
 
        
         
		It’s electric! Going green on transit 
 Dinowitz proposes green bills for NY buses and public transit jobs 
 BY ALEX MITCHELL  
 Bronx Assemblyman Jeffrey  
 Dinowitz  is  envisioning  
 a  greener  future  for  the  
 roads of New York. 
 He,  along  with  Buffalo  
 State  Senator  Tim  Kennedy, 
  who chairs the Senate  
 Transportation  Committee,  
 introduced  two  laws as part  
 of  a  proposal  called  “Green  
 Transit,  Green  Jobs”  that  
 would reshape public automotive  
 travel in New York  
 by  harnessing  electric  energy  
 while  creating  jobs  in  
 the process. 
 One of the two bills would  
 require all new transit bus  
 purchases starting in 2029 to  
 be primarily electric, zeroemission  
 vessels while the  
 second would create contracting  
 incentives for public  
 transit  agencies  to  contract  
 these buses from manufacturers  
 employ  from”  highneed  
 communities” within  
 the state. 
 “It’s time we move beyond  
 the outdated and fl awed presumption  
 that  we  have  to  
 choose between helping  
 the  climate  and  supporting  
 our economy,” Dinowitz  
 said, adding that with  
 the proposal, New York can  
 nationally  demonstrate  
 that  investing  in  sustainable  
 infrastructure  is  not  
 only  good  for  our  climate  
 but  is  good  for  workers  and  
 communities too. 
 “The  wheels  of  progress  
 move slowly, but it is imperative  
 that we continue taking  
 tangible steps towards the  
 climate goals we established  
 in 2019,” he said in reference  
 to environmental legislation  
 passed in the state. 
 From  this  proposal,  the  
 New York  State  Department  
 of  Transportation  would  be  
 tasked with  considering  the  
 purchase  of  zero  emissions  
 buses from its fi ve-year capital  
 plans while the bill is said  
 to also aid in coordination of  
 non-MTA transit agencies on  
 the purchasing, installation  
 and sharing of services. 
 The timeline included  
 in  this  bill  also  mirrors  a  
 commitment  that  the  MTA  
 has  already  made  to  purchase  
 Literary activist talks One Book, One Bronx 
 BRONX TIMES REPORTER,6      SEPTEMBER 4-10, 2020 BTR 
 only electric buses  
 starting in 2029. 
 According to the bill,  
 experts estimate that improved  
 health  from  switching  
 entirely to electric buses  
 results  in  savings  of  approximately  
 $150,000 per  
 bus  or  $100  per  New  York  
 City resident. 
 The legislation also  
 cites that other major cities  
 such as Los Angeles  
 and Chicago have put forward  
 similar  commitments  
 in the development of new  
 employment  “that  created  
 hundreds of high-quality,  
 unionized jobs.” 
 Those  programs  included  
 a  40  percent  of  a  factory  
 workforce  from  traditionally  
 under-represented  
 groups in manufacturing as  
 well as the development of  
 an  apprenticeship  program  
 that  prioritizes  low-income  
 workers,  people  of  color,  
 women, returning citizens  
 and veterans. 
 Kennedy  described  the  
 legislative package as one  
 underscoring  “New  York’s  
 commitment  to  developing  
 innovative  approaches  that  
 advance our state’s progressive  
 agenda,” adding, “it also  
 demonstrates  our  dedication  
 to  creating  sustainable,  
 high  quality  transportation  
 networks and a greener,  
 more  environmentally-just  
 New York.” 
 Statewide,  there  are  approximately  
 8,500 transit  
 buses  in  New  York  while  
 5,800 of those are controlled  
 by the MTA. 
 Assemblyman  Jeffrey  Dinowitz  proposed  bus  bills  for  a  greener  New  
 York   Photo bya Jason Cohen 
 BY JASON COHEN  
 Lifelong Bronxite Ron Kavanaugh  
 fell in love with reading  
 and literacy at a young  
 age and has dedicated his life  
 to books. 
 As  executive  director  of  
 the  nonprofi t arts organization  
 Literary  Freedom  Project, 
   Kavanaugh,  58,  has  devoted  
 more  than  20  years  
 to  connecting  contemporary  
 writers of the African  
 Diaspora with the Bronx community. 
  His quest to bridge  
 the literary arts gap began  
 in 1998 with “Mosaic,” a literary  
 magazine he founded and  
 ran for 18 years, which tackled  
 the lack of diversity and  
 platforms for covering Black  
 writers. 
 Today, Kavanaugh continues  
 to build community and  
 conversations through the  
 Literary  Freedom  Project’s  
 Mosaic Literary Conference,  
 an  annual  convening  of  artists  
 and writers for literaturefocused  
 panel discussions and  
 events, lesson plans and workshops  
 for secondary school  
 educators and One Book One  
 Bronx, a weekly book club series  
 that fosters a supportive  
 environment for readers and  
 has hosted more than 600 individuals. 
 It began in 2018 and in addition  
 to talking about books,  
 One Book One Bronx engages  
 young people through lesson  
 plans about Black identity  
 and Black culture. Since its  
 inception, the group has garnered  
 quite a following and  
 usually has between 20 and 60  
 people at each discussion. 
 “Our goal has always been  
 to connect the community,”  
 he said. “What I always try to  
 convey to people is that this is  
 a free and open space.” 
 With the next season of One  
 Book One Bronx approaching  
 on Sept. 16, Kavanaugh spoke  
 with the Bronx Times about  
 the series and literacy in the  
 borough. 
 “Many people don’t have  
 a place to discuss issues and  
 books,”  he  explained.  “I’m  
 trying to give readers a place  
 they can come together.” 
 While each month they  
 meet to discuss a book, more  
 often than not, the attendees,  
 who are mostly women, chat  
 about relationships, violence  
 and communities. 
 Due to COVID-19, the group  
 has been holding virtual sessions, 
  which include readers  
 from the Bronx and also individuals  
 throughout the city  
 and in other states. 
 Since the murders of Breonna  
 Taylor and George  
 Floyd, the conversations have  
 shifted to race and the protests. 
  In fact, after the murder  
 of Taylor, the group read “All  
 About Love: New Visions” by  
 bell hooks. 
 “For a lot of people the  
 book  club  has  been  an  outlet  
 for people to discuss the issues  
 affecting their lives,” Kavanaugh  
 said. 
 Kavanaugh  recalled  how  
 growing up in Morrisania, he  
 was always drawn to books.  
 He used to frequent the local  
 library and spent many hours  
 there. 
 According to Kavanaugh,  
 while many people have  
 smartphones or computers,  
 thousands in the Bronx do not  
 have Wi-Fi and there is only  
 one bookstore in the borough.  
 Therefore, even in the digital  
 age,  he  stressed  that  reading  
 actual books is still essential. 
 He hopes more bookstores  
 open in the Bronx. 
 “Libraries  play  an  important  
 role in communities like  
 the Bronx,” he said. “Reading  
 is very important to who you  
 are and who you become.” 
 One Book One Bronx book club meeting  Courtesy of Literary Freedom Project