From: The Queens Courier
Rockaway residents take to City Hall, demand say in
Sandy rebuilding
Rockaway residents take to City Hall, demand say in
Sandy rebuilding
Monday, March 25th, 2013
Danny Ruscillo, president of the 100th Precinct Community Council |
By day 143, Rockaway residents had
had enough.
Scores traveled to the steps of City Hall on Saturday, March 23
to call on Mayor Michael Bloomberg and the city to help residents rebuild after
Sandy.
Shoulder to shoulder with elected officials and candidates for
mayor and borough president, resident after resident told personal stories of
their prolonged recovery and demanded a say in how the peninsula is rebuilt.
“Now, as community residents of
the Rockaway peninsula and Broad Channel, we demand to always have our voices
heard on what goes on with all future projects, and most importantly, to be
part of the process when implementing them to protect our community from
another Sandy, or any type of possible future disasters,” said Danny Ruscillo,
president of the 100th Precinct Community Council. Ruscillo held a sign that
became one of the chants during the hour-long press conference: “United we
stand. Divided we drown.”
Senator Charles Schumer recently secured money to rebuild New
York beaches, and take measures to prevent flooding.
The Army Corps of Engineers, which
has been conducting surveys on protecting the beach-front community for more
than a decade, recently said the study would take at least another
year-and-a-half.
But [residents like Margaret Wagner think that’s too long. Wagner
said she took the trip to lower Manhattan while her husband was at home putting
up sheetrock in their Broad Channel home.
“We want the studies to end
tomorrow,” said Wagner. “Give us a plan today. Not a year-and-a-half from now.”
John Cori and Eddie Pastore, who run Friends of Rockaway Beach and organized
the City Hall rally, have long campaigned to build better beach protection.
This was not the first time Rockaway residents have criticized
Bloomberg and his administration for what they believed was a delayed reaction
to the storm. On a visit to Breezy Point in November, Bloomberg was lambasted
by a resident; spectators at the St. Patrick’s Day parade on March 2 booed him
when he marched.
Councilmember Eric Ulrich and
State Senator Joseph Addabbo both said it was crucial that those who live there
have the final say in how the communities are rebuilt.
“These residents have to live with what’s left behind,” Addabbo
said. “Let’s get to work for these people.”
“We heard about the federal money that Senator Schumer was able
to secure and we’re very grateful for that,” Ulrich said. “But the community
needs to be kept in the loop as to how that money is going to be spent.”
No comments:
Post a Comment