
 
		Celebrating Valentine’s Day amid the  
 COVID-19 pandemic in Union Square  
 BY DEAN MOSES 
 Love is in the air, but unfortunately,  
 so is COVID-19. 
 On  Valentine’s  Day  New  York  
 usually serves as one gigantic convention  
 center in which hundreds of people can  
 be seen holding hands, hugging, kissing,  
 and  brandishing  fl owers  and  balloons.  
 However, this year the romantic holiday  
 also  marks  a  grim  milestone:  the  fi rst  
 Valentine’s Day of the pandemic. Due to  
 this unfortunate fact, the city streets are  
 exhibiting a lot less bouquets and drastically  
 less affection due to social distancing.  
 Still, some Manhattanites are celebrating,  
 albeit in a very different way. 
 Steven hopped out of his car to quickly  
 purchase an assortment of fl owers from a  
 curbside vendor for his girlfriend, a mere  
 pit stop before heading home and preparing  
 dinner himself. Usually, he takes his  
 partner  out  for  a  romantic,  one-on-one  
 meal at a restaurant. 
 “It’s a wash out. I am not eating inside  
 yet—maybe next year. But not yet,” Steven  
 said. 
 Although  NYC  restaurants  have  offi  
 cially opened back up for indoor dining  
 at 25% capacity, the fear of contracting  
 Oliva Cadwell and Laura Kok hug after gift giving. 
 the virus is overshadowing the majority  
 of  romantic  overtures.  Oliva  Cadwell  
 Surprised  Laura  Kok  with  a  rose  and  
 some chocolate on Union Square. This  
 expression of affection is enough for the  
 pair, the risks of spreading COVID-19 is  
 not worth one night of enjoyment out on  
 the town. 
 PHOTO BY DEAN MOSES  
 “We are just going to get coffee and that  
 is going to be the whole day. I live with an  
 87-year-old roommate, so I am not going  
 indoors in any dining establishment and I  
 haven’t been through the whole pandemic.  
 I am not going to start until we are vaccinated,” 
  Cadwell said. 
 Still the inability to spend the day akin  
 to years prior will not prevent them from  
 observing the occasion. 
 “Valentine’s Day  is  about  celebrating  
 love.  Period.  It  doesn’t  have  to  be  any  
 particular type of love. It’s just about love  
 and I love Laura,” Cadwell said before Kok  
 jumped in. “I was feeling needy. I forgot  
 today was Valentine’s Day and she has been  
 my person throughout the pandemic. She  
 is the one person in my bubble who I will  
 see. It’s lovely,” Kok explained. 
 While some are showcasing their love  
 for  an  individual,  others  are  honoring  
 institutions that they look to for guidance.  
 Stivenson  Joseph  paid  for  a  bouquet  of  
 fl owers from a local vendor but when asked  
 who they were for he simply replied, “This  
 is for the church.” 
 “I am going to leave it for them. I do  
 that because I feel happy and I am blessed,”  
 Joseph said. 
 Although COVID-19 has not affected  
 him personally, he acknowledges that he  
 is constantly at risk through work. He says  
 he feels affected through the pain of others  
 around him. Still, he attempts to look at the  
 world through a positive lens, which is why  
 he is attempting to spread that positivity by  
 leaving fl owers at Immaculate Concepcion  
 Church on 1st avenue and 14th street. 
 Overall crime drops 21 percent, shootings rise  
 during January in latest NYPD crime stat report 
 BY ROBERT POZARYCKI 
 The new year got  off  to  a  
 good start for the NYPD. 
 Overall  crime  was  
 down 21% during January 2021,  
 which included a slight decrease  
 in murders and a sharp drop in  
 grand  larcenies,  the NYPD reported  
 Friday. Even so, shootings  
 — which had more than doubled  
 during 2020 — remained higher  
 during the fi rst month of 2021,  
 though at a lower rate. 
 In the seven major crime categories  
 (murder, rape, robbery,  
 felony assault, burglary, grand larceny  
 and grand larceny auto auto  
 theft), the NYPD recorded 6,882  
 total incidents between Jan. 1-31  
 of this year; that’s down from the  
 8,637 major crimes that occurred  
 during January 2020. 
 Robberies  and  rapes  were  
 also down sharply during January  
 (down 29% and 21.6%, respectively); 
  the lone major crime that  
 increased was auto theft, which  
 was up 12.8% for the month. 
 Year-over-year, murders had  
 slightly  decreased  from  27  in  
 January 2020  to 25  in  January  
 2021. Shootings during January  
 2021 were  up  16.7%, with  77  
 incidents  reported,  an  increase  
 from the 66 that occurred at the  
 time last year. 
 The shooting increase comes  
 even as the NYPD continues to  
 step up its efforts to combat gun  
 crimes  across  New  York  City.  
 That  effort  kicked  into  higher  
 gear following a summer of gun  
 violence last year in which the city  
 recorded a combined 486 shootings  
 in July and August. 
 Shootings  have  steadily  
 decreased  in  the months  since,  
 from 152 in September to 77 in  
 January. Last month, the NYPD  
 tallied 486 gun arrests — a 61.5%  
 SOURCE: NYPD 
 increase in fi rearms-related collars  
 from the same time a year  
 ago. 
 The NYPD particularly touted  
 the efforts of precincts in Patrol  
 Borough  Brooklyn  North  and  
 Patrol Borough Bronx, which recorded  
 138 and 104 gun arrests,  
 respectively. 
 What  really  drove  the  crime  
 drop  in  January,  law  enforcement  
 sources said, was a sharp  
 32% decline in grand larcenies.  
 There were just 2,546 incidents  
 recorded last month, down from  
 the 3,788 incidents recorded in  
 January 2020. 
 The positive developments on  
 the crime front have given Police  
 Commissioner  Dermot  Shea  
 further hope that 2021 will turn  
 out to be a far better year for the  
 NYPD in their efforts to keep the  
 city safe. 
 “As we move into 2021, I remain  
 very optimistic about  the  
 continuing work  of  the NYPD  
 to  improve  both  public  safety  
 and trust across New York City,”  
 said  Shea.  “All  New  Yorkers  
 have weathered a great deal during  
 2020, but your NYPD cops  
 remain undaunted in their vital  
 work  –  not  only  driving  down  
 crime – but also engaging with  
 our  many  community  partners  
 in order to build trust in every  
 borough, in every neighborhood.” 
 14     February 18, 2021 Schneps Media