
 
		By Nelson A. King 
 In a joint letter on Wednesday, 
  April 22, 19 of Brooklyn’s  
 Black elected officials called on  
 Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor  
 Bill  de  Blasio  to  implement  a  
 sweeping  revitalization  plan  
 directed to Black communities,  
 which they said have suffered  
 the most harm from the coronavirus  
 (COVID-19) pandemic. 
 Signatories  of  the  letter  
 comprised:  Jumaane  D.  Williams, 
   New  York  City  Public  
 Advocate;  Congress  Members  
 Yvette D. Clarke and Hakeem  
 Jeffries, 9th and 8th Congressional  
 Districts, respectively;  
 Eric Adams, Brooklyn Borough  
 President;  and  Sens.  Kevin  
 Parker  (21st  Senate  District),  
 Zellnor Myrie (20th Senate District) 
   and  Roxanne  J.  Persaud  
 (19th Senate District). 
 Other  signatories  were:  
 Assembly  Members  N.  Nick  
 Perry (58th Assembly District),  
 Walter T. Mosley  (57th Assembly  
 District), Latrice M. Walker  
 (55th Assembly District),  
 Charles Barron (42nd Assembly  
 Caribbean L 6     ife, May 1-7, 2020 
 District Assembly), Diana Richardson  
 (43rd  Assembly  District), 
  Jaime R. Williams (59th  
 Assembly  District),  Tremaine  
 Wright  (56th  Assembly  District), 
   and  Mathylde  Frontus  
 (46th Assembly District). 
 City  Council  members  who  
 signed the letter were: Alicka  
 Ampry-Samuel  (41st  Council  
 District),  Farah  Louis  (45th  
 Council  District),  Majority  
 Leader  Laurie  Cumbo  (35th  
 Council District) and Inez Barron  
 (42nd Council District). 
 The elected officials said the  
 proposed  Elizabeth  Jennings  
 Graham  Community  Investment  
 Plan, otherwise known  
 as the “Lizzie Plan,” would seek  
 to involve the Black community  
 in  the  public  response  to  
 the crisis and include plans for  
 data  collection,  testing,  personal  
 protective  equipment,  
 among other things. 
 “Black people are dying at  
 a  higher  rate  than  the  rest  of  
 New York while making up the  
 majority  of  frontline  workers  
 keeping the state afloat,” the  
 letter reads. 
 “This  disproportionate  
 impact demands a commensurate  
 response and is why we  
 write  today  to  demand  that  
 New  York  immediately  convene  
 a task force to specifically  
 address the Emergency, Relief,  
 Recovery and Rebuilding needs  
 of Black New Yorkers in Central  
 and South Brooklyn,” the letter  
 adds. 
 “Thus far, Black voices have  
 been  excluded  from  the  decision 
 making  in  response  to  
 COVID-19,” the letter continues. 
  “The convening of this task  
 force, and subsequent adoption  
 of the recommendations put  
 forth by the Plan, seeks to rectify  
 this injustice.” 
 The legislators said the scope  
 of the proposed task force would  
 include:  Specific  and  granular  
 data  on  infection  rates,  hospitalizations  
 and deaths in the  
 Black community; provision of  
 Personal Protective Equipment  
 (PPE) for all essential workers,  
 many  of  whom  are  Black;  “all  
 manners of testing” in Black  
 Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke.   Photo by Nelson A. King 
 communities,  including  the  
 testing of essential workers, the  
 availability of rapid testing and  
 additional testing sites; relief  
 for  Black-owned  businesses;  
 and resources specifically dedicated  
 to  food  distribution  in  
 the Black community. 
 Brooklyn’s Black pols want  
 sweeping revitalization plan