BROOKLYN, NY: Clubs, Candidates and Co-ops
MEET THE CANDIDATES: Here are some opportunities to meet local candidates and ask them questions.
Apr. 26, 3-5:30 PM: Education Forum Mayoral Control, End It or Mend It ?
Not a candidate's forum, but still worth attending.
Sponsored by CBID, Senator Eric Adams, Senator Velmanette Montgomery, Council woman Letitia james, 57th District Leader Olanike Alabi, UFT
Union Temple, 17 Eastern Parkway
Apr. 30, 6 PM: Education Forum Mayoral Control, End It or Mend It?
Reprise of this event. Sponsored by CBID, Senator Eric Adams, Senator Velmanette Montgomery, Council woman Letitia james, 57th District Leader Olanike Alabi, UFT
Teen Challenge Center, 444 Clinton Ave between Greene and Gates Ave
May 3rd, 5-7 PM: Meet Josh Skaller, candidate for the 39th City Council District: Marjorie Gersten, Joy and I are hosting this event. Refreshments. 50 Willow St, in Brooklyn Heights
May 9th 4-10 PM: One of the hottest events coming up. Food, music and two candidates for the price of one. Meet Rock Hackshaw, candidate for the 40th City Council Distirct, with special guest Norman Siegel, candidate for Public Advocate. Lots of music and Caribbean-American food. $20 donation requested. 1400 Schenectady Avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y. (Between Foster Avenue and Farragut Road).
May 19 7-9 PM: Candidate Debate: 39th Council District, sponsored by CBID and IND
Church of Gethsemane, 1012 8th Ave at 10th St. (Park Slope)
BROOKLYN REFORM DEMOCRATIC ORGANIZATIONS:
Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats is a community-based Democratic club. CBID has fought for reform and progressive causes since 1968. As a Brooklyn-based Club, we have been instrumental in the election of many candidates for public office. Much of this success was a result of our question-and-answer forums with prospective candidates as well as our extensive on-the-street contact with our constituents.
Staunchly opposed to political corruption, we are proud of our independence and our commitment to progressive reform in city, state and national politics. We are a vehicle for citizen empowerment and making government more accountable to our neighborhoods.
We meet monthly, usually the fourth Thursday evening of the month in the basement of the Park Slope United Methodist Church, on the corner of 6th ave and 8th street, at 7:30pm. All are welcome.
New Kings Democrats (”NKD”) is a new, grassroots organization in Kings County (Brooklyn), New York whose primary mission is to recruit and prepare individuals to run for Kings County Democratic Committee. NKD hopes to achieve the goal of an inclusionary and participatory democracy by making it easy for individuals to run for local, elected office. NKD will serve as a training ground for individuals seeking higher office, and hopes to build and nurture a new group of Brooklyn Democratic leaders.
Democracy for NYC in Brooklyn:
Democracy for New York City (DFNYC) is a volunteer-driven non-profit politicalaction committee. We are part of a national coalition of local groups committed to the ideals espoused by Democracy for America, the organization founded by Howard Dean.
We work both locally and nationally to ensure that fiscally-responsible and socially-progressive candidates win elections at all levels of government. We develop innovative ways to advocate for the issues that matter to our members and promote legislation which has a positive effect in our communities. We engage people in the political process and give them the tools to organize, communicate, mobilize, and enact change on the local, state, and national level.
Currently there is only one Brooklyn chapter:
Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn - Meets First Wednesday of every month. 7:00pm, Wyckoff-Bennett Homestead 1669 E. 22nd St. with host Annette Mont and Estelle Glasser.
CITY COUNCIL CANDIDATES IN BROOKLYN:
TOP PICK:
Josh Skaller for City Council. Josh is a good friend of ours, a solid progressive, and about as honest as you can get. Josh is taking a leadership role in supporting the Obama Administration's EPA nomination of the Gowanus Canal for Superfund status. I have smelled and seen how polluted this waterway is, and it amazes me that they want to build on it now before it is cleaned up. Obama's EPA wants to use the Superfund to clean it up BEFORE development can start. This is a toxic waste site. No development should start before it is cleaned up. Current development plans, supported by most of Skaller's opponents, is to develop the site without adequate clean up. My wife thinks this will lead to the next Love Canal. I think Josh and Obmam will get the site cleaned up before this can happen, if Josh is elected.
"Josh has always fought for fiscal responsibility and the progressive solutions needed to reform city government"
--Jim Dean
Chair of Democracy For America (DFA)
Josh has been endorsed by State Senator Eric Adams, Civil Rights champion and Public Advocate candidate Norm Siegel, Democracy for NYC, and many others.
Here is Josh's statement on his campaign website:
Here's Josh Skaller Speaking Up for Giving REAL Power to the Parents
Here are some more of my endorsements in Brooklyn:
33rd City Council District: Jo Anne Simon. You can read my detailed rundown of this race here.
34th City Council District: Diana Reyna. The first woman of Dominican-American descent to be elected to NYC public office. Reyna is being heavily targeted by Brooklyn Boss Vito Lopez because she hasn't gone along with his corruption. Seems to me a certain Surrogate Judge had a similar experience and won when Vito tried to take his revenge. I think we can defeat Vito again. I don't consider Reyna my ideal candidate (she is one of the Bloomberg 29, for example), but I certainly won't support Vito's corruption candidate against her.
35th City Council District: Letitia James wholeheartedly. An amazing woman!
38th City Council District: David Galarza wholeheartedly. I know him and he is a good guy. Smart, honest, progressive and reform minded.
40th City Council District: Rock Hackshaw. He is a fellow blogger and his knowledge of Brooklyn politics is amazing. I differ with this guy on some issues. He is too conservative to my mind. But I know him and his honesty and integrity are exceptional and I think he would be an excellent City Councilman. Since he is running against a guy who lies about being a doctor and is as strange and squirrely as you can get, Rock would be a very welcome change. (No website yet?)
45th City Council District: Two candidates I like. First Terry Hinds. I have three people giving very good recommendations for this guy. But I also think Rod Daley is good and represents a chance to get another educator on the city council.
DRINKING LIBERALLY IN BROOKLYN:
An informal, inclusive progressive social group. Raise your spirits
while you raise your glass, and share ideas while you share a pitcher.
Drinking Liberally gives like-minded, left-leaning individuals a place
to talk politics. You don't need to be a policy expert and this isn't a
book club - just come and learn from peers, trade jokes, vent
frustration and hang out in an environment where it's not taboo to talk
politics.
Park Slope
* Second Wednesday of each month, 7:30-10:00 pm
* Commonwealth, 497 5th Ave (at 12th Street)
* Hosted by Anthony Accurso, Emilie Harkin and Emily Farris, parkslope (at) drinkingliberally.org
FOOD CO-OPS IN BROOKLYN:
Park Slope Food Co-op
782 Union Street
Brooklyn, New York 11215
Phone: (718) 622-0560
FAX: (718) 622-5685
linda_wheeler@psfc.coop
http://www.foodcoop.com/
This is the largest Food Co-op in America. Joy and I are members (as are City Council Candidates Ken Baer and Josh Skaller). Low prices and high quality even if it can be a bit inconvenient at times.
Flatbush Food Cooperative
1318 Cortelyou Road
Brooklyn, New York 11226
Phone: (718) 284-9717
FAX: (718) 284-9719
info@flatbushfoodcoop.com
http://www.flatbushfoodcoop.com/
Established in 1976, and located on Cortelyou Road in the heart of Victorian Flatbush since 1985, Flatbush Food Coop is a community-owned, full-service natural foods store specializing in organic products. We are committed to serving the diverse community in which we are situated, and beyond, by providing goods and services that promote personal and environmental well-being. Like the 300 food coops across the nation with which we are affiliated, we are open to all—it is not necessary to be a member to shop. By joining the Coop, however, you become a joint owner of our business and are able to take additional savings on your purchases. There are opportunities for varying degrees of involvement in the coop, and our member-owners are able to influence the direction of our organization. We are particularly proud that the dozens of ethnic groups in Brooklyn’s most diverse neighborhood are reflected in our staff, our close to 3,000 members, and countless shoppers.
Apr. 26, 3-5:30 PM: Education Forum Mayoral Control, End It or Mend It ?
Not a candidate's forum, but still worth attending.
Sponsored by CBID, Senator Eric Adams, Senator Velmanette Montgomery, Council woman Letitia james, 57th District Leader Olanike Alabi, UFT
Union Temple, 17 Eastern Parkway
Apr. 30, 6 PM: Education Forum Mayoral Control, End It or Mend It?
Reprise of this event. Sponsored by CBID, Senator Eric Adams, Senator Velmanette Montgomery, Council woman Letitia james, 57th District Leader Olanike Alabi, UFT
Teen Challenge Center, 444 Clinton Ave between Greene and Gates Ave
May 3rd, 5-7 PM: Meet Josh Skaller, candidate for the 39th City Council District: Marjorie Gersten, Joy and I are hosting this event. Refreshments. 50 Willow St, in Brooklyn Heights
May 9th 4-10 PM: One of the hottest events coming up. Food, music and two candidates for the price of one. Meet Rock Hackshaw, candidate for the 40th City Council Distirct, with special guest Norman Siegel, candidate for Public Advocate. Lots of music and Caribbean-American food. $20 donation requested. 1400 Schenectady Avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y. (Between Foster Avenue and Farragut Road).
May 19 7-9 PM: Candidate Debate: 39th Council District, sponsored by CBID and IND
Church of Gethsemane, 1012 8th Ave at 10th St. (Park Slope)
BROOKLYN REFORM DEMOCRATIC ORGANIZATIONS:
Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats is a community-based Democratic club. CBID has fought for reform and progressive causes since 1968. As a Brooklyn-based Club, we have been instrumental in the election of many candidates for public office. Much of this success was a result of our question-and-answer forums with prospective candidates as well as our extensive on-the-street contact with our constituents.
Staunchly opposed to political corruption, we are proud of our independence and our commitment to progressive reform in city, state and national politics. We are a vehicle for citizen empowerment and making government more accountable to our neighborhoods.
We meet monthly, usually the fourth Thursday evening of the month in the basement of the Park Slope United Methodist Church, on the corner of 6th ave and 8th street, at 7:30pm. All are welcome.
New Kings Democrats (”NKD”) is a new, grassroots organization in Kings County (Brooklyn), New York whose primary mission is to recruit and prepare individuals to run for Kings County Democratic Committee. NKD hopes to achieve the goal of an inclusionary and participatory democracy by making it easy for individuals to run for local, elected office. NKD will serve as a training ground for individuals seeking higher office, and hopes to build and nurture a new group of Brooklyn Democratic leaders.
Democracy for NYC in Brooklyn:
Democracy for New York City (DFNYC) is a volunteer-driven non-profit politicalaction committee. We are part of a national coalition of local groups committed to the ideals espoused by Democracy for America, the organization founded by Howard Dean.
We work both locally and nationally to ensure that fiscally-responsible and socially-progressive candidates win elections at all levels of government. We develop innovative ways to advocate for the issues that matter to our members and promote legislation which has a positive effect in our communities. We engage people in the political process and give them the tools to organize, communicate, mobilize, and enact change on the local, state, and national level.
Currently there is only one Brooklyn chapter:
Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn - Meets First Wednesday of every month. 7:00pm, Wyckoff-Bennett Homestead 1669 E. 22nd St. with host Annette Mont and Estelle Glasser.
CITY COUNCIL CANDIDATES IN BROOKLYN:
TOP PICK:
Josh Skaller for City Council. Josh is a good friend of ours, a solid progressive, and about as honest as you can get. Josh is taking a leadership role in supporting the Obama Administration's EPA nomination of the Gowanus Canal for Superfund status. I have smelled and seen how polluted this waterway is, and it amazes me that they want to build on it now before it is cleaned up. Obama's EPA wants to use the Superfund to clean it up BEFORE development can start. This is a toxic waste site. No development should start before it is cleaned up. Current development plans, supported by most of Skaller's opponents, is to develop the site without adequate clean up. My wife thinks this will lead to the next Love Canal. I think Josh and Obmam will get the site cleaned up before this can happen, if Josh is elected.
"Josh has always fought for fiscal responsibility and the progressive solutions needed to reform city government"
--Jim Dean
Chair of Democracy For America (DFA)
Josh has been endorsed by State Senator Eric Adams, Civil Rights champion and Public Advocate candidate Norm Siegel, Democracy for NYC, and many others.
Here is Josh's statement on his campaign website:
I love Brooklyn—our neighborhoods and our people, the incredible warmth I feel walking around our vibrant and diverse communities. Like you, I know that Brooklyn is a terrific place to live and raise our families. But everywhere we look these days, the things that make our borough great are under assault. Developers and out of touch politicians seem determined to transform our community into an endless series of high-rise condos and strip malls. I believe that unchecked development threatens the beauty and integrity of our neighborhoods, overtaxes public services, and places an incalculable burden on our fragile ecology. I’m willing to stand up to the developers, and I hope you’ll stand with me.
As President of Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats (CBID) for the past two years, and as an executive member of Democracy for New York City, I've had the honor and pleasure of working with fellow concerned citizens to help change Brooklyn for the better: Local government that doesn't fear its constituents, but embraces them. A political ecosystem that nourishes and amplifies our core values rather than suppresses them. Transparency, honesty, community empowerment, and more than just lip service for the progressive values our neighborhoods share. I will continue to work on behalf of schools and teachers for our children, an environmental policy brave enough to protect the planet for future generations, and I will stand strong and defend our neighborhoods from the out of control, out of context development that seems to be everywhere, and advocate for smart growth and community based planning.
I look forward to bringing the enthusiasm I've shared with so many of you to city council.
Here's Josh Skaller Speaking Up for Giving REAL Power to the Parents
Here are some more of my endorsements in Brooklyn:
33rd City Council District: Jo Anne Simon. You can read my detailed rundown of this race here.
34th City Council District: Diana Reyna. The first woman of Dominican-American descent to be elected to NYC public office. Reyna is being heavily targeted by Brooklyn Boss Vito Lopez because she hasn't gone along with his corruption. Seems to me a certain Surrogate Judge had a similar experience and won when Vito tried to take his revenge. I think we can defeat Vito again. I don't consider Reyna my ideal candidate (she is one of the Bloomberg 29, for example), but I certainly won't support Vito's corruption candidate against her.
35th City Council District: Letitia James wholeheartedly. An amazing woman!
38th City Council District: David Galarza wholeheartedly. I know him and he is a good guy. Smart, honest, progressive and reform minded.
40th City Council District: Rock Hackshaw. He is a fellow blogger and his knowledge of Brooklyn politics is amazing. I differ with this guy on some issues. He is too conservative to my mind. But I know him and his honesty and integrity are exceptional and I think he would be an excellent City Councilman. Since he is running against a guy who lies about being a doctor and is as strange and squirrely as you can get, Rock would be a very welcome change. (No website yet?)
45th City Council District: Two candidates I like. First Terry Hinds. I have three people giving very good recommendations for this guy. But I also think Rod Daley is good and represents a chance to get another educator on the city council.
DRINKING LIBERALLY IN BROOKLYN:
An informal, inclusive progressive social group. Raise your spirits
while you raise your glass, and share ideas while you share a pitcher.
Drinking Liberally gives like-minded, left-leaning individuals a place
to talk politics. You don't need to be a policy expert and this isn't a
book club - just come and learn from peers, trade jokes, vent
frustration and hang out in an environment where it's not taboo to talk
politics.
Park Slope
* Second Wednesday of each month, 7:30-10:00 pm
* Commonwealth, 497 5th Ave (at 12th Street)
* Hosted by Anthony Accurso, Emilie Harkin and Emily Farris, parkslope (at) drinkingliberally.org
FOOD CO-OPS IN BROOKLYN:
Park Slope Food Co-op
782 Union Street
Brooklyn, New York 11215
Phone: (718) 622-0560
FAX: (718) 622-5685
linda_wheeler@psfc.coop
http://www.foodcoop.com/
This is the largest Food Co-op in America. Joy and I are members (as are City Council Candidates Ken Baer and Josh Skaller). Low prices and high quality even if it can be a bit inconvenient at times.
Flatbush Food Cooperative
1318 Cortelyou Road
Brooklyn, New York 11226
Phone: (718) 284-9717
FAX: (718) 284-9719
info@flatbushfoodcoop.com
http://www.flatbushfoodcoop.com/
Established in 1976, and located on Cortelyou Road in the heart of Victorian Flatbush since 1985, Flatbush Food Coop is a community-owned, full-service natural foods store specializing in organic products. We are committed to serving the diverse community in which we are situated, and beyond, by providing goods and services that promote personal and environmental well-being. Like the 300 food coops across the nation with which we are affiliated, we are open to all—it is not necessary to be a member to shop. By joining the Coop, however, you become a joint owner of our business and are able to take additional savings on your purchases. There are opportunities for varying degrees of involvement in the coop, and our member-owners are able to influence the direction of our organization. We are particularly proud that the dozens of ethnic groups in Brooklyn’s most diverse neighborhood are reflected in our staff, our close to 3,000 members, and countless shoppers.
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