Saturday, June 29, 2019

Your Help Is Needed

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Your Help Is Needed

Neighbor --

I truly hope that you are having a good weekend. I am currently working with community organizations to battle the uptick in gun violence in our communities this summer and making sure that our youth have access to summer programs that will help steer clear of gun and gang violence. I have advocated for our Youth for many years, the same way I advocate for our Seniors and Low to Moderate Income Families.

( Donate to the Campaign Today to Help Me to Be Able to Do More to Save Our Youth. )

Once I am elected the new City Councilmember of the 45th District in November, my advocacy will not stop and my passion and consistency will not change. There is so much more that needs to be done regarding Gun Violence, Housing, Healthcare, Immigration, Education, Job Opportunities and Resources and I am more than ready to implement the solutions that myself, community organizations and YOU have come up with to make sure that the issues that WE face as a Community are Solved.

TOGETHER WE CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE and with your Help We Can Make A Change.

Kind regards,
Anthony Beckford
Community Leader / City Council Candidate

 
 
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Saturday, June 15, 2019

"Caged Children" on New York Sidewalks

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'Children In Cages' Appear On NYC Sidewalks

"We must keep the reminders going of the unethical, bias, racist, inhumane policies of this current administration and what those who support his policies are condoning. Imagine if it was your child or family member in this cage. Political lines are used to divide the people. And the NYPD, is disgusting in it's participation in silencing this reminder by tearing down and covering up many of these cages. We Must Stop the Hate and the Ignorance. We Must Come Together to Shatter the Foundations of Bigotry and Racism and Build a Unified Movement of the People" - Anthony Beckford

New York, NY

Early Tuesday morning, cages with foil-clad mannequins inside of them were mysteriously spotted on sidewalks in various parts of Manhattan and Brooklyn. Online, people reported seeing the cages around Gramercy Park and around the Upper West Side, among other places. In each of the cages, a figure resembling a small child lays down on a mat, covered by a flimsy foil blanket, underneath a sign reading #NoKidsInCages.

Kids in Cages, a project helmed by RAICES, the Texas-based immigration legal services nonprofit organization, as well as the advertising agency Badger & Winters, are claiming responsibility for the demonstration. "Guerrilla installations popped up early this morning in NYC as protest to the more than 3000 children separated from their parents at the border," RAICES wrote on Twitter. "This is not history. This is happening now. #NoKidsInCages is about the children. We cannot be a nation that separates families."

The 25 cages installed around NYC were designed to highlight the grim conditions endured by children detained at the United States-Mexico border. In addition to the physical embodiment of incarcerated children, the cages also pipe out sound recordings that have been captured at detention centers.

The cages were installed outside of media organizations' Manhattan and Brooklyn offices (including Vice, Newsweek, and Refinery 29) as well as outside of cultural institutions (The Natural History Museum), and key intersection points, such as Atlantic Avenue-Barclays Center, and Union Square. The demonstration, which is a one-off for now, calls for the passage of the Keep Families Together Bill (HR541) introduced earlier this year, according to Jess Neill, the Director of Strategy at Badger & Winters.

The NYPD has been covering up and tearing down the cages, as Twitter users reported. At Broadway and Houston, in lower Manhattan, three NYPD officers were present, asking onlookers to not huddle near the cages as they called in a special unit to haul the cage away. The NYPD did not immediately respond to an inquiry about whether investigators expect to charge anyone for the installations, but a spokesperson said "a total of 8 cages with mannequin infants/children have been located." As reported in the Gothamist

In Solidarity,
Anthony Beckford

Donate as little as $10 to my Grassroots City Council Campaign Today
http://bit.ly/2IaySdV

 
 
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Friday, June 14, 2019

Brooklyn Residents Fight for Tenant Rights in New York

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Brooklyn Residents Rally in Flatbush Ahead of Rent Law Deadline

On Saturday, I had the honor of marching with my fellow Housing Advocates and Community Members. The action was organized by Flatbush Tenat Coalition and attended by over 200 people. Our Rent Laws expire on June 15, 2019 and we are sending a clear message that All 9 Bills that will Protect Tenants need to be passed with no excuses by the NYS Assembly, Senate and Governor Coumo. Enough is Enough. Housing Is A Human Right - Anthony Beckford

Article by Sam Raskin of the Bklyner

FLATBUSH—A crowd of advocates filled the streets of Flatbush Sunday to spread the word about the ongoing rent-law battle, seven days before the laws applying to the city's rent-regulated apartments expire.

As legislators and Gov. Andrew Cuomo hash out what bills governing 1 million rent-regulated rental apartments will and won't get passed before the session ends in a week, the Flatbush Tenant Coalition rallied to call for passing all nine bills, handing out fliers with local politicians contact information, hoisting signs and chanting into megaphones while walking around the neighborhood. Flatbush, along with other neighborhoods in central Brooklyn, has in recent years been home to high levels of gentrification and displacement and faces more of it in years to come—a common reason why rent laws were important to those who participated in Sunday's demonstration .

"We want to remind our local politicians that you work for us," Sundai Bestman, an organizer with Flatbush Tenant Coalition who was in Albany during recent demonstrations, shouted into the megaphone as the ralliers cheered. "We do not want a seat at the table, we want to destroy the whole goddamn table, set up a new table and have them take a seat at our table."

"We're out here today because the current rent laws are inequitable," Bestman told Bklyner. "It's going to be an uphill battle, it's a fight. Unfortunately, some of the local politicians are in the back pocket of some of these landlords, but I think we're going to be disruptive enough to pass all nine laws."

Those nine laws are a rent-law package tenant advocates have dubbed universal rent control—tenant-friendly measures that would eliminate ways landlords raise rents in exchange for apartment and building upgrades, bar landlords from raising the rents when a unit becomes vacant as well as extend tenant protections to many unregulated tenants across the state, among other changes.

In Albany last week, State Assembly and Senate leaders claimed they had the votes to pass all nine bills, and in turn Cuomo said he'd sign them if the bodies did. But the leaders of the Assembly and Senate— Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Carl Heastie, respectively— soon conceded they would negotiate with the governor on the rent laws before the session ends.

Jerissa Cribb, an organizer with the Flatbush Tenant Coalition, listed getting rid of major capital improvements (MCI) —a permanent increase in rent amounting to a fraction of the money spent on the upgrades—as the most important part of the tenant-related legislation being considered.

"Why should we have to pay for [building repairs] if we don't actually own our homes?" she said.

Mary Lutz, a retiree who lives in Flatbush, said she got involved in tenant advocacy because of gentrification. "It's metastasized from Park Slope," she said.

"The demonstration of tenant power is the most important thing at this point, because [politicians] know that every one of us is a voter," she went on. "Only when people start getting out on the streets like this and organize will positive change occur."

Andrew Butler, an actor and musical theater composer who lives in Flatbush, while walking with the demonstration told Bklyner "it's important that we get loud to convince our lawmakers" that they have to pass the rent-law bundle or risk facing "repercussions."

"This community is ours and we're not going to let them use it for profit," Estefania Trujillo Preciado, an organizer with the tenant group told the crowd.

"It's time for us to get justice and not to be pushed out of our homes for profit," said Sabrina Francois, another organizer with the tenant coalition.

For Francois, who was raised in Flatbush and lives in Canarsie, tenant protections and rent laws are personal. Her family, she said, had moved away due to the rising rents.

"If my family had known we had laws to protect us, or if we felt like we did, my family wouldn't be in Massachusetts," she explained. "It was easier for us to get up and leave, and of course that's what they want, so I came back to fight and let people know that we don't have to leave and we do have rights."

In Solidarity,
ANTHONY BECKFORD

Donate to my Campaign Today to help me Continue my Fight for Tenants, Homeowners and Small Business Owners: http://bit.ly/2IaySdV

 
 
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