
 
        
         
		2019 REVIEW 
 many of his earliest clients,  
 some of whom have been visiting  
 him since he worked in  
 his fi rst barbershop as a teenager. 
  Many remember Jack’s  
 Barber  Shop  as  an unoffi cial  
 meeting place where neighbors  
 and old friends would  
 gossip and discuss sports.   
 July 
 Shots  fi red:  NYPD  Chief  
 of Department Terence Monahan  
 slammed  Brooklyn  District  
 Attorney Eric Gonzalez  
 at a Manhattan press conference  
 on July 8 for putting gunmen  
 back on the street. The  
 police  chief  specifi cally criticized  
 the prosecutor’s youth  
 diversion program where offenders  
 between the ages of 14  
 to 22 who plead guilty to weapons  
 possession charges can  
 partake in an 18- to 24-month  
 educational program in place  
 of incarceration. The district  
 attorney’s offi ce  fi red  back  
 that instead of spending their  
 time criticizing the program,  
 the Police Department should  
 focus on closing open cases.  
 Time  Out:  City  Health  
 Department shut down Time  
 Out  Market  on  July  10  after  
 inspectors  discovered  a  communal  
 fridge shared by most  
 of its eateries was too warm.  
 The walk-in fridge was found  
 COURIER LIFE,12      DEC. 27, 2019-JAN. 2, 2020 
 operating at a balmy 58 degrees  
 — 17 degrees over the  
 41-degree threshold set by the  
 federal Food and Drug Administration  
 to  prevent  the  
 growth  of  bacteria.  Inspectors  
 ordered the fridge to be  
 taken  offl ine,  which  necessitated  
 the 14 vendors using it  
 to close down, and by extension  
 shuttered the entire food  
 hall.  
 Powerless: A punishing  
 heat wave and thunderstorm  
 left thousands of south Brooklynites  
 without power in July,  
 forcing those in the dark to  
 sweat it out without air conditioning  
 as  temperatures  
 creeped above 90 degrees. Residents  
 in Canarsie, Marine  
 Park, Mill Basin, and parts  
 of Flatbush suffered worst —  
 with locals describing chaotic  
 car crashes as traffi c  signals  
 remained  dormant  throughout  
 the night. The utility company’s  
 handling of the blackouts  
 lead  to  calls  from  some  
 elected offi cials to consider  
 city control of the power grid,  
 claiming Con Edison was not  
 adequately  prepared  to  handle  
 emergencies.  
 Pedal power:  Mayor  Bill  
 de  Blasio  announced  an  aggressive  
 expansion  of  the  
 city’s bike lane network on  
 July 25. The $58.4 Million plan  
 requires the city install 80  
 miles of protected bike lanes  
 per year, with several priority  
 zones falling in Brooklyn,  
 including Bay Ridge, Borough  
 Park, Midwood, Sheepshead  
 Bay, Coney Island, East Flatbush, 
  and Bedford-Stuyvesant. 
  The announcement  
 came  amid  a  bloody  year  for  
 cyclists,  who  suffered  29  fatalities  
 citywide, and 18 in  
 Brooklyn.  
 Brash  beetle:  Scientists  
 discovered a new species of  
 beetle with a unique genitalia  
 —  right  in  Greenwood  Cemetery! 
   The  bizarre  bug  was  
 proven  to  be  a  unique  specimen  
 of the genome Agrilus, a  
 family of about 3,000  species.  
 Not everyone was pleased  
 with  the  discovery  though,  
 cemetery  tree  huggers  are  
 concerned the European native  
 could cause grave damage  
 to the boneyards stately  
 old trees, and should be eradicated  
 if possible.  
 August 
 Slip  up: A Williamsburg  
 basketball court became dangerously  
 slippery after a Looney  
 Tunes-inspired paint job  
 made it unsafe to play on Aug.  
 23. To address locals’ concerns, 
  the city’s Parks Department  
 days later added a layer  
 of clear paint mixed with silica  
 sand after local ballers  
 complained that the paint job  
 — a public-private partnership  
 with cartoon studio Warner  
 Bros. — created a slipping  
 hazard. The city also widened  
 the court, repainted its lines  
 to  better  suit  the  court,  and  
 replaced  its backboards  from  
 distracting  cartoon-covered  
 surfaces to clear boards.  
 Continued on Page 14 
 Continued from Page 10 
 Scientists identifi ed a new species  
 of beetle at Green-Wood Cemetery  
 discovered  by  a  male  specimen’s,  
 right, unique genitalia.  
   National Forest Service 
 Transformers were installed in the Flatlands, one of several southern Brooklyn  
 neighborhoods affected by the blackout.  Photo by Steve Solomonson 
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