
 
        
         
		Historic Liberty Bell is removed  
 from charred East Village church 
 BY DEAN MOSES 
 A chorus of emotional cheers rang  
 out  as  New  York’s  Liberty  Bell  
 emerged from the ashes of Middle  
 Collegiate Church on June 16. 
 To Rev. Jacqui Lewis seeing the bell intact  
 is a symbol of fortitude. Although on Dec. 5,  
 2020, a six-alarm fi re demolished the East  
 7th Street house of worship known for their  
 inclusion of the LGBTQ+ community, both  
 the church’s facade and the bell, which rang  
 in 1776 in celebration of the nation’s independence  
 from British rule, remains intact  
 amidst adversity, something Rev. Lewis says  
 encapsulates her congregation. 
 “We are still standing. We say that although  
 the fi re burned down much of our  
 sanctuary, the place where the love resides,  
 the place where justice resides is inside of  
 us. We are the sanctuary, and we survived,”  
 Rev. Lewis said, adding, “We are resilient,  
 and the bell symbolizes resilience, and it  
 symbolizes tenacity.” 
 The  removal  process  is  no  easy  feat,  
 though. After the Director of the Department  
 of Buildings Tim Lynch found the bell  
 undamaged by the fi re, the way in which  
 Rev. Jacqui Lewis stands beside the New York Liberty Bell with pride. 
 to remove it from the ruins required meticulous  
 planning and a lot of manpower.  
 The fi rst step was to ensure the site was  
 stabilized with metal  bars  since certain  
 areas have withered due to the extreme  
 heat from the blaze. The process needed  
 two cranes, one to lift workmen up the  
 burned  structure  where  they  attached  
 PHOTO BY DEAN MOSES 
 reinforced rope to the Liberty Bell and a  
 second to hoist it from the window and to  
 the sidewalk below. 
 As it emerged from the steeple, onlookers, 
   who  had  gathered  to  witness  the  
 momentous occasion, unleashed a rousing  
 round of applause while Rev. Lewis became  
 overwhelmed  with  emotion,  embracing  
 Amanda Hambrick Ashcraft, the executive  
 minister for Middle Collegiate Church. 
 The bell is set to be transported to the  
 New York Historical Society where it will  
 be placed on display at an exhibition and  
 viewed by New Yorkers and tourists alike  
 while Middle  Collegiate  Church  begins  
 the rebuilding process. Additionally, Rev.  
 Lewis shared that she will curate the exhibit  
 and it will remain at the New York  
 Historical Society for the 20th anniversary  
 of the 911 memorial. 
 Rev. Lewis told amNewYork Metro that  
 Middle Collegiate Church will be reconstructed, 
  but in order to make that happen,  
 she says they will need to raise more funds. 
 “Our emotion, our heart and our mind  
 all want to rebuild on the site so that is how  
 we are proceeding, the back end of the site  
 will become our program building, so we  
 are trying to fi gure out how much we need  
 to demolish. Of course, we need to raise  
 funds to make this happen, our insurance  
 was good but not good enough to rebuild,”  
 Rev. Lewis said, adding, “We are looking  
 at what kind of plan we can create that will  
 make the church both our sacred place, but  
 even more fully a community center.” 
 Before the bell was transported to its  
 temporary home at 77th Street and Central  
 Park West, Rev. Lewis marked the occasion  
 by striking the celebrated bell 19 times in  
 honor of liberty. 
 De Blasio, City Council commit $40M  
 to private shelter security guards 
 BY DEAN JAMIESON 
 With  homelessness  one  of  the  
 most  pressing  issues  in  the  
 2021 mayoral  race,  it’s more  
 important than ever that those on the street  
 have somewhere safe to sleep. Oftentimes,  
 that means a non-profi t shelter. 
 Yet many of the private security offi cers  
 who work at these shelters are paid so little  
 they can barely afford health insurance –  
 and are even in danger of homelessness  
 themselves. 
 Now the New York City Council and  
 Mayor Bill DeBlasio are moving to change  
 this, committing 40.5 million dollars to  
 ensure that these essential workers are paid  
 fair, livable wages.  
 “For over 4,000 working families – their  
 lives are going to change, this year,” said  
 Mayor DeBlasio at a press conference this  
 afternoon. A group of working people, each  
 wearing union shirts, stood behind him.  
 “You can’t ask someone to help solve one  
 of the most challenging problems in society,  
 but not give them enough to put food on  
 their tables, or pay their rent, or take care  
 of their families.” 
 His  description  was  borne  out  by  a  
 number  of  speakers. Homeless  shelters  
 can be rife with violence; yet many security  
 offi cers are paid minimum wage, barely  
 enough to sustain an individual, let alone  
 a family. “We cannot afford to live in the  
 city we work,” said Shaquille Sheppard, a  
 PHOTO BY DEAN JAMIESON 
 private shelter security offi cer who himself  
 grew up in-and-out of shelters. “Private  
 security jobs are poverty jobs.” Kyle Bragg,  
 president of Local 32BJ, a chapter of the  
 Service Employees International Union,  
 substantiated  this,  saying  that,  “while  
 helping the City’s most vulnerable, many  
 of these workers struggle to afford things  
 themselves,” and, “may even fi nd themselves  
 homeless.” 
 According  to  a  recent  survey,  shelter  
 security workers – over 90% of whom are  
 people of color – are more than four times  
 as likely to be homeless or uninsured than  
 the average New Yorker. At the same time,  
 some 48% of those surveyed said they are  
 inadequately  trained.  In  somewhere  as  
 dangerous as a homeless shelter, this can  
 mean the difference between life and death. 
 That these shelters cannot even sustain the  
 people they employ – people whose work  
 is essential to the City – is a cruel and vicious  
 irony and one that the pandemic put  
 into even starker relief. While thousands  
 fl ed the City to the Hudson Valley and the  
 Hamptons, many of these essential workers  
 had no choice but to mask up, sanitize, and  
 help the City’s most vulnerable – and while  
 getting terribly paid. 
 DeBlasio,  and  the  City  Council,  are  
 working hard to amend this injustice. The  
 $40 million designated out of the city budget  
 for shelter security offi cers will mean  
 wage increases from $15 to $18 an hour, as  
 well as benefi ts such as family health care.  
 For many of the near-4,000 private shelter  
 offi cers in the City, this money will mean  
 doctor visits, rent payments, or simply a  
 little more time spent at home; the effects,  
 in short, will be life-changing. 
 18     June 24, 2021 Schneps Media