Bronx
The Casualties
Melanie Lefkowitz |
“A lot of small businesses aren’t getting the assistance they need to become more competitive.”
“A lot of small businesses aren’t getting the assistance they need to become more competitive.”
In an excerpt from the City Limits magazine investigation of small businesses in New York, a look at the holdouts along increasingly chain-ganged 86th Street.
“If it doesn’t start doing something soon, I’m going to be out of business after 26 years.”
In the lobby of STRIVE, an employment-training program in East Harlem, the messages are clear, stated in a bold, black font on posters that greet the overwhelmingly black and Latino clients as they get off the elevator and enter the lobby: “Please Remove Your Hats.” “Please Do Not Wear Pants Below the Waist.” “Please Do Not Wear Headphones.”Inside the classroom, says STRIVE’s chief operating officer, Angelo Rivera, attitudes are a primary target. “You have to inflict some kind of discomfort and pain so they can own up to what their issues are,” he says. “That whole attitudinal piece will make you or break you in the world of work.”But in a month of instruction, STRIVE students also get two days on civics.
In the Far Rockaway neighborhood of Queens on a slate gray Friday in February, the food pantry at St. Gertrude the Great was devoid of clients. The woman working there, who wanted to be identified only as Marbe, explained why.”There’s nobody today because it’s the beginning of the month,” she said. People had just received their unemployment checks and food stamp benefits. “By the middle of the month, there’ll be more.”Marbe began working at the pantry in 2000 and says she saw demand spike in 2001, only to subside as more pantries opened up in the area.
Business leaders and immigrant advocates have joined forces to resist cuts to English classes for New York’s new arrivals.
New York City’s health care facilities already are short-staffed when it comes to nurses. Now pension problems could push more out the door.
It’s a difficult moment to be middle class in New York City — but a new study shows how to keep these residents at home in the five boroughs.
A group of Queens congregations is working together to recruit and nurture new foster parents.