Author Topic: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009  (Read 6071 times)

Offline toddg

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Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« on: December 26, 2008, 11:07:22 PM »
If Monserrate's plans to move up to the State Senate remain on track, there will be a special election in February to replace him on the City Council.  So far, there are five announced candidates:

Julissa Ferreras, Chief of Staff to Hiram Monserrate
Francisco Moya, former Chief of Staff to David Paterson
Eduardo Giraldo, former president of the Queens Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
Carlos Pena, community activist
George Dixon, Democratic District Leader

Who would be the best leader for our neighborhood and the city in these challenging times?

Here's an article about the contenders:
5 vie for Monserrate seat (Jackson Heights Times, Dec. 26, 2008)

« Last Edit: February 12, 2009, 08:19:21 AM by toddg »

Offline petster

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #1 on: December 27, 2008, 09:57:42 PM »
Did Monserrate represent Corona or Jackson Heights on the council? Sorry for my confusion. Isn't Danny Dromm looking for a seat on the City Council to represent Jackson Heights?

Offline Chuckster

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #2 on: December 27, 2008, 10:07:22 PM »
According to the New York City Council website, Monserrate represents Queens' District 21 which encompasses Corona, Corona Heights, Elmhurst, East Elmhurst, Jackson Heights, LaGuardia Airport, Flushing Meadow, Corona Park.

Daniel Dromm is looking to fill the seat of Helen Sears in District 25 that also includes Jackson Heights.
« Last Edit: December 27, 2008, 10:15:29 PM by Chuckster »
The Chuckster has spoken!

Offline petster

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #3 on: December 28, 2008, 11:45:47 AM »
Thanks for clearing up the confusion. :D

Offline toddg

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #4 on: January 07, 2009, 10:30:31 PM »
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PR- 002-09
January 3, 2009

MAYOR BLOOMBERG ANNOUNCES SPECIAL ELECTION FOR THREE VACANT CITY COUNCIL SEATS WILL BE HELD ON FEBRUARY 24

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg today announced that a special election for Council Member for the twenty-first, thirty-second and forty-ninth Council districts will be held on Tuesday, February 24th, 2009.

The special election will fill vacancies that were created at midnight on December 31st, 2008 by the resignation of Hiram Monserrate in the twenty-first Council district and Joseph P. Addabbo in the thirty-second Council district; as well as a vacancy created at midnight on January 2nd, 2009 by the resignation of Michael E. McMahon in the forty-ninth Council district.

The February 24th election will elect council members that will serve until December 31st, 2009. Pursuant to the City Charter, the nomination of candidates in this election will be by independent nominating petition.

Offline toddg

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #5 on: January 11, 2009, 11:09:38 PM »
Here's a report on a recent candidates forum:

City Council hopefuls make their case before special election
by Alan Krawitz, Chronicle Contributor
01/08/2009
      
  Kicking off the special City Council election season, the Lesbian and Gay Democratic Club of Queens last Monday held a Candidate’s Night at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Jackson Heights.

   The event spotlighted four candidates vying to succeed state Sen. Hiram Monserrate’s in the 21st City Council District.

   Issues raised at the event ranged from the controversial Willets Point Redevelopment project to education and crime — and perhaps most importantly for the mostly LGBT crowd, same-sex marriage.

  (Follow link for complete story)

Offline toddg

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #6 on: January 11, 2009, 11:44:51 PM »
Here's another article I missed...

The New York Observer
Libre, Willets, Obama, Crime at Candidates' Forum for Monserrate's Seat
by Azi Paybarah on January 6, 2009

(Follow link for complete article)

Offline toddg

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Offline smok

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #8 on: January 16, 2009, 06:28:25 PM »
Julissa was the only one with credible points in that article, although I'm not impressed by her response to the Libre situation. She should come forward with what she knows now. To do otherwise is not quite honest. I also wasn't impressed by any of the candidates. Who is this guy, George Dixon? He's concerned about sending crime elsewhere?? Hello, his JOB would be to address issues in HIS district...what kind of councilperson would he really be if improving his district goes against his moral code somehow?

Offline Queenskid

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #9 on: January 21, 2009, 10:12:41 AM »
Julissa Ferreras may have made some good points, but how can you vote for someone who can't account for hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayer money that was supposed to go to our community.  What is she going to do in the Council?  Lose a million or two. 

Offline fodoherty

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Feb 24 Special Election to fill remainder of Monserrate term
« Reply #10 on: February 12, 2009, 12:00:05 AM »

Is anyone talking about this.  It is in less than 2 weeks, but there does not seem to be much information about this.  Here is the little that I know. 

There seems to be 4 candidates left: Francisco Moya, Julissa Ferraras, George Dixon and Jose E. Giraldo.  The would all be Democrates if the election had a party affiliation.  The district is an odd shape, but generally it goes from 80th Street in Jackson Heights all the way to Flushing Medows Park.  It covers part of Jackson Heights, Corona and East Elmhurst.
 
On Wed., Feb. 18 at 7:00 PM the Jackson Heights Beautification Group will have a Candidate Forum so that the community can hear from all 4 candidates. Questions from the community will be asked directly to the candidates.  It will be held at the Community Church on 35th Avenue near 82nd Street.

The Queens Congregation United for action and the Antioch Baptist Church will have a Candidate's Forum on Saturday, Feb. 14 at 11:00 AM at 103-20 Northern Blvd.

Offline toddg

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #11 on: February 12, 2009, 08:18:33 AM »
Jackson Heights Times
E. Elmhurst Council seat candidates to hold debate

By Jeremy Walsh
Wednesday, February 11, 2009 11:10 PM EST

At least three of the remaining five candidates vying for the City Council seat vacated by state Sen. Hiram Monserrate (D-East Elmhurst) will face off in a debate at the Langston Hughes Library this Thursday.

Julissa Ferreras, Monserrate’s former chief of staff; Eduardo Giraldo, former president of the Queens Hispanic Chamber of Commerce; and Democratic district leader George Dixon all confirmed they would attend the event, scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the library at 100-01 Northern Blvd.

The candidates are regrouping after facing challenges to the petition signatures that would qualify them for the special election ballot. Candidate Angel Del Villar, a Corona lawyer who ran unsuccessfully against Monserrate for the seat in 2001, was kicked off the ballot after Ferreras challenged him.

“His petitions were awful,” she said. “He was just randomly collecting signatures from Roosevelt Avenue. There’s a process. We invest a lot of time and energy to do things right.”

Del Villar could not be reached for comment.

Other candidates also fought off challenges to their petitions.

“Julissa challenged everyone,” Dixon said. “Mine in particular was challenged. They listed objections, the whole bit. They did their best because I’m in one of the strongest voting areas. Everyone is out to siphon off votes from the East Elmhurst area.”

...

Ferreras leads the pack in endorsements, with health care, hotel and municipal employees unions, 14 current or former Council members and the Working Families Party.

Moya earned endorsements from U.S. Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D?Ridgewood), former state Sen. John Sabini and Democratic district leaders Barbara Jackson and James Lisa.

Offline fodoherty

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #12 on: February 17, 2009, 12:34:02 AM »

Is this NYT Story (below) about Julissa Ferreras the same person who is running for the 21st City Council Seat?


ysfunction at a Charity That Relies on Council Largess
By RUSS BUETTNER and SERGE F. KOVALESKI
Hiram Monserrate, a city councilman from Queens, has supplied more than $400,000 in city funds in recent years to a nonprofit agency that has been run by some of his closest aides and whose financial records have devolved into what its current director calls “a mess.”

The organization, Libre, which offers a wide array of programs and services for the Latino community, has not filed a tax return for the past two years. It has never registered as a charity with the state attorney general’s office, as required. And its director says unpaid bills and poor record-keeping grew so problematic that he had to all but shutter Libre last year.

“Libre is a mess,” said Rodolfo Herrera, the director. “I don’t think it’s a mess because they were stealing money. I think it’s because they didn’t know what to do with paper.”

The millions of dollars that council members dole out to community groups each year rarely received attention until last month, when it was revealed that the Council had been using the names of fictitious groups to park money that it could later spend without going through the normal budget review process.

Now a spectrum of analysts, from auditors for the city comptroller to federal investigators to lawyers for the city’s Department of Investigation, are scrutinizing just what kinds of programs City Council members are financing with the discretionary funds they control.

Libre, whose name stands for Latino Initiative for Better Resources and Empowerment Inc., has not been identified as the subject of any special review. But it resembles, in its close ties to Mr. Monserrate, other organizations that have drawn scrutiny.

Mr. Monserrate, a former city police officer, negotiated the lease for Libre’s former office, according to the building’s superintendent, and one of the group’s former top executives says he was directly recruited for the job by the councilman. In recent years, its four principals included two women who worked as Mr. Monserrate’s chief of staff and his director of constituent services.

P. Wayne Mahlke, Mr. Monserrate’s legislative and budget director, said the councilman had no control of Libre and had believed that its finances and tax filings were “in full compliance.”

“The council member knows Libre provided services to the community and has been a strong organization,” Mr. Mahlke said. “Yes, they went through some difficulties, but that was all their own internal difficulties.”

Libre has told city officials that it provides recreation and education programs, assistance to immigrants and job training for people in Queens. A more detailed picture of the organization’s activities was unavailable because Mr. Herrera said he was not directly involved in program services and other staff members did not return calls.

Neighbors of Libre’s former office in Corona, Queens, said that the office was seldom crowded and that staff members generally seemed to be involved in dispensing advice on how to reach government agencies.

Libre has also served as something of a clearinghouse for city funds. Mr. Monserrate’s office said Libre dispensed a third of the money it received to other organizations that the councilman had deemed worthy of support, like the Corona Basketball League and the Colombian Parade Committee.

City Council officials said Friday that they knew the names of all the organizations that were the ultimate recipients of such “pass-through” appropriations. The Council speaker, Christine C. Quinn, and the city’s Law Department made efforts last year to increase the monitoring of pass-through funds, which have been used for more than a decade.

But Council officials said they relied primarily on the city agencies that actually expend the money, under contract, to make any background checks on recipient groups. The checks can be cursory, however, as was made clear in an indictment last month.

The indictment accused two aides of Councilman Kendall Stewart of Brooklyn of embezzling $145,000 from a nonprofit group they ran. Prosecutors said in the indictment that officials at the city’s Department for the Aging had initially denied Mr. Stewart’s request to give money to the group, the Donna Reid Memorial Education Fund, after noticing that it was based at the home of his chief of staff. But a subsequent request was approved by the Department of Youth and Community Development.

Until November, Libre operated out of a two-story building on National Street in Corona, where neighbors said the organization sometimes held evening English classes but generally opened for only part of the day and rarely had more than three people working.

The building’s superintendent, Ismail Gaiby, said the office grew more crowded when Libre sponsored voter registration drives, which he said were often attended by Mr. Monserrate.

“There were a lot of people coming in and out,” said Mr. Gaiby, who also works at an Islamic book company and meat store on the block. “They would go out in the street and register the voters.”

Mr. Gaiby said Mr. Monserrate, accompanied by another man, personally negotiated Libre’s $1,100-a-month rent in April 2005 and delivered the security deposit, but Mr. Mahlke said the councilman “does not recall having any participation” in that process.

Libre was incorporated in July 2003, but it has filed only one tax return, which covered the fiscal year ending June 30, 2005. That return showed revenues of $49,750 and expenses of about $25,000, made up mostly of $19,200 in rent and utilities and $3,520 for printing.

The return said the group provided “street activities, including music and cultural enrichment for youth and adults,” and “back-to-school equipment and activities for young adults.” It listed Yoselin Genao, who was Mr. Monserrate’s director of constituent services, as the contact for Libre.

The return listed Julissa Ferreras as chairwoman of Libre’s board of directors, and indicated it was an unpaid position. City records indicate that during the time period covered by the tax return, Ms. Ferreras was also serving as Mr. Monserrate’s chief of staff, a post she did not leave until August 2005. Ms. Ferreras returned to work as Mr. Monserrate’s chief of staff last September.

In an interview on April 18, Mr. Monserrate gave an account that differed from what the records indicate. He said Ms. Ferreras had not held positions in his Council office and at Libre at the same time. He said that she took the position with the nonprofit only after ending her first stretch with the Council, and that he had required her to leave Libre last year when she returned to work for his office.

Ms. Ferreras, Ms. Genao and Mr. Herrera’s computer services company have also been paid for work on Mr. Monserrate’s political campaigns, records show.

The bookkeeping issues with Libre surfaced last fall, according to Mr. Herrera, who said Ms. Ferreras recognized that there was trouble with Libre’s books. Javier Cardenas, who was executive director at the time, left shortly after, and Libre began to search for a new director. Mr. Cardenas could not be reached for comment, and Ms. Ferreras did not return calls.

Efforts to find a new leader for the organization last October put Mr. Monserrate in touch with Herman Mendoza, who now runs a community outreach program in Corona, Mr. Mendoza said.

“He offered me the position” of executive director, Mr. Mendoza said. “I was working for an insurance company, and he said, ‘Hey, there’s an offer if you want to work, since you do a lot of work with the community.’ ”

But Mr. Mendoza said he found that he was Libre’s only staffer and left after three weeks.

“They couldn’t pay me a salary, so I had to get another job quick,” he said. “I guess there was no funding.”

Mr. Herrera, who had been Libre’s treasurer since its inception, said Ms. Ferreras asked him to take over as director in November. He immediately moved Libre into the small office in Jackson Heights where he runs two other firms, a Colombian radio station and a nonprofit organization, Latin Technologies, that offers technology training.

Latin Technologies has received $120,000 in city funds since 2004, most of it in discretionary awards from Mr. Monserrate.

In a telephone interview on Friday from Colombia, where he was visiting, Mr. Herrera said he planned to file Libre’s delinquent tax returns by the end of May. He said Libre’s only existing city contract called for it to distribute $32,000 of a $40,000 award to other community groups.

Mr. Herrera said he was unable to access Libre’s records because he was out of the country. Though he was the treasurer during the years in question, he said he did not monitor the books, a job that he said fell to Mr. Cardenas.

“All we’ve been doing is paying bills from the past,” Mr. Herrera said. “Libre doesn’t have employees. We are just cleaning up Libre debt.”

Reporting was contributed by Daryl Khan, Sharon Otterman, William K. Rashbaum and Ray Rivera.


Offline toddg

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #13 on: February 17, 2009, 12:39:00 AM »
Gotham Gazette has a good overview of the race and the candidates:

Complicated Calculus in Race to Replace Monserrate

Offline fodoherty

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Re: Special Election for 21st City Council District - Feb. 2009
« Reply #14 on: February 17, 2009, 12:55:50 AM »

As you know, there will be a special election for the 21st City Council District on February 24, 2009 to fill the seat vacated by Hiram Monserate.

Traditionally the Jackson Heights Beautification Group holds a candidates forum. Since this is a special election to fill the remaining term the campaign season is abbreviated. The election is just one week away on Tuesday, so this Wednesday we will have our candidate forum.

It will be held at the Community Church at 7:30 PM on 35th Avenue near 82nd Street.

There are 4 remaining candidates:
Francisco P Moya Yes We Can http://www.franciscomoya.com/
George R Dixon United For Change George R. Dixon does not have a web site
Jose Eduardo Giraldo People For Progress http://www.eduardogiraldo.com/home1.html
Julissa Ferreras United We Can http://julissaferreras.com/public_html/

The election is non-partisan and all the candidates are members of the Democratic party. The new term will only run until the end of the year. The 21st Election District does not cover all of Jackson Heights, but it does cover from 79th Street east to Corona between 37th Avenue and Roosevelt. It generally covers from La Guardia Airport down to Flushing Meadows Park. If you are in the district you should have already received a card from the NYC Board of Election noting where your polling place will be located. Make sure you check as in special elections, they often combine polling places and have reduced hours.

The candidate forum will have a dedicated section for your questions. Each candidate will be allowed to introduce themselves, take some general questions and then be open to questions from the audience. This is the time to have your questions answered before the election.

Please tell you neighbors. I hope to see you on Wednesday night at 7:30 at the Community Church on 35th Avenue near 82nd Street.