POLICE SEEK 7 BURGLARS WHO HIT COMMERCIAL SITE NEAR BROOKLYN COSTCO
SUNSET PARK — POLICE HAVE RELEASED SURVEILLANCE PHOTOS OF SEVEN BURGLARS who broke into a commercial building in Sunset Park, swiping $8,000 in cash and $2,250 worth of electronic merchandise before fleeing. On Wednesday, Feb. 28, around 8 p.m., the group of young men and women forcibly entered the building, located at 4100 1st Ave. just a couple blocks from Costco on 2nd Avenue. Media released by police shows the individuals traipsing in a carefree manner through the site.
Anyone with information is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or visit the CrimeStoppers website.
✰✰✰
REPORT: WESTERN BK RESIDENTS ‘HAPPIEST’ WITH NEIGHBORHOODS, IN A LESS-HAPPY CITY
WESTERN BROOKLYN — RESIDENTS OF A SWATH OF BROOKLYN FROM DUMBO TO RED HOOK gave their neighborhoods the city’s highest scores, according to research conducted by the Citizens Budget Commission — with 83.4% of CB6 (Cobble Hill, Red Hook, Park Slope) residents rating their neighborhoods excellent or good, followed closely by residents of CB2 neighborhoods (Brooklyn Heights, Downtown, Fort Greene), where 82.2% of residents gave their neighborhood the highest scores. CBC’s 2023 Resident Survey, released March 19, shows sharp drops in overall citywide satisfaction ratings from the pre-pandemic days of 2017, however.
CB6 District Manager Mike Racioppo on Friday noted the importance of the distribution of resources. “Resources such as access to schools, parks, and, most importantly, housing can all be made more accessible with better policy choices,” Racioppo wrote in CB6’s newsletter.
✰✰✰
MAMDANI, VELAZQUEZ: USE CONGESTION PRICING TO FUND MORE FREE BUS ROUTES
WILLIAMSBURG — BACKING A BILL TO EXPAND NYC’S FREE-FARE BUS LINES from 5 to 15, Rep. Nydia Velázquez (Downtown Brooklyn, Long Island City) braved Saturday’s downpour to join Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani (Astoria) on the B60 bus, which runs from Williamsburg to Canarsie. Mamdani introduced the legislation that created the fare-free bus pilot. His “Get Congestion Pricing Right” proposal includes millions to expand the pilot and increase bus frequency and reliability. “These fare-free routes … ensure we deliver on the promise of congestion pricing on the first day of the toll,” Mamdani said in a statement.
Velazquez said the free-fare program “is helping to bring equity to our public transportation system and ensure that New Yorkers can commute to school, work, or wherever they need to travel regardless of their income level.”
✰✰✰
ONE QUEENS-BOUND BQE LANE CLOSED OVERNIGHT UNTIL APRIL 12
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS — THE NYC DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION WILL CONTINUE TO CLOSE one lane of the Queens-bound Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, from Atlantic Avenue to Clark Street, during overnight/early morning hours (midnight to 5 a.m.) until April 12. During the right lane closure, the Atlantic Avenue entrance ramp to the Queens-bound BQE will also be closed. These closures are required for saw cutting and concrete removal of pavement for interim repairs, and are dependent on weather and field conditions, DOT Liaison Anita Navalurkar said via email.
Also, an alert about the upcoming full closure: The Queens-bound BQE will be fully closed from Atlantic Avenue to Sands Street from 2 a.m. Saturday, April 13, until or before 4 a.m. Monday, April 15, Navalurkar adds.
✰✰✰
PURIM JOY: MASBIA HOSTS DINNER FOR NEEDY FAMILIES
BOROUGH PARK — MARILYN F., AGE 9, SPENT PURIM WITH HER FRIENDS ON SUNDAY — volunteering for less fortunate families. The youths, who through school do volunteer work with Masbia of Borough Park on New Utrecht Avenue, assembled care packages that were delivered to families with widowed and divorced mothers. Marilyn’s mother, Sylvia, is a private chef who also teaches Jewish cultural cooking to people of all ages. Meanwhile, Chef Ruben Diaz created a grand Purim feast at the Masbia Soup Kitchen’s dining room, complete with all the traditional Jewish foods and a giant apricot Hamantaschen, for needy families in Brooklyn.
Purim (this year March 23-24) which celebrates the courageous heroism of the Persian king’s Jewish wife, and the survival of the Jewish people as chronicled in the Book of Esther, is the most significant charity-giving day in the Hebrew calendar. Delivering food baskets in one’s community is a time-honored Jewish tradition.
✰✰✰
FERRY SERVICE EXPANDS WITH NEW SPRING SCHEDULE
CITYWIDE — THE NYC FERRY IS OFFERING EXPANDED SERVICE STARTING THIS SATURDAY with its new spring schedule: the South Brooklyn route from Red Hook’s Pier 11 and Brooklyn Bridge Park’s Pier 6 to Governor’s Island on weekdays and weekends is back on the menu just in time for warmer temperatures, while cruise passengers can catch early-morning shuttles between Pier 11 and the Red Hook ferry stop on dates in April and May when ships are docked at the Red Hook Terminal. Additionally, some departure times on the South Brooklyn and Astoria routes have been moved in order to provide more consistent service during peak times, according to NYC Ferry.
The new spring schedules can be viewed online on the ferry service’s website, or through the NYC Ferry app.
✰✰✰
BISHOP BRENNAN USHERS IN HOLY WEEK WITH PALM SUNDAY NEIGHBORHOOD PROCESSION
PROSPECT HEIGHTS — BROOKLYN DIOCESAN BISHOP BRENNAN ON PALM SUNDAY LED MORE THAN 250 PEOPLE IN A PUBLIC WITNESS OF FAITH with their blessed palms down Vanderbilt Avenue to the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph on Pacific Street. After an opening prayer and blessing, Bishop Brennan thanked the NYPD for its logistical and safety measures, and said, “In this procession, we walk with Jesus remembering that Jesus always walks with us. Today we gave public witness to our Catholic faith on the streets of Brooklyn, showing the greatness of God to those who walked, drove, biked, and jogged by us as we walked.” Palm Sunday commemorates the triumphant entrance of Jesus into Jerusalem, as chronicled in all four Gospels.
Following the procession, Bishop Brennan celebrated the Spanish Mass at the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph. The Diocese observes Holy Week with several special Masses and observances including, on March 25, Reconciliation Monday.
✰✰✰
SAM’S CLUB SALAD PRODUCT CLEARED FROM RECALL
NATIONWIDE — A CONSUMER RECALL FOR A SOUTHWEST SALAD KIT SOLD AT SAM’S CLUB locations around the U.S. has ended, according to a local store manager interviewed on Saturday, March 23. Member’s Mark Southwest Salad was recalled as a precaution in early February as part of a widespread recall of similar products and bottled dressing, because the cotija cheese and queso fresco listed as ingredients were determined to be infected with Listeria monocytogenes. While several store brands, including Trader Joe’s, were believed to be part of the infected cheese batch, the Sam’s Club product was not listed in the FDA’s advisory. A store manager told the Brooklyn Eagle on March 23 that the product had been pulled preemptively and was now back in stock.
The Listeria had been traced to cheese products of Rizo-Lopez Foods and had caused illnesses and at least two deaths. The recall is still in effect for some of these products.
✰✰✰
COUNCILMEMBER RESTLER SPONSORS ELECTRONICS RECYCLING DRIVE
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS/DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN —RESIDENTS OF CITY COUNCILMEMBER LINCOLN RESTLER’S DISTRICT WILL HAVE THE CHANCE TO DROP OFF AND RECYCLE their old electronics at an e-Waste Day he is sponsoring at the Borough Hall Greenmarket on Saturday, April 6. No registration is needed, and residents can drop off computers, printers and other peripherals from 9 a.m. to noon that day.
However, the following items will not be accepted: air conditioners, appliances, batteries and lightbulbs.
✰✰✰
ELECTROMAGNETIC STORM DISRUPTS GPS AND SOME POWER GRID SYSTEMS
NEIGHBORHOOD — A SEVERE ELECTROMAGNETIC STORM REPORTEDLY DISRUPTED GPS NAVIGATION AND OTHER COMMUNICATIONS over much of the northern United States, including New York, on Sunday afternoon, March 24, according to an advisory that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration sent yesterday around 5 p.m. The NOAA alert, defining this kind of storm as “a major disturbance of the earth’s magnetic field,” indicated that it could cause “possible widespread voltage control problems and some protective systems may mistakenly trip out key assets from the power grid. Satellite navigation (GPS) could be degraded or inoperable for hours.”
The storm and its disruption to GPS systems were expected to end overnight. As of 10 a.m., on Monday, March 25, 2024, advisories on this issue had been removed from NOAA’s website.
✰✰✰
MTA WILL EXEMPT MUNICIPAL FLEET, SCHOOL AND COMMUTER BUSES FROM CONGESTION PRICING
CITYWIDE — A LARGE PART OF THE CITY’S MUNICIPAL VEHICLE FLEET, SCHOOL BUSES AND SOME COMMERCIAL BUSES WILL BE EXEMPT FROM THE MTA’s CONGESTION PRICING PLAN, the Daily News reported on Monday, March 25. While city-operated vehicles such as fire engines and garbage trucks were already exempt, the policy now expands to include city-owned vehicles conducting government business, and yellow school buses that have contracts with the city’s Department of Education, including those transporting children to some charter and private schools. Likewise, long-distance commuter buses that are publicly accessible and have regular schedules — including the Hampton Jitney — will be exempt whether the city or a private company operates them.
However, the exemptions will not be extended to employee shuttles, buses without regular schedules, or private vehicles belonging to public employees.
✰✰✰
FDA’S VIRTUAL PUBLIC MEETING WILL FOCUS ON NEW WAYS TO ENSURE FOOD SAFETY
NATIONWIDE —THE U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (FDA) INVITES THE PUBLIC TO REGISTER FOR A VIRTUAL PUBLIC MEETING aimed at facilitating data and technology to advance food safety. The daylong virtual meeting, scheduled for Wednesday, April 24, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. is titled “Data and Technology in the New Era of Smarter Food Safety,” covering an eponymous initiative that the FDA launched in 2019. The New Era of Smarter Food Safety Blueprint has four core elements: Tech-enabled Traceability, Smarter Tools and Approaches for Prevention and Outbreak Response, New Business Models and Retail Modernization and Food Safety Culture. The MTA aims to coordinate these elements to create a safer and more digital, traceable food system.
The morning session will consist of FDA presentations on the agency’s current thinking on the potential for new, innovative or different data and technology activities to create a safer food system. Public comments and stakeholder feedback will be heard during the afternoon session.
✰✰✰
BROOKLYN ACTIVIST LEADS ‘SEX STRIKE’ CAMPAIGN TO PROTECT RIGHTS OF ABANDONED WIVES
FLATBUSH AND KIRYAS JOEL/ORANGE COUNTY — AN ORTHODOX JEWISH WOMAN IN BROOKLYN IS LEADING A ‘SEX STRIKE’ TO END THE PRACTICE OF ORTHODOX HUSBANDS REFUSING to grant a divorce (or get) to the wives they have abandoned, reports Gothamist. Men in many cases can and have withheld the religious and ceremonious divorce document, called a get, that a rabbinic court must first approve. Without the document, women are not free to remarry, and many have become destitute as their erstwhile husbands exploit the traditional get to exert power over them, asserts Brooklyn Orthodox activist Adina Sash, who has launched the sex boycott on behalf of Malky Berkowitz, an Orange County woman whose life has been on hold for years. Jewish law mandates that women ritually cleanse themselves at a mikvah, following their menstrual periods, before their husbands can resume intimacy with them. By boycotting the mikvah, women are essentially withholding sex.
Not all Orthodox women support the “Free Malky” campaign. Others complain that the public mikvah boycott threatens to dissolve the sanctity of the Jewish household.
✰✰✰
CHINESE NATIONALS CHARGED WITH LENGTHY HACKING SCHEME THAT TARGETED U.S. GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN — SEVEN NATIONALS FROM THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA WERE CHARGED IN FEDERAL COURT IN BROOKLYN on Monday, March 25, with conspiracy to commit computer intrusions and conspiracy to commit wire fraud. The charges involved the defendants’ involvement in a PRC-based hacking group that spent approximately 14 years targeting U.S. and foreign critics, businesses and political officials in furtherance of PRC’s economic espionage and foreign intelligence objectives. According to court filings, the defendants conducted global campaigns of computer hackers targeting political dissidents located inside and outside of China, government and political officials, candidates and campaign personnel in the United States and elsewhere, and American companies. The defendants and others in the APT31 Group successfully compromised the targets’ networks, email accounts, cloud storage accounts and telephone call records. Some surveillance of compromised email accounts lasted for years.
The targeted U.S. government officials included White House staff and employees of the Departments of Justice, Commerce, Treasury and State, as well as U.S. senators and representatives of both political parties.
✰✰✰
WSJ HOLDS SWIM IN HONOR OF JOURNALIST JAILED IN RUSSIA
BRIGHTON BEACH — REPORTERS FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ON MONDAY gathered on the Brighton Beach boardwalk to hold a swim in support of their colleague Evan Gershkovich, a New Jersey native and Journal reporter, to commemorate the upcoming one-year anniversary of his detention in Russia on espionage charges. The swim, joined by the Coney Island Brighton Beach Open Water Swimmers club, is one of several being held in solidarity around the world, including events in California, the U.K., Australia, South Africa, Canada and New Zealand, in what the Journal says is a nod to Gershkovich’s love for Brighton Beach and England’s Brighton seaside resort.
The U.S. State Department has declared Gershkovich’s detention to be unlawful; the Journal has called repeatedly for his release, and says it is working with the government and his family to press for his return.