Oy Vey Rockaway Stats–2010 in review

My Entry for Most Interesting New Storefront of 2010!

Thanks readers!  You helped me get “Oy Vey Rockaway” off the ground by visiting my site.  It’s been very entertaining to write for you and I look forward to sharing more pictures and stories about local life in the New Year! 

The statistics gatherers at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary THEY prepared of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Fresher than ever.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 1,600 times in 2010. That’s about 4 full 747s.

In 2010, there were 19 new posts, not bad for the first year! There were 465 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 268mb. That’s about 1 pictures per day.

The busiest day of the year was September 7th with 81 views. The most popular post that day was Representative Advertising Customers .

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were facebook.com, mail.yahoo.com, inside.nps.gov, summittoshore.blogspot.com, and mail.aol.com.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for oy vey rockaway, irish circle toys for tots, “coast guard, jamaica bay, ny, vivian rattay carter, and marine parkway bridge.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

Representative Advertising Customers September 2010
2 comments

2

Red Hook to GWB or Bust! Hudson River Sloop Clearwater’s 2010 Pumpkin Sail November 2010
4 comments

3

About August 2010
6 comments

4

Read “Rock Solid” Columns from 2009 & 2010 September 2010

5

You can’t fight City Hall…if you can’t get to City Hall. September 2010
5 comments

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Snow Drifts on the Monday after Christmas–Let’s Call it a Block Party!

Rockaway Beach Boulevard in Belle Harbor, looking east

The great Boxing Day Blizzard of 2010 (sixth largest snowfall in NYC history) finally ran out of steam on Monday, December 27, late in the morning, and everyone was boxed-in! Rockaway residents began to shovel out their driveways…and their sidewalks…and their side streets. Woe to those without a private plow or snow-blower on the block. It was so hard to get around on the streets that The Wave didn’t even open. That’s rare. So I headed out of the house on foot to take some photos.

I was interested in comparing this snowstorm to the rather memorable series of NYC weather events during the winter of 1995-96.  I recall very well how the snow from those storms accumulated; we just kept shoveling it to the side of the walkways until the pile in front of my in-laws’ house on Rockaway Beach Boulevard in Neponsit was almost 5 feet tall!  Of course, it didn’t help that the snowplows going up and down the boulevard kept pushing it out of the street and onto the sidewalk, over and over again!  

Is there a driveway (and a garage) in there?

I am happy to report that today’s storm, while significant, was a “piker” compared to the ones in 1995-96.  Still, most west-end blocks remained impassable as of 3 p.m., and the Sanitation Department snowplows had only lightly smoothed out the drifts on the main east-west arteries. I saw a small white DEP pickup truck fitted with a plow, apparently trying to clear snow away from the sewers.

Just like the New Jersey freeways, the divided roadway of Rockaway Beach Boulevard that passes through Belle Harbor and Neponsit was a tableaux of cars, abandoned like so many sand pails at the beach.

Frozen in Place on RBB

 

 I spoke to some of these unfortunate neighbors, and heard that they were returning late from work shifts the previous evening, and could not pass through the center of Rockaway Beach Boulevard at all.

Somehow, the food delivery trucks got through to Beach 129 Street, where a few stores had opened for business so everyone could come out and get some meat! 

Digging Out the Meat Truck--Newport Ave. at B. 129 St.

A shovel patrol was needed at the intersection of Newport and Beach 129 Street, to dig out a Boar’s Head truck that had gotten stuck. A short time later, another meat delivery vehicle was parked on the shopping street, when a little white car got stuck next to it. Finally, the driver of a Toyota Corolla came barreling down the block, and it was starting to look like a Laurel and Hardy movie, as he was about to get boxed-in, as well!

Car stuck next to meat truck on B. 129 St.

The sidewalk shoveling trends were interesting. On some blocks, inertia (or was it common sense?) took hold and only a few neighbors bothered to clear a path, so pedestrians were forced to backtrack and head for the street in order to pass through. There were other places, like the 200 block of Beach 130 Street and the 400 block of Beach 128 Street, where everyone came outside to shovel the sidewalks and clear away snow from the fire hydrants, as if it were a block party.

Both of the blocks mentioned above were notable in that the sidewalks were cleared almost from end to end, while the street remained almost completely covered with snow! You don’t see that too often…

That BIG cup needs a big partner--how about a huge snowdrift?

Another thing you don’t see often is a riveting news story involving Rockaway that captures the attention of the entire city–unless it’s a negative story!  Kudos to the MTA for allowing 500 passengers (many just in from JFK Airport) to remain stranded overnight on an A train on the tracks out on Jamaica Bay without power to the third rail.  This story was deemed important enough that it even made the U.S. network news this evening.  Nothing like a warm welcome for visitors to New York!  Now the whole world knows what daily commuters from the peninsula put up with on a regular basis!     

Don’t you love snow days? They are a great chance to catch up on everything you make excuses not to do the other 363 or so days a year when we don’t have two feet of snow on the ground!

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How to “Rock Shop” for the Holidays (c) 2010 Vivian R. Carter

Tap, Tap, Tap at Mrs. Elaine's School of Dance

The last few shopping days before Christmas have arrived; it’s liberating to assiduously avoid going anywhere near a mall.  There are many great Rockaway businesses where you can buy thoughtful and unique gifts.  First stop is to browse The Beach Gallery at Sunlites Stained Glass Studio (114 St. and RBB).  Renee Radenberg’s hand-crafted jewelry is being featured, and the shop will be open on the evening of Wed. Dec. 23 until 9 p.m. and on Friday, Dec. 24 until 6 p.m.  Other gift shops nearby include The Beach Bungalow (beach block of 116 Street) and The Gift is Love, on 116 Street between RBB and Newport.

Another great gift idea is a gift certificate from a spa, salon, or exercise studio.  My local favorites are Nail Country, Strands, Just Beautiful, Hot Yoga, Cyberzone, and Mrs. Elaine’s School of Dance.

Or give the gift of artwork.  Call Rockaway Artists’ Alliance and they will assist you in contacting a local artist whose work will suit your taste.  Another suggestion is to purchase a seat plaque at the Rockaway Theatre Company in the name of the person you are gifting.

If you still need a gift idea, just browse the tabbed list of my Rockaway advertising customers in this blog.  Most are happy to accommodate you with a gift certificate for a loved one.    

Staff at the Irish Circle Greet Santa and his elf!

This past weekend, there seemed to be private parties and charitable events everywhere—at Bayview Restaurant in Broad Channel, BayHouse in Breezy Point, the Knights of Columbus hall, and at the Irish Circle, as well.  On Saturday, the Irish Circle sponsored a “Toys for Tots” lunch with Santa.  Everyone had a great time, and their Santa was the best!  He really looked the part.

Jake, Catherine & “Auntie” Deb

 

The Rockaway Jetty charitable group had a very well-attended party at the K of C on Saturday, complete with popcorn and cotton candy machines, food catered by Russo’s on the Bay, a multi-media DJ, and gifts for the children of families who had been selected from the community.  Big smiles were everywhere!  Congratulations to the Jetty and the Circle for hosting these great Christmas celebrations.

Rockaway Jetty Volunteers

First Congregational Church sponsored a children’s multicultural winter music festival on Sunday afternoon, Dec. 18.  It was a great success–there was a diverse group of entertainers, from a Chinese fan dancer to a drumming/dance trio from the Ivory Coast, plus the

Swedish Folk Song

children sang Christmas songs in Spanish and English. 

The chapel was rocking when volunteers from the audience joined the African drummer and dancer for a little aerobic workout on the dance floor! 

W. African Drummer Justin Kafando and his daughter in traditional costume

If you get regular e-mail blasts from the 100 Precinct Community Council, you have probably heard that Jate Doremus, a long-time Rockaway civic activist, died on Friday.  A service was held at O’Connor Funeral Home at 10:00 a.m. on Monday, December 20. My condolences to Sandee and the Doremus family.  I have great memories of sitting with Jate, Sandee and Doug Macleod last year, watching the Queens County St. Patrick’s Day Parade from a vantage point at Beach 100 and RBB.  Jate cared deeply for this community and will be missed.         

I’m passing along the link to the “Best and Worst of Queens” poll.  The only Rockaway nomination this year is Rockaway Artists’ Alliance, for best arts, entertainment and culture organization.   We didn’t need an About.com poll to tell us that RAA is really something special!  Saffron Restaurant in Howard Beach was nominated for best restaurant, as well.  Here’s the link so you can vote, if you are so inclined.  Deadline by which to vote is Wed. Dec. 22.  http://queens.about.com/od/Best-and-Worst/tp/Best-Of-Queens-2010.htm  Good luck to RAA and Saffron!

I hope to post again before the week is out.  If that doesn’t happen, don’t say I didn’t wish you a “Merry Christmas!”

Posted in Business and Economics, Philosophy, Religion and Philanthropy, The Arts and Entertainment | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Election Day Jitters for RAA Board Candidates

Monthly Meeting of RAA Members--Circa 2008

They are not running for President of the United States, but being a board member of the Rockaway Artists Alliance is a pretty prestigious slot.  Over the past few weeks, the politicking within the arts community on the Rock has intensified–it’s starting to look a bit like the glitzy promotional campaigns leading up to the annual vote on the Academy Awards.  For your consideration…

For Your Consideration--A Candidate Campaign Appeal

On Monday evening, December 13, at the annual members’ meeting and holiday party of the RAA, new board members and officers will be elected, and it’s a hotly contested race this time around.  In my view, a hallmark of a dynamic group is the willingness of volunteers to battle each other for leadership roles without salaries.  All of the candidates have prepared written summaries of their credentials that have been e-mailed to RAA members.  One candidate, Jan Nebozenko, demonstrated his artistic flair with a glossy, four-color campaign card that states his vision for RAA’s future.  Long-time RAA member Joan Boudreault distributed a flyer endorsing Nebozenko and four other candidates, including the critically acclaimed watercolorist/print-maker–Christian Le Gars; long-time board members Janet Dever and Martha Elliott Killian; and newcomer Gary Russo.   There are other  accomplished artists and long-time, dedicated RAA members running, as well.

It’s interesting to see the varied personalities, skills and perspectives the candidates bring to the group.  An old Chinese proberb applies to deciding who should sit on the Board of RAA–a good leader knows the way, shows the way, and goes the way.   Groups are always better off, in my view, when they choose board members who have a nice blend of vision and practical experience.

If you are an RAA member, be sure to vote–there’s even an absentee balloting procedure.  Gotta’ love the RAA!

"Seaside" Belts Out a Doo Wop Standard

Speaking of long-time RAA board members, another candidate is James McKay, former singer with the Rock N’ Roll Hall of Famers, the Flamingos.  McKay is still out there on stage.  He and his talented singing group “Seaside” came to RAA for a free concert Saturday afternoon, performing outstanding cover versions of many 50’s and 60’s doo wop classics, such as–you guessed it–“Under the Boardwalk.”  The audience was small, but enthusiastic.  You can sample the group’s sound (or purchase a recording) at the website www.cdbaby.com. The singers and instrumentalists in the ensemble, in addition to McKay, include John Jones, Adele Lee, Melvin Shepherd, the Arthur Sterling Trio, and Bobby Martone.

2011 Officers and Directors of MyRockPark

The election for officers/board members of My Rock Park (formerly Rock. Pk. Homeowners & Residents) was a snooze, compared to the pulse-raiser at RAA. On December 2, the uncontested slate of candidates was presented and the secretary cast one vote to make it official.  Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer then delivered the oath of office to the group’s new leaders. 

I have been impressed by the work and enthusiasm of the current leaders of My Rock Park, and decided to re-join the board (after serving previously, during the fabulous “Eddie Re years” in 2002-3).  Also elected:  incumbent Kristin McMorrow, plus new directors John McCann, Brian Becker, Harold Paez, Jr., and the group’s new officers–President Noreen Ellis, Vice President Rick Horan, Treasurer Maureen Walsh, and Secretary Pete Stubben.   

Left to right: Jackie Graham Mills; Madhu Powar-Garg; Loretta Lynch; Rock Viv

With all these elections afoot, I envy a good friend and former colleague of mine in the law biz, the incomparably classy Loretta Lynch, who doesn’t have to worry about running for office–just being confirmed by the Senate every 4 years.  Loretta was sworn in as the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York at a ceremony on Monday, December 6 at Brooklyn Law School.  Attorney General Eric Holder was an honored guest at the event.  It was a sea of gray and navy suits, as you can imagine.  I decided to add some color by wearing forest green, and Loretta also stood out from the crowd in a cream-colored, two-piece suit-dress.  It was a really joyous occasion, with Loretta’s whole family up from North Carolina to cheer her success!

The Atmosphere is Always Festive for the Fresh Ham Dinner!

About 100 neighbors enjoyed the fresh ham dinner and Christmas Bazaar at First Congregational Church on Saturday.  A new volunteer chef, Eric Smith, stepped up this year and worked all day in the kitchen to deliver on the promise that this year’s meat would be the most tender and delicious we’ve ever tasted.  It was. 

Four hard-working “church ladies” have been helping to anchor this event for decades–Roberta McHugh (fresh-baked cookie and cake purveyor); Pat Warren (handmade soaps and lotions); Lillian Stuart (hand-crafted Christmas ornaments); and Peggy Koli, who sells scrumptious fresh-baked breads, home-made jams and other canned goods, much of which is produced from the bounty grown in her Rockaway Beach garden each summer.  Blackberry jelly and green beans marinated in fresh dill are some of her specialties.  

Community Board 14 meets this Tuesday, Dec. 14 at 7:30 p.m. at the Knights of Columbus, 333 Beach 90 Street.  On Wednesday, Dec. 15, the 100 Precinct Community Council gets together, also at the K of C at 7:30 p.m., and that could be an interesting one, with the extremely rare charges of police brutality against two 100 Precinct officers being alleged by the now infamous “Rockaway Beach Dog Walker.”  I don’t know what the facts will show in that case, and it’s regrettable that the situation obviously got out of hand, in terms of the degree of force used.  But I believe that we, as a community, need to help the police come up with some strategies to address the rampant disregard of the pooper-scooper law on this peninsula.  Signage obviously does not help, although we could take a lesson from our friends across the pond in the UK on how to put out an effective message.  Take a look at this: 

Another worthwhile suggestion is to install bag dispensers in various locations along the boardwalk.   An effective deterrent (but one that might not withstand legal scrutiny) would be to confiscate the violators’ pets and put them up for adoption–now that would get these inconsiderate louts where they live!

I have another solution–the cops could deputize a squad of early-morning joggers and walkers with armband cameras.  I exercise several times a week during the early morning hours, and regularly observe not very neighborly “neighbors” letting their dogs urinate and defecate all over the verdant grasses of Rockaway Beach, Rockaway Park and even–gasp–Belle Harbor.   It doesn’t matter whether it’s a tree lawn, a front lawn, a church lawn, a school yard, or the Veterans’ Memorial Circle.  I always pause to verbally object and confront such cads, and it’s always the same response, in so many words–my dog’s comfort is important–in fact, it matters more than your silly grass, so just go away.

OK, I’ll go away, as soon as you smile…You’re on candid camera!

Posted in Local Government-Rockaway Peninsula & Broad Channel, The Arts and Entertainment | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Round One–NYC Waterfront Advocates Dispute Rockaway’s Claim to “Sixth Borough” Title

Abbraciamento's On the Pier--One of Gateway's Tarnished Jewels on the Canarsie Waterfront--Summer 2010

I did not attend the waterfront conference in Manhattan yesterday, sponsored by Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance.  For those of us in the contingent work force, that would be rough.  What I earn each week on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday pays the rent.  However, the post-event reports about the conference lead me to believe that Rockaway may have lost out in the prestigious race for the esteemed title of “Sixth Borough” of New York City, unless we move quickly for trademark or copyright protection.  As one of several contestants who claim a passing expertise in Rockaway history, I shall elaborate. 

 
The earliest coining of the term locally appears to have come from the arts community–a 2001 Jamaica Bay Softball tournament in Broad Channel featured a live band called “Sixth Borough” and a rapper wrote a song called “Far Rockaway-Sixth Borough” in 2002. There were several repetitions in letters to the editor of The Wave in the past decade, including a columnist who used it twice in late September 2010.
 
This summer, I was reading a blogger named “Tugster” who used the term to refer to the waterfront, but I was very skeptical, because such a usage lumps together the down-at-the-heels areas of Gowanus Canal and Newport Creek with the Chelsea Piers and Brooklyn Bridge Park (neither of which can be called neglected, for sure).  Also, is the “High Line” considered on the waterfront?  Can’t call that neglected!  I knew Rockaway had a better claim of being even more uniformly ignored by the city than the “waterfront,” so I mentioned it in my September 5, 2010 blog entry “You Can’t Fight City Hall… if You Can’t Get to City Hall.”  The neglect of Rockaway’s waterfront (and every other aspect of our life here) by the city, coupled with the long-documented, fabled “dumping ground” status we enjoy, leads me to conclude that neglect is not the right term at all–“scourged” by the city is more like it.  
 
I’ve been so intrigued by the term “Sixth Borough” that I did the research and found what I believe to be the definitive blog summary, researched by a guy named “Barry Popik,” with links to news stories dating back to 1911.  It’s even better than Wikipedia.  Now there’s a back-handed compliment!    Link is here:
 
The five boroughs were formed in the late 1890’s.  A decade or two later, there were moves to annex Yonkers (1911), and Southern Westchester (1927), but both “Sixth Borough” references were to be taken literally, as there were contemporaneous efforts ongoing to form an actual legal borough entity.
 
The first figurative usage, according to Popik’s research, was in 1954, during the heyday of immigration into NYC from the “Sixth Borough” of Puerto Rico.  Hey, P.R. has a pretty good claim to the title!  You can get there by airplane in almost the time it takes to get to Manhattan via the A-train from Rockaway.  And just to digress for a moment, did you know that in an early version of West Side Story from 1949, Maria was Jewish, not Puerto Rican? So Puerto Rican immigration was clearly a powerful cultural and political force in NYC in the 1950’s. 
 
Other places have been called the “Sixth Borough,” though it appears that such coinings have never been used by the actual native indigenous peoples of these areas, but merely as a marketing ploy by NYC expats seeking to distinguish their new “residential colonies” in these “outposts.” If proximity to egg creams, bagels, and other accoutrements of authentic Jewish culture are a requirement, present-day Rockaway loses and better claims can probably be made by Miami, Scarsdale and Israel.  If the requirement is close proximity via transit, as the folks from Jersey always argue, they certainly win out, although Riker’s would win if you count school buses with bars on the windows as transit.  Rockaway is far behind almost every other contestant (except Israel, for sure, and Miami-maybe).  Suffice it to say that I was surprised Popik’s research never turned up a reference to “Sixth Borough” vis a vis Cary County, N.C., in the Research Triangle!  I’m sure it’s out there–you just have to dig harder…  Here is a summary of Popik’s gathered list of references:
 
1962-Rockland County
1973-Miami
1975-Jersey City (I lived there briefly in 1979, but bolted after 28 days–believe me, it wasn’t the “sixth borough” back then, for sure, if we use the “desirable expat residential colony” formula!)
1976-Fort Lee
1978-Israel
1987-Nassau County
1991-Scarsdale
2002-Far Rockaway [not on Popik’s list; I’ve added it here to document the earliest usage I could find in The Wave]
2004-Riker’s Island
2005-Philadelphia (another good claim to the title–you can get there by Acela faster than you can get to Rockaway on the A-train, as well!)
 
One thing that distinguishes the claim of Rockaway, among this list of places, is that it’s the only discrete neighborhood already located within the five boroughs. The “waterfront” is spread across many boroughs, and Riker’s Island technically is not open to the general public, so it doesn’t count.
 
Here’s my suggestion for how the title of “sixth borough” should be awarded to any one of these places:  Never has NYC taken so much, and given so little, to a place it calls its own.
 
Rockaway wins the title of Sixth Borough, hands down, with “The Waterfront” a close second. 
 
Posted in Business and Economics, New York City Government, Water and waterways | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Mailboxes are not Bulletin Boards. Street Trees Belong to Us All. Norman Rockwell’s Paintings Do Not.

Canopy of Trees on 400 Block of Beach 128 Street, Rockaway Park, NY

Home values are affected by many factors.  Exclusive zoning is critical, and a tidy-looking, tree-shaded street scene contributes value to all the homes located on a particular block.

When I was looking for a new apartment six months ago, the outdoor surroundings at each location seemed almost as important to me as the interior features of the apartment itself. I chose a relatively quiet block with a lush, arching canopy of maple, pear and plane trees.

I have noticed the disappearance of at least three street trees on my block since I moved in six months ago; when I asked around, someone told me that at least one was removed by the private homeowner by choice.  As the city’s Million Trees Project continues to plant thousands of new trees, everyone needs to be reminded that the trees we already have are precious, as well.  Homeowners are encouraged to water and fertilize the street trees in front of their homes properly, like good stewards, but must contact the city if a tree falls, becomes diseased or loses a limb.  Street trees are not private property.  These living organisms, and the patch of grass or dirt they inhabit, belong to the city.

Street trees are not the only public property in a residential neighborhood. Mailboxes belong to the taxpayers, as well.  Federal postal regulations govern them.  Those olive green metal “traffic control boxes” installed at eye level on the poles holding up traffic signals belong to the City Department of Transportation.  The red fire boxes are public property, as well.  Several weeks ago, writing on this blog, I mentioned the deplorable condition of some of the U.S. Postal mailboxes in the western end of the peninsula, particularly the one in the heavily visited location in front of PS 114 in Belle Harbor.  Periodically, it seems to become a target for graffiti “artists.” Fortunately, it was beautified in the past several weeks, so it doesn’t look like this anymore:

Mailbox in front of PS 114Q--October 2010

Shortly before the election, I noticed that political campaign stickers had been placed on mailboxes.   Flyers for several businesses started appearing on the makeshift “bulletin boards” as well.  Residents have always posted flyers for yard sales and missing pets on utility poles, and they are usually good at removing them after the events are over.   If they are left to hang, it looks very messy, and such postings technically violate city sanitation rules or federal regulations (in the case of mailboxes).

We’ve got another type of outlaw posting here on the peninsula of late.  Perhaps you’ve seen the nice surf photos that have been glued onto the ugly plywood construction fences in the area by a local artist known only as “Reid.”  There’s even one on a fence near a home on Rockaway Beach Boulevard in the 130’s, and–of all places–on the plywood barricade at The Wave.  With all due respect, your photos are nice, Reid, but be careful out there; The Wave owns that space and newspapers are in the business of selling space.  That’s how I pay my rent.  It may start with an “R,” but this is Rockaway, not Red Hook.  Why not ask for permission first?

Of course, it’s also a violation of federal copyright law to sell bootleg DVDs.  I don’t see any attempts to enforce those laws locally, either, although there is a rather notorious group of “vendors” who regularly frequent MTA subway cars and businesses near Beach 116 Street selling what does not legally belong to them.  Surprisingly, they find plenty of people willing to buy.

And let’s face it, you don’t have to look for folks freshly arrived on a boat from Asia who don’t speak a word of English to see blatant disregard for intellectual property rights.  Even the local newspapers in Brooklyn and Queens, who should definitely know better, often get into the act.  If a local paper runs a color ad that is enlivened by images of the “Sesame Street” gang or Sanrio’s ubiquitous “Hello Kitty,” take it from me, they probably have no license to do so.   And unless I’m missing something, Norman Rockwell’s famous series of paintings that appeared on the covers of The Saturday Evening Post over four decades (from the 1930’s through the 1960’s) are still protected by copyright.  Yet there it is on the cover of this week’s Rockaway Point News–Rockwell’s “Freedom From Want” (the famous Thanksgiving Dinner illustration).  They probably got a bargain-basement license, I’m sure.  You know how flexible those starving artists like Norman can be, when they want to get their art out there…

Back to mailboxes.  A request to all our neighbors–please don’t post flyers on them.

Mailbox on Newport Avenue in Rockaway Park--Need a Mover?

There are several bulletin boards in local banks and stores, and many businesses will consider posting a flyer in their store window for a regular customer who is publicizing a not-for-profit event or trying to get a small business off the ground.  The sanitation department periodically issues tickets, and in mainland Queens, even local charitable groups have been charged with littering for posting flyers on signposts and telephone poles.

In my view, the homeowners’ groups should be contacting the postal service to bring pressure for regular maintenance of local mailboxes that have become eyesores.  Since the postal service

Mailbox on Newport Avenue in Rockaway Park–Need a Tutor?

 rarely steps up to this task, which is surprising considering that the boxes are an anachronism and provide a limited service to a shrinking population of users, it falls to the homeowners’ groups to recruit volunteers to carry out the job of painting over the graffiti, promptly.  Experience proves that when graffiti remains, it generally leads to more vandalism.  Let’s nip this problem in the bud.

My interest in the local mailboxes dates back to 2002, when I first noticed an olive green metal structure on Newport Avenue near PS 114Q called a “relay box.”   These were not receptacles for deposit of envelopes to be mailed, but had been used by the Postal Service to drop off bags of mail for carriers along each route.  There used to be a mail relay box on Newport Avenue near Beach 136 Street, and it was tagged with white spray paint from the time I moved to Belle Harbor.  Upon investigation, it turned out that the relay boxes were not even being used anymore, as most mail carriers had been issued vehicles for making mail deliveries.  The Postal Service quickly removed the eyesore; an interesting enough story to attract the attention of The N.Y. Daily News.  Here’s the link to their article:   http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/ny_local/2002/07/31/2002-07-31_new_address_for_eyesore_mail.html

We then moved on to look at the blue mailboxes. This was back in the “good old days”

Belle Harbor Adopt-a-Mailbox Volunteers-2002

when my children were younger, way shorter, and didn’t mind wearing hand-me-down sweat pants to school every day.  They and their friends were also malleable enough to be intrigued by the idea of carrying out a voluntary service in the community by beautifying this public property with a fresh coat of paint to cover the graffiti. To do the task correctly, we had to acquire cans of government-issued U.S. Postal Service blue enamel.  It took rather a long time to get the paint, if I recall correctly.  Congressman Weiner had to intercede for us.

Weiner's With the Cleaners!

Talking About How We Can Stop Graffiti

We’d better get started planning for a spring spruce-up of the mailboxes in the area.  There’s a different postmaster now.  You know these bureaucrats. We’ll probably have to start from scratch.

Posted in Business and Economics, Creatures of the Planet (Non-Human), Meet Your Fellow Man, New York City Government, The Land We Share, The World of Human Beings, U.S. Government | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Oy Vey, Jamaica Bay!

Hunter's Moon Sets Over Marine Parkway Bridge, Sat. 10/23/10, 7:28 a.m.--Copyright 2010 Vivian R. Carter

Nothing like a Hunter’s Moon setting over Jamaica Bay.  Except, perhaps, that same moon setting over the marsh islands of Jamaica Bay, restored to some semblance of their natural, 18th-century beauty. 

Marsh grass at Bayswater Point State Park-Copyright 2009 - Vivian R. Carter

Verdant with native Spartina grasses, not choked with reedy phragmites (the bellwether of distressed marshes), or buried under a flood of nitrogen-rich wastewater.  Well, that’s the dream of some local environmentalists.  Occasionally, the “powers that be” cooperate to try and achieve this dream.    

On Friday, October 22, Colonel John R.Boulé II, Commander of the New York District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 

Col. Boule welcomes visitors to the MV Hayward as the boat pushes off from the pier at the Battery.

hosted a Jamaica Bay Restoration Inspection Tour aboard the MV Hayward, for representatives of community organizations from New York and New Jersey. 

Group Pauses for a Photo. Courtesy U.S. Coast Guard

Roland Lewis of Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance (left) is greeted by Col. John R. Boulé II, Commander of the N.Y. Dist. of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, as Len Houston of the Corps stands by (right).

Rockaway was represented by two local activists:  RockViv, a/k/a Vivian Rattay Carter (publicity chair of Sebago Canoe Club of Canarsie and grant-writer for Rockaway’s Gateway Bike & Boathouse),    

Dan Mundy thanks Col. Boule by presenting him with a Jamaica Bay Ecowatchers cap.

and Dan Mundy (head of Community Board 14’s Environmental/ Parks/ Uniformed Services and Public Safety Committee, and founder of Jamaica Bay Ecowatchers of Broad Channel .  

We boarded the ship at the Battery in New York City and cruised through New York Harbor.  Past Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty. 

Ellis Island--Copyright 2010 Vivian R. Carter

Verrazano Bridge--Copyright 2010 Vivian R. Carter

Under the Verrazano Bridge. 

Structure that discharges overflowing wastewater from Coney Island treatment plant into the Bay.

Past Coney Island.  Around the tip of Breezy Point.  

On into Jamaica Bay.

Gil Hodges-Marine Parkway Bridge-Copyright 2010 Vivian R. Carter

Once we had arrived in the bay, Len Houston, Environmental Branch Chief of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, presented an overview of the agency’s ongoing efforts at several locations visible from the vessel, including Plumb Beach near Sheepshead Bay, Dead Horse Bay (at the foot of Flatbush Avenue near Floyd Bennett Field), Paerdegat Basin in Canarsie, and the Pennsylvania/Fountain Avenues landfill near Starrett City.

Methane discharge tower at Penn-Fountain Avenues Landfill is visible as MV Hayward pauses at Elders East and West.

The featured topic for the voyage was the marsh grass restoration projects at Elders Islands East and West (the islands visible toward the west when crossing the Addabbo Bridge into Howard Beach).

Aerial photo of Elders East and West Undergoing Restoration. Courtesy U.S. Coast Guard

Oyster beds were also discussed and pointed out by representatives of the New York/New Jersey Baykeeper organization,

Oyster beds are being installed along the shore of Governor's Island.

as the boat passed Governor’s Island on its return into New York Harbor. 

For those interested in the history of Jamaica Bay, Daniel M. Hendrick of the Queens Chronicle edited a fascinating “Images of America” title for Arcadia Books, called “Jamaica Bay,” published in 2006. There are lots of great images from the Queens Public Library’s collection, plus many captured by Jamaica Bay Guardian Don Riepe.  Also, don’t miss page 110 of the book, which shows me and my daughter viewing the “Last Flight of the Concorde” in 2003.  You can purchase a copy at the Gateway National Recreation Area bookstores at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge in Broad Channel or at Floyd Bennett Field on Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn.  Gateway doesn’t operate a bookstore at Ft. Tilden, so you probably have to leave the Rockaway Peninsula to get it!

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Red Hook to GWB or Bust! Hudson River Sloop Clearwater’s 2010 Pumpkin Sail

Sailing Past the Battery on the Clearwater

The group’s tagline is: “Creating the Next Generation of Environmental Leaders.”   You can say that again!

Since its maiden voyage in 1969, the 106-foot long Hudson River Sloop Clearwater has welcomed aboard more than half a million young people and hundreds of thousands of adults for its signature environmental education program—“The Classroom of the Waves.”  An astonishing total of over 15,000 students and more than 200 teachers, are trained each year by Clearwater’s staff and volunteer educators.

Clearwater's Dock at the Red Hook Fairway Supermarket

The ship, a replica of the classic 18th and 19th century sloops that once plied the Hudson River regularly, is the grandly realized vision of folk singer Pete Seeger.  In 1966, the Hudson had become a dumping ground for industrial and human waste, and Seeger thought that building a glorious sloop as an educational vessel might be a way to dramatize the plight of the river.  Thousands of grass-roots volunteers attended Hudson River folk picnics during the 1960’s to help raise money to build the boat, which was finally launched in 1969. Thousands more are required each year to help keep the Clearwater in good condition.  The sloop, named to the National Register of Historic Places in 2004, continues to sail regularly each year, through the last week in October.  Public sails are available at Clearwater’s Great Hudson River Revival, the premier folk music/environmental festival in the U.S., held each year at Croton Point Park on Father’s Day weekend.  The festival is also going strong for over 40 years!   

After years of anticipation, I managed to land a choice volunteer slot in June 2010 at the festival’s Working Waterfront area, with my friends from the Sebago Canoe Club. While at the event, I joined Clearwater, filling out an application and selecting several weeks when I’d be able to come aboard as a volunteer.   The last week in October looked good—so I ended up on the sloop’s final education voyage of 2010—the Pumpkin Sail.

We launched from the Fairway Supermarket dock in Red Hook, Brooklyn on Monday, October 25, and bid adieu to the last student sailors for the year—a troop of intrepid fourth-grade Girl Scouts from Manhattan’s Spence School—at the 79th Street Boat Basin in New York City, six days later on Sunday, October 31.

We had a week of spectacular weather for sailing, and the ship’s crew and volunteers (about 15 of us) welcomed about 400 visitors aboard for a total of eight educational sails.  We also accommodated various Clearwater administrators, supporters and education program funders, plus a sizeable production crew, with equipment, from The Discovery Channel 3D Network.  The camera crew filmed “The Classroom of the Waves” on three days of our voyage.  The program is slated for broadcast next year.

The vision of Seeger, who is now 91 years old, is being realized.  The Hudson River is much cleaner today than it was in 1968.  The Clean Water Act now protects waterways throughout the U.S., although some would argue that enforcement needs to be strengthened.  If you are a doubter on that point, just check out how the toilet and waste water are disposed of at the 79th Street Boat Basin.  It’s an eye-opener, and nose-opener, as well! 

Seeger’s legacy will live on in this program, even after the ship reaches the end of its useful life.  Many who step aboard will become the next generation of environmental leaders; ALL who visit experience a taste of the river that you cannot get onshore.    

Volunteers on the Voyage (L to R): Rock Viv, Peter, Kristie, Clea and Sabeena

I wistfully departed on Sunday afternoon, savoring memories of the adventure as I headed up to the subway, toting an overloaded duffle bag stuffed with a week’s worth of well-worn work clothes, boots moist with Hudson River water, and my sleeping bag and pillow, still redolent of nights adrift, like plankton, in a bunk on the brackish estuary.       

Clearwater's Shrouds Frame "Sailor's Delight" Sunset

Those of you visiting from the blogosphere can now climb aboard The Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, view scenes of life on the ship and experience snippets of “The Classroom of the Waves.”  You might want to learn more about Seeger and the legendary Clearwater organization at www.clearwater.org.  Then consider volunteering or buying a weekend ticket for the festival, at Croton Point Park on Father’s Day weekend, 2011, to help Clearwater continue to “deliver for the river!”

Volunteers Meet the Crew--Sunday, October 24, 2010

Volunteer Gear in Bunk Area

 

Waiting for Evening Grub in the Main Cabin

First Meal at Red Hook is al fresco

Land Transit for the Crew is Aboard, as Well!

Use Shore Heads When Possible

Call-A-Head's Got Nothing on These Guys--Sustainable, Yet Elegant!

The Alternative to Shore Heads--A Composting Toilet on Board!

Just in Case–PFD Supply On Deck

Tiller and Mainsail Are Ready--Pointed North at Red Hook

Driveshaft and Engine Are Ready If There's No Wind

Crew for the Voyage

Poster on the Pantry Closet Says it All!

Morning Chores--Swab Those Decks!

Morning Chores-Aubrey Pumps the Bilge, Europa Fills the Brine Barrel

Ship's Mate Bard Readies the Mainsail

Raising Sail to Depart Red Hook--Monday, October 25, 2010

Sloop's Stern Area

Secure at the Dock Next to Yacht Summerwind–79th Street Boat Basin

Although it Looks Like a Close Call at the George Washington Bridge...

 

Sloop's 108-foot Mast Easily Clears the Deck of the Bridge!

Clearwater Educator Maija With GWB in View

Clearwater Educators Nina and Maija

Navigation Lesson

Trawling for Hudson River Life

Physics Lesson--Mechanical Advantage of Using Lever to Pump Bilge

Physics Lesson--Mechanical Advantage of Pulleys in Tug-of-War

Classroom of the Waves Has Decks for Chalkboards--Plankton Lesson

Aubrey Climbs Mainsail II

Aubrey Climbs Mainsail

Gathering for Souvenir Drop of Hudson Water at Departure

Posted in Creatures of the Planet (Non-Human), Meet Your Fellow Man, Planet Earth, The Arts and Entertainment, The World of Human Beings, Water and waterways | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments

Is There a Democrat in the House? And Could Somebody Get Me a Pair of Scissors?

How appropriate–Weiner’s standing on the far left, Turner’s on the far right!

It got downright unruly over there at the Bungalow Bar on Thursday, October 21.  The candidates for U.S. Congress, Weiner and Turner, were invited to speak at a lunch forum sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce.  Since there was a charge for the lunch, and conventional wisdom says Republicans are generally better off financially, the place was packed with “elephants.” 

Looks like a Republican crowd to me!

The very first question put to the candidates tackled the health care debate.   After each had stated pros and cons on the issue, it was Weiner’s turn for rebuttal.  When thunderous applause greeted his attempt at ironically suggesting that “well, maybe you WANT to get rid of the President’s health care plan,” Weiner probably knew this was not his crowd.  Even if his sign-wavers on the sidewalk outnumbered Turner’s by 3 to 1!

Bungalow Bar, Rockaway Beach, October 21, 2010

And while the Republicans packed it in at the Bungalow Bar, the mood was more bi-partisan and wholesome at the mid-day ribbon cutting for the new Seaside Library renovations.  It’s so touching to see and hear adorable schoolchildren spouting poems about the joys of reading!  During the “small talk” in advance of the photo op, I said that I thought some of the civic groups in Rockaway needed to be more democratic.  Ulrich, who I find to be pleasantly partisan in a droll way, couldn’t resist adding: “with a lower case ‘d’, if you don’t mind!”

One--two--three--snip! The new Seaside Library is Unveiled

 

Later in the day, it was time for another largely partisan celebration—this time for the Democrats–at another ribbon-cutting, for the new Arverne-by-the-Sea grocery store, Super Stop & Shop.  Jon Gaska was quoted on Tuesday in the New York Daily News, noting that our neighborhood is unique in its ability to get excited about a simple new amenity like a grocery store.  It’s sad in a way…

Dignitaries Cut the Stop & Shop Ribbon

I’m attaching a gallery of photos from the ribbon-cutting.  For those who hadn’t planned on visiting the new store anytime soon, it’s sort of a virtual tour.  Not just of the store, but of everybody who’s a civic “anybody” these days in Rockaway.  Enjoy!

Finally, here’s a follow-up on blog entries posted over the past six weeks on “Oy Vey Rockaway.”  The battle over the proposed high-rise tower at Beach 93 and Shorefront Parkway (see “Holland Seaside Civic Chalks One Up for Light and Air”) has ended.  But it didn’t end well.  The NYC Board of Standards and Appeals granted the developer’s right to build all six stories of condos.  Disappointing news for the homeowners on the block.    

Release the pigeons!!!  Community Board 14 has a shiny new website.  Just go to www.queenscb14.org.  The site lists the names of all the members, and a directory of the committees.  Let’s give credit where credit is deserved, even if the website was long overdue.  Now we need to get the minutes of the meetings posted, and it becomes a truly meaningful effort.    

The City Council Members’ Rockaway Task Force held another public “listening session” on Wednesday, October 20.  Attendance at the first meeting was about 60; it dropped to about 40 for the second meeting; The Task Force members are earnest and well-meaning, but the panel has two problems.  Although there have only been two meetings, an east end member of the panel was absent each time.  Also, the Task Force seems to be suffering from the same Rockaway disease that afflicts CB 14—possibly as insidious as diabetes or asthma—and that is lack of communication of its message. The meetings only seem to be drawing the most dedicated and concerned of civic activists.  OK, so the Task Force meeting was competing against a Yankee playoff game… My column, Rock Solid, which appears in The Wave today, suggests some solutions for these problems.  I hope you will get a chance to read it.

The Task Force provided a written agenda at the meeting, a copy of which is attached. TaskForceAgendaOct20 The agenda summarizes the suggestions from the first Task Force meeting.  The group’s email address to which you can send comments is Rockawaytaskforce@gmail.com

As a special feature for those of you who love box scores, I am attaching the OFFICIAL Greater Rockaway Quality of Life Scorecard, a grid listing two dozen items I call Greater Rockaway Improvements, Projects & Events (“GRIPES”).  There is space on this grid to estimate the chances of finding a solution on each GRIPE, and to chart the various agencies and organizations that could help, or hinder the effort to find solutions. As a special bonus, there is a blank grid that allows you to compile your own list of GRIPES.  Although I don’t have the room to summarize all that was said at the second Task Force meeting, be assured that virtually every single item that came up for discussion is listed on my Scorecard.  Be forewarned, this is targeted at total civic improvement geeks, like me and some of the other folks from My Rock Park.  Score away, Joe Hartigan! Scorecard

This is my last blog entry until November rolls around.  I will be on the water for nine of the next ten days—on a JBay inspection tour with the Coast Guard, then sailing as an education program volunteer on Pete Seeger’s famed Hudson River Sloop Clearwater.  I promise to return on November 1 with great photos and stories from my travels.

Posted in Local Government-Rockaway Peninsula & Broad Channel, New York City Government, New York State Government, U.S. Government | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Weiner’s a Winner–of My Rock Park’s 50-25-25!

It’s our favorite game on the Rock.  Not rugby or soccer or hoops.  In Rockaway, it’s the fifty-fifty.  Get out your $5 bills.  No civic meeting, concert or sporting event is complete unless everyone’s toting around those big strips of tix.

The place was the Belle Harbor Yacht Club, on the evening of Thursday, October 14.  Although a Nor’easter was blowing outside, the meeting room was almost filled, thanks to the organizers from My Rock Park’s board of directors.  They managed to get the major party candidates for New York State Assembly and the U.S. Congress in front of the crowd for more than an hour. 

Crowd listens to candidates

Questions were earnestly asked, and the candidates gave pat and very predictable answers.  You come to Rockaway wearing blue, you pander to municipal workers.  If you’re a candidate wearing red, it’s all about helping small businesses.  That was easy.  Nobody has to tax their brains too much.  Blah, blah, blah.  Then, everyone applauds, and its on to the fifty-fifty drawing.

Weiner Nails the Winning Ticket

Maybe it was a metaphor for our political future:  more people win, but you get less.  Since volunteers had sold tickets for the fifty-fifty from two rolls with identical numbers, the unheard-of occurred–there were two winners!  Guess who was holding one of those tickets?  Our energetic young Democratic Congressman, Anthony Weiner! 

As he graciously conceded his portion of the 50-25-25 to his co-winner, Weiner smiled from ear to ear.   I don’t know if he’s superstitious, but it could be a good omen about that election. 

Dr. Harold Paez, center, Republican Assembly Candidate

In his remarks to the crowd, Weiner asserted that money has too great an influence on our democratic processes, but added, rather optimistically, that he doesn’t believe our country is that “broken.” Then he switched to the pessimist mode in talking about Afghanistan, cautioning that “we are not going to be able to stamp out every inequity in the world.”  Given this dichotomy, what’s an idealist to do? 

Bob Turner Speaks, as Anthony Weiner Waits

I believe, based on my life and career experience, that we must begin to forge a consensus on how to promote moral and fiscal accountability throughout the substantially frayed fabric of our society.  Massive structural changes seem to be required to root out badly ingrained, rather greedy and irresponsible habits in the housing, financial, education, medical and legal sectors.  Throw in professional sports, for good measure.  But how to get from here to there?  Legendary American novelist Mark Twain may have given us the answer:  “Habit is habit, and not to be flung out of the window by any man, but coaxed downstairs a step at a time.”

I’m waiting to see if any candidate has a clue on how to start the difficult process of saying NO to a lot of different people–red ones and blue ones.

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