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14 FIDF Leaders From US Visit Israel To Connect With IDF Soldiers

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Fourteen young leaders and supporters of Friends of the Israel Defense Forces (FIDF) from all walks of life, representing communities from across the U.S., joined the FIDF National Young Leadership Mission to Israel, June 24 – June 30, to show their appreciation for Israel’s brave soldiers and celebrate 71 years of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).

The mission brought members of FIDF’s Young Leadership (YL) Division together with the soldiers of the IDF. Mission participants received in-depth briefings by military officers, toured the tunnels of the Western Wall and the Old City, explored the Golan Heights, and celebrated in Tel Aviv. Participants visited an IDF army base to get a behind-the-scenes look into the Israeli military and even met with former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley near Tel Aviv.

For the first time, mission members also participated in the Combat Soldier’s Fun Day, enjoying recreational activities alongside Israel’s soldiers. The mission participants also helped pack groceries for the organizations Ach Gadol and Ha’shomer Ha’chadash, which help address food insecurity, with combat veterans who received FIDF IMPACT! Scholarships.

“The Young Leadership Mission was a unique opportunity for young American Jews to encounter and interact with IDF soldiers and learn from them first-hand what it means to serve selflessly on the front lines,” said FIDF Chief Development Officer Nina Hanan. “Many felt that this was a life-changing experience. They came away with strong bonds with the soldiers and with each other.”

(Back Row- left to right) Jake Kolar, Matthew Brunwasser, Bradley Fleishman, Shadi Farahi, Benjamin H (Middle Row- left to right) Danielle Mund, Shardae Hanookai Zoe Robins (Kneeling)-Josh Greenberg

Among participants were FIDF San Diego Young Leadership Board Member Jarrod Goldberg, FIDF San Diego Young Leadership Board Member and FIDF San Diego Executive Board Member Danny Recht, FIDF San Diego Young Leadership President and FIDF San Diego Executive Board Member Stephanie Nissan, Joshua Neir, FIDF New York Young Leadership Executive Board Member Matthew Brunwasser, Lindsay Bernard, Shadi Farahi, Jake Kolar, FIDF Los Angeles Young Leadership Board Member Danielle Mund, FIDF Los Angeles Young Leadership Board Member Shardae Hanooki, Daniel Geoulla, Benjamin H., FIDF National Young Leadership Development Coordination Josh Greenberg, Bradley Fleishman, Zoe Robins, and FIDF Young Leadership Missions and Visits Manager Sharon Sheffer.

Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America Applauds US Senate Committee’s Passage of Federal Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act

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Today, the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, the nation’s largest Orthodox Jewish umbrella organization, applauds the U.S. Senate’s Committee oEnergy and Natural Resources for passing the bipartisan Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act (S. 520), with special appreciation to Committee Chairwoman Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Ala.) and Ranking Member Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) for including it in their agenda.

The bill, spearheaded by the Orthodox Union Advocacy Center and a coalition of nonprofit groups, will establish a new pilot program that provides federal grants through the U.S. Department of Energy so that houses of worship, day schools and other nonprofits ranging from community centers to museums and hospitals can improve their buildings’ energy efficiency. Nonprofits across the country spend $200 billion annually on energy costs – about 5 to 7 percent of their yearly budgets – due to aging, antiquated infrastructure.

The Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act would provide $10 million each year for the next five years for nonprofits to purchase equipment to upgrade existing infrastructure as well as renewable energy generators and heaters. The upgrades will reduce operating costs, decrease environmental impact and create jobs. Nonprofits would be eligible to apply for grants of up to $200,000 each.

Sens. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and John Hoeven (R-N.D.) re-introduced the Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act in the Senate in February; U.S. Reps. Matt Cartwright (D-Penn.) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Penn.) re-introduced companion legislation (H.R. 3120) in the House last month.

Said Nathan Diament, executive director for public policy for the Orthodox Union:

“Our nation’s synagogues, churches and other nonprofits are in dire need of energy modernization but haven’t had the funds to do so. The Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act will give a much-awaited boost to the faith community and nonprofit sector alike by enabling them to put greater funding into programs and services and spend less on their energy bills.”

Said Orthodox Union President Mark (Moishe) Bane:

“We are grateful to Sens. Hoeven and Klobuchar for re-introducing this important legislation in the Senate, and we look forward to its swift passage by Congress.”

h umbrella organization, applauds the U.S. Senate’s Committee on Energy and Natural Resources for passing the bipartisan Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act (S. 520), with special appreciation to Committee Chairwoman Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Ala.) and Ranking Member Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) for including it in their agenda.

The bill, spearheaded by the Orthodox Union Advocacy Center and a coalition of nonprofit groups, will establish a new pilot program that provides federal grants through the U.S. Department of Energy so that houses of worship, day schools and other nonprofits ranging from community centers to museums and hospitals can improve their buildings’ energy efficiency. Nonprofits across the country spend $200 billion annually on energy costs – about 5 to 7 percent of their yearly budgets – due to aging, antiquated infrastructure.

The Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act would provide $10 million each year for the next five years for nonprofits to purchase equipment to upgrade existing infrastructure as well as renewable energy generators and heaters. The upgrades will reduce operating costs, decrease environmental impact and create jobs. Nonprofits would be eligible to apply for grants of up to $200,000 each.

Sens. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and John Hoeven (R-N.D.) re-introduced the Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act in the Senate in February; U.S. Reps. Matt Cartwright (D-Penn.) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Penn.) re-introduced companion legislation (H.R. 3120) in the House last month.

Said Nathan Diament, executive director for public policy for the Orthodox Union:

“Our nation’s synagogues, churches and other nonprofits are in dire need of energy modernization but haven’t had the funds to do so. The Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act will give a much-awaited boost to the faith community and nonprofit sector alike by enabling them to put greater funding into programs and services and spend less on their energy bills.”

Said Orthodox Union President Mark (Moishe) Bane:

“We are grateful to Sens. Hoeven and Klobuchar for re-introducing this important legislation in the Senate, and we look forward to its swift passage by Congress.”

Finding Your Inner Power with Rabbi Yossi Bensoussan – Summer Tour 5779

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Yes this a bit unconventional, but let’s go with it for a mere moment. Take a breather, lay back and close your eyes. Think of a remarkable accomplishment where you can truly give yourself a pat on the back. Now, reflect on just one small manner where you may want to improve. That’s it! Getting to this point means you are ready to step aboard CHAZAQ’s Finding Your Inner Power Summer Tour 5779 with Rabbi Yossi Bensoussan.

 

The Three Weeks begin this Sunday, July 21st on the Seventeen of Tammuz fast. The Bein HaMetzarim translated as between the straits refers to a the time where the Jewish nation is just that – lingering in peril. As a unity, we have the customs of maintaining a mourning period that commemorates the ultimate unfathomable destruction of both the first and second Bati Hamikdash; first by the Nevuchadnezzar II and later by the Romans.

 

To this end, the CHAZAQ organization listened to the persistent behest of Mrs. Daphne Zeruvabeli of Great Neck, NY and arranged a week of pure simplistic inspiration by a man of awesome stature, Rabbi Yossi Bensoussan.

 

The Five Towns Community will have the awesome privilege to host Rabbi Bensoussan’s FIRST lecture this Sunday evening at 7 pm at Congregation Shaare Emunah, 539 Oakland Avenue, Cedarhurst, NY 11516Shiva Asar B’Tamuz: Break the Fast, Break Your Limits.

Well over a decade ago, Rabbi Yossi Bensoussan began his tireless work for the klal educating teenagers from all backgrounds. Rabbi Yossi brings a warm friendly laugh alongside a respectable laid back demeanor giving down to earth meaning to his electrifying and empowering teachings.

 

Notably, Rabbi Bensoussan speaks and gives counsel on issues ranging the gamut of teenagers in general and specifically with regard to substance abuse also helping to co-found the Second Chance Initiative for providing parents and schools with solutions to address young adult dependencies.

The Queens community at large will have the honor to hear Rabbi Bensoussan’s penetrating words, entitled Hunger Games, this Sunday afternoon, July 21, at 4:30 pm at the Agudath Israel of Kew Gardens Hills located inside the Yeshiva of Central Queens, 147-37 70th Road, Flushing, NY 11367, as 9th of 15 LIVE lecturers giving classes during CHAZAQ’s Shiva Asar B’Tamuz Marathon. Classes begin at 12:30 pm STREAMING LIVE on TorahAnytime.com and continue throughout the day until maariv.

Monday night at 8:15, Great Neck’s Ahavat Shalom Synagogue, 130 Cutter Mill Rd., Great Neck, NY 11021, will hear how God Runs the World, But I Run My Life.

 

Emet Outreach will join in welcoming Rabbi Yossi back to Queens 8:15 pm Tuesday at the Beth Gavriel Community Center, 66-35 108th Street in Forest Hills, NY for Pray to Fail. We encourage everyone to spread the word to their friends and family.

 

Lose Yourself to Find Yourself is Wednesday’s theme at Yeshiva Ohr Yitzchak, 1214 East 15th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11230, 8 pm.

 

For the past number of months CHAZAQ has joined forces with the Thursday Night Shiur and E Copier Solutions at Bais Medrash Netzach Yisrael, 49 Forshay Road in Monsey, NY. Every Thursday night at 9:20 pm, acclaimed speakers deliver powerful uplifting tales of innovation. Rabbi Bensoussan will meld the ambiance of cholent and kugel with Who Are We without Our Stories.

 

Sponsorship opportunities for this tour are still available. To bring Rabbi Yossi to your camp, shul or community please dial 718.285.9132 or send a note to [email protected].

 

For more information on CHAZAQ’s life changing work in your community and beyond, visit www.CHAZAQ.org.

Assemblywoman Nicole Malliotakis Visits Israel

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New York State Assemblywoman Nicole Malliotakis, who represents parts of Staten Island and Brooklyn, has been in Israel this past week with the National Council of Young Israel. “This trip – being in Jerusalem – has been one of the most beautiful and meaningful experiences of my life,” said Nicole. 
Nicole at US Embassy with Huckabee
Nicole at Yad Vashem – Holocaust memorial

President Rivlin received an Honorary Doctorate in law from Yonsei University in South Korea

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ביקור נשיא המדינה ראובן רובי ריבלין בסיאול, דרום קוריאה הענקת תואר דוקטור לשם כבוד מטעם אוניברסיטת יונסיי Photo by Kobi Gideon / GPO

An honorary doctorate in law was awarded to President Reuven (Ruvi) Rivlin today, Tuesday July 16 / 13 Tammuz, in a ceremony held at Yonsei University in Seoul.

During the ceremony, Yonsei University President Yong-Hak Kim presented the president and his activities that led the university to decide to award him the title. The moving ceremony left a deep impression on the president and members of the delegation present at the ceremony – senior figures from universities in Israel and South Korea.

Prior to the award ceremony and in the presence of the president, MOUs were signed between Yonsei University and five Israeli universities: the Hebrew University, Bar Ilan University, Tel Aviv University, the Technion and Ben Gurion University. Representatives of the universities and Chair of the Planning and Budgeting Committee of the Council for Higher Education Prof. Yaffa Zilbershats, who heads the academic delegation accompanying the president’s visit participated in the ceremony.

Yonsei University in Seoul was established as a medical school in 1885 and is one of the oldest in the country and one of the three most prestigious universities in South Korea. Today, the university has dozens of faculties and departments in the fields of science, society and the humanities.

“As someone who studied law at Israel’s Hebrew University and has dealt with law and legislation his entire life, it is such an honor to accept a Doctorate of Laws from this great university which is dedicated to the pursuit of truth, said the president.

“Both the Jewish and Korean people view education not merely as an activity to be completed, but as a life-long process in which we constantly push the boundaries of knowledge and come up with new questions and ideas for meeting the challenges we face,” he continued. “This shared approach is the reason why Israel and Korea invest a higher percentage of their GDP in R&D than any other country. This shared approach creates tremendous potential for cooperation: economic cooperation between Israel’s unique start-up ecosystem and Korea’s world-leading industries and companies, and academic cooperation between our excellent universities and researchers in which we take such great pride.”

In the evening, the president met with representatives of the universities who are part of the large academic delegation accompanying his visit, headed by Professor Yaffa Zilbershats, Chair of the Planning and Budgeting Committee of the Council for Higher Education and Prof. Nili Cohen, President of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities. Among the university leaders were representatives of the Hebrew University, Tel Aviv University, Haifa University, the Technion, the Weizmann Institute, Bar Ilan University, Ben-Gurion University, the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, Lev Ort Braude College, Afeka College and Azrieli College. The President heard about the cooperation that has developed between the Israeli representatives and their Korean counterparts and thanked them for their arrival. “You are taking Israel’s reputation from one end of the world to the other,” said the president.

Earlier in the day, the president laid a wreath in memory of the victims of the Korean War at the central monument in Seoul’s military cemetery.

Cuomo Demands MTA Address Homeless Situation As Agency Releases New Centralization Plans

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Gov. Andrew Cuomo sent a letter to MTA execs Friday demanding they address the homeless crisis in the city’s subways — saying he’s “never seen it this bad.”, according to the
NY Post, right after the MTA released a preliminary report containing recommendations on a transformation plan.

“Today is the beginning of a new, modern MTA – one that delivers better service, completes projects on time and on budget, and uses its resources effectively and efficiently,” said MTA Chairman and CEO Patrick J. Foye. “Make no mistake about it, this transformation will allow us to finally give our customers the system they deserve and prepares us to execute on what is likely to be the biggest capital plan in MTA history”, Mass Transit Mag reported.

The reorganization of MTA, the first in the transit systems 51-year history, was mandated by New York State’s budget bill that passed in April as part of widespread reforms. The report makes seven recommendations calling for the MTA to refocus on core objectives and centralize many department functions.

“This reorganization builds upon the progress made by the Subway Action Plan, Fast Forward and Save Safe Seconds to transform every aspect of our service and deliver modern, fully accessible transit to riders. It will enable us to build on our work over the last year, which has led to a historic turnaround in subway performance,” said New York City Transit President Andy Byford, which was reported by Mass Transit Mag.

Following the report’s release, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued a letter to the MTA Board of Directors requesting that as the authority moves forward with its transformation plan that it address the growing number of homeless people living on the city’s subways.

“Homelessness is a crisis, and it has been for a long time and it’s only getting worse. It affects service, it affects riders and it affects homeless people,” the governor said.

Cuomo said in his letter which was obtained by Mass Transit Mag that: “In 2018, there were 1,771 homeless people living in the subway — that number surged to 2,178 in 2019, an increase of 23 percent. According to the MTA’s own statistics, trains were delayed 659 times in 2018 by homeless people who were walking on tracks and engaging in disruptive and often dangerous behavior including blocking train doors—a staggering 54 percent increase from the 428 homeless related delays in 2014. And that number is getting worse: in the first three months of this year, the MTA reports that there have already been 313 homeless related train delays. Over the last decade, the number of incidents more than tripled, from 254 in 2008 to 856 last year.”

Cuomo feels now is the time to address this issue as the MTS undergoes and an unprecedented reorganization. He stated: “The MTA must develop a comprehensive outreach plan that coordinates MTA personnel, social service providers and shelter and supportive housing providers to help the homeless out of the system and into safe, supportive environments. If the MTA needs more police or social service providers, now is the time to make that adjustment. Hire them and include it in the Reorganization Plan.”

 

 

Trump Tells “The Squad” to “Go Back Home” – Charges Them with Being Anti-Jewish

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Reps. Ilhan Omar (Minn.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY), Rashida Tlaib (MI), and Ayanna Pressley (Mass.). The four women of color are known in Congressional corridors as ‘The Squad.’ They held a press conference Photo Credit: Screenshot: PBS Newshour (YouTube)

Edited by: Fern Sidman

The war of words continued on Monday between President Trump and four “radical” members of Congress from the Democratic Party. At the White House Rose Garden, Trump said: “They’re complaining all the time,” and then added: “Very simply, you can leave. You can leave right now. Come back if you want, don’t come back, that’s okay too. But if you’re not happy, you can leave… and you know what? I’m sure that there will be many people that won’t miss them.” Photo Credit: Shutterstock

The war of words continued on Monday between President Trump and four “radical” members of Congress from the Democratic Party.

“When will the Radical Left Congresswomen apologize to our Country, the people of Israel and even to the Office of the President, for the foul language they have used, and the terrible things they have said. So many people are angry at them & their horrible & disgusting actions!” the president tweeted, according to a WIN report.

Trump was apparently referring to Reps. Ilhan Omar (Minn.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY), Rashida Tlaib (MI), and Ayanna Pressley (Mass.). The four women of color are known in Congressional corridors as ‘The Squad.’

On Sunday, WIN reported that Trump tweeted a suggestion that they “could go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came.” Only Omar was born outside the U.S., coming from Somalia. She is a naturalized citizen.

Omar’s attack followed the revelation of an earlier tweet in 2012 in which she said that the Jewish State had “hypnotized the world” into supporting its positions. She has in addition voiced support for the anti-Israel BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) movement, according to the WIN report.

On Monday, at the White House Rose Garden, Trump said: “They’re complaining all the time,” and then added: “Very simply, you can leave. You can leave right now. Come back if you want, don’t come back, that’s okay too. But if you’re not happy, you can leave… and you know what? I’m sure that there will be many people that won’t miss them.”

Omar, Ocasio-Cortez, and Tlaib have been outspoken in their criticism of Israel as a state as opposed to simply attacking government policy.

Omar has used a number of anti-Semitic tropes in her comments. Both she and Tlaib have been connected to the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which is said to be linked to Hamas and whose leaders have compared Israel to ISIS. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

World Israel News reported that Omar has used a number of anti-Semitic tropes in her comments. Both she and Tlaib have been connected to the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which is said to be linked to Hamas and whose leaders have compared Israel to ISIS.

Ocasio-Cortez has accused Israel of committing a massacre in the Gaza Strip. She also compared the U.S. detention centers along the Mexican borders to concentration camps, according to the WIN report.

In response to the president’s comments, the four held a news conference late Monday afternoon, with Omar coming out hitting with a series of vulgarities: “This is a president who has said ‘grab women by the pu–y,’ this is a president who has called black athletes ‘sons of bit–es,’ this is a president who has called people who come from black and brown countries ‘sh–holes.’” she said, charging that “this is the agenda of white nationalists.”

Fox News noted afterward that “Trump, in fact, had called those who kneel during the national anthem ‘sons of bit–es,’ not black athletes generally. And his comments concerning ‘sh–holes’ referred to places, not individuals.”

Refusing to refer to Trump as president, Pressley told the news conference: “I will always refer to him as the occupant as he is only occupying space.”

She charged that “he does not embody the grace, the empathy, the compassion, the integrity that that office requires and that the American people deserve.”

“He’s launching a blatantly racist attack on four duly elected members of the United States House of Representatives, all of whom are women of color,” Omar said. “This is the agenda of white nationalists.”

Omar and Tlaib, who are the first two Muslim women to serve in Congress, explicitly called for Trump’s impeachment, according to a VOA report.

“I urge House leadership, many of my colleagues, to take action to impeach this lawless president today,” said Tlaib.

“He does not know how to defend his policies,” Ocasio-Cortez told reporters. “So, what he does is attack us personally. And that is what this is all about.”

Earlier on Monday, Trump rejected widespread criticism that his comments run counter to American values.

“It doesn’t concern me,” he told reporters Monday at the White House, “because many people agree with me.”

The president said of the lawmakers: “If they’re not happy here, they can leave,” adding, “these are people that hate our country.”

Asked whether his comments were racist, Trump said, “Not at all.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is among those characterizing the president’s comments as “disgusting attacks.” “The House cannot allow the President’s characterization of immigrants to our country to stand. Our Republican colleagues must join us in condemning the President’s xenophobic tweets,” Pelosi said in calling for support for a House resolution to condemn Trump’s tweets. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

VOA News reported that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is among those characterizing the president’s comments as “disgusting attacks.”

“The House cannot allow the President’s characterization of immigrants to our country to stand. Our Republican colleagues must join us in condemning the President’s xenophobic tweets,” Pelosi said in calling for support for a House resolution to condemn Trump’s tweets.

Most lawmakers of Trump’s party have stayed silent on the controversy, according to VOA News. But four Republican senators — Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine, Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania and Mitt Romney of Utah —are criticizing Trump’s remarks.

“The president has a unique and noble calling to unite the American people,” Romney, a former Republican presidential nominee, told reporters. “In that regard, he failed badly this weekend and continued to do so today.”

VOA reported that Murkowski tweeted: “There is no excuse for the president’s spiteful comments — they were absolutely unacceptable and this needs to stop.”

“President Trump was wrong to suggest that four left-wing congresswomen should go back to where they came from,” Toomey said in a statement, as was reported by VOA. “The citizenship of all four is as valid as mine.”

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who golfed with Trump over the weekend, said the president should “aim higher” with his criticism of the four, even as the lawmaker disparaged their views.

On Fox News, Graham said Monday Ocasio-Cortez “and this crowd are a bunch of communists” who “hate Israel. They hate our own country. They’re calling the guards along our border — the border control agents — concentration camp guards. They accuse people who support Israel of doing it for the Benjamins [money]. They’re anti-Semitic. They’re anti-America.”

“As Jews, we are all too familiar with this kind of divisive prejudice,” said Jonathan Greenblatt, chief executive officer of the Anti-Defamation League. “While ADL has publicly disagreed with these congresswomen on some issues, the president is echoing the racist talking points of white nationalists and cynically using the Jewish people and the state of Israel as a shield to double down on his remarks.”

The four female legislators, who are politically to the left of Pelosi, have squabbled with the House speaker over immigration policy and other issues, according to the VOA report. The dispute has attracted Trump’s attention in recent days, even prompting him to utter rare public support for Pelosi — at least when it comes to her attempt to rein in the newly elected foursome.

On Monday, however, after she said it would be better to rephrase Trump’s campaign slogan “Make America Great Again” to “Make America White Again,” the president called that “a very racist statement.”

In a Twitter response to Trump on Sunday, Omar reminded him that the United States is the only country to which members of Congress swear an oath, according to the VOA report.

“Which is why we are fighting to protect it from the worst, most corrupt and inept president we have ever seen,” she added.

“You are angry because you can’t conceive of an America that includes us,” Ocasio-Cortez responded to Trump on Twitter. “You rely on a frightened America for your plunder.”

Concerning the vehemently anti-Jewish and anti-Israel canards that have been spewed forth by “The Squad” on a regular basis, Adam Kredo of the Washington Free Beacon reported that the Trump administration is working on multiple fronts to investigate and combat a rising tide of anti-Semitism in America that top officials warned is spreading across the country via a network of far left, anti-Israel activists, who seek to mainstream hatred against Jews at the nation’s college campuses and elsewhere.

During a daylong conference on Tuesday, the first of its kind for this administration, senior administration officials from across the government gathered with legal experts and scholars to address the growing threat of anti-Semitism, which has resurged in America and across the globe in recent years, according to the WFB report.

The forum comes amid disclosures by the FBI that hate crimes in the U.S. have risen steadily since 2014, with anti-Jewish hate crimes consistently comprising more than half of totals for each year.

Organized by the Justice Department, senior Trump administration officials from the Education, Treasury, and State Departments joined together to discuss a range of actions the government is taking to prevent federal dollars from being spent on college programs that seek to mainstream anti-Israel ideologies, was reported by the Washington Free Beacon.

The Education Department has already launched a formal investigation into how nearly $250,000 in federal grant dollars were awarded to Duke and the University of North Carolina for a series of events that featured speakers and organizations tied to not just anti-Semites, but also known terror organizations.

The WFB reported indicated that officials provided disturbing information about the uptick in anti-Jewish violence across the U.S.

“Far too often, Jews and Jewish communities in America suffer outside the spotlight,” Attorney General William Barr said as he kicked off the event. “New York City, this past year, has seen a sharp uptick in attacks on Orthodox Jews, particularly in the Crown Heights neighborhood. People are attacking Jews in the streets and vandalizing synagogues. In Massachusetts in March, vandals desecrated 59 gravestones in a Jewish cemetery, knocking over headstones and scrawling swastikas and hateful graffiti.”

“While the tragic attacks in Pittsburgh and Poway appropriately drew national attention, these attacks and others like them in communities across the country are, sadly, less well-known outside the Jewish community,” Barr said. “But they form the daily background of concerns about security and safety that many in the Jewish community feel.”

“As attorney general and a fellow citizen, I want to assure the Jewish community that the Department of Justice and the entire federal government stands with you and will not tolerate these attacks,” Barr vowed.

Already, Barr’s Justice Department has “aggressively pursued anti-Semitic hate crimes,” according to Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey A. Rosen.

“Under his leadership, the Department successfully convicted eight members of hate groups for desecrating a synagogue in Nashville, Tennessee; five individuals for conspiracy to interfere with the rights of a holocaust survivor in San Diego through a vicious campaign of anti-Semitic harassment; numerous skinheads around the country for a variety of anti-Semitic crimes; and convicted the neo-Nazis responsible for the murder of the prominent radio host Alan Berg in Denver, Colorado,” Rosen said. “He also fought against anti-Semitic zoning discrimination in Airmont, New York.”

Charles Small, director of the Institute for the Study of Global Anti-Semitism and Policy, called on the Trump administration to launch investigations into grants given by foreign governments to U.S. universities. In many instances, grant money for anti-Israel programs is awarded by some of the Middle East’s wealthiest purveyors of anti-Israel ideology.

“The isolation of Jewish students on campus” is the goal of these groups, said William Jacobson, a clinical professor of law and director of the Securities Law Clinic.

Lights Out for DeBlasio!! Hizzoner Continues to Campaign in Iowa During NYC Blackout

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Power outage in Midtown Manhattan and the Upper West Side affected an area from 71st street south to 42nd St. and east from the West Side Highway to 5th Ave. – Photo Credit: Shutterstock

By Jared Evan

Mayor de Blasio was campaigning in Iowa for his disastrous run as Democratic presidential nominee as 72,000 of his city’s residents experienced a massive blackout that left the West Side of Manhattan in the dark Saturday.

De Blasio took heat from the governor as City Council Speaker Corey Johnson ended up having to be the “defacto mayor” updating New Yorkers of the situation.

Last Saturday night, a blackout effected hundreds of thousands of con ed customers, along with thousands upon thousands of theater and concert goers, tourists and diners along a 30-block stretch from Times Square to about 72nd Street and Broadway, for several hours.

According to an AP report, those attending the Jennifer Lopez concert said that Madison Square Garden went dark about 9:30 p.m. in the middle of Lopez’s fourth song of the night. The arena was later evacuated. And at Penn Station, officials were using backup generators to keep their lights on.

Meanwhile hundreds of restaurants, stores and bars in the Times Square area were forced to close, and almost every Broadway performance was cancelled, spiraling the 30-block area into a surreal and confusing scene as thousands of theater goers lined up outside theaters.

“Look, mayors are important and situations like this come up, you know, and you have to be on site,” Cuomo told CNN, the entertainment/news network. “I’ve been governor of New York for eight years. In that time, I can count the number of times I left the state on my fingers.”

Clearly this was a swipe at de Blasio who recently missed D- Day celebrations and the Puerto Rican Day parade to campaign for his long shot presidential campaign.

Gov. Cuomo was forced to fly in from Albany to the emergency command center on the Upper West Side, where he held a press conference.

“We have to have a system that is designed to handle disruptions and rather than domino, we have a redundancy in the system, so this doesn’t happen” again, Cuomo told reporters at the press conference.

“We just can’t have a power outage of this magnitude in this city. It is too dangerous. The potential for public safety risk and chaos is too high. We just can’t have a system that doesn’t. It’s that simple at the end of the day and that’s what we’re goanna work on.”

The governor said he has directed the state Department of Public Service to investigate the cause of the blackout in hopes of preventing another of its magnitude, NY Post reported.

Many people went to social media to give credit to Corey Johnson for taking over in the mayor’s absence.

“Mayor Corey Johnson has done a bang-up job during the last five hours. We have no idea what that random guy in Iowa is doing but good luck to him.”, a Hell’s Kitchen resident commented on Twitter, while another local commented “Corey is mayor for the night.”

De Blasio appeared on CNN to defend himself on the entertainment and news channel: “When you’re a mayor or governor, you’re going to travel for variety of reasons. The important thing is to have the hand on the wheel, make sure things are moving effectively, and communicate to people.”

NYPD Union Boss Encourages ICE Support as Sanctuary City Mayors Protect Illegals from Arrest

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Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Matthew Albence took a swipe at U.S. mayors who announced their opposition to planned immigration raids. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

By Jared Evan

Sergeants Benevolent Association President Ed Mullins urged members to put politics aside and “stand shoulder-to-shoulder” with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents during raids according to a letter the NY Post discovered.

“[ICE] will be apprehending individuals who are criminally wanted for crimes committed under the United States Code of Laws,” Sergeants Benevolent Association President Ed Mullins wrote in a letter sent out recently to union members, who are sergeants in the NYPD. “We, the members of law enforcement, do not write these laws, nor do we engage in the politics and or opinions of the laws”

“I further encourage you to NOT leave any ICE Agent abandoned if in need of assistance and to stand shoulder to shoulder with each agent so that they too can return home safely to their families,” Mullins further states.

“They are members of law enforcement just like you and we must never participate in the politics being applied upon our duty to uphold the law.”

Meanwhile, Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Matthew Albence took a swipe at U.S. mayors who announced their opposition to planned immigration raids.

“The entire public is safer when law enforcement works together,” Albence said on Fox News, reacting to several mayors across the country who declared they would not be helping federal immigration authorities locate and apprehend illegal aliens living in their jurisdictions, Daily Caller News Foundation pointed out.

“It’s incredulous that it’s OK for these law enforcement agencies and these jurisdictions to enforce the laws that they’re sworn to uphold, but when we come in to do our enforcement that we’re sworn to uphold, all the sudden it’s a problem”, Albence continued.

The latest to join in on defying federal immigration enforcement by leftist mayors in “sanctuary cities” is Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot who began to block Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials’ access to the city’s police databases following news of possible raids in Chicago and other major U.S. cities.

Lightfoot said last week that the city has taken steps to ensure that the Chicago Police Department (CPD) will not cooperate with upcoming ICE sweeps that are expected to begin, The Hill reported.

“They will not team up with ICE to detain any resident. We have also cut off ICE access from any CPD databases and that will remain permanent,” she said, adding that she had spoken with the agency’s leadership to object to the planned raids.

“Chicago is and will always be a welcoming city that will never tolerate ICE tearing our families apart,” she said at a recent press conference.

ICE would be restricted from seeing the department’s incident narratives, arrest information, crime mapping systems and other databases, according to The Hill.

In addition to far-left leaning mayors, many high-profile Democrat figures have literally instructed illegals how to evade federal immigration officials. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, for example, said during her weekly press conference on July 11 that a deportation warrant is not the same as a search warrant and that illegal immigrants should simply not open the door if an agent comes knocking, Daily Caller News Foundation reported

PA Man Indicted on Attempted Murder Charges for Setting Fire to Rabbi’s Bklyn Home

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The District Attorney identified the defendant as Matthew Karelefsky, 41, of McKeesport, Pennsylvania. He was arraigned today before Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Martin Murphy on a 17-count indictment in which he is charged with first-degree attempted murder, second-degree arson, second-degree attempted murder, and related charges. Photo Credit: Yeshiva World News

 Fire Destroyed Victim’s Midwood Home and Severely Damaged Two Adjacent Properties; Video Surveillance Allegedly Captured Defendant Setting the Fire

By: David Ben Hooren

Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez on Monday announced that a 41-year-old Pennsylvania man has been arraigned on an indictment in which he is charged with first-degree attempted murder, second-degree arson and related charges for intentionally setting fire to the home of a Brooklyn rabbi. The fire quickly spread to two adjacent houses, injuring 11 people, including a six-week-old infant, four first responders and two police officers.

District Attorney Gonzalez said, “This defendant allegedly traveled to Brooklyn with the sole intent to kill and had no concern for the dozens of people he deliberately put in harm’s way. Thanks to our firefighters and first responders, no one was seriously injured in this fire. I intend to prosecute this case vigorously and hold this defendant accountable for his alleged crimes.”

The District Attorney identified the defendant as Matthew Karelefsky, 41, of McKeesport, Pennsylvania. He was arraigned today before Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Martin Murphy on a 17-count indictment in which he is charged with first-degree attempted murder, second-degree arson, second-degree attempted murder, and related charges. He was ordered held without bail and to return to court on September 10, 2019. The defendant faces up to 25 years to life in prison if convicted of the top count.

The District Attorney said that, according to the investigation, on June 13, 2019 at approximately 3:50 a.m., a rabbi at a local yeshiva and his wife awoke to a fire in their three-story multi-family home at 1492 East 17th Street in Midwood. The fire spread to homes on either side of the property, causing 13 residents, including a six-week-old infant, to evacuate. Numerous individuals were treated for smoke inhalation.

Fire marshals determined the fire at 1492 East 17th Street was intentionally set and that it spread to the adjacent properties. Investigators also determined the fire began underneath the rabbi’s front porch, where K9 dogs identified the smell of an accelerant and fire marshals discovered remnants of a Kingsford charcoal bag, charcoal, a plastic milk carton, empty lighter fluid containers, lighter boxes and several rags believed to have been drenched in accelerant.

Video surveillance taken from across the street from the victims’ homes allegedly shows the defendant setting the fire. Additionally, video surveillance from a Midwood grocery store captured the day before the incident allegedly shows the defendant purchasing Kingsford charcoal and matches.

Police arrested the defendant in Manhattan on June 15. At the time of his arrest he was wearing a pink shirt with a white collar—a shirt he was allegedly seen wearing walking near the victims’ homes before and after the incident. It is alleged that the defendant has a tattoo on his forearm that reads, “Never let go of the HATRED – KILL Rabbi Max”. He also allegedly wrote numerous social media posts expressing his animosity for and intention to harm the victim.

The case was investigated by New York City Fire Department Marshal Stewart Hines.

Intelligence Analyst Alexandra Aber, of the District Attorney’s Crime Strategies Unit and Paralegal Supervisor Aneudy Mata, of the District Attorney’s Green Zone Trial Bureau, assisted in the investigation.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Sara Kurtzberg, Deputy Chief of the District Attorney’s Green Zone Trial Bureau and Assistant District Attorney Aaron Fishkin, also of the Green Zone, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorney James Lin, Bureau Chief.

Epstein’s Connections to ‘Victoria’s Secret’ Emerges Amid Mounting Evidence

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When a scandal like the one engulfing Jeffrey Epstein breaks, it is always interesting to see where things lead. According to published reports, one of those Epstein connections may lead to Victoria’s Secret. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

By Howard M. Riell

When a scandal like the one engulfing Jeffrey Epstein breaks, it is always interesting to see where things lead. According to published reports, one of those Epstein connections may lead to Victoria’s Secret.

Italian model Elisabetta Tai says she was directed to Epstein — arrested last week for sexually abusing minor girls from 2002 to 2005 – back in 2004 was a contact who might help her get into modeling for Victoria’s Secret.

“He told me this is one of the most important people in modeling,” Tai told The New York Post. “He said that this man is in charge of Victoria’s Secret and he’s going to change your life.”

The meeting reportedly didn’t go as anticipated. “I rang the doorbell of this incredible mansion, and a butler answered the door,” said Tai in the Post interview. “It was astonishing. It was a very beautiful house, and I saw about five models walking around as soon as I walked in. I was so excited.”

The encounter went as one might guess, and when Tai tried to leave, as she recounts to the Post, a woman who worked for Epstein “told me that I couldn’t just leave. She said that this man is important, that he is a friend of President Clinton.”

Indeed, CNBC has reported that Clinton visited Epstein in prison while he was serving a 13-month criminal sentence in 2008 and 2009. There was, in fact, “a revolving cast of characters take turns visiting him… Those visitors included Epstein’s appeals attorney Alan Dershowitz, who showed up on New Year’s Day 2009, as well as Arnold Paul Prosperi, a college friend of former President Bill Clinton, documents show.”

Still other alleged connections have also emerged. ABC News has reported that Epstein “has been a prolific donor to various Democratic campaigns and party committees over the past couple decades… One of the biggest beneficiaries of Epstein’s contributions was then-Senate hopeful Hillary Clinton, who received $20,000 from him in 1999 through her joint fundraising committee with the Democratic Party, according to Federal Election Commission filings. Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign also received $1,000 from Epstein in 1992.”

Last week, the New York Times reported that Epstein had “asked a federal judge to release him on substantial bond. He offered both his New York mansion, which city tax documents valued at close to $56 million, and his private jet as collateral. Prosecutors said on Monday they sought to have Mr. Epstein held in jail until his trial, pointing to his wealth as they said he had “an extraordinary risk of flight and danger.” Mr. Epstein’s bail proposal is expected to be taken up in Federal District Court in Manhattan on Monday.”

CUNY Prof Quits Amid Charges of Cocaine Binges & Sex Parties

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Hunter College psychology professor and sex and drug researcher Jeffrey Parsons has been accused of using cocaine at college events and organizing annual parties that included major amounts of alcohol and sex. Photo Credit: hunter.cuny.edu

By Pat Savage

Sex and drugs may bring down a high profile professor.

Hunter College psychology professor and sex and drug researcher Jeffrey Parsons has been accused of using cocaine at college events and organizing annual parties that included major amounts of alcohol and sex.

Parsons, described by the New York Post as “the youngest-ever “distinguished” professor at the public college and one of the CUNY system’s highest paid professors” left his job on July 3rd in the wake of a school investigation that reportedly supported staff complaints dating back to the spring of 2018.

Parsons served as the director of the Center for HIV Educational Studies and Training (CHEST), tasked with doing research on – what else – drug use and at-risk sex. The program was funded to the tune of a reported $37 million in grants between 1997 and 2016.

“Every year he’d host a party he claimed he paid for out of his expense account known as the CHEST fest, a former employee said. Last year’s bash is when his alleged bad behavior came to a head,” the Post reported. “The May 4, 2018, soirée was held at the iconic Stonewall Inn in the West Village, where Parsons rented out the bar’s second floor. The theme: rebellion. As he did at past events, Parsons encouraged attendees to imbibe.”

Parsons is known as a psychologist, researcher, and educator whose career includes stints as Distinguished Professor of Psychology at Hunter College and The Graduate Center of the City University of New York (CUNY). He was trained as a developmental psychologist and has applied this training to understand health, according to Wikipedia, with a particular emphasis on HIV prevention and treatment. “He is well-known for his research on HIV risk behaviors of gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM), HIV-related syndemics, and sexual compulsivity.”

Parsons is a nationally and internationally recognized expert in HIV prevention and treatment, having been particularly influential on understanding health risk behaviors associated with HIV transmission and HIV-related health outcomes for GBMSM, Wikipedia noted. He was a pioneer in understanding the etiology and consequences of sexual compulsivity (now often referred to as hypersexuality) for GBMSM as well as having produced influential work on topics ranging from understanding intentional condomless sex (i.e., barebacking) and methamphetamine use to developing efficacious interventions to reduce substance use and HIV-related health risk behaviors.

Dems Square Off, Turn Nasty as AOC Chief of Staff Blasts Pelosi

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The latest dispatch from the war zone sees Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s chief of staff, Saikat Chakrabarti, attacking House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. He has called her a less than powerful leader, and moderate Democrats in general – of which Pelosi is purportedly one — of racism. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

By: Theodore Mikalis

The knives are out as Democrats view for the ideological control of their party.

The latest dispatch from the war zone sees Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s chief of staff, Saikat Chakrabarti, attacking House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. He has called her a less than powerful leader, and moderate Democrats in general – of which Pelosi is purportedly one — of racism.

One Democratic party member told the New York Post that Chakrabarti has proven “incredibly polarizing” and is “pushing this conflict between Pelosi and AOC. He and AOC are looking for enemies, they are looking for fight, they are looking to create controversy. And it’s working. It’s raising money, getting more media, raising stature, increasing email lists, increasing profile.”

During the first week of July, Chakrabarti took to social media to insists that Pelosi “claims we can’t focus on impeachment because it’s a distraction from kitchen table issues. But I’d challenge you to find voters that can name a single thing House Democrats have done for their kitchen table this year. What is this legislative mastermind doing?”

Just a couple of weeks before, Chakrabarti let it slip that he thought the “New Southern Democrats” were “hell-bent to do to black and brown people today what the old Southern Democrats did in the 40s.”

NBC News’ Jonathan Allen has been following the action, and recently noted, “As they feud publicly, freshman Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is slowly learning a painful lesson about American politics at the hands of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi: Power is about numbers. Pelosi has them and Ocasio-Cortez does not. The more Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., lashes out over the limits of her own influence, the more obvious those limits become and the more the imbalance tilts in the direction of Pelosi, D-Calif. After all, their fellow politicians are nothing if not hypersensitive to even the slightest shifts in the winds of power.”

He continued, “Now, they’re freely dunking on Ocasio-Cortez and her allies in the wake of her not-so-veiled allegation that Pelosi is discriminating against her clique, known as “The Squad,” because of their lack of seniority, their gender and their skin color.”

Ocasio-Cortez had previously remarked that the House Speaker had been intentionally “singling out” freshman congresswomen of color. Oddly, President Trump came to Pelosi’s defense, saying that in his estimation she was not a racist.

Others are enjoying the infighting less. House Democrats and their aides “are quickly losing patience with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez over her office’s nonstop sparring with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other long-serving members, suggesting the speaker’s dismissive comments toward her may represent the view of a growing section of the caucus,” noted Fox News. “She is a complete fraud,” one senior Democratic source told Fox News on Friday, succinctly summing up members’ frustration.”

Cuomo Protects Minority Hairstyles  in New Anti-Discrimination Act

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"For much of our nation's history, people of color–particularly women–have been marginalized and discriminated against simply because of their hair style or texture," Governor Cuomo said in a statement. "By signing this bill into law, we are taking an important step toward correcting that history and ensuring people of color are protected from all forms of discrimination." Photo Credit: Shutterstock

By: Sanford Bergmeister

Governor Andrew Cuomo has signed into law S.6209A/A.7797A, which amends the Human Rights Law and Dignity for All Students Act to make clear that discrimination based on race includes hairstyles or traits associated with race.

“For much of our nation’s history, people of color–particularly women–have been marginalized and discriminated against simply because of their hair style or texture,” Governor Cuomo said in a statement. “By signing this bill into law, we are taking an important step toward correcting that history and ensuring people of color are protected from all forms of discrimination.”

The bill amends section 292 of the Human Rights Law and section 11 of the Dignity for All Students Act to add new subsections to the definitions of race, to include “traits historically associated with race, including but not limited to hair texture and protective hairstyles.” The bill’s provisions are effective immediately.

Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins said, “Discriminating against someone because of their hair style or texture is wrong, and now it is also against the law. We should celebrate the diversity that makes New York State great and that includes respecting the hair style choices of all New Yorkers. I commend Senator Jamaal Bailey for sponsoring this legislation which the Senate Majority was proud to pass, and I thank Governor Cuomo for signing it into law.”

Noted Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, “No one should face discrimination at school or in the workplace, but too often we see people of color, particularly women, who are told their hair is unprofessional or not appropriate in public settings. These discriminatory policies sideline people of color–keeping children out of their classrooms and diminishing who they are. That discrimination has no place in New York State. The Assembly Majority will continue to fight so every New Yorker is treated with dignity and respect.”

Added Senator Jamaal T. Bailey, “The way one chooses to wear their hair should be legally protected and supported–and in New York, now it will be. I thank Governor Cuomo for supporting and signing this bill that makes New York State a leader when it comes to ending racial discrimination based upon natural hair and hairstyles. I would also like to thank Assembly Member Tremaine Wright, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and her Chief of Staff and Counsel Shontell Smith for their leadership. When leadership is diverse, it understands and is reflective of the communities. Thank you for protecting our crowns”

Assembly Member Tremaine S. Wright said, “As a Black woman who prioritizes equity, and has worn my natural for 17 years, this bill is deeply personal for me. While chatting with racial and gender equity champion Adjoa B. Asamoah about the longstanding and problematic practice of hair discrimination, I recalled the action Congresswoman Marcia Fudge took during her tenure as Congressional Black Caucus Chair to confront new rules the army proposed to ban hairstyles that would disproportionately impact Black women. I determined a legislative fix was in order, and decided I’d carry the CROWN Act in NY. I am beyond proud to have done so, and for New York to be the first state to have had this historic bill passed in both chambers. Special thanks to Speaker Heastie and Majority Leader Stewart Cousins for their leadership.”

NYC Cyclists Stage “Die-In” at Washington Square Park to Protest Rising Death Toll

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Last Tuesday night, hundreds of cyclists gathered for a “die-in” at Washington Square Park, as a call for action. There were heartfelt speeches lecturing about the necessity of better protecting cyclists in what is becoming known in the biking community as “the crisis.” Photo Credit: Shutterstock

By Ilana Siyance

In 2019, an alarming 15 cyclists have already died in NYC, being struck by cars or trucks. This number already exceeds the total of 10 cyclists killed throughout the entire year of 2018. Last Tuesday night, hundreds of cyclists gathered for a “die-in” at Washington Square Park, as a call for action. There were heartfelt speeches lecturing about the necessity of better protecting cyclists in what is becoming known in the biking community as “the crisis.”

NYC has put effort into adding bike lanes onto roads, but cyclist fatalities are up. Council Speaker Corey Johnson supported the gathering. “It is heartbreaking that New Yorkers feel so unsafe walking and biking in our city right now that pedestrians, cyclists, and transit advocates feel they must stage a die-in in order for something to change,” Johnson said in a statement. “We must not stop fighting until every New Yorker can move around our city safely and efficiently. I hope you’ll fight with me.” In May, Johnson presented a bill that would oblige the city’s Department of Transportation to add 50 more miles of protected bike lanes each year till 2024.

For the protesters, the crisis refers to not only the dangerous reality of cyclist fatalities, but also to the unyielding values that still resists prioritizing road design and infrastructure that is truly biker friendly. As per the NY Times, under Mayor de Blasio, 337 miles of bike lanes have been added to the Big Apple for a total of 1,240 miles of bike lanes. This expansion was in line with the exciting announcement two years ago, issued by the NYC’s DOT to say that NYC is now safer and easier to navigate by bike than it has been for the last 20 years.

While cycling may have increased, proponents maintain that it is not safer. While the added bike lanes encourage cyclists to bike their way into freeways and to their destinations, the lanes don’t always follow through for cyclists. The side of the street reserved for cyclists, frequently faces obstructions in the form of double parked vehicles, construction, a premature end to the bike lane, and foot traffic, creating a sudden dead end for bikers.

Bike lanes face plenty of resistance. Communities have fought back against bike lanes on the grounds that they will take away parking spaces, compound already unbearable traffic conditions, and create a less safe environment for all. Also, opponents say cyclists sometimes are their own worst enemy, who disregard traffic rules and speed. Further, they maintain that cyclists suffer no penalties for their hazardous driving and are exempt from the requirement for any training, licensing, or insurance.

One of the speakers at the protest was Hindy Schachter, whose husband died in 2014 as a pedestrian hit by a cyclist in Central Park. “It’s not the cyclist that’s at fault,” she said. “It’s the city that has not designed safe pedestrian and cycling the whole way.”

One thing that both sides agree on is that we have a long way to go to make NYC a safe place for cyclists.

DOE Head Mary Ellen Elia Resigns; Drew Heat from Yeshivos Over Secular Edu

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Department of Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia has unexpectedly resigned. Elia drew criticism after she re-released regs that would have given New York State control over the number of hours of secular studies taught at private schools statewide. The regs also mandated curriculum requirements. Photo Credit: NYS Education Department

By: Benjamin Kaplanowitz

Department of Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia has unexpectedly resigned.

Elia drew criticism after she re-released regs that would have given New York State control over the number of hours of secular studies taught at private schools statewide. The regs also mandated curriculum requirements.

“Elia’s latest effort to exercise state control over private schools statewide sparked a flurry of activity. By state law, the guidelines mandated by Elia are subject to a public comment period,” reported Vos Iz Neias. “A campaign launched by PEARLS giving yeshiva parents a chance to voice their opposition to the plan resulted in 4,862 letters of protest, representing 14,100 yeshiva students, in just over one week.”

Torah Vodaath Rosh Hayeshiva Rabbi Yisroel Reisman has reportedly called for a letter-writing campaign targeting his school’s parents, grandparents, friends and alumni.

Reisman and Mir Rosh Yeshiva Rabbi Elya Brudny “met with Commissioner Elia last year hoping to demonstrate that the vast majority of yeshivas were providing students with a substantially equivalent education to that offered in the public schools, as required by state law,” said the Jewish news site. “The two penned a letter to the editor that appeared in the Wall Street Journal… last December warning that New York’s yeshivas would not allow the state to make any curriculum changes that would in any way interfere with their emphasis on offering a Torah-true education.”

Published reports claimed that Elia resigned in order to take a position with a national company specializing in helping school districts draft and execute turnaround strategies. She had apparently failed to tell the board of her plan to resign before the news became public knowledge.

According to chalkbeat.org, Chancellor Betty Rosa “said the announcement “obviously caught us all off guard” but declined to comment further before walking into back-to-back board trainings, which are closed to the public and are a typical July agenda item for the Regents. Regent James E. Cottrell said the news came as a “total shock” and upset him. He said he thought the board had made positive strides under Elia’s four-year leadership.”

In an official statement, the board members “said they have made “much progress” with Elia to improve education and described Elia as “steadfast in her commitment to placing the interests of students first,” chalkbeat.org reported.

The letter drafted by Elia said in part that “our goal to close the opportunity gap in all districts across the state… Going forward, I hope to translate the experiences I’ve gained from one of the largest, most complex education systems in the country into lessons to help improve classrooms, schools and districts for students in every state.”