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Red Hook IKEA gets new ferry line

Since its opening in 2008, the IKEA megastore in Red Hook has provided the Brooklyn community with do-it-yourself furniture and its trademark Sweedish Meatballs. However, the waterfront location has been historically hard to access using public transportation.

The B61 bus route is the only mass transportation option that goes directly to the store, which for many people involves a transfer at Smith-9th Street Station from the sluggish G train. When the NYC Ferry system launched in 2017, shoppers were filled with a new hope that the service would improve access to the IKEA store. However, the Red Hook stop for the ferry system is still a mile and a half away from the store, well out of walking distance for many.

To remedy this problem, IKEA turned to the private sector.

This past week, IKEA announced that it has reached an agreement with two different ferry services that will supply direct service to the Red Hook wharf directly next to the store.

The ferries will be operated by the company NY Waterway, famous for its boat and bus tours in Manhattan. Service began on Saturday, July 3rd, and will bring shoppers directly from Manhattan to the Brooklyn store.

“We hope to make the trip to IKEA a little bit easier and a lot more pleasant with a free ferry ride from our Manhattan terminals,” Armand Pohan, CEO and chairman of NY Waterway wrote in a statement on June 30th. “We’re excited to partner with IKEA to launch this new service for the summer.”

Mike Baker, IKEA’s New York Market manager agreed: “At IKEA we believe that sustainability, accessibility and affordability should be included in every aspect of our customers’ journey,” he said

The ferries will pick up passengers at three locations throughout Manhattan. These include a Midtown Location at Pier 79, a Battery Park City location near Brookfield Place, and a Financial District Location at Pier 11. Boats will travel directly from these locations to the IKEA store’s Brooklyn pier.

IKEA’s new ferry service arrives after a rough couple of months along New York City’s waterways. Early in June, a New Jersey ferry operated by the company Seastreak experienced a crippling malfunction mid journey, sending the vessel careening into the Brooklyn shoreline near Bushwick Inlet Park. Multiple travellers sustained injuries, but none fatal. The ferry itself experienced severe damage along its hull.
Elsewhere in North Brooklyn, the NYC Ferry landing in Greenpoint closed suddenly late in May and is still yet to reopen. The service change was attributed to a “mechanical issue,” and the MTA has since set up a free shuttle bus between Greenpoint and Hunters Point South that mimics the ferry route.

The Greenpoint landing and the entire NYC Ferry system are operated by the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC), not the MTA.

John J. Scibelli

John J. Scibelli passed away on Friday, July 9, 2021 at the age of 91. Beloved Husband of the late Margaret Theresa Scibelli. Loving Father of Peter Scibelli and Anthony Scibelli. Cherished Grandfather of Olivia, Dillon, Samantha and Matisse. Dear Brother of Sophie Murray and the late Joseph “JoJo” Scibelli. Mr.Scibelli was a United States Army Veteran, longtime school teacher at H. Frank Carey High School and an avid NY Giants and Rangers fan. In Lieu of Flowers, memorial donations may be made to: St. Labre Indian School. Mass of Christian Burial offered at Our Lady of Mercy Church on Thursday, July 15, 2021 10 AM. Interment followed at St. John Cemetery, Middle Village, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY 11378.

Boguslaw Sadowski

Boguslaw Sadowski passed away on Wednesday, July 7, 2021 at the age of 67. Beloved Husband of Hanna Kisiel Sadowski. Loving Father of Marta Oalka and Przemec Sadowski, father-in-law of Michal. Cherish Grandfather of Julia and Erick. Dearest Brother of Zdzislaw Sadowski & Family and brother-in-law of Irek Wrobel & Family. Dear Son-in-Law of Henryka Wrobel. Mass of Christian Burial offered at Holy Cross Church on Monday July 12, 2021 9:45 AM. Interment followed at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Maspeth, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY 11378.

Luisa Natale

Luisa Natale passed away on Wednesday July 7, 2021 at the age of 82. Beloved Wife of the late Joseph Natale. Loving Mother of Ralph Natale and Mother-n-Law of Priscilla. Cherished Grandmother of Joseph, Michael and Celeste. Dear Sister of Josephine Gangone. Also survived by many loving nieces and nephews. Luisa was a longtime member of the San Cono di Teggiano Cub of Brooklyn, NY. Mass of Christian Burialoffered at Our Lady of Hope Church on Monday July 12, 2021 9:45AM. Entombment followed at St. John Cemetery AVe Maria Garden Mausoleum, Middle Village, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Mapseth, NY 11378.

Jose H. Gallego

Jose H. Gallego passed away on Thursday, July 8, 2021 at the age of 95. Beloved Husband of Edilma Gallego. Loving Father of Anderson Olmos, Yurley Corbo, Steven Alexander and Joanna Gallego. Cherish Grandfather of Brandon Corbo, Gianni Olmos and Giorgio Olmos, and other grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Mass of Christian Burial offered at St. Margaret’s Church on Tuesday July 13, 2021 9:45 AM. Entombment followed at St. John Cemetery Ave Maria Garden Mausoleum, Middle Village, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY 11378.

Jennie Story

Jennie Story passed away on Friday, July 9, 2021 at the age of 94. Beloved Wife of the late William Story. Loving sister of Thomas Valenti, Patsy Valenti and the late Michael Valenti, Jacqueline Pinghera and Anna Carpino. Cherish Aunt and Great-Aunt of many loving nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews. Mass of Christian Burial offered at Transfiguration Church on Wednesday July 14, 2021 10:30 AM. Interment followed at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Maspeth, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY 11378.

Mary Elizabeth Rooney

On Saturday, July 3rd occurred the passing of Mary Elizabeth Rooney (née Wallace), a native of Glin, Co. Limerick, Ireland. She came to New York as a very young woman. She rose to prominence in the local banking industry in Woodhaven, with years of service at Columbia Federal Savings and having retired as Vice President of Community Federal Savings. She was locally active in the Rotary Club and the Woodhaven BID. She was the widow of Michael John Rooney, Sr. who died in 2018. She is survived by two sons, Michael, Jr and Kevin. She is survived also by daughters in-law Tammy Rooney and Louise Watson-Rooney and granddaughter Mattie Eileen Rooney and several nieces, nephews and cousins. The viewing will be at Leahy-McDonald Funeral Home at 111-02 Atlantic Ave Richmond Hill, Queens, NY 11419 on Friday July 9, 2021 from 4pm to 8pm. Funeral Sat. July 10th at 10am St. Elizabeth’s RC church at 94-20 85th Street, Ozone Park, NY 11416. Burial at St. John’s Cemetery at 80-01 Metropolitan Ave, Middle Village, NY 11379 to follow the funeral on Saturday.

An inside look at UBS Arena at Belmont Park

The New York Islanders playoff run ended with a game seven defeat in the NHL semi finals, and since then the sprint to finish the construction of their new home stadium, UBS Arena at Belmont Park, has intensified.
BQE Media recently toured the arena construction site, where as many as 700 construction professionals are at work daily, readying the new arena for the Isles to occupy next season. While there are still many nuts and bolts to tighten before hockey games and concerts can take place, the arena is coming together. “It’s very exciting for those of us working on the project to actually see signage,” said Michael Sciortino, Senior Vice President of Operations and Assistant General Manager of UBS Arena, “It’s a real milestone.”
According to the new venue’s website, “UBS Arena is a part of the $1.5 billion redevelopment of Belmont Park that includes a retail village and hotel. The project is expected to generate approximately $25 billion in economic activity, including 10,000 construction jobs, 3,000 permanent jobs and major infrastructure improvements.”
Although the new sports and concert venue is loaded with modern technology, it will borrow from great New York sites of the past. Architects referenced the original Madison Square Garden, Ebbets Field, the former home of the Brooklyn Dodgers in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn, and even from Grand Central Station in creating UBS Arena’s identity. “It’s an old New York design when talking about the aesthetic of the arena, there’s a Grand Central Station and an early-1900’s New York feel with a lot of the tile and brick work,” said Sciortino.
Sciortino, a Rockland County native and Long Island resident since 2005, spent two years as Vice President of Operations at the Chase Center in San Francisco, home of the Golden State Warriors, handling the day-to-day operations at the facility. For him, hiring construction crews with the right experience has been key. “The architect is Populous, the industry leader for sports and entertainment venues – full stop,” Sciortino said. “The finishes inside and out are stupendous.”
Although the Isles were born into a brand new Coliseum in 1972 and played three seasons at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn starting in 2015, those involved with the UBS Arena project are tasked with the job of creating the world-class stadium Islanders fans have been demanding for decades. The “Isles” closed out their tenancy at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum, in Uniondale, Long Island with one final win, sending their series with the Tampa Bay Lightning to the limit in front of a passionate crowd that just didn’t want to leave.
In the design process, the Isles made sure to equip their new home with a number of amenities that were weak points at their previous venues.
First, the Isles made sure to add the luxury spaces like bars and suites that the Nassau Coliseum never had enough of. At UBS Arena, there will be eight bars with views of the ice and several “VIP suites and clubs inspired by New York.” According to a press release dated May 8, UBS Arena has already sold out of 80% of premium seating.
The Isles faced critics league wide when they moved to the Barclays Center, a venue that was built for basketball and has many seats where views of the hockey nets are obscured to the crowd. The new venue was designed to replicate and improve upon the sight lines at the Nassau Coliseum, known for its intimate vibe and robust views.
Another area where the Isles will have an advantage league-wide is in the bathroom. While fans found crowded restrooms at the Nassau Coliseum, Sciortino says UBS Arena will have the best restroom-to-fan ratio locally and in the NHL overall. There are 68 guest-facing restrooms, 12 of which are “family style.”
Still, Sciortino says the Isles won’t be able to host games in the building until November, forcing the team to start the season on the road. Recently, plans were announced to hold the Isles preseason games in Bridgeport, CT, where the Isles have their farm team.
With much work left to do, Sciortino and his staff are poised for challenges that may emerge in the completion process.
“We prepare for everything we know about. I’m always most nervous about the thing that we don’t know about yet,” Sciortino says. “There’s some gremlin in this building that no one knows about yet that is going to create a problem for us later, we just need to be prepared.”

Local pols respond to City’s new budget

On June 30th, Mayor Bill de Blasio, Council Speaker Corey Johnson, and various members of the City Council gathered in the City Hall Rotunda to celebrate the passage of the fiscal year 2022 budget for New York City.
The $98.7 billion budget is the largest in the City’s history, roughly 12 percent higher than last year’s leaner, pandemic-influence budget of $88.2 billion. The 2022 budget passed by the closest of margins, with 32 City Council Members voting in favor and 17 against.
Mayor de Blasio and speaker Johnson are praising the fiscal plan as a key step in the City’s post-pandemic recovery. However, many critics — including current and incoming City Council members — are still upset with the result.
“This is one of the greatest investments in working families in the history of New York City,” de Blasio said during Wednesday’s press conference. “We are sending resources to the communities who need it most, this is a radical investment in working families and that’s what we need right now to come out of this pandemic and move forward.”
The budget includes many programs focused on recovery, including a $24 million provision to hire unemployed people in economically distressed neighborhoods.
Additionally, the budget (which has not yet been made open to the public) reverses many of the cost-saving cuts made to City agencies last year, including those to the Parks Department, Sanitation, and libraries.
Since the announcement, elected officials in Queens and Brooklyn have shared their thoughts on the budget.
Queens Borough President Donovan Richards viewed the budget favorably, praising the Mayor for restoring funding to some services and allocating new funding for programs that can specifically benefit Queens.
“Here at Queens Borough Hall, I am thankful that many painful cuts to the Borough President’s Office from Fiscal Year 2021 are restored and now improved in this year’s budget,” Richards wrote in a statement. “I applaud Mayor de Blasio, Speaker Johnson, Finance Chair Dromm and the Council for securing a budget that places Queens and the rest of our City on a path to recovery.”
He continued: “This pandemic also unfortunately propelled a pandemic for hate, particularly against our Jewish, Asian-American Pacific Islander (AAPI), and Muslim communities. As Queens saw a rise against hate, I called for these investments and I am proud that the $4 million AAPI Community Support and $1 million Hate Crime Prevention initiatives are included in this budget.”
Multiple City Councilmembers from Queens, including Peter Koo from District 20 (Flushing) and Adrienne Adams from District 28 (Jamaica), followed suit, issuing statements that celebrated budget victories for their own constituents and communities.
Brooklyn’s Borough President and Mayoral frontrunner Eric Adams shared a sentiment similar to that of the Queens BP, writing “I am pleased to see that this budget restores cuts to services including parks and sanitation, which are vital to our public health and quality of life, as well as cuts to our community boards, which represent the most local form of our civic engagement.”
However, many progressive-leaning politicians have taken issue with some of the provisions included in the budget. These concerns are focused primarily on the additional $200 million in funding awarded to the NYPD, which critics believed to be ill-advised after a year-long movement to decrease the department’s budget in response to police violence nationwide.
Mayor de Blasio defended the additional funding, stating that they are aimed at improving the NYPD’s “IT Needs” and cutting overtime spending.
“We want to have the department be effective, we need better technology to do that,” de Blasio said. “The other piece — and I say this very openly — we worked together on overtime. We reduced overtime a lot.”
In addition to the current City Council Members who opposed parts of the budget, a number of incoming Council Members also expressed concerns.
Our paper spoke with Jennifer Gutierrez, who recently won the election to represent District 34 (which encompasses parts of Bushwick, Ridgewood, and Williamsburg in both Brooklyn and Queens).
“For so many New Yorkers in organizing and movement spaces, there were a lot of expectations that this budget would work to remediate the glaring shortcomings from last year’s budget,” Gutierrez said. “Together, we demanded more transparency, an equitable recovery program, and divestment from the PD to invest in common-sense initiatives.”
Gutierrez continued: “It seems there were zero lessons learned in this opaque budget cycle. We have a lot to learn from, a lot to fight against, and a lot left to deliver for all New Yorkers.”

Young people volunteer in Forest Hills

Children have proven that if they see a way to improve their neighborhood, they have the power to collaborate, whether by exercising a green thumb, the stroke of a paint brush, or by pursuing other activities.
For many children who volunteered with their parents, June felt like a community spirit month, and some felt inclined to participate in more than one event and made friends while they were at it. As a result of Home Depot’s humanitarian mission, multi-colored varieties of flowering bushes known as hydrangeas were donated by the Glendale branch, in addition to begonias, impatiens, and petunias. In collaboration with this columnist, an approximate 50 volunteers landscaped The Howard Apartments’ large lawns on 66th Road on June 18 and revive the local residential community garden concept, which can be traced to the 1930s. That led to a landscaping opportunity on June 25 with 25 volunteers to further beautify the properties. The community’s youth ranged from age 4 to 16.
Howard Apartments resident Myitzu Min Zu and her family, including her 9-year-old son Orratha, received a first-hand lesson in gardening and applied the finishing touches on June 29. “My son had a wonderful time planting colorful hydrangeas,” she said. “Orratha likes nature so much, that he believes planting trees and flowers would restore the balance in the whole world. He thinks it needs restoring because of the air pollutants, and now he knows it is hard work, since he experienced planting them himself. He said it was great letting him have his first experience gardening, and he would like to say thank you.”
Between the gardening opportunities was an event by the Forest Hills & Rego Park Graffiti Cleanup Initiative that improved Forest Hills on June 27, attracting 15 volunteers, as young as age 5.
“A beautiful and cleaner community makes us happier,” explained Juliana Zakowski, whose 6-year-old child Dylan volunteered. “I was very proud of him, since he did a great job taking care of the plants, making sure they were dug deep enough.”
“I learned the basics of community service, and would like to say that volunteering is extremely important for the experience and the skills that you learn,” said 16-year-old High School for Math, Science, & Engineering student Darren Hamilton, who volunteered with his mother Amy Hsu. He continued, “I enjoyed the gardening events and the Forest Hills mailbox graffiti cleanup, since I felt as if I was contributing to the community in a relatively large way. Graffiti on mailboxes and in general can be curbed by maintaining objects more and more thoroughly.” To further improve the community, he would like to learn what the community is requesting. “It will directly benefit the community with direct input,” he said.
His mother said, “It was a great feeling seeing him work in a group setting and engaging with other people.” In order to maintain the community routinely, she suggested having students engaged continuously and on a rotational basis in community activities and stressing the importance of civic awareness. She said, “Teens should feel proud to live in a neighborhood where the landscape includes trees, flowers, and zero graffiti. In the future, they can proudly say they contributed to the beauty of their neighborhood, and pass on this mindset.”
Evelyn Vargas watched in pride as her daughter Valentina Galdamez, a PS 175 student volunteered. She said, “It’s very important for our children to learn about empathy, community, teamwork, and making a positive difference in our world, even if it’s a small one. All these aspects are cultivated through volunteering. I would like my daughter to learn that this world is not just ‘about me,’ but ‘about us.’” To achieve that reality, she recommended more volunteer efforts, being good role models, and exposing uncivil behaviors on social media. As a believer in the broken windows theory, she said, “If a neighborhood is neglected, it only calls for more neglect and antisocial behavior.”
Galdamez said, “I felt proud of myself because I planted flowers in front of a building and we made it look beautiful. I learned that taking care of a building is better than leaving it plain. It is important to volunteer because you can help the community become better, and it is fun to do.
In the past, she volunteered with her best friend by cleaning Rockaway Beach. Each opportunity leads to further brainstorming. “We can pick up garbage from the street. Sometimes I have toys that I don’t like anymore and another kid might want them, and I may want what another kid doesn’t play with anymore. Another idea is giving old clothes that don’t fit to other people who cannot afford new clothes.”
“I wasn’t present at the gardening events since I had to work, but knowing that both of my children are very eager to participate in events to help the community makes me proud,” said Yin Wu. She suggested bi-weekly or monthly volunteer opportunities as a beneficial means for maintaining the community, which would also mount to a fun learning experience. “Having our children contribute is a wonderful way of encouraging future contributions to great causes,” she said.
Her 15-year-old daughter Brianna said, “It’s always uplifting to be able to help the community. Taking simply a few hours from your schedule to do volunteer work can prove to be fun and helpful.” She has faith that people of all ages can easily find volunteer opportunities. “Activities such as cleaning up environments and communal locations, repainting or refurbishing areas, and working at places such as public libraries can all be great opportunities.”
Wu’s sixteen-year-old son Alex said, “It was fun to try something that I have not done before. Working together with many people on a big community project was a blast! I learned how to properly dig a hole and plant flowers in a suburban environment, and I never thought that it would be an exciting activity.” His ideas for volunteering are sweeping local parks, eliminating weeds, or assisting in nursing homes. “Even if you think that a small community activity feels like it has little to no effect, it will have a great impact in the long-run,” he said.

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