FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM  NOVEMBER 26, 2020 • THE QUEENS COURIER 23 
 Courtesy of Zara Realty 
 City’s proposed homeless shelter in Far Rockaway met with resistance 
 BY BILL PARRY 
 bparry@schnepsmedia.com 
 @QNS 
 Despite pushback from local leaders,  
 the city is moving forward with its plans  
 to build a new shelter for homeless families  
 in Far Rockaway under Mayor Bill de  
 Blasio’s “Turning the Tide” initiative. 
 Th  e initiative, aimed to end decades-old  
 stop-gap measures such as using cluster  
 sites and commercial hotel facilities, will  
 see the new shelter will be built in place  
 of the Far Rockaway Cathedral church at  
 1252 Brunswick Ave. 
 “As we implement our borough-based  
 approach, we are ending the ineffi  cient  
 stop-gap facilities citywide while opening  
 high-quality facilities New Yorkers in  
 need deserve as they stabilize their lives,”  
 NYC DSS-DHS said in a statement. “Th is  
 high-quality, borough-based facility will  
 be the fi rst of its kind in this Community  
 District, off ering 72 adult families experiencing  
 homelessness the opportunity  
 to get back on their feet safely and closer  
 to their anchors of life. Working together  
 with neighbors and not-for-profi t provider  
 Black Vets for Social Justice, we’re  
 confi dent that these new Yorkers will be  
 warmly welcomed and through collaborative  
 support and compassion, we will  
 make this the best experience it can be  
 for all.” 
 According to the city, there are 489  
 households comprised of 984 individuals  
 from Queens Community District 14 in  
 shelters across the city, however, there are  
 only 831 sheltered in CD 14. 
 Th  e new facility at 12-52 Brunswick  
 Ave. will provide 72 homeless adult families  
 the opportunity to be sheltered in  
 their home borough, closer to their support  
 networks including schools, jobs,  
 healthcare,  family,  social  services  and  
 communities they call home. 
 “Th  e Rockaway Peninsula has many  
 needs, but a seventh homeless shelter is  
 not one of them,” Assemblywoman Stacey  
 Pheff er Amato said. “I strongly oppose the  
 proposed shelter at 1252 Brunswick Ave.  
 in Far Rockaway.” 
 “Let’s be clear, this has nothing to do  
 with the compassion of our community  
 towards families in need of housing and  
 additional services. Th  e city is completely  
 shortsighted by placing families in a  
 geographically and economically isolated  
 community and should explore other  
 options to better serve and assist these  
 families, ” Pheff er Amato added. “Placing  
 families and individuals on a peninsula  
 with already overburdened social services  
 infrastructure, and insuffi  cient employment  
 and transportation options will create  
 an additional obstacle. Th  e city cannot  
 continue to rely on the Rockaway  
 Peninsula as they fail to come up with a  
 comprehensive plan to adequately solve  
 the homeless crisis in New York City at  
 the root. I am working closely with community  
 leaders and my colleagues in government  
 to work towards alternative outcomes.” 
 State Senator Joseph Addabbo made  
 many of the same points in making his  
 opposition clear to the proposed shelter. 
 “While we all support assisting homeless  
 individuals, putting a large capacity  
 homeless shelter — this one located  
 at 1252 Brunswick Ave. — the seventh  
 on the peninsula, without any community  
 input, is not the right way to do it,”  
 Addabbo said. “We have witnessed the  
 mayor’s administration fall far short of  
 achieving its goal of providing the services  
 homeless individuals need to get back  
 on their feet, with large populations being  
 warehoused at ineffi  cient locations, with a  
 site selection process that does not allow  
 for any helpful outside input, ideas or  
 suggestions. Th  e Rockaways have always  
 faced a unique set of challenges by being  
 geographically isolated from the rest of  
 Queens, and it is not fair to the community  
 residents and businesses, as well  
 as those facing homelessness, to place  
 another shelter in this area. I will continue  
 working with the local community and  
 government offi  cials to address this issue.” 
 Th  e new facility is the 76th shelter to  
 be sited under the mayor’s “Turning the  
 Tide” plan and is expected to open in  
 2022. Of the 76 sited shelters, 41 of them  
 are open and operational and currently  
 serving New Yorkers experiencing homelessness. 
 New residential development to  
 bring affordable housing to Jamaica 
 BY CARLOTTA MOHAMED 
 cmohamed@schnepsmedia.com 
 @QNS 
 A new residential development set to  
 be built in Jamaica will create new aff ordable  
 housing and bring signifi cant investment  
 into the community at a time when  
 COVID-19  has  continued  to  present  
 severe economic challenges. 
 Zara Realty’s new state-of-the-art, ninestory  
 residential building at 153-10 88th  
 Ave. will have 223 units, from studios  
 to two-bedrooms apartments (each with  
 new appliances), and 30 percent of its  
 units will be set aside as aff ordable housing. 
 Th  e 218,000-square-foot building will  
 have solar arrays on the roof to produce  
 green energy. Th  ere will be space available  
 for a community facility on the ground  
 fl oor. All tenants will be provided with  
 access to a valet parking garage, fi tness  
 center, recreational space, roof terrace,  
 storage units and more. 
 Tony Subraj, co-managing partner for  
 Zara, said new investment on this scale  
 has been infrequent since the start of the  
 pandemic, but they think it is needed now  
 more than ever. 
 “Whether it is buying older buildings  
 and reinvesting in the critical infrastructure  
 to create quality, lasting housing, or  
 starting from the ground up to deliver  
 new aff ordable housing for New Yorkers,  
 Zara  Realty  has  been  creating  homes  
 for Queens families for nearly 40 years,”  
 Subraj said. 
 Amir Sobhraj, co-managing partner for  
 Zara, said high-quality, aff ordable  housing  
 will be key to the economic revival  
 of the city and of southeastern Queens in  
 particular. 
 “Even  as  COVID-19  has  devastated  
 so many families in our community, 
  and caused an enormous crater in our  
 local economy, we believe in Queens. We  
 believe in the future of this neighborhood,  
 where we grew up and where we work,  
 and we are investing here for the long  
 term,” Sobhraj said. 
 Construction on the new residential  
 development is expected to be completed  
 in 2022. 
 Photo via Google Maps 
 
				
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