|

PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
17, No. 19 |
Sept..23
- Oct. 6, 2004 |



Editorial
A Filtration Myth
Is a mantra repeated by Bronx
Democratic Party chief Jose Rivera and his allies: Assemblyman Jeffrey
Dinowitz wanted the water filtration plant built in Riveras district at
Fordham Landing.
Just last week at a Council committee hearing, Council Member Maria
Baez, a Rivera protégée, could only think to ask Dinowitz, who was
testifying, one question: If youre so opposed to this project, why did
you support putting it in my district at Fordham Landing? Of all the
questions she could have asked, like, how can the Council be assured the
jobs associated with the project will go to Bronxites?; or how will the
DEP protect neighbors with asthma from the blasting?, she instead opted
for a cheap political shot.
The Norwood News has been to every public hearing on the water
filtration plant in the past decade. We have interviewed Dinowitz dozens
of times. And we have never heard him advocate that the plant be built
anywhere in the Bronx, including at Fordham Landing on the Harlem River.
The irony is that Rivera, who lives in Fordham Hill near the proposed
Fordham Landing site, felt no need to attend a single meeting held by
his fellow cooperators to plot their opposition to the facility. Nor did
he attend a critical community meeting in October 2002 at St. Nicholas
of Tolentine Church. Baez, who sent a staffer, was also absent, angering
the meetings organizers. Only State Senator Efrain Gonzalez attended the
session.
Jeff Dinowitz is certainly capable of fighting his own battles. But our
elected officials must take responsibility for their actions.
Blaming Dinowitz is just an excuse for doing a bad thing, which is the
decision to
jeopardize the health and well being of Norwood residents in favor of
serving the political interests of lawmakers elsewhere in the
borough.
Scooter Success
Could it be? The incessant drone of those dastardly motorized
mini-motorcycles that terrorized our communities over the summer has
disappeared or at least dissipated?
Looks like it. We haven't seen or heard a
scooter in quite a while.
According to Deputy Inspector Joseph Hoch, commander of the 52nd
Precinct, his officers confiscated over 100 of the scooters this summer.
Hoch also credits other Bronx commanders for making the scourge a top
priority.
We commend Hoch and his officers for their success. And now we hope that
to help prevent the noise of summer from returning next year, that the
City Council act soon on legislation to ban motorized scooter sales
within city limits.
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