Simcha Felder
A question of loyalty
Oh, choices. The Village Voice on the Bronx Gonzales-Espada primary:
When last in the senate, Espada picked up his chair and went and sat with the Republicans. His reward from then–GOP majority leader Joe Bruno was some $745,000 in member-item grants he was allowed to dole out to recipients of his choice. (Espada found the perfect home for the money: his own Soundview health-care centers. He was later forced to withdraw the gifts after the Times reported them.)
The Daily Politics on the SD-21 primary in Brooklyn:
[State Senator Kevin] Parker insisted he's not concerned. He accused [primary opponent Simcha] Felder of being a Republican plant.
"Simcha Felder has no interest in being in the state Senate," Parker said. "There was no way he decided to do this all by himself."
Before casting their votes on Tuesday, voters should inquire as to whether the "Democrat" on the ballot will work to pass a Democratic agenda if elected. or sell himself out to Dean Skelos. With Espada, Felder and Kendall Stewart, there's reason to doubt whether they'll vote with their professed party, or prolong the Albany stalemate between a republican Senate and a Democratic Assembly by switching sides.
New York State Senate | Pedro Espada | Simcha Felder
Solving the Vicious Circular
I know we should be wary of efforts to legislate pet peeves, but count me as a supporter of City Councilmember Simcha Felder's proposal to allow New Yorkers to opt out of the stream of advertising circulars, menus, and other fliers currently being delivered unbidden onto our doorsteps.
It's bad enough, as a tenant, having to wade through a pile of soggy junk mail everytime you walk up your stoop. Throw them out, and more quickly appear. As Felder points out, homeowners have it even worse: they're on the hook with the Department of Sanitation for what is, essentially, someone else's garbage. And then there's the environmental cost of churning out all those plastic-wrapped papers. Felder isn't proposing an outright ban - just the chance to say no thanks to all the clutter. It's a do-not-call list for your front step.
I'm actually surprised that a bill like this hasn't been proposed already. Other cities do the same thing - for instance Amsterdam, where you can see, on every mailbox, a sticker indicating whether or not the building's residents want to receive the free junk. If I recall correctly, there are even a couple of options - for instance, one could say "yes" to menus but "no thank you" to piles of Rite-Aid coupons.
In the grand scheme of things, it's hardly a towering issue. But then quality of life is all about the little things, isn't it?
City Council | New York City | Simcha Felder





