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Officials: Twelve New Covid-19 Cases Linked To Jersey Shore Beach Parties

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A dozen new coronavirus cases in the Philadelphia area have been traced to someone who attended gatherings at beach houses at the Jersey Shore, health officials said. Photo Credit: AP

By: AP

A dozen new coronavirus cases in the Philadelphia area have been traced to someone who attended gatherings at beach houses at the Jersey Shore, health officials said.

Eleven cases reported Saturday were linked to a New Jersey resident at gatherings in the past two weeks, Bucks County officials said. One case reported Friday also was traced to the person.

It’s an important reminder not to let one’s guard down at the beach, said Dr. David Damsker, health director of the large county, which borders Philadelphia to the south and New Jersey to the east. He did not disclose exactly where the gatherings took place.

The region’s mass transit system on Monday reinstated a requirement that passengers wear masks. The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority had eased the requirement to a recommendation in April after a viral video showed a rider being dragged off a bus by police after boarding without a mask.

Employees will now remind riders of the requirement, SEPTA said.

In a somewhat related development, it was reported that the World Health Organization says it still believes the spread of the coronavirus from people without symptoms is “rare,” despite warnings from numerous experts worldwide that such transmission is more frequent and likely explains why the pandemic has been so hard to contain.

Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19 said at a press briefing on Monday that many countries are reporting cases of spread from people who are asymptomatic, or those with no clinical symptoms. But when questioned in more detail about these cases, Van Kerkhove said many of them turn out to have mild disease, or unusual symptoms.

Although health officials in countries including Britain, the U.S. and elsewhere have warned that COVID-19 is spreading from people without symptoms, WHO has maintained that this type of spread is not a driver of the pandemic and is probably accounts for about 6% of spread, at most. Numerous studies have suggested that the virus is spreading from people without symptoms, but many of those are either anecdotal reports or based on modeling.

Van Kerkhove said that based on data from countries, when people with no symptoms of COVID-19 are tracked over a long period to see if they spread the disease, there are very few cases of spread.

“We are constantly looking at this data and we’re trying to get more information from countries to truly answer this question,” she said. “It still appears to be rare that asymptomatic individuals actually transmit onward.”

(AP)

World Leaders Won’t Gather in NYC for UN General Assembly For 1st Time In 75 Years

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Sparse traffic due to coronavirus, moves past the United Nations headquarters Friday, May 15, 2020, New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

By: AP

The president of the U.N. General Assembly said Monday that world leaders will not be coming to New York for their annual gathering in late September for the first time in the 75-year history of the United Nations because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

But Tijjani Muhammad-Bande told a news conference that he hopes to announce in the next two weeks how the 193 heads of state and government will give their speeches on pressing local and world issues during the assembly’s so-called General Debate.

“World leaders cannot come to New York because they cannot come simply as individuals,” he said. “A president doesn’t travel alone, leaders don’t travel alone” and “it is impossible” to bring large delegations to New York during the pandemic.

“We cannot have them in person as we used to — what happened in the last 74 years — but it will happen” Muhammad-Bande said of the annual event.

Secretary-General Antonio Guterres recommended last month that the gathering of world leaders, which was supposed to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the United Nations, be dramatically scaled back because of the pandemic.

Guterres suggested in a letter to the General Assembly president that heads of state and government deliver prerecorded messages instead, with only one New York-based diplomat from each of the 193 U.N. member nations present in the assembly hall.

Muhammad-Bande said Monday that by late September “maybe a hundred or so” people might be allowed in the General Assembly chamber.

The meeting of world leaders usually brings thousands of government officials, diplomats and civil society representatives to New York for over a week of speeches, dinners, receptions, one-on-one meetings and hundreds of side events.

This year was expected to bring an especially large number of leaders to U.N. headquarters to celebrate the founding of the United Nations in 1945 on the ashes of World War II.

Muhammad-Bande said the 75th anniversary celebration “is not conceived as one moment” but will continue throughout the year starting on June 26, the 75th anniversary of the signing of the Charter of the United Nations in San Francisco.

He said a political declaration on the United Nations at 75 is also being negotiated, and world leaders will have the opportunity to mark the occasion — only not in person.

(AP)

MTA Unveils 13-Point Plan for Commuter Return; Disinfecting Emphasized

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The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) has unveiled a 13-Point Action Plan for a Safe Return as New York City begins Phase 1 reopening on Monday, June 8. (Photo via Wikimedia Commons, Mtattrain)

By: Walter Sorensteen

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) has unveiled a 13-Point Action Plan for a Safe Return as New York City begins Phase 1 reopening on Monday, June 8.

The MTA moved more than 8.3 million riders prior to the pandemic across New York City Transit, Metro-North and the Long Island Rail Road. Since dropping more than 90 percent systemwide – ridership has started to return in advance of Phase 1 with subways and buses now moving 1.5 million customers.

To continue moving essential workers, welcome back additional riders and invest in the future of the system, the MTA is reimagining operations with one core mission: doing everything possible to ensure the safety of all New Yorkers. Its 13-Point Action Plan for A Safe Return includes:

  • Increased Service
  • Unprecedented Cleaning & Disinfecting
  • Mandatory Face Coverings
  • Enhanced Safety & Security
  • Nation-Leading Employee Safety Initiatives
  • Innovative Cleaning Solutions
  • Hand Sanitizer
  • Floor Markings, Directional Arrows and New Signage
  • Staggered Business Hours
  • 2 Million Mask Contribution from State & City
  • Contactless Payments
  • New Partnership & Technology to Make System Safer
  • Data Dashboard

“The MTA, a global leader among transportation agencies and the largest in North America, has acted expeditiously since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic’s arrival in New York,” officials said in a release. “To date, the agency has distributed 2.6 million masks, 5.1 million pairs of gloves, 35,000 gallons of hand sanitizer and 112,000 gallons of cleaning solutions to its heroic frontline employees and implemented an unprecedented cleaning and disinfecting regimen across subways, buses, commuter rails and stations.”

“As more New Yorkers return to work, the MTA continues to lead the nation in customer and employee safety and we are doing everything possible to transform our system and operations for the future,” said Patrick J. Foye, Chairman and CEO of the MTA. “This aggressive plan includes global best practices, input from the business and labor communities and public health officials, and is the product of months of work from the talented team at the MTA. We thank our frontline employees – the heroes moving heroes – whose dedication has been unwavering.”

“We understand our critical duty to provide safe and reliable transportation to our customers and help the New York metropolitan region get back on its feet,” said Mario Peloquin, MTA Chief Operating Officer. “A lot of planning and careful attention to detail went into figuring out how to strategically reopen the MTA for Phase 1, and our top priority remains the same: to continue to be the vehicle by which the entire region not only recovers, but thrives once again.”

“Safety is our north star and will always be the top priority for all of us at the MTA,” said Sarah Feinberg, Interim President of New York City Transit. “We’re ramping up service as we head into Phase 1, and we’ll be there every step of the way to ensure customer and employee safety going forward. We’ve been working closely with our partners in labor and I thank the incredible 54,000 men and women of NYC Transit for their unwavering dedication.”

Epstein Case at Center of Dispute Btwn Prince Andrew & US Prosecutor

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Attorneys representing Britain’s Prince Andrew have lambasted U.S. justice authorities, Monday June 8, 2020, for what they described as a violation of commitments to confidentiality in their discussions with him about the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.(AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit, FILE)

By: Arthur Popowitz

Prince Andrew’s life will apparently never be the same in the wake of revelations of his friendship with the late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

The latest involves an important federal prosecutor basically suggesting the prince doesn’t always tell the truth.

Attorneys for the royal family member say he’ll be glad to answer questions relating to an investigation into sex trafficking – in writing. But the prosecutors insist they need an in-person interview.

Geoffrey S. Berman, the US attorney in Manhattan, said during a press conference three months ago that the prince had “completely shut the door” on assisting his office with the investigation. In fact, he used the phrase “zero cooperation.”

Now, the prince’s representatives are claiming that’s a lie – that the price is happy to help, but in writing. Next came dueling statements.

AP reported that Andrew’s lawyers said in a statement that he has offered three times this year to speak with U.S. investigators after being assured that he “is not and has never been a ‘target’ of their criminal investigations into Epstein.”

That offer, though, came with a request that “our co-operation and any interview arrangements would remain confidential,” said the firm Blackfords LLP in London.

“Unfortunately, the DOJ has reacted to the first two offers by breaching their own confidentiality rules and claiming that the Duke has offered zero cooperation. In doing so, they are perhaps seeking publicity rather than accepting the assistance proffered,” the lawyers said.

Berman noted in his statement: “Today, Prince Andrew yet again sought to falsely portray himself to the public as eager and willing to cooperate with an ongoing federal criminal investigation into sex trafficking and related offenses. If Prince Andrew is, in fact, serious about cooperating with the ongoing federal investigation. Our doors remain open, and we await word of when we should expect him.”

“Under mutual legal assistance treaties, the British government could compel the prince to submit to an interview with its own officials if he were to persist in refusing to grant one to the federal prosecutors in New York,” the New York Times reported.

AP reported that Attorney General William Barr told Fox News on Monday that prosecutors are not seeking to extradite Andrew.

“I don’t think it’s a question of handing him over,” Barr said. “I think it’s just a question of having him provide some evidence, but beyond that I’m not going to comment.”

The world got even more complicated for the royal today when it was learned that a charitable trust supporting his work must give back in excess of $445,314 (£350,000) in payments made to a trustee after a public watchdog intervened.

“The Charity Commission has revealed the Prince Andrew Charitable Trust broke the law by handing over large sums to the prince’s household to compensate for time spent on other activities by one of his employees,” reported The Guardian. “The Charity Commission has revealed the Prince Andrew Charitable Trust broke the law by handing over large sums to the prince’s household to compensate for time spent on other activities by one of his employees.”

The problem, the piece continued, “emerged last year following publicity over the prince’s interview on BBC Newsnight about his friendship with the disgraced financier and convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The highly critical report is a further blow to his position.”

NY Court Officer Suspended Over FB Posts Depicting Obama & Clinton Being Lynched

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Sgt. Terri Pinto Napolitano’s gun was taken away after posting controversial images of Obama and Hillary being hung (FACEBOOK)

By: Denis Cyr

A Word of advice for any conservatives out there who express themselves thru memes, be careful.

A female NYPD officer was suspended after was referred to the state court system’s inspector general for an investigation over a post on her Facebook page over the weekend, which shows doctored images of the former president and former secretary of state.

The memes are largely symbolic images conveying the common belief of those on the right that Obama and Hillary Clinton are criminals and should be brought to law.

Sgt. Terri Pinto Napolitano’s gun was taken away after posting: the first meme: “The True American Dream,” the post shows Obama hanging from a rope, with the words “We Will Not Yield” and “Your day is coming TRAITOR!”

The second meme appears to show Clinton as she is walked to the gallows by seven people, with the words “IT’S NOT OVER TILL THE FAT LADY SWINGS.”

The NY Post reported:  The memes which has since been deleted, drew a sharp rebuke Saturday from New York Chief Judge Janet DiFiore.

“This conduct is abhorrent, by anyone, at any time, and under any circumstances,” DiFiore wrote to court system personnel. “But at this critical moment in our history — when our nation is reeling from the death of George Floyd and its aftermath — it is a sickening and unpardonable offense against every colleague in our court system, as well as the vast and diverse public we serve.”

“We assure you that we have already begun the process and will take every step within our power so that this conduct is condemned and punished appropriately.”

“The images have absolutely nothing to do with George Floyd or the protests. While they are controversial images, they are basically a call to justice for many Americans believe both Obama and Hillary are criminals, these are not racial images, they are political, I suppose the Obama image was too much, however I wonder how many police officers on the other side post Kill Trump memes, those kind of memes seem to be perfectly acceptable, I thought political speech was safe, evidently if it’s against Democrats, free speech becomes a privilege, not s right, my Facebook is filled with violent anti-Trump images”, political analyst Jared Evan told TJV.

NYS Lawmakers Want Insurance Cos. to Pay Small Businesses for Virus Incurred Losses

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A bill was introduced by Assemblyman Robert Carroll that suggests the entire insurance business is responsible for business interruption insurance claims that have been denied to those small businesses due to legalistic contractual minutiae. Photo Credit: NYS Assembly

By: Sally McPhee

New York State legislators in Albany want to squeeze insurance firms into paying small businesses for losses incurred due to the Coronavirus pandemic.

A bill was introduced by Assemblyman Robert Carroll that suggests the entire insurance business is responsible for business interruption insurance claims that have been denied to those small businesses due to legalistic contractual minutiae.

“Carroll is targeting the clauses that exclude liability for traditional business interruption induced by a virus—ones typically reserved for e-coli on food—for the coronavirus,” reported Crain’s New York Business.

“It is within the state’s power to say that we are retroactively finding these clauses unconscionable and null and void, starting on day one of the emergency and running through when the emergency is over,” Carroll told Crain’s. “Furthermore, we are saying it’s for businesses under 250 employees, legit small businesses that don’t have bargaining power.”

Experts have been warning all along that commercial insurers have been braced for a pair of major threats. “The first is millions of claims by small businesses that want their insurers to cover their losses from COVID-19 lockdowns,” Reuters reported. “The industry… is of the view that the vast majority of those claims are either unwarranted under the language of their policies or specifically excluded because of exceptions that insurers began to impose in 2006.”

Another risk, the piece pointed out, is from “state legislatures considering laws to force the industry to provide retroactive coverage to policyholders, regardless of the language of their insurance contracts. Lawmakers in seven states, including hard-hit New York, New Jersey and Louisiana, have introduced such bills, though no law has yet been enacted.”

Chubb Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Evan Greenberg reportedly said during an earnings call that the fallout of the pandemic could prove a permanent game changer for the insurance industry.

“This event will be the largest event in insurance history,” Greenberg said, according to Bloomberg News. Wednesday on an earnings call discussing Chubb’s first-quarter results. The virus and its ripple effects will impact both the asset side and the liability side of the balance sheet, he said.

“We’re in an unprecedented moment of historic proportions,” Greenberg noted during the call. “None of us living today has experienced an event of this nature or magnitude. It is at once surreal and catastrophic. As a country, we will manage through and heal both our society and economy, and it will take time.”

Insurance companies find themselves challenged by the likelihood of lawmakers in a variety of states putting together bills to forces them to cut checks for business interruption losses.

Elected Officials Get Blasted in Scathing Letter from NYPD Captain’s Union

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Chris Monahan, who took over as President of the Captains’ Endowment Association back in December of 2019, is pointing the finger of blame at politicians. “They do not have your back and will use you as a political pawn!” he reportedly noted in an emailed letter. Photo Credit: LinkedIn

By: Mike Mustiglione

The New York Police Department’s captains union has criticized elected officials for putting cops between a rock and a hard place: blamed if they react too strongly or weakly to the ongoing George Floyd riots.

Chris Monahan, who took over as President of the Captains’ Endowment Association back in December of 2019, is pointing the finger of blame at politicians. “They do not have your back and will use you as a political pawn!” he reportedly noted in an emailed letter. “My assessment is ‘Hands off the protester/looter you will be assaulted by them. Hands on the protester/looter you will be assaulted by our elected officials.’ BE CAREFUL!”

Monahan told The New York Post, “We just have to see who votes ‘Yes’ for the series of anti-police legislation and who votes no Monday in Albany.”

The email reportedly began this way: “We are encountering troubling times, between COVID-19, the day after day protest and looting happening in our city, the long hours and cancellation of our RDO’s. I commend each one of our members.” It continues, “Rest assured if the wheel of misfortune falls on any of you, the CEA will be there to defend and protect you. Religious or not, at this time Saint Michael must pray for us because our leaders have abandoned us.”

New York City’s Mayor Bill de Blasio has often incurred the wrath of the NYPD. Just yesterday, he announced a series of new reforms to the New York City Police Department designed to strengthen trust between New Yorkers and officers. The City will shift funding from the NYPD to youth and social services for communities of color, move vendor enforcement out of the NYPD, and establish a community ambassadors program within the NYPD. The Mayor also announced his support of the new 50-A reform bill introduced in Albany. The Mayor also lifted the citywide curfew effective immediately.

“While we have taken many steps to reform policing in this city, there is clearly more work to do to strengthen trust between officers and the New Yorkers they serve,” said de Blasio. “These will be the first of many steps my Administration will take over the next 18 months to rebuild a fairer City that profoundly addresses injustice and disparity.”

Among his planned reforms:

– Shift Funding from NYPD to Youth and Social Services: The City will find significant savings in the NYPD budget. This funding will go towards youth development and social services for communities of color. The amount will be finalized with the City Council during the budget process.

– 50-A Reform: The Mayor announced that he supports the State Legislature’s efforts to take away the provisions in 50-A that prevent transparency while still protecting the personal information of police officers. The Mayor also commended the Legislature for taking this step to ensure more accountability in the Department’s disciplinary system and give the public confidence.

– Move Vendor Enforcement Out of NYPD: The City will shift enforcement for street vending out of NYPD so our officers can focus on the real drivers of crime instead of administrative infractions. This will further the Administration’s de-escalation agenda by reducing interactions between uniform officers and New Yorkers, particularly immigrant communities and communities of color.

Brooklyn Communities Collaborative Doles Out $3 million to Local Nonprofits

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BCC is a not-for-profit 501c3 organization partnering closely with the City University of New York, Maimonides Medical Center, One Brooklyn Health System, 1199SEIU, and key community partners focused on strengthening health, wealth, and leadership in Brooklyn communities

Edited by: JV Staff

Brooklyn Communities Collaborative (BCC) announced last week the first round of grants from its $3M Strong Communities Fund with over $180,000 going to four local nonprofits – the Arab American Family Support Center, CAMBA, exalt Youth, and Elite Learners.

BCC is a not-for-profit 501c3 organization partnering closely with the City University of New York, Maimonides Medical Center, One Brooklyn Health System, 1199SEIU, and key community partners focused on strengthening health, wealth, and leadership in Brooklyn communities.

As recent events have painfully highlighted the gaping inequities and structural racism that continues to affect our Black communities, BCC’s mission is to address the toxic triggers of poor health in historically and currently underserved communities throughout Brooklyn.

“BCC stands in solidarity with all people of good conscience who are peacefully demonstrating and voicing their determination to challenge the structural barriers that prevent a more just society and a beloved community,” said Roger L. Green, Vice Chair, BCC Board, and former member of the NYS Assembly representing Brooklyn. “To this end, we propose that our Strong Communities Fund will be embraced as a constructive tool to advance the moral imperatives of equity and social solidarity during these momentous times.”

BCC’s work is driven by a commitment to ensuring that the voice of communities of color is strong and present in all advocacy, research, policymaking, and healthcare reform efforts.

While the recent events of the COVID-19 pandemic came suddenly; structural racism was centuries in the making. A central goal of BCC has been to foster the development of durable, healthy, vibrant, and economically strong communities.

BCC made $3M available to nonprofits through the Strong Communities Fund at the end of April to address the immediate needs of organizations most affected by COVID-19. While this crisis has heightened health and safety risks for the poor, hungry, homeless, and other vulnerable populations, it is more important than ever to support the nonprofits that provide critical services to these people.

Each recipient organization aligns with BCC’s mission by promoting health and wealth in underserved communities and fighting back against inequities.

Arab American Family Support Center: $50,000 to support remote access to mental health services, personal protective equipment, and emergency funds.

CAMBA: $60,500 to cover data plans for 500 cell phones, provided at no cost through a corporate donation, for 3 months. These phones will help clients access remote services and telemedicine.

exalt Youth: $50,000 to support virtual internships for youth with justice system involvement, including student stipends and equipment necessary to implement and transition to a virtual platform.

Elite Learners: $25,000 to continue an anti-violence program in Brownsville that provides mentoring to at-risk youth to prevent incarceration of low-level youth offenders in partnership with the Brooklyn DA’s Office and the 73rd Precinct.

(Kings County Politics)

NY City Council Forges Ahead with Property Tax-Deferral Bills

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The second City Council bill, which was put forward by Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, would defer property taxes on properties worth less than $250,000 without interest. Photo Credit: AP

By: Howard Riell

The New York City Council is mulling a pair of bills that, if voted into law, would let citizens defer property taxes — and tenants defer rent payments.

A vote on both bills could happen as early as June 18.

The first one lets owners of properties that have been assessed at over a quarter million dollars to delay payment of the total amount of property taxes. “To qualify, taxpayers would have to show the occupant of the building was affected by limitations on “seating, occupancy or on-premises service limitations” from an executive order by the governor or the mayor between March 7 and June 30, or experienced an “unexpected decline” in income for more than 30 days during that period,” according to therealdeal.com.

Those owners of property who were permitted to put off taxes due on July 1 would be required to pay 25% of their tax bill by Oct. 1, and the rest by May 1. Renters would similarly receive a reprieve from payments during the tax deferral period, “and for three more months after the property owner becomes current on taxes and fees for municipal services such as water and sewer charges. The interest rate for the late rent would be no more than 25 percent of the late interest rate on the deferred taxes,” the web site reported.

The second City Council bill, which was put forward by Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, would defer property taxes on properties worth less than $250,000 without interest. In order to qualify, owners of property in the city must use the property as their primary residence; experience economic hardship as a result of Covid-19; and have a combined income of less than $250,000.

The issue of property taxes is approaching a flashpoint. On Monday, the Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY), the City’s leading real estate trade association, reported that tax revenue generated from investment and residential sales in New York City and New York State decreased by 76% from May 2019 to May 2020, and 40% from April 2020 to May 2020.

These decreases represent a $145 million loss in tax revenue for the City and State year over year, and a $31 million decrease from month to month. Since the start of the crisis in March 2020, there has been a decline of more than $160 million in tax revenue.

“This data confirms the unprecedented economic crisis facing our City and State. Our local economy must reopen in a healthy way. We also need our public officials to put in place policies that will restart such economic activity rather than deepen the crisis,” said REBNY President James Whelan. “Promoting more real estate sales and transactions will produce the tax revenue the City and State need to pay for vital government services from education to infrastructure improvements.”

Scarsdale Real Estate Firm Buys Midtown Apartment of Iranian Princess

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A real estate firm in Scarsdale, NY, is reportedly purchasing the property that served as home to the late Princess Ashraf Pahlavi of Iran, who died four years ago at the age of 96. Photo Credit: Wikipedia

By: Alicia Gomez

Sold!

A 12,000-square-foot home located at 29 Beekman Place in Manhattan – closed to the UN – is off the market.

The digs, the subject of legal wrangling for years, was once the home of the late princess of Iran. It reportedly sold for much less than its asking price.

A real estate firm in Scarsdale, NY, is reportedly purchasing the property that served as home to the late Princess Ashraf Pahlavi of Iran, who died four years ago at the age of 96.

“An LLC linked to Finkelstein Timberger East Real Estate went into contract to buy the home for $11.5 million on June 4, according to court documents,” therealdeal.com reported. “The seller, Wansdown Properties Corporation, is an entity created to manage the princess’ assets. Finkelstein Timberger manages a portfolio of more than 3,500 apartments in buildings throughout the Bronx and recently refinanced several of them in a large deal with Morgan Stanley. Compass broker Charlie Attias and a Rosewood Realty team led by Greg Corbin brokered the deal.”

Super-expensive properties have been moving. According to the weekly Olshan Realty report, no fewer than four big money homes with asking prices of more than $4 million went to contract during the week before New York City moved to Phase 1 of reopening.

“The No. 3 contract was a townhouse at 29 Beekman Place, asking $11.45 million, a significant reduction from the $49.9 million it was asking when it listed in 2014,” noted mansionglobal.com. “The house was purchased in 1980 by Princess Ashraf Pahlavi, the twin sister of the last Shah of Iran. The property has been tied up in complicated lawsuits since her death in 2016. As a result, the property was thrown into bankruptcy court. Due to a confidentiality agreement, listing brokers Charlie Attias of Compass and Greg Corbin of Rosewood Realty would not reveal any details of the sale.”

Princess Ashraf ol-Molouk Pahlavi, who was born on October 26, 1919, was the twin sister of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last Shah of Iran and a member of the Pahlavi dynasty. She was considered the “power behind her brother” and was instrumental in the 1953 coup which led to him taking the throne, according to Wikipedia. She served her brother as a palace adviser and was a strong advocate for women’s rights. Following the Iranian Revolution in 1979, she lived in exile in France, New York, Paris and Monte Carlo and remained outspoken against the Iranian Islamic Republic.

$20M Brooklyn Bldg Sale Gets Nixed Over One Month’s Missed Rent

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The Crunch Fitness chain has 40 locations in New York state, and more than half of them are scattered around the city’s boroughs. Photo Credit: Crunch.com

By: James Wilcox

A single month’s rent is becoming a big deal in a deal for a retail property in Brooklyn worth an estimated $20 million.

The purchaser of the 7,100-square-foot property reportedly wants out of the deal because the April rent payment from tenant Crunch Fitness, has not yet been paid.

A lawsuit filed on Wednesday by the property’s owner, Millhouse Peck Properties, says the firm deserves to keep the down payment – in the amount of $1 million down – that had been placed in escrow. Also, legal fees.

LG Park Slope, slated to take control of the property on April 13, reportedly reneged on the deal because Millhouse failed to place Crunch Fitness in default of its lease. Millhouse is said to have bought the edifice in October of 2015 for the price of $5.25 million from the Beekman Estate. Beekman is currently owned by Lucius Palmer.

“The Crunch Fitness chain has 40 locations in New York state, and more than half of them are scattered around the city’s boroughs. They have been closed since March 16, under Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s executive order to close all movie theaters, gyms and casinos and to limit restaurants to only takeout,” Crain’s New York Business reported.

Across America, Crunch Fitness workout centers have been opening back up following pandemic shutdowns. The chain began modestly with a single workout club located in a basement studio in New York City’s Greenwich Village in 1989. “While we believe in the power of fitness to improve lives,” its web site explains, “we also know exercise is hard work and everyone can use a little more motivation. So we’ve fused fitness and entertainment so that we can make serious exercise fun.”

Millhouse “had no obligation to go after Crunch in the agreement, Millhouse’s attorneys claimed in the complaint, and LG had known since March 30 that Crunch was not going to be able to make rent the next month,” Crain’s reported. “According to the lawsuit, LG rejected a proposal by Crunch to defer its rent until 2021 and then pay it back in monthly installments; LG also rejected a suggestion by Millhouse to allow Crunch to pay half its rent in April and defer the other half until next year.”

According to the complaint, LG “is making up excuses to avoid paying the $1 million, but none of its shifting excuses hold water.”

According to the report, LG Park Slope had been handed Crunch Fitness’s estoppel letter. That letter summarized the firm’s financial position, the lawsuit said. However, according to LG Park Slope, the letter had credibility issues since it bore the names of individuals who were nowhere to be found on the lease.

What NYC’s Reopening Means for the Real Estate Industry

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All construction work deemed to be nonessential has been held in abeyance, but can now go forward. But now, all construction, retail, manufacturing, wholesale trading and agriculture industries can go forward once again. Photo Credit: nyc.gov

By: Charles Hightower

New York City is… finally…. beginning to reopen after three months.

All construction work deemed to be nonessential has been held in abeyance, but can now go forward. But now, all construction, retail, manufacturing, wholesale trading and agriculture industries can go forward once again.

“More than 33,000 non-essential construction sites are eligible to reopen,” reported therealdeal.com. “The Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York, the Building Trades Employers’ Association and the Real Estate Board of New York have agreed to a set of safety standards for union sites (or those with collective bargaining agreements). Workers must wear face coverings at all times, a departure from the state guidance that required masks only if social distancing is not possible.”

The state has naturally put out guidelines that construction businesses must follow, most focusing on social distancing and protective equipment. In the area of social distancing, companies must:

– Create additional space for employees by limiting in-person presence to only personnel necessary for the current task(s), adjusting workplace hours, staggering arrival/departure times, creating A/B teams, and/or scheduling only one team in an area at a time

– Modify alignment of workstations to maintain 6 ft. distance and avoid multiple crews and/or teams working in one area. If not feasible, provide and require face coverings or enact physical barriers (e.g. plastic shielding walls), in accordance with OSHA guidelines, in areas where they would not impair air flow, heating, cooling, or ventilation

– Reduce bi-directional foot traffic by posting signs with arrows in narrow aisles, hallways, or spaces

When it comes to protective equipment, the state is insisting that employers must provide employees with an acceptable face covering at no-cost to the employee and have an adequate supply of coverings in case of replacement. Acceptable face coverings include but are not limited to cloth (e.g. homemade sewn, quick cut, bandana) and surgical masks, unless the nature of the work requires stricter PPE (e.g. N95 respirator, face shield).

Face coverings must be cleaned or replaced after use or when damaged or soiled, may not be shared, and should be properly stored or discarded, according to the state regs. “Limit the sharing of objects (e.g. tools, machinery, materials, vehicles) and discourage touching of shared surfaces; or, when in contact with shared objects or frequently touched areas, wear gloves (trade-appropriate or medical); or, sanitize or wash hands before and after contact.”

Construction companies must also adhere to hygiene and sanitation requirements from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Department of Health (DOH) and maintain cleaning logs on site that document date, time, and scope of cleaning.

Big Races to Watch Out for in the NY Primary on June 23rd

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Entering New York’s 9th Congressional District Democratic Primary race is City Councilman Chaim Deutsch (D-Sheepshead Bay, Manhattan Beach, Brighton Beach, Gerritsen Beach, Manhattan Beach, Homecrest, Marine Park, Midwood).

Edited by: JV Staff

The longest serving African-American woman in the New York state legislature, Senator Velmanette Montgomery is not running for re-election this year and has endorsed Assemblymember Tremaine Wright to succeed her in the 25th State Senate District seat, which covers the northern Brooklyn areas of Fort Greene, Boerum Hill, Red Hook, Bedford-Stuyvesant, Sunset Park, Gowanus and Park Slope.

According to a previous report on the amny.com web site, The neighborhoods that make up the 25th district might very well change though, when political districts across the state are realigned in 2022, based on the 2020 Census results.

Having been in the State Senate since 1985, Montgomery has passed the torch to someone that she believes will ensure that her district has a representative familiar with the district’s constituents and their needs — and that she believes Wright is the perfect fit for that role.

“My consideration to leave this post was indeed with great concern that the work we have all put into building this district over the decades be preserved,” said Montgomery during her announcement Jan. 11 in the basement of the Transit Workers Union Local 100 headquarters, as was reported by amny.com several months ago. “I’m hopeful that we will be able to replace my presence with someone who will do us equally proud, and that someone is Tremaine Wright.”

Amny.com reported that Wright, who represents the 56th Assembly District which covers central Brooklyn, won the seat in 2016. She now joins two other candidates in the race to succeed Montgomery: former staffer and life-long district resident Jason Salmon and Democratic Socialists of America-backed middle school teacher Jabari Brisport.

“We have to look at the whole, and what the most broad effect of the legislation that we pass is going to have on our people,” said Wright. “And this is the training I have been getting over the last three years in the Assembly. “

Entering  New York’s 9th Congressional District Democratic Primary race is City Councilman Chaim Deutsch (D-Sheepshead Bay, Manhattan Beach, Brighton Beach, Gerritsen Beach, Manhattan Beach, Homecrest, Marine Park, Midwood). Mr. Deutsch is running against incumbent Rep. Yvette Clark.

Back in January, Deutsch wrote on Twitter, “I am excited to announce my candidacy for United States Congress in NY-9. Public service is in my blood – it is how I was raised and it is how I have lived my life. For the past six years, it has been my honor to represent the 48th district in the City Council, one of the most diverse districts in NYC, advocating for my constituents every single day. It is with this simple spirit & passion that I pursue this new opportunity in Congress.”

Besides running against Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-Brownsville, Crown Heights, East Flatbush, Flatbush, Kensington, Park Slope, Prospect Heights, Midwood, Sheepshead Bay, Marine Park, Gerritsen Beach, Prospect Lefferts Gardens), Deutech will be taking on Adem Bunkeddeko, who narrowly lost to Clarke in 2018 and Isiah James.

According to a report on the Kings County Politics web site, besides being the only white conservative Democratic candidate in the race in a district that is roughly 50 percent black, much of Deutsch’s city council district is in Clarke’s Congressional district includes the Orthodox Jewish heavy neighborhoods of Midwood and Marine Park.

Additionally, Sheepshead Bay, Gerritsen Beach and Homecrest are more conservative Democratic neighborhoods, who may not like President Donald Trump’s rhetoric, but see some positives in his policies and are turned off by the current Democratic partisanship and politicization of the impeachment drama now consuming Washington.

According to a June 8th report on the Kings County Politics web site, the money pot for the 51st Assembly District race is spilling over with cash, as Katherine Walsh, one of three challengers to incumbent Assemblymember Feliz Ortiz (D-Red Hook, Sunset Park) has raised over $100,000 in total campaign contributions.

Of those contributions, 91% of those were $100 or less, coming from a total of 1,308 donations since launching in late September.

Walsh’s campaign said the main reason behind the flood of cash is Walsh’s demand for better leadership, a theme she has incorporated throughout her campaign.

“At the start of the pandemic, there was a deafening silence from our current State Assemblymember, leaving our district to fend for itself. Neighbors stepped up to help us grow South Brooklyn Mutual Aid, which has now delivered groceries to over 1,800 families. But neighbors can only do so much. We deserve more from our elected leadership,” said Walsh.

Richardson originally addressed the “attacks and nonsense” surrounding Hamilton in similar fashion on Facebook back in 2018. Hamilton lost his senate seat, to current State Senator Zellnor Myrie, which was largely attributed to Hamilton’s affiliation with the disbanded Independent Democratic Conference (IDC).

She denounced Hamilton, calling him a Democrat that doesn’t caucus with other Democrats, but with Democrats who vote Republican. A claim supported two years ago by progressive organizations, like True Blue NY, which also referred to him and other IDC members as turncoats.

After 47 years, Brooklyn Assemblyman Joe Lentol may be facing a real challenge in the June primary, according to a January report in the Gothamist.

He will face a local activist named Emily Gallagher who was won the support of some reform Democrats in the area, hoping to pull off an Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez-like upset against an incumbent who may be tougher to dislodge than Joe Crowley.

The Gothamist reported that Williamsburg and Greenpoint have changed drastically since Lentol first took office. In the 1970s, they were working class neighborhoods, home to a large contingent of Italian, Polish, Jewish, and Latino immigrants. In the 1990s, Williamsburg was a hub for artists and upwardly mobile new arrivals. By the late 2000s, the area had rapidly gentrified, with a Michael Bloomberg-backed rezoning triggering the development of luxury condominiums along the waterfront. The working and middle classes have largely been priced out.

(KCP)

Deal of the Century – Prospect and Peril

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Netanyahu and Trump. Photo Credit: Kobi Gideon, GPO

By: Yigal Dilmoni

In recent days, many words have been thrown around about sovereignty and the Trump outline. The media makes huge headlines out of every expression, however small, diverting the debate from the essence and content to gossip and petty political preoccupation. To get a big picture, one must go deeper and learn.

Our role as settlement leadership is to look after the residents of the area and the future of the State of Israel, and especially this important region of the country. I have read the plan in depth, I have known the area and the localities for many years, I have known the development processes and future developments, and, most importantly, I have studied the map that came with the White House declaration on the “Deal of the Century”.

After the American recognition of the Golan Heights and the transfer of the embassy to Jerusalem, Secretary of State Pompeo stated that Israeli settlement in Judea, Samaria and the Jordan Valley does not contravene international law.

This is an important and strategic legal statement and is a positive and meaningful turn in the approach of the US and President Donald Trump towards the State of Israel and settlement. The Deal of the Century also recognizes Israel’s right to stretches of its homeland, and there is a great chance for the first time to apply Israeli law to territories in Judea, Samaria and the Jordan Valley. However, it also has great risks for the future of the State of Israel.

Quoting from the opening pages of the plan can clarify the great concern over acceptance of this plan in its entirety: “This vision creates a realistic solution for two states where a safe and prosperous Palestinian state will be at peace alongside the State of Israel … Any peace agreement must take into account the legitimate aspiration of the Palestinians for self-determination. … the current vision seeks to address this by setting the territory for a future Palestinian state, strengthening Palestinian self-government institutions, providing legal status and international standing of a state … “.

Delving into the plan raises some points to think about and address:

  1. In the Deal of the Century presented in the White House last January, the United States recognized Israel’s authority and ability to apply sovereignty in the Judea, Samaria and the Jordan Valley. This is a tremendous change in orientation that President Trump brings with him. For the first time, Israeli law can be applied to large areas of the region, something we have dreamed about for years.
  2. The “Deal of the Century” includes a long document and conceptual map, which recognizes the application of Israeli sovereignty in Judea, Samaria and the Jordan Valley over about 30% -33% of the area, with the remainder of Area C (about 30%) frozen for at least 4 years. The plan also includes stringent conditions and requirements from the Palestinian Authority, which, if met, lead to agreement for the establishment of a Palestinian state over about 70% of the territory. It is unclear until when this right will be reserved for the Palestinians. What is understandable is that there is no clear deadline, but rather “at least four years,” as Prime Minister Netanyahu said.
  3. The conceptual map includes the contiguous territory of the future Palestinian state (about 68% + compensation in the territory of sovereign Israel), and more than 20 Israeli localities that will remain as enclaves in the area outside sovereignty and will be subject to a freeze on construction and prohibition on expansion from the built-up area.
  4. If the plan is approved in its entirety, it may be the first time that there is official Israeli consent for and recognition of a Palestinian state, with the creation of a possible basis for such a state by drawing a map of the application of the law and creating a continuous border line (about 850 km) between 30% of the area under sovereignty and the remaining 70%. Even if the Palestinians do not meet the conditions – Israeli and American acceptance or recognition of a Palestinian state will remain forever.
  5. As soon as the plan is accepted, about 20 localities will become isolated – enclaves inside Palestinian territory, in which a construction freeze with the approval of only “upward construction” will begin. This issue is under discussion, but one sentence from the plan shows the dangerous intentions: “The Israeli population in these enclaves will have a choice to remain in place unless chosen differently.” It is clear to us what this means, and why, in general, a construction freeze is needed. So that the population will “choose differently” – this prevents the absorption of young couples and families, thus creating suffocation and necrosis, thus encouraging residents to leave communities.
  6. The map also shows the continuity of sovereignty on major roads, including Highway 60 at several key points – between Elon Moreh and the Tapuah junction, between Shiloh and Ofra, between Ofra and Jerusalem, between Gush Etzion and Hevron, and between Hevron and Otniel, Trans-Judea Route 35, Ateret-Neve Tzuf road and more.
  7. Adoption of the plan and map will inevitably result in the continued Palestinian takeover and massive illegal construction in Area C, which even now is barely enforced.
  8. The program presents additional risks. It also includes a proposal to hand over additional parts of the Land of Israel to the PA in the regions of Arad, Umm al-Fahm and Halutza. There is a possibility for refugee return. A Palestinian capital in Arab neighborhoods in eastern Jerusalem appears. According to the plan, a joint crossings authority with the PA will be established that will include the opening of land crossings from Jordan that can cause an influx of refugees.

To summarize and state clearly: This plan brings prospects and risks. The main task of the Israeli government is to reduce the risks to zero and increase the prospects to one hundred.

How to do it? By changing the map, and these are exactly the things we at the Yesha Council are working to change at present.

Israeli sovereignty must be maintained between the communities, over all the roads and infrastructure. It is necessary to cancel any construction and infrastructure freeze and equalize the status of all localities. Massive construction should be allowed in all localities. A clear exit plan must be produced in a set amount of time known in advance. A deadline when the time is up for the Palestinians to fulfill the conditions.

It must be declared that this plan does not include concessions or forbidden consent to a Palestinian state. The map presented threatens the future of settlement and the State of Israel. Correcting it and adapting it to settlement needs will turn the perils into prospects, and be the key to a historic and important political move.

(INN)

Yigal Dilmoni is Director of the Yesha Council.

Is America Really Racist?

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University students. Photo Credit: iStock

America certainly isn’t the racist dystopia its critics describe, but is it the land of opportunity where hard work leads to success?

By: David Rosenberg

At the heart of the protests, riots, and acts of vandalism which have devastated American cities over the past two weeks lies a firm conviction, one which fueled a movement that is shocking both in the intensity of the violence it has embraced, as well as in the breadth of support across the population nationwide.

That conviction is that America remains a firmly racist country, with the many disparities in outcomes between races being propped up by political, economic, legal, and social systems, which, it is believed, were built to do quietly what Jim Crow did loudly.

With one fell swoop it seems, and almost overnight, acceptance of this narrative has gone from being a growing trend on the Progressive Left to becoming a new American dogma, one that is mainstream and part of the canon of beliefs required for social acceptance.

The Silent Majority – if they are still a majority, as they were when Nixon popularized the term 51 years ago – remain firm in their belief that America isn’t the racist nightmare which the proponents of the racial gospel claim it is.

Yet the Silent Majority has remained consistently on the defensive, watching as American cities burn, and as a newly invigorated Black Lives Matter movement convinces Middle America’s young to hate their parents, hate their national patrimony, and, ultimately, hate themselves.

Race has once again, almost in the blink of an eye, become the defining political fault line in American politics, with the Left and Right lining up around opposing narratives.

America is either a land of limitless opportunity where a person who works hard and goes through the system can succeed – or it’s a rigged game, where whites benefit from a regime of stealth racism, allowing them to live easier lives at the expense of people of color in a zero-sum world.

But which narrative is right?

Racist America – or the Land of Opportunity?

Well, strictly speaking, neither is. And that’s usually the case when dealing with complex social questions.

America certainly isn’t the racist dystopia its critics portray it as – masses of innocent, unarmed young black men are not, contrary to popular opinion, gunned down ruthlessly by police.

Last year ten unarmed blacks – nine men and one woman – were killed during altercations with police. That’s for the entire year, during which a total of some 10 million arrests were carried out.

Of those, 10 deaths, five were justified as the suspect was physically assaulting or threatening an officer’s life, while one of the 10 was recognized as an accident. In other words, you could count on one hand the number of unjustified police killings of black men in the US in an entire year. Compare that to the 89 police officers killed in the line of duty that year.

Blacks are arrested more often than whites, and are jailed more frequently too.

But blacks are also more likely to commit crimes, and are significantly more likely to commit violent crimes, and much like the gender difference in incarceration rates, the racial disparity reflects differences in crime rates.

Thirty-seven-and-a-half percent of violent crimes were committed by blacks in 2017, according to the FBI, along with 29.3% of property crimes – closely mirroring the number of blacks imprisoned in the US.

Despite claims of systemic economic racism against blacks, local, state, and federal government agencies offer special loans and other financial benefits to black-owned companies, and the federal government for years leaned heavily on banks to lower their lending requirements in order to increase the number of private loans to black families.

Educationally, an entire array of affirmative action programs ranging from increased outreach to blacks, to quotas and lowering standards for black applicants have been adopted over the past half century to increase the number of black students on college campuses. While the actual effects of affirmative action on black students are questionable at best, it is difficult to fit these policies into a narrative of anti-black racism by the educational establishment.

But what of the countervailing argument, that America is the land of opportunity for all, where hard work and respect for the rules guarantee success?

‘Systemic Racism’ – and the lack of a conservative counter-argument

This narrative is a bit of a straw man, since it is impossible to guarantee anyone’s success.

I raise it, nevertheless, because it is so often touted by conservative critics of the ‘systematic racism’ narrative.

What of the enormous disparities in outcomes in a whole plethora of metrics, from home-ownership and joblessness to loan request rejections, academic performance, drug addiction rates, and poverty?

These massive disparities between racial groups – and they are significant – form the most conspicuous evidence for a Left claiming systemic racism is alive and well deep under the surface.

For too many on the Right, these disparities are either simply ignored, or may be intuitively understood to be the result of something bigger, but without an alternative explanation being articulated.

Inferiority or Discrimination?

That’s because to a large extent the Right suffers from the same fallacies as the Left: the animistic fallacy, and the false dichotomy between racism and discrimination.

Under the animistic fallacy, all social phenomena, good or ill, must be the result of some conscious effort by a person or persons in some place of power.

Someone must be at fault for every disaster, and someone must be to thank for every boon.

It’s the animistic fallacy that causes a multiplicity of conspiracy theories, even when simpler explanations exist. Many of the medieval libels against Jews exemplified this, with catastrophes (like the Bubonic Plague) blamed on the acts of some unseen cabal. The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and other modern conspiracy theories of Jewish world domination are new variants of the same theme of the animistic fallacy.

In the US, the Left increasingly sees in the disparities between blacks and whites a malicious hand of racist whites, working behind the scenes to elevate one group at the other’s expense.

The Right, by contrast, has no boogeyman to point to fulfilling this need for some kind of institutional scapegoat, muting its response to accusations by the Left of systemic racism.

But nothing, perhaps, is as definitive in empowering the Left’s narrative – and muting the Right’s – as the false dichotomy on the cause of racial disparities.

A sort of mutated offspring of the animistic fallacy, racial disparities (of any kind, not simply between whites and blacks in the US) are assumed to be the result of one of two causes: either the racial inferiority of one group to the other, or the racist actions of a country’s institutions in propping up one group while tearing the other down.

In other words, you either must believe the US is deeply racist, or you must believe that blacks are inherently, genetically inferior.

It’s a powerful belief which many people on both sides quietly accept.

And if they were honest, it is the motivating force for more than a few on the Left, who deeply fear that they, too might be racist if they didn’t make themselves believe in the systematic racism argument. .

(INN)

David Rosenberg is deputy editor at Arutz Sheva – Israel National News English site. He made Aliyah from Oakland, California in 2003 and now lives in Samaria. He has an MA degree in Israel Studies from Hebrew University.

Corona Rules Go By the Wayside as Israeli Businesses Ignore Health Guidelines

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Israelis shop at the Mahane Yehuda market in Jerusalem, June 3, 2020. Some wear masks, some don’t. (Flash90/Olivier Fitoussi)

An investigation reveals that some major Israeli retail chains aren’t checking customers’ temperatures, enforcing mask wearing or social distancing.

By: Lauren Marcus

A report by Israel Hayom revealed Monday that some Israeli retail chains and shopping centers aren’t maintaining health guidelines, like checking customers’ temperatures, enforcing mask wearing, and social distancing.

In the central city of Kfar Saba, Israel Hayom observed that everything appeared to be pre-coronavirus business as usual, with lax enforcement of the health guidelines. At the local branch of a national fast food chain restaurant, nobody checked customers’ temperatures.

A branch of a chain home goods store offered hand sanitizer at the entrance to the store, but no temperature checks took place. Employees wore masks dangling from their ears, not covering their noses and mouths. No one was counting the number of customers inside the store at one time or enforcing social distancing.

Inside a Kfar Saba mall, many customers were unmasked or improperly wore their masks, not covering their noses and mouths. Some employees followed suit, wearing masks under their chins.

Within the stores and common areas in the mall, there appeared to be no limit to the number of customers in one place and no social distancing.

Israel Hayom contacted the retail chains’ and mall’s management for comment, who all said something like, “This is an exceptional case, which we’ll deal with shortly.”

In the southern city of Beer Sheva, customers streamed in and out of the municipal post office without having their temperatures checked. There was no enforcement of social distancing inside the post office, and customers were not required to wear masks. Post office employees wore masks, but under their chins.

Security guards in Beer Sheva’s central bus station, which sees tens of thousands of passengers transiting through the desert hub daily, did not check temperatures of those entering the station.

Passengers weren’t required to wear masks and there was no hand-sanitizer available. When an Israel Hayom reporter asked a security officer why the health guidelines weren’t being enforced, he said, “We are under no commitment to follow them.”

The report comes on the heels of a spike in new coronavirus infections, which some experts have called the beginning of a “second wave” of infections. The uptick in cases should mean that businesses strictly commit to health guidelines, but Israel Hayom found the opposite to be true.

In May, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that businesses would need to participate in the Purple Badge program in order to reopen.

The Purple Badge standard means that businesses commit to abiding by Ministry of Health guidelines, such as checking customers’ temperatures at the door, enforcing the wearing of masks, having alcohol-based hand sanitizer available, and limiting the number of people inside a store so that social distancing can be maintained.

(World Israel News)

read more at: www.worldisraelnews.com