Who are they  
 endorsing? 
 Lander Endorsed  
 by Sunrise NYC 
 Sunrise NYC endorsed  
 Brad Lander  
 for NYC Comptroller. 
 “Lander understands  
 that  in  order  
 to bring a just transition  
 away from fossil  
 fuels and towards  
 climate justice to our  
 city, every position  
 must play a part – including  
 Brad Lander.  File photo 
 our Comptroller,” said Grace Cuddihy  
 and Judah Klingsberg, co-leads of the Sunrise  
 NYC Political Endorsements Team. 
 Lander welcomed the endorsement, and  
 credited Sunrise organizers for building  
 grassroots power to advance the Green New  
 Deal and related climate policy locally and nationally. 
 “I’m eager to be your partner in the work  
 ahead to hold NYC accountable to ambitious climate  
 action – ensuring we meet our emissions  
 reduction goals, expand green energy opportunities, 
  and invest in resilient infrastructure –  
 so that we can secure a healthy and resilient  
 future for all New Yorkers,” said Lander. 
 Reynoso Endorsed by Family  
 Members of People Killed by Police 
 Brooklyn Borough  
 President candidate  
 Antonio Reynoso  
 received the  
 endorsement of Terrence  
 Floyd,  Victoria  
 Davis, Iris Baez,  
 Constance Malcolm,  
 and Valerie Bell, all  
 of whom are family  
 members of individuals  
 killed  by  
 Floyd  is  the  
 Antonio Reynoso.  
  Photo by William Alatriste for  
 the New York City Council 
 brother of George  
 Floyd; Davis is the sister of Delrawn Smalls;  
 Baez is the mother of Anthony Baez; Malcolm  
 is the mother of Ramarley Graham; and Bell  
 is the mother of Sean Bell.      
 “I have heard the cries of New Yorkers  
 and Americans whose loved ones have been  
 wrongly killed or injured by the police -- they  
 are sick and tired of hollow promises that  
 don’t end police killings of our neighbors,”  
 Reynoso said. “I am committed to ending the  
 over-policing of our communities and investing  
 in the resources we need to thrive.” 
 COURIER LIFE, APR. 30-MAY 6, 2021 11  
 NYC’s #1 Source for Political & Election News 
 Democracy in action 
 BPL partners with Schneps Media to host Brooklyn debates 
 BY STEPHEN WITT 
 When it comes to showing versatility  
 as a local community asset, 
   the Brooklyn Public Library  
 (BPL) is hard to beat. 
 A case in point is the BPL doing  
 a full-court press in educating  
 and acting as a resource for  
 the coming 2021 citywide primary  
 and general elections. 
 This includes the BPL partnering  
 with Schneps Media to host  
 debates for every contested city  
 council  race  in Brooklyn  as well  
 as for the Brooklyn Borough President. 
  These Zoom webinar debates  
 will start next month with  
 dates, times and login information  
 to be announced in the coming  
 week. 
 “Fostering civic and community  
 engagement generally is an  
 important role for all libraries and  
 it’s one that we’re particularly focused  
 on in Brooklyn. We’ve been  
 doing work along these lines, certainly  
 for the past few few years,  
 and we were very engaged with  
 the city, and a lot of community  
 groups  throughout  Brooklyn  on  
 the census,” said BPL Executive  
 Vice President David Woloch. 
 Woloch said several libraries  
 assist  in  helping  people  register  
 to vote and about a third of the library’s  
 59 branches have served  
 as polling places on election day. 
 Woloch said the challenge this  
 year – aside from the pandemic – is  
 to get people aware that primary  
 day has been moved from September  
 to June 22. Additionally, there  
 is the issue of educating voters in  
 the community about rank-choice  
 voting (RCV) this year he said. 
 “There’s been a lot of dialogue  
 over the past few months and a  
 lot of organizations doing great  
 work around getting information  
 to folks, about rank choice voting.  
 I think our role isn’t to duplicate  
 that work, but to make our reach  
 and our resources available to  
 help some of these other civic and  
 community  partners,”  said  Woloch. 
 Woloch  said  with  35  of  the  51  
 city council seats open due to term  
 limits  as well  as  the  open mayor  
 and comptroller’s race, it is imperative  
 that  civic  organizations  
 work together to foster a greater  
 local democracy. 
 “Our thought is we can be helpful, 
   particularly  by  partnering  
 with some of the other civic and  
 community actors and groups to  
 help encourage them to vote at this  
 very important time,” he said. 
 Leading the charge for NYCHA fi xes 
 BY ARIAMA C. LONG 
 New York City Housing Authority  
 developments are getting  
 a badly needed $80 billion  
 investment and improvements  
 announced  by  U.S.  Senate  Majority  
 Leader Chuck Schumer  
 last week. But improvements  
 are extending past the buildings  
 and reaching into the communities  
 for input as well with a new  
 Resident Roundtable. 
 Schumer, who’s been working  
 doggedly  on  this  with  housing  
 advocates and City Councilmember  
 Alicka Ampry-Samuel, said  
 through federal public housing  
 funds via the just-proposed  
 American Jobs Plan, wrongs can  
 be righted after decades of disinvestment, 
  bad management and  
 federal neglect of NYCHA and  
 all its mostly low-income and  
 struggling residents. 
 Schumer explained that the  
 initial plan was a $40 billion investment  
 in public housing capital  
 needs from the Biden Administration, 
  but with a solid  
 push, was doubled to address  
 U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer,  speaking  
 with NYCHA residents about repairs.    
   Contributed photo 
 “NYCHA’s repair backlog, years  
 of can-kicking, Republican-led  
 federal disinvestment and delays  
 that have  left  tenants  frustrated.” 
 “For far too long, our public  
 housing  infrastructure  needs  
 have been left unaddressed, left  
 to get worse, and have brought  
 serious harm to hundreds of  
 thousands of New Yorkers,” said  
 Schumer. “Lead in the bodies of  
 our children. Toxic mold in the  
 lungs of our friends and neighbors. 
  Leaky roofs. Dilapidated  
 playgrounds. Non-working elevators. 
  Unsafe environments.  
 Polluting and expensive boilers  
 and heating systems. The maddening  
 list goes on and on.” 
 NYCHA houses about 380,299  
 residents in over 177,611 apartments  
 within 335 housing developments, 
  and serves hundreds  
 of thousands more through  
 programs  like  Section  9,  This  
 money will aim to speedily address  
 all corrective work orders, 
   inspections  of  apartments  
 or  other  needed  areas,  routine  
 maintenance  of  elevators  and  
 faulty heating, and severe violations, 
  like rodents or mold in developments  
 across the city. 
 Meanwhile, NYCHA offi - 
 cials  said  that  it’s  establishing  
 a roundtable that will include  
 about 30 residents from each development  
 that can weigh in on  
 things like, lease enforcement  
 and compliance, quality of life  
 complaints, safety and security,  
 feedback, and quality assurance. 
   
 police.  
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