Skip to main content

Featured

Landlord of Burned Bronx Building Sued to Stop Heat Monitoring

  Hundreds of tenants were displaced after a fire ripped through the top floor of 2910 Wallace Ave. in The Bronx, Jan. 14, 2025.  Credit:  Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY Ved Parkash had 10 properties put in a city housing agency program to track temperatures in chronically cold apartments. One just caught fire, leaving more than 250 homeless.  This article originally appeared in The City. By  Samantha Maldonado ,  Mia Hollie , and  Jonathan Custodio BRONX - The landlord whose Bronx building burned in a five-alarm fire Friday fought the city’s housing agency in court last year in an unsuccessful bid to exit a city program that requires monitoring for landlords with chronic heat complaints. Landlord Ved Parkash owns 2910 Wallace Avenue, a now burnt-out 98-unit apartment building in the Allerton neighborhood of The Bronx, just east of the New York Botanical Garden. That apartment building, along with nine others ...

Climate Change and A Festival of Light

Mayor Adams holds a public hearing at City Hall to discuss a package of childcare bills. -Photo by Caroline Willis/Mayoral Photo Office


Op-Ed


By Mayor Eric Adams


Ten years ago, 44 New Yorkers lost their lives when Hurricane Sandy hit. We suffered a weeklong blackout in downtown Manhattan, and billions in property damage. As we honor the memories of those whom we have lost, we are also embarking on the single largest urban climate adaptation program in the country so we can keep New York City and all New Yorkers safe.







On Wednesday, October 26, we will break ground on one of the most important parts of the plan: The Brooklyn Bridge-Montgomery Coastal Resilience (BMCR) Project. This is a system of storm walls and quickly deployable barriers that will rise into place to protect the Two Bridges neighborhood of Manhattan when a storm surge is headed our way. The BMCR project is just one part of the work we will be carrying out in all five boroughs to make sure that we are prepared when the next storm hits.





And New York City is not alone in feeling the catastrophic effects of climate change. From Jakarta, Indonesia to New Delhi, India; from Lima, Peru to Lagos, Nigeria; from Karachi, Pakistan to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, cities are being affected by storms, flooding, and record-high levels of pollution and temperatures.  In order to combat these complex problems, we must respond with multi-pronged, holistic solutions.



At C40 Cities, a global network of mayors taking urgent action to confront the climate crisis, I discussed prioritizing plant-based foods so that we can improve both our own health and the health of our planet—by decreasing our carbon footprint. New York City now offers Meatless Mondays and Plant Powered Fridays for our children’s public-school lunches, and we are making plant-forward meals the default in NYC Health + Hospitals. We are also encouraging urban agriculture and increasing healthy food access, while creating new jobs.  


Our Precision Employment Initiative fights the climate crisis by connecting people at risk of gun violence with career training and jobs in the green energy sector. So far, the program has been a great success, showing reduced levels of violence in communities where the initiative was piloted, and by creating employment opportunities that do good for the planet.




We also announced at $2 billion plan to fully electrify our schools. Going forward, every new school we build will be fully electric, and by 2030, we will have completed or initiated the conversion of 100 existing schools to all-electric heating. This means no more fossil-fuel-burning boilers, which is good for our students’ health and the environment.



As we face the complicated challenges of the 21st Century, our ancient traditions give us strength. One of these traditions is the Hindu festival of Diwali, which is celebrated by South Asian and Indo-Caribbean New Yorkers. Diwali marks the triumph of light over darkness, good over evil, and wisdom over ignorance. 


On October 20th, along with Assemblymember Rajkumar and Chancellor Banks, I announced my support for making Diwali a public school holiday so that South Asian and Indo-Caribbean New Yorkers are seen and supported, and so that all New Yorkers can learn and grow from the Festival of Lights.

Comments

Popular Posts