Veterans, Honored and Remembered Locally, Continue to Serve the Community

  Throughout the northwest Bronx, various statues, plaques and memorials honor and remember those veterans who served the country, some of whom died in combat. From the Bronx Victory Memorial at the southern end of Mosholu Parkway, which honors local residents who died in World War I, to Memorial Grove in Van Cortlandt Park, which honors those who served up to, and through the Vietnam War, local neighborhoods recognize the service of men and women in the military.   Of course, Woodlawn Cemetery is the final resting place for over 6,500 men and women who served in the military. Those


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DOB Warns Property Owners, Contractors & Crane Operators of Danger Amid High Winds

   The New York City area may experience severe weather, including potential wind gusts up to 40 MPH, starting, Sunday, Nov. 15. Accordingly, the City’s Department of Buildings is reminding all builders, contractors, crane operators, and property owners to secure their construction sites, buildings, and equipment.                                                                                                                                      The Department will be performing random spot-check inspections of construction sites around the city. If sites are not secured, the Department will take immediate enforcement action, issuing violations and Stop Work Orders, where necessary.   Winds may reach higher speeds and last longer than forecast in certain areas of the city. Property owners


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Bronx Connections: 2020 Election Local Lens: Housing and Education

Norwood News, in partnership with WFUV radio and BronxNet Television, presents a five-part series on national issues affecting voters during the 2020 presidential election, seen through the local lens of Bronx neighborhood communities. Part five looks at housing and education.   It’s no secret that the Bronx has challenges, that its richer neighbors to the North and South do not. It ranks last among New York counties in terms of health outcomes, has some of the poorest school districts, and some of the highest air pollution rates, but it also has people who care fiercely about it, people who want


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New Tracker Allows Public to Better Understand DOB Project Timelines

  On Oct. 14, the New York City Department of Buildings (DOB) launched an online Service Levels Tracker, a new tool which allows New Yorkers to see average wait times for DOB services while also, according to DOB, demonstrating the agency’s commitment to both expediency and efficiency.   While this information has been available to the public in different forms over the years, the new tracker puts it all in one location, with a clear explanation of the different DOB metrics. Too often, homeowners and the public do not have the tools necessary to understand where DOB fits into the


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Deadline Extended to Nov. 6 for Communities of Color Nonprofit Stabilization Fund Grant

The New York Urban League and its partners invite community-based organizations (CBOs) to apply for a NYC Council Communities of Color Nonprofit Stabilization Fund (CCNSF) grant by the new extended deadline of Nov. 6, 2020 at 5 p.m.   The New York City Council established the Communities of Color Nonprofit Stabilization Fund (CCNSF) in recent years and has allocated $2.5 million to award grants to support Black, Latino, and Asian-led community-based organizations throughout New York City’s five boroughs.   The first New York City Council fund of its kind, CCNSF aims to build the capacity of New York City nonprofits


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Census Deadline Cut Short to October 15 following Supreme Court Ruling

At noon on Wednesday, Oct. 14, NYC Census 2020 and partners hosted an emergency virtual press conference to raise awareness about the shortened timeline for the completion of the census which now ends Oct. 15, and to mobilize the community in a final sprint to respond and encourage their neighbors, friends, and family to do so also.   On Friday, Sept. 24, U.S. District Court Judge Lucy Koh had ordered the Census Bureau to keep conducting the census count until Oct. 31 but a subsequent Supreme Court ruling allowed the Trump administration to end the 2020 Census on Oct. 15.


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Affordable Homeownership Summit Focuses on Black Homeownership & Racial Wealth Gap

The annual Affordable Homeownership Summit hosted by the Center for NYC Neighborhoods will take place, virtually, over two days on Oct. 7 and 8, between 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. EST. It will discuss recovery strategies from the global pandemic, Black homeownership, the racial wealth gap, and climate change.   The center will bring together hundreds of leaders, policymakers, government officials, lenders and advocates, virtually, for its seventh annual summit, which will run for two days with five panels, as experts discuss innovative solutions and current best practices for low, and moderate-income homeowners.   Keynote speaker Andre Perry, fellow on


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Census Deadline Extended to October 31, Norwood Can Do Better

On Friday, Sept. 24, U.S. District Court Judge Lucy Koh ordered the Census Bureau to keep conducting the census count until October 31.   City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, who yesterday announced his withdrawal from the mayoral race in New York City, and 2020 Census Task Force Co-Chairs, Carlos Menchaca and Carlina Rivera, issued a statement on the court ruling extending the census period.   “This is a win for New York and gives us another month to get a complete count in the City. We have seen the Trump Administration try and fail, again and again, to exclude immigrants


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Elections 2021: Oswald Feliz on Education, Climate Action & Housing

  Bronx native, attorney, and board member of Northwest Bronx Democrats 4 Change, Oswald Feliz, is clear on what his top three issues are in running for City Council in the 15th District. “Number one, I will work to racially and economically desegregate our public-school system,” he said. “We actually have the most racially and economically segregated system in the country, and that has to change.”   Feliz said that in a city which has the largest public-school system in the country, with over 1.1 million students, where 70 percent are from minority communities, it is unjust that only a


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