Brooklyn
Shop Locally, Save Brooklyn: DDDB friendly business list
The Develop, Don't Destroy Brooklyn (DDDB) website lists, just in time for the holidays, all the businesses that have been supportive of their efforts to preserve Brooklyn. Here's that list below:
RESTAURANTS AND BARS:
7th Avenue Donuts Luncheonette (Park Slope)
Diner fare and fresh baked donuts.
324 Seventh Avenue (between Eighth and Ninth Street)
(718) 768-0748
Al Di La Trattoria (Park Slope)
Park Slope’s perpetually packed, widely-acclaimed Venetian institution.
248 Fifth Avenue (Near Carroll Street)
(718) 852-1572
www.aldilatrattoria.com
(I can personally vouch for this one. Absolutely excellent! The sage butter gnocchi and the saltamboca (sp?) are among the best as is their frozen cappuccino).
Antonio's Pizzeria (Park Slope)
Pizza since 1950.
318 Flatbush Avenue (between Park & Sterling Place)
(718) 398-2300
Bacchus Bistro (Boerum Hill/Cobble Hill)
French bistro.
409 Atlantic Avenue (between Bond & Nevins Street)
(718) 852-1572
www.bacchusbistro.com
Beast Bar (Prospect Heights)
A unique take on Spanish tapas, and bar.
638 Bergen Street (at Vanderbilt Avenue)
(718) 399-6855
Atlantic Yards | Economy | Brooklyn | Develop Don't Destroy Brooklyn
Brooklyn's Top Polluters and You
Here's an interesting rundown of the polluters in Brooklyn from the Josh Skaller for City Council website. The worst polluters in Brooklyn are (not in order): Con Edison - Hudson Ave Station, Gowanus Generating Station, Kings Plaza Total Energy Plant, American Sugar Refining Inc, Brooklyn Navy Yard Cogeneration Plant. These people are poisoning our air and water. Just a reminder of how bad pollution in Brooklyn can be, let me remind you of what the Gowanus Canal looks like: (two out of five lovely pictures of the canal taken by my wife July 26th, 2008)

See the lovely phase change between the solid slick and the water? Here's what it looked like on the opposite bank:

Yes...that is a glass bottle embedded and suspended by the muck.
alternative energy | Energy | Environment | Health | Pollution | Brooklyn | Con-Ed
CBID to Mayor Bloomberg and David Yassky: "We will not forget and we will not forgive"
The Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats has issued this statement regarding the Bloomberg Putsch:
The Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats (CBID) strongly oppose the recent City Council vote extending their own terms of office and those of the Mayor and other municipal officeholders, as well as the unsavory tactics used by Mayor Bloomberg to bend the Council to his will. Strong-arming charities who depend upon the Mayor's largesse and harrassing vulnerable Council Members do not represent the transparent, accountable governance approaches that this Mayor has always claimed to offer. For the Mayor and City Council to dismiss two recent referenda proving the people's support for eight-year term limits is an outrage.
Bloomberg Putsch | Brooklyn | Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats
Childcare in Brooklyn: Losing a Valuable Asset
One of the biggest crises for working families in America is the lack of affordable, quality child care. The choices available are few and often very exclusive (I hear rumors of people having to give stock tips to day care owners to get their kids in) and/or very expensive.
My wife and I were lucky. We got our son into the Berkeley Carroll child care center. Berkeley Carroll child care is far from cheap, but they provide all day care so both my wife and I can work full days, so it is worth it. They offer first come-first serve sign ups for new applicants, so it is as egalitarian as you can get given the price. This means there is a wide variety of children who attend from all over the city. The quality of care is exemplary. Parents are encouraged to be involved and are listened to (message to Bloomberg: successful schools listen to the parents!). Children are happy and learn at an amazing rate. My only complaint is the price but you get what you pay for, so even there it isn't really a complaint.
childcare | day care centers | Berkeley Carroll School | Brooklyn
WFP's Tuesday challenge
There are two hotly contested primaries happening this Tuesday in our fair City's core, both of which feature young, Progressive reformers going up against well-established incumbents. In one case, we have Paul Newell and Luke Henry taking on Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, in what Errol Louis called the most important race in this state; in the other, former Senate Minority Leader Marty Connor is in the fight of his life against Progressive challenger Daniel Squadron.
Here's a map: light blue is the 64th AD, red, the 25th Senate District.

The Working Families Party has taken positions in both races. In the SD-25 race, they're backing Dan Squadron, saying:
"This district is in need of a State Senator who will champion responsible development and shake things up in Albany. Daniel Squadron has a proven record of fighting for change," said Rocky Chin a member of the Chinatown/Lower East Side Club of the Working Families Party.
In the AD-64 race, by contrast, WFP stuck with Silver, arguing:
2008 Elections | Brooklyn | Dan Squadron | Manhattan | Paul Newell | Working Families Party
A Powerful Endorsement For Borough President: Can It Deliver?
The calypso king of the world (the Mighty Sparrow/Slinger Francisco), who was born on the island of Grenada -but lived most of his adult life in Trinidad and Tobago- opened up a famous calypso of his, with this line: “Let me tell you something, about Labor Day in Brooklyn”. That’s exactly how I start this column; by telling you something big that happened on Labor Day in Brooklyn.
Since 1967, the West Indian American Day Carnival Association (W.I.A.D.C.A.) has been holding Labor Day parades (millions strong) in New York City. One of their big events lately, is the breakfast ceremony - usually held under a large tent, in a park off Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn. Politicians from every corner come to this event. In the past there have been appearances from Senators Clinton and Schumer; former governors like Pataki and Cuomo; mayors like Bloomberg, Koch and Dinkins; and electeds at all levels of the political ladder. Even wannabee electeds show up for media exposure, networking, advertising purposes, photo-ops and the like. It’s the political place to be on the morning of Labor Day.
I doubt that the current borough president of Brooklyn (Marty Markowitz) has ever missed one of these breakfasts, since he was first elected to office (senate) almost 30 years ago. Marty loves Caribs, and they in turn are reciprocal (for the most part). He loves to tell anyone within earshot, that Caribs elected him to the boro prez position. He even made a light-skinned black Jamaican-born woman his deputy borough president; her name is Yvonne Graham. She is attractive, bright, articulate and qualified. She is also a health-expert. She is a damn good candidate for any office. And I don’t just say this because I am Caribbean-American like she is. As much as I am a Carib, I try to be objective about these things.
2009 Elections | Brooklyn | Marty Markowitz | Yvonne Graham
Markos Moulitsas comes to Brooklyn
A reader emails what is likely to be a packed event.
I noticed a sign in the window at the local Barnes & Noble on Court Street this morning. Markos of Daily Kos is going to be there on Thursday, Sept 4, at 7:00 pm. I thought you might want to check it out. Let me know if you plan to go because I'm definitely going.
Markos, obviously, is the founder of Daily Kos, the world's biggest blogging site, currently on tour to promote his newest book, Taking On The System - Rules for Radical Change in a Digital Age.
The book is getting rave reviews, and there are few places more demanding of systemic change than our very own cherished home state, so consider marking your calendar.
Blogging | Elections | Brooklyn | Markos Moulitsas
IND: No, you can't
There's been some back and forth here recently on IND, the so-called Independent Neighborhood Democrats, and their role in the primary in the 25th Senate District. Here and here, a commenter claiming to be the chair of the board of that organization explains their rationale for backing incumbent establishmentarian state Senator Martin Connor over insurgent Progressive newcomer Daniel Squadron.
The structure of that argument offers an opportunity to discuss the structural role of political clubs in the democratic process and the political life of the state, and whether their role is adequate to a vastly changed political environment in a changing city.
Let's begin with the basics, the public face of that organization, their web site. The site offers literally no avenue of engagement - there's not even a 'contact us' page, let alone everything else that's become standard over the last few years, a blog, a Facebook page, a Flickr page, YouTube, MySpace, none of that. What you get instead, presumably because that's what reform is all about, are links to forms, long lists of club officeholders, the heady stuff of committees and by-laws, and, as the glittering prize, links to the web sites of various incumbent legislators. What's noticeably absent is any acknowledgment of what's been built by Progressives over the last few years - the blogs, the resource web sites, the new think tanks, books, authors, all of it - just not there in this immaculate self-contained universe. IND is clearly alive with the intoxicating spirit of insurrection and rebellion that fueled its origins.
Those origins, as the site helpfully points out, lie back in the halcyon days of protest against the Vietnam War.
IND was organized more than 30 years ago by young activists from Carroll Gardens seeking to improve our neighborhoods and to end the war in Vietnam. IND continues to be committed to improving our Brooklyn community and to reforming the Democratic Party.
Of course, Vietnam is over, an entire generation in the past. The spirit of Vietnam has long since been co-opted by mortgages, careers and second homes, or whatever else it is that animates the baby boom generation. Apparently, high on their list of priorities is the maintenance of committees and boards, carrying as they do titles, coveted markers of social distinction. If this was once a revolutionary generation setting out to remake the world in its own image, that spirit has long since calcified into something far more brittle.
Independent Neighborhood Democrats | Brooklyn
Roger Adler: Running For the Wrong Office?
This morning I was late to work. As I rushed to the Union St. R-train stop, what should I see but Roger Adler campaigning at this stop.
Now, remember my standard disclaimer: Roger Adler is running against my friend Devin Cohen for the 1st Civil Court seat in Brooklyn. So I come to the table admittedly biased.
Today I took a flyer from Adler's hired hand while I watched him cheerfully wish commuters a good weekend. Adler was quite personable, quite different from the more arrogant and cranky guy I met at the Independent Neighborhood Democrats endorsement meeting. I was happy to see him in a better mood and seeing him finally campaigning personally in the district.
Civil Court Judge | election 2008 | judicial elections | Brooklyn | Roger Adler
Chris Owens Takes on the Judicial Convention
The judicial convention is one of the ways corruption can best thrive in Brooklyn's machine dominated political landscape. Yet most Brooklynites have no clue what the judicial convention is, why we have it, or what needs changing about it.
Apparently Chris Owens, President of Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats, wants to do something about that. His efforts have created something of a stir because he is raising money as part of his run for delegate to the judicial convention. This raised eyebrows because no one could imagine why you need money to run for an uncontested party position. I held off commenting for the most part because I suspected there may well be a plan behind Chris Owens' fundraising, and I suspected I knew what it was since I had similar ideas (which I never followed up on) regarding County Committee.
Corruption | judicial convention | Brooklyn | Chris Owens






