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Squadron Hosts Community Meeting at LICH Sunday

State Senator Daniel Squadron will be host for a community meeting to which all residents of Cobble Hill, Carroll Gardens, Boerum Hill, and the Columbia Waterfront are invited this Sunday, November 21, from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m., at the Avram Conference Center, rooms F & G, Long Island College Hospital, 339 Hicks Street. According to Senator Squadron:

In April, more than 350 community members joined me for the Second Annual 25th Senate District Community Convention, where I received valuable input on issues as diverse as school overcrowding, nightlife concerns and pedestrian safety. In this community discussion, I will update folks about progress we have made on topics raised at the convention, as well as take new questions and comments about issues in Albany and in the neighborhood.

Addendum: If you plan to attend, please RSVP to Jordan Levine at 212-298-5565 or jlevine@nysenate.gov.

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State Approval of LICH/SUNY Merger May Come Tomorrow

See BHB for details.

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District 33: Come Meet Your Councilmember!

Councilmember Stephen Levin invites all Wyckoff, Gowanus & Warren residents to a Public Meeting this Wednesday, May 19th, from 6:30-8:00 PM. The meeting will be held at the Wyckoff Community Center at 280 Wyckoff Street.

Councilmember Levin will speak, along with Marguerite Mann, Director of the New York City Housing Authority Brooklyn Office.

If you have any questions or concerns please contact Hope Reichbach or Arisleyda Dilone at 718.875.5200.

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Carroll Gardens native appointed next Fire Commissioner

Chief of Department Salvatore J. Cassano has been named New York City’s 32nd Fire Commissioner. A U.S. Army veteran with combat experience in Vietnam, Cassano lives in Staten Island but was born in Carroll Gardens.

Fire Fighting News: “He has a lifetime of unmatched experience and will be an outstanding commissioner for the FDNY,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg said during a press conference at City Hall.

Chief Cassano added: “My goal as Fire Commissioner is to build upon the successes of the last eight years and to make the Department stronger and better than ever before.”

The Chief has served the FDNY as a firefighter, lieutenant, captain, battalion chief, deputy chief, deputy assistant chief and assistant chief. He has been cited for bravery five times for rescuing victims from burning buildings.

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Brooklyn Bridge Park Town Hall meeting tonight

Senator Squadron will host a meeting tonight to give the community a chance to hear a presentation from the City of New York on Brooklyn Bridge Park. To take part, head to LICH tonight at 7pm, Conference Rooms C & D (corner of Hicks and Atlantic Avenue, enter on Hicks Street).

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No more solid gates for stores

Photos from NYT.

Photos from NYT.

On Monday, City Council voted to ban security gates that completely shield commercial storefront windows and doors from view (as in the left photo above). The only roll-down gates that are permitted are the type that allow passers-by to see inside store windows (as in the right photo above). Luckily, all businesses affected – including banks, barber shops, beauty salons, health clinics, dry cleaners, dental offices and retail stores - have until July 1, 2026, to install security gates that allow at least 70 percent of the area they cover to be visible. Any gates installed after July 1, 2011, must comply with the new requirements. A New York Times reporter decided to see how the storeowners of Carroll Gardens were dealing with the news:

Along Court Street in the Carroll Gardens section of Brooklyn, a gentrifying commercial and residential strip in what remains an Italian stronghold, the gradual ban on solid gates – there are probably tens of thousands of them – was as well-received as a property tax hike. Not a single owner or manager who was interviewed was aware of the Council’s vote.

The head-scratching dismay expressed by Pyung Lim Lee upon learning that City Hall had taken a regulatory interest in the rickety old solid gate outside C.H. Plaza Dry Cleaners, 400 Court Street, Brooklyn, N.Y., 11231, was typical.

“If the government pays, then O.K.,” said Mr. Lee, the owner of the shop, who was not surprised to learn that the government would not, after all, be covering the cost of a new gate. “They make law, law, law, and people’s life is more difficult.”

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Spotted: Sotomayor on Smith Street

Politico reports a Justice Sonia Sotomayor sighting:

A rare benefit of being a Brooklyn based political reporter: Michael Crowley tweets, “It’s not every night you sit down in a Brooklyn restaurant (Po) and notice a Supreme Court justice (Sotomayor) two tables away.”

“She left her purse on a chair; stern-faced security guys came back for it about 30 min[utes] later,” he writes.

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Community Roundtable with Senator Squadron

squadron-hs-040The Cobble Hill Association will kick off its Community Roundtable series on Monday, November 23, with Senator Daniel Squadron. The roundtable will be an informal meeting where you can feel free to discuss any issues or concerns with Senator Squadron. The event will take place at 7:30 pm on Monday at Christ Church (corner of Clinton and Kane Streets), and is free and open to the public.

UPDATE: The roundtable has been postponed until further notice. Please visit the CHA website for updates.

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Denis Hamill Pans LICH/SUNY Deal

Denis Hamill, writing in today’s Daily News, detects something rotten about the proposed takeover of LICH by SUNY Downstate Medical Center:

NY Daily News: A smelly political back room merger of LICH with SUNY Downstate Medical Center is imminent, unless state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo steps in…”In September, the LICH medical staff submitted an alternative restructuring plan to the state Department of Health that we believe would make this private hospital profitable again,” says Dr. John Romanelli, head of the LICH medical staff. “We’ve received no response. Nothing. Instead they seem ready to approve the Downstate takeover, making it a public hospital, without even consulting the medical staff.”

In his column, Hamill alleges that Continuum Health Partners, LICH’s present manager, has “cannibalized LICH for the benefit of the network’s Manhattan mother ship, Beth Israel” and, according to Dr. Romanelli, “they are trying to bury the body with this deal with Downstate.”

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Brad Lander wins City Council seat

Brad Lander (D) received over 60% of votes to earn the District 39 City Council seat. Michael Bloomberg received only 4% more votes than Bill Thompson for his third term as Mayor, and Marty Markowitz received over 80% of votes for Brooklyn Borough President.

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