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FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT www.couriersun.com MARCH 27, 2014 • The Courier sun 23 SCOTT BARON’S STAR OF QUEENS brought to you by SCOTT BARON & ASSOCICATES, P.C. Attorneys & Counselors at Law 1-866-WAS-HURT (866) 927-4878 718.738.9800 star OF queens DO YOU SUFFER FROM: • Pain • Shoulder Pain • Muscle Pain • Joint Pain • Lower or Upper Back Pain • Kyphoplasty • PRP injection ACCEPTING ALL MAJOR INSURANCES We are conveniently located in QUEENS, BROOKLYN & MANHATTAN i~Pain NO REFERRALS NEEDED! Call Us Today to schedule your appointment O ce: 646.620.6485 or 718.724.4388 for spanish FRANK TONER PRESIDENT ROCKY HILL CIVIC ASSOCIATION COMMUNITY SERVICE: Frank Toner is the president of Rocky Hill Civic Association (RHCA), a volunteer organization started more than 80 years ago. Today it continues to work and enhance the quality of life for more than 1,000 households bounded by Braddock Avenue, Union Turnpike, Stronghurst Avenue and Winchester Boulevard. BACKGROUND: Toner was born and raised in Middletown, N.Y. His family moved to Elmhurst when he was a teenager. Toner and his wife Margaret, a Bellerose native, married in 1973 at St. Gregory The Great and settled in the neighborhood. Toner’s interest in the RHCA was piqued when he started receiving the association’s monthly bulletin. “I was aware that this community organization existed, and I was a little curious,” Toner said. But it wasn’t until he was playing basketball at a local school that he decided to sit in on a RHCA meeting that was being held in the same building. “I saw that they were really devoted in helping the community, and from there I was committed,” Toner said. He signed up to be a block captain, and dealt with the complaints of his neighbors and the distribution of bulletins on his block. Toner was asked to be on the board after impressing the association president with volunteer work and a 95 percent collection rate on dues. When the president stepped down in 2007, Toner took his place. GOALS: A goal Toner has for the near future involves surveying the streets for potholes and notifying the city so they can be fixed. He also intends to lobby for long-removed greenery to be restored to the median on Winchester Boulevard. Another key focus for Toner and the RHCA is participatory budgeting, where community members vote to decide how public money is spent. FAVORITE MEMORY: Toner’s fondest memory is participating in a coalition with a number of other civics associations in Queens, called Eastern Queens United. This group consists of about 10 different civic groups that come together when there is a problem in communities. “There is power in numbers, and this is a positive thing for the community,” Toner said. One of the projects that the RHCA has worked on with the help of Eastern Queens is enforcing the zoning rights in Toner’s community. “It took all of us working together to rezone the area, and that was a big victory for us,” Toner said. BIGGEST CHALLENGE: Toner’s biggest challenge is outreach. “The ethnic make up in the neighborhood has changed, and I would like to see more diversity in the group,” he said. BY: KATELYN DI SALVO


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