Piano for Public to Arrive in Oval Park on June 18

Last summer, as part of the Sing for Hope program, a piano arrived in Sachkerah Woods Playground in the Norwood section of Van Cortlandt Park (see photo above by David Greene). This year, the destination is Williambridge Oval. It was supposed to appear near the new playground on June 18, but some final punch-list construction items under way there (the Parks Department says the playground, spray showers, and basketball courts, will be open by the end of June) make that location unlikely. The Parks Department tells us though that the piano is definitely Oval bound, and though they won’t know the location until the last minute, it may go in front of the benches at the Reservoir Oval West entrance. Unfortunately, last year, the pianos suffered from vandalism in two Bronx Parks, including Sachkerah Woods.

Bronx News Roundup, Friday, June 10

Happy Friday, ladies and gentlemen of the Bronx and beyond, let’s get down to business. Weather: It may be cooler today, but there’s definitely still some sticky humidity lingering. A slight chance of thunderstorms this afternoon before we head into a weekend full of clouds, rain and, thankfully, much cooler temperatures.Story of the Day: Four Injured in Castle Hill BBQ ShootingI hate (and I don’t use that word lightly) making gun violence the subject of our Story of the Day. It feeds into the worldwide-held stereotype of the Bronx as a crime-ridden blight on the rest of New York City. There are other positive, compelling, fun and substantive conversations we should be having.

Bronx Events: Puerto Rican Festival at Roberto Clemente Park

By GIOVANNY FAUSTO PINTOThis Sunday marks the 54th National Puerto Rican Day Parade, a time-honored tradition where Puerto Rican residents in the Bronx and the across the city come out to celebrate their heritage. This year’s grand marshals are Robert I. Unanue, President of Goya Foods, Inc., and Carlos ?Unanue, President of Goya Foods Puerto Rico. The Parade kicks off at 11 a.m. at Fifth Avenue and 44th Street, and ends at Fifth Avenue and 79th Street. If you need any flags, necklaces, or other swag to showcase your Puerto Rican

Bronx News Roundup, Thursday, June 9

Weather: Outrageously hot. Because of the extremely temperatures and humidity today in the Bronx and the rest of the region, the National Weather Service has issued a heat advisory until 8 p.m. tonight as well as an air quality alert from 2 to 11 p.m. Stay inside, drink lots of water and if you can, spend some time chillin’ in one of the city’s 400-plus cooling centers. Click here to locate the center nearest you. Thankfully it is supposed to cool down slightly tomorrow and then temperatures should drop significantly this weekend.Story of the Day: Shooter Takes Aim at Bronx Students, Hits 16-year-old in the HipThis is the type of terrifying random-act-of-violence story that keeps parents up at night. Yesterday afternoon, a man stepped off a BX5 bus near the Rincon de Gautier Institute for Law and Public Policy on Story Avenue and opened fire.

Heat Wave Health Tips: Stay Cool, Bronxites

File photo by Adi TalwarWeather.com says the thermometer is going to hit a stifling 95 degrees today. As we mentioned in this morning’s news roundup, you can get some relief from the heat by stopping in at one of the city’s air-conditioned cooling centers.You can find the location closest to you by calling 311 or using this online map feature.In the meantime, the folks over at St. Barnabas Hospital wanted to remind everyone, especially the elderly and those with young children and infants, to be wary of the health dangers that can come with very hot weather.Dr. Ernest Patti, the hospital’s Senior Attending Physician of Emergency Medicine, offers these tips for how to stay cool-and avoid health problems like heat exhaustion and heat stroke-until this sweltering weather breaks:Drinks lots of cool water even when you’re not feeling thirsty. You can dilute water with a 50-50 mix of natural fruit juices if you desire a change. Avoid alcoholic beverages, soft drinks, sports and energy drinks (especially in children), coffee, cola, and caffeine drinks.

Bronx Crime Watch: Granny Robbery Suspect Caught

The man police say spent three weeks in April and May terrorizing and brutally robbing elderly Bronx women in the 48th and 52nd precincts has been arrested, according to Deputy Inspector Joseph Dowling, the commanding officer of the 52nd Precinct.Yesterday afternoon, we published a mug shot of Tyrone Rosario, 40, an ex-con who has

Devoe, Bronx River and Joyce Kilmer Parks to Get Wi-Fi

Bronx River Park is one of three in the Bronx that will be getting free Wi-Fi access this summer. (Photo by J. Evelly)In the mood to do a little web surfing in the great outdoors? You’ll soon be able to break out your laptop or iPad at three Bronx parks, thanks to a city initiative launched today.Devoe Park in Kingsbridge Heights, Bronx River Park in West Farms and Joyce Kilmer Park, near Yankee Stadium, will be Wi-Fi enabled this summer, part of a bigger project launched by the city and wireless service provider AT&T that’s bringing free wireless to 20 different city parks.Starting today, you’ll be able to get online near the north-end playground in Joyce Kilmer Park. Bronx River Park and Devoe Park will get Wi-Fi enabled over the summer. “New York City has the greatest network of public parks in the world, and we’ve invested heavily to expand and enhance them,” Mayor Bloomberg said at an announcement in Harlem.

Deadly Belmont Fire Points to Illegal Housing Dangers; City Launches Crackdown

Editor’s Note: A version of this article first appeared in the May edition of the Tremont Tribune.A fire at 2321 Prospect Ave. killedthree people in April (Photo by David Greene) Mayor Bloomberg and the City Council announced yesterday that the city will be taking a new, more aggressive approach in identifying and inspecting apartment buildings suspected of being divided illegally.At the end of April, a fire tore through an apartment building in Belmont and killed three family members who had been living there-Christina Garcia, 43, Juan Lopez, 36, and their 12-year-old son Christian Garcia.The early morning blaze broke out on the top floor of a multi-family building at 2321 Prospect Ave., a space that had been subdivided into several rooms using partitions, according to FDNY spokesman Frank Dwyer.The tragedy has shined a spotlight on the proliferation of dangerous housing conditions in the Bronx, and across the city. Experts and elected officials say practices like illegal divisions, erected by both tenants and landlords alike, are frighteningly common and growing in number.Sally Dunford, of the West Bronx Housing and Neighborhood Resource Center, called the problem “endemic.”She described some of what she’s seen in the community in recent years: already small apartments portioned off into even smaller ones, blocking access to the fire escape or stationed dangerously close to the building’s heating source; five people living in a basement with no bathroom or kitchen; an elderly couple living in a closet; tenants moving back into a property immediately after the city ordered them to vacate.“It’s just scary,” Dunford said.“Illegal subdivisions are a major problem because they make it difficult for people to escape a fire, for firefighters to find and extinguish a fire, and can also trap firefighters in a burning building,” Dwyer said in e-mail.Dunford said that problem has been exacerbated by the city’s dwindling affordable housing stock, making tenants are more likely to squeeze into a crowded, chopped-up apartment to save a buck.“People are more willing to do than to go to a shelter,” she said.Landlords, meanwhile, who are struggling to make mortgage payments on the city’s ever-growing number of financially unstable properties can collect more rents if they can fit more tenants into a given space—even if it’s a fire hazard.“People who are going under are much more likely to do stupid things,” Dunford explained.The last known owner of the Prospect Avenue building where the fire took place, a used car salesman named Domingo Cedano, told the New York Times that he’d lost the building to foreclosure years ago.Records listed on the Department of Buildings (DOB) website show that the city received several complaints about the property over the last few years, but that inspectors were unable to access the apartments to follow up on them.A bill sponsored by Bronx Councilman Oliver Koppell would force the DOB to seek a warrant to gain access to properties in instances where inspectors are turned away, or fail to gain entry, more than twice.“I was shocked to find out this city practice,” Koppell said, of closing complaint cases after the two failed attempts. “It seemed to me to be completely outrageous, and irrational. They’ve got to try to pursue it.”In yesterday’s announcement, the Mayor described the city’s “new approach,” wherein Fire Department officials will team up with Buildings inspectors to investigate apartments deemed “high risk.”

Bronx Crime Watch: Granny Robbery Suspect Sought

Bronx robbery suspect Tyrone RosarioPolice say they are looking for assistance in locating Tyrone Rosario (pictured), 40, who they say is wanted in connection with six robberies of elderly women in the 48th and 52nd precincts between April 23 and May 9.Rosario is described as being 5-feet-5-inches tall and weighing 120 pounds. Anyone with information can call Crime Stoppers at (800) 577-TIPS (8477) or submit their tips by logging onto Crime Stoppers’ website at www.nypdcrimestoppers.com or by texting their tips to CRIMES (274637), then enter TIP577.All calls are confidential.