Michael E. McMahon speaking with CM Domenic M. Recchia Jr, CM Rosie Mendez and CM Melissa Mark-Viverito
CM John Liu and CM Domenic M. Recchia, Jr


Jane Hirschmann - Time Out From Testing
Randi Weingarten


CM David Yassky


NYC Comptroller William Thompson, Jr.



CM Robert Jackson





CM Bill DeBlasio

CM Jessica Lappin



CM Rosie Mendez