2     TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.COM   |   JULY 23-JULY 29, 2021 
 BY CARLOTTA MOHAMED 
 Improvements to Challenge  
 Playground in Little Neck are  
 underway as the NYC Parks  
 Department, northeast Queens  
 elected officials and community  
 leaders broke ground on the  
 site on Thursday, July 5. 
 NYC Parks Queens Borough  
 Commissioner Michael  
 Dockett joined Queens Borough  
 President Donovan Richards, 
  Senator John Liu, Assemblyman  
 Edward Braunstein,  
 Councilman Barry Grodenchik  
 and Community Board 11  
 District Manager Joseph Marziliano  
 for the groundbreaking  
 at the playground located  
 at 251st Street and 61st Avenue. 
 “We’re excited to break  
 ground on renovations that  
 will transform Challenge Playground  
 into a more inclusive  
 and accessible green space,”  
 Dockett said. “Upon completion, 
  Queens residents and visitors  
 can enjoy enhanced play  
 and integral family-friendly  
 space for recreation and outdoor  
 fun.  We’re  grateful  to  
 Borough President Richards  
 and Council member Grodenchik  
 for making this upgrade a  
 priority.” 
 This  project  will  reconstruct  
 the existing playground  
 with brand-new sensory play  
 equipment, swings and spray  
 showers. 
 The new design will feature  
 auditory and visual elements  
 that will offer playful shadow  
 effects, sounds and touchable  
 textures. Additional upgrades  
 will include new seating and  
 picnic areas, plantings and repaved  
 pedestrian pathways for  
 easier access to the play area. 
 Renovations to Challenge  
 Playground  were made  possible  
 by a $75,000 allocation from  
 Grodenchik and $3 million  
 from former Borough President  
 Melinda Katz, with continued  
 support from Richards. 
 The project is expected to  
 be completed in spring 2022. 
 Richards thanked the de  
 Blasio administration and  
 Grodenchik for making the  
 groundbreaking possible. 
 “This is a great day for the  
 children and families of Little  
 Neck  as  we  break  ground  on  
 this first-class playground,”  
 Richards said. “Children need  
 to have high-quality places  
 to play in order for them to  
 grow and thrive, and the reconstructed  
 Challenge Playground  
 will be such a space.” 
 Grodenchik said the improvements  
 to the playground  
 will create an amazing outdoor  
 space where local residents, 
  especially children, will  
 be able to connect, interact and  
 thrive for years to come. 
 “Playgrounds are critical to  
 the health of a community, so  
 the redesign and reconstruction  
 of Challenge Playground  
 will provide tremendous benefit  
 to the communities of  
 Little Neck and Douglaston,”  
 Grodenchik said. 
 Children and families are  
 spending more time outdoors,  
 which is great for health and  
 well-being, mentally and physically, 
  according to Liu. 
 “The Challenge Playground  
 has a special place in  
 our community’s history and  
 it’s long time to rebuild this important  
 public asset,” Liu said.  
 Reach reporter Carlotta  
 Mohamed by e-mail at  
 cmohamed@schnepsmedia. 
 com or by phone at (718) 260– 
 4526. 
 BY JENNA BAGCAL 
 A Queens lawmaker called  
 on  the  city  to  make  longawaited  
 sidewalk  repairs  
 nearly  a  year  after  Tropical  
 Storm  Isaias  wreaked  havoc  
 in the metropolitan area. 
 On Tuesday, July 13, Senator  
 John  Liu  joined  with  
 community  leaders  and  local  
 homeowners in Bellerose  
 who highlighted the dangers  
 surrounding  the  neglected  
 sidewalks.  For  the  past  11  
 months,  residents  have  put  
 up  traffic  cones  and  homemade  
 signs  to  warn  pedestrians  
 of the the damage and  
 dangerous conditions. 
 The group said that after  
 months of delays, the city  
 failed  to  make  good  on  its  
 promise to begin repairs in  
 early spring “when the weather  
 is warmer.” Since then,  
 they said that there have been  
 no updates or follow-ups as to  
 when the city would begin fixing  
 the uprooted sidewalks. 
 “These sidewalks are used  
 daily by children, seniors and  
 other pedestrians to get to  
 schools, parks, grocery stores,  
 and to run daily errands. Sidewalk  
 safety is more important  
 than ever with the rise in pedestrian  
 usage and it’s unfathomable  
 that a year later the  
 city  has  failed  to make  these  
 repairs,” Liu said. “The city  
 must  get  this  work  done  yesterday, 
  to protect pedestrians  
 from injury, to relieve homeowners  
 of  prolonged  anxiety  
 and  to  spare  our  taxpayers  
 from  potentially  costly  lawsuits  
 against the city.” 
 Isaias  hit  the  East  Coast  
 and  the Caribbean  in August  
 2020, leading to Governor Cuomo  
 calling for a state of emergency  
 in the days following to  
 help with cleanup and power  
 restoration. 
 In  the  aftermath  of  Isaias, 
   Queens  residents  reportedly  
 had over 9,300 reports  
 of downed trees at the time,  
 making it the borough with  
 the  most  tree  damage  in  the  
 city. Residents  said  that  the  
 state  of  the  sidewalks  was  
 not only a safety hazard but  
 an eyesore for homeowners  
 who liked to maintain a high  
 standard for neighborhood  
 aesthetics. 
 “As a longtime Bellerose  
 home owner who takes pride  
 in  maintaining  the  property  
 in  pristine  condition,  I  am  
 distressed by having the sidewalk  
 in such an unattractive,  
 unsafe and dangerous condition  
 Courtesy of Senator John Liu’s office  
 for the last year. The city  
 promised to repair it but they  
 still have not done so,” Kathy  
 Parent said. 
 Lifelong  Whitestone  resident  
 Angela  DeNicola,  a  
 93-year-old cancer survivor,  
 echoed Parent’s sentiment. 
 “I find it unacceptable that  
 the upended sidewalk, caused  
 by a NYC tree that fell in a  
 storm last August, has not  
 been repaired. After numerous  
 calls to various agencies,  
 to no avail, it remains a safety  
 issue,” DeNicola said. 
 According to a city spokesperson, 
  sidewalk repairs  
 would be coming to the community  
 sooner rather than  
 later. 
 “We’re grateful to all the  
 elected officials who highlighted  
 the outstanding work  
 today, and we look forward  
 to  making  the  repairs  in  the  
 coming  weeks.  Queens  deserves  
 safe and accessible  
 sidewalks and we’ll do everything  
 we  can  to  expedite  
 the process from here,” said  
 Mitch Schwartz,  a  spokesperson  
 for the mayor. 
 Reach reporter Jenna Bagcal  
 by  e-mail  at  jbagcal@ 
 schnepsmedia.com or by phone  
 at (718) 260-2583. 
 The  NYC  Parks  Department  along  with  elected  officials  and  
 community  residents  at  the  groundbreaking  of  Challenge  
 Playground in Little Neck.  Photo by NYC Parks/Daniel Avila 
 City’s Parks Department  
 breaks ground at Challenge  
 Playground in Little Neck 
 NE Queens leaders call on city  
 to fi x year-old sidewalk damage 
 FLUSHING TIMES (USPS#03925) is published weekly by Queens CNG LLC, 38-15 Bell Boulevard, Bayside, NY 11361, (718) 229-0300. The entire contents of this publication are copyright 2021. All rights reserved.  
 The newspaper will not be liable for errors appearing in any advertising beyond the cost of the space occupied by the error. Periodicals postage paid at Flushing, N.Y. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the  
 FLUSHING TIMES C/O Queens CNG LLC 38-15 Bell Boulevard, Bayside, N.Y. 11361 
 
				
/QNS.COM
		/schnepsmedia.com
		link