April Membership Meeting: City Council Districts 7 & 10 Candidates Forum

 

Join us for our April Membership Meeting and get to know the candidates running for New York City Council in Districts 7 & 10!

Our meeting will start at 10:00 AM ET on Saturday, April 10. We have invited all of the candidates running for City Council in Districts 7 & 10 to come and tell us why they are the best candidate and how they will tackle environmental racism in our community. Members will also have an opportunity to ask them questions.

RSVP Today

 

THE NEW YORK CITY COUNCIL is the law-making body of the City of New York and it consists of 51 members from 51 different Council Districts throughout the five boroughs.  The council monitors the performance of city agencies (ex. Department of Education, NYPD, etc.) and makes land use decisions as well as legislating on a variety of other issues. The City Council negotiates the City’s budget with the Mayor and has sole responsibility for adoption of  the city budget. City Council Members provide leadership and guidance to their communities, communicating on behalf of their residents to the Council.

 

MEET THE CANDIDATES: District 7

Shaun Abreu has spent years advocating for our community, defending tenants’ rights, and fighting for working families. Born in City  Council District 7 to immigrant parents from the Dominican Republic, Shaun was raised in Washington Heights and attended public schools there and in Manhattan Valley, where he currently resides.

A firm believer in housing justice, Shaun works as a tenants’ rights attorney at the New York Legal Assistance Group, defending low-income New Yorkers from eviction and helping dozens of families remain in their homes. Like many of his clients, Shaun was raised on public assistance and in elementary school, witnessed his family being evicted. This experience fuels his commitment towards securing housing justice for working families, which he will continue to fight for in the City Council.

Shaun was a vital member of Manhattan Community Board 9, a board director for Friends of Morningside Park, and a court-appointed special advocate for children in foster care. As the Deputy Campaign Manager for Council Member Mark Levine, Shaun spearheaded this victorious race in 2013 and contributed to the successful passage of the Right to Counsel bill, guaranteeing that low-income New Yorkers have access to free attorneys in housing court. During law school, Shaun interned for the Honorable Ronaldo T. Acosta, the Presiding Judge of the Appellate Division for the First Judicial Department, as well as the Natural Resources Defense Council, where he contributed to a successful petition directing New York State to reduce pollutants from our city’s drinking water.

Shaun received his B.A. from Columbia College, Columbia University, and his J.D. from Tulane University Law School.

 

Marti Allen-Cummings (they/them) is an activist, community board member, gig worker and drag artist running for City Council in Uptown Manhattan. Marti has been working in NYC for 13 years after moving to the city to pursue a performing arts career. They know what it’s like to make it in New York living paycheck to paycheck and without insurance. For over a decade, Marti has been deeply involved in the community – advocating for LGBTQIA+ young people through the Ali Forney Center and aiding New Yorkers experiencing homelessness.

During the 2016 election Cycle, Marti founded a progressive Democratic club and their political activism energized an entire community. Marti currently serves on Community Board 9 on the Senior Issues Committee, and is an advisor on the NYC Nightlife Advisory Board. Marti lives with their husband, Blake, and two dogs on 143rd Street.

 

Dan Cohen is a native New Yorker with deep roots in the community, an affordable housing advocate, a proud NYC public-school graduate as well as current public-school parent, and serves on the school PTA. Since 2014 Dan has worked at the nonprofit Housing Partnership, helping to preserve thousands of affordable housing units each year. Dan is the Democratic State Committeeman representing the 69th Assembly District since being first elected in 2010 and also a founder of the Progressive Caucus of the NYS Democratic Committee. He is involved in the community as a member of Community Board 9, working to create 1,000 new affordable units, limit luxury real estate development, protect local landmarks and preserve our parks. Dan is also the President of the Valley Restoration LDC, a founder of Friends of Anibal Aviles Playground/Amigos del Parque de Anibal Aviles and on the board of Friends of Morningside Park. He was born and raised in rent-regulated housing in Upper Manhattan in the same neighborhood where he lives with his wife and son today. You can learn more about Dan at www.Cohen2021.com.

 

Stacy Lynch is a daughter of Harlem and a woman who was born into the movement that has dedicated her life to serving her community. She’s known for her ability to build coalitions whose work brings forth change in communities of great need. Most recently, she served as the Deputy Director of Intergovernmental Affairs at the NYC Mayor’s Office where she spent her days responding to community crises across the City and developing response plans designed to ensure the community needs were met and residents’ quality of life remained whole.

Stacy launched her run for NYC Council in the 7th District because she’s seen firsthand how government can play an active role in everyday people’s lives. As she stands on the cusp of leading District 7 to recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic, Stacy couldn’t be more prepared for this task, nor more energized to continue her life of service. Stacy is a dedicated caretaker to her mother Mary; a little sister to her brother Bill Lynch lll, a doting aunt to her nephew Bill Lynch llll, and a loving mom to her dog Bear.

 

Maria Ordoñez is an organizer and working-class Latina running for City Council in District 7. Maria is a lifelong West Harlem resident and has seen working class communities of color like hers go ignored by our elected officials for far too long. She firsthand understands what it means to go through New York City’s public school system and the hardships of living in an underserved community of color. That’s why she is running to represent us on the City Council. We have a huge affordable housing crisis, displaced communities, and people are suffering from lack of access to food and quality healthcare. Politicians have forgotten our communities, rich people continue to get rich, and working class people continue to struggle to survive. We need true representation and someone who will fight so that everyone has the right to food, healthcare, a good home, an education, and a good job. Maria will bring the voices of Council District 7 to City Hall and fight for a more just and equitable society for everyone. Maria is building a movement for District 7 and has the support of Our Revolution, PSC-CUNY, the New York Progressive Action Network, Grassroots Action NY, and The Jewish Vote.

 

A lifelong resident of West Harlem, Corey Ortega is a son of Dominican immigrants and the proud product of a union household. (His mom was a member of the UFT, and his dad was a member of Carpenters Union Local 608).

An experienced community organizer, Corey works as District Leader to fight for a fairer, stronger city for all New Yorkers. Corey is running for City Council on a platform of addressing the crisis of affordable housing, ending police abuse, expanding civil right to counsel, protecting LGBTQ+ rights, fighting for Medicare for all, building emergency and transitional housing for homeless LGBTQ+ youth, and fighting for educational equity.

Corey’s passion for public service started on the block where he grew up. When he was in college at St. John’s University, where he worked with his mother, a retired public school teacher, to found a group family daycare. He also fought for the rights of daycare providers on the executive board of UFT’s Child Care Providers Chapter. After graduation, he worked as a tenants’ rights advocate at P.A.L.A.N.T.E. Harlem, helping to improve the living conditions of Harlem residents in rent-stabilized and federally-subsidized buildings.

Corey also served as a Special Assistant for New York State Assembly Member Keith L.T. Wright, where for 3 years he served the Harlem community. From fighting eviction proceedings, to working with vendors on a proposal to create a vendor district on 125th Street and helping small business owners get back on their feet, he found equitable solutions for the residents of the district.

Corey has brought his skills as an organizer and knowledge of affordable housing to serve the veteran community. As Director of Civic Leadership at the NYC Veterans Alliance, he recruited and trained veterans to run for office. He also helped organize veterans to pass NYC Human Rights Local Law 119, which protects veterans and service members from discrimination in housing, employment, and public accommodations.

Corey is a staunch ally of the LGBTQ+ community. He has worked on LGBTQ+ voter registration drives, fought for the CASTRO bar/lounge and other LGBTQ+ businesses of color, and has been vocal in protesting against Trump’s recent healthcare rule that erases transgender protections.

Corey is a progressive Democrat who’s leading efforts to bring new voices into government and the political process. In 2017, he ousted an entrenched incumbent to become the first Dominican American District Leader in the 70th Assembly District (Part D). From founding one of the most diverse Democratic clubs in Northern Manhattan, to amplifying the voices of Black, Latinx, and Asian New York City Council Members, to partnering with his neighbors and grassroots organizations to help defeat the IDC, Corey is committed to building an inclusive, progressive Democratic Party that looks like our neighborhood.

He lives with his wife, Danielle, in the same rent-stabilized apartment in the Manhattanville neighborhood he grew up in.

 

Raymond Sanchez is a lifelong Manhattanite.

Ray was born and raised in the Baruch Houses, a New York City Housing Authority complex. Ray’s mother came from Central America as a young adult, eager to work and build a better life.

Growing up as a City kid in the 1980s had real challenges. Rainbows of crack vials littered NYCHA staircases, residents were threatened by gang violence, and the AIDS epidemic hit the city’s poorest zip codes the hardest. Ray’s mother feared she might lose her son to the dangers of the streets, so she enrolled him in the Boys Club of New York (BCNY) for structured after-school activities.

The BCNY selected Ray for its scholarship program, and at age 11, he enrolled in boarding school in Connecticut.

Ray knew that there were plenty of Black and Latina/o/x kids back home who would thrive if they had access to the same resources enjoyed by more privileged groups. It’s a fundamental reason why he has always sought to invest in communities of need, like the NYCHA houses he grew up in. It’s also why he is incredibly proud to have worked on passing the New York City Living Wage Law in 2011 and to have served as the lead author on an application that won a $10 million Downtown Revitalization Initiative Award for the South Bronx.

Ray went on to receive his BA from Wesleyan University, majoring in government with departmental honors for his thesis work on Latino political incorporation in New York City. He took his enthusiasm for civic engagement from academia to his first job as staff for the historic 2001 mayoral campaign of then Bronx Borough President Fernando Ferrer, whose central theme was a “Tale of Two Cities.”

After the campaign, Ray moved on to work for the Hispanic Federation, which was a natural progression after the campaign. Ray greatly enjoyed his time there, working on behalf of the Latino community; this experience has informed his years of service with various non-profits.

It also made his five years as a pension trustee to the New York City Retirement System that much more rewarding. Ray leveraged his corporate experience in financial services to oversee investments and corporate governance. He also worked with his fellow labor trustees to divest from predatory hedge funds that were exploiting Puerto Rico’s debt.

 

MEET THE CANDIDATES: District 10

Carmen De La Rosa immigrated from the Dominican Republic as a child and grew up in Inwood where she has lived her entire life. Her advocacy and passion for justice are deeply influenced by her roots. She has listened and advocated for the most vulnerable, even before she started her career in government.

In November 2016, Carmen was elected to represent us in the New York State Assembly. Since her first day in office, Carmen has fought against racism, xenophobia and economic injustice and her commitment to the community she loves continues.

As an Assembly Member, she is driven by the needs of our people. She led the passage of the NYS Dream Act to provide access to education to all students regardless of immigration status, and worked with organizers and advocates to reshape the lives of tenants, delivering real rent reform. Carmen is the lead sponsor in the Assembly for a billionaires tax to #TaxTheRich that will ensure the ultrawealthy finally pay their fair share and help us close budget gaps wreaked by COVID-19.

Carmen will fight to make sure that the needs of our community are at the forefront. She will fight to protect our community from irresponsible development and displacement, dismantle fundamental flaws in our criminal justice system, expand our social safety nets, fix our broken education system, and protect frontline workers and vulnerable small businesses. Carmen De La Rosa is the leader this moment requires.

 

Angela Fernandez is a single mother, lawyer and human rights activist who has worked for decades at the grassroots, co-leading movements that have led to transformational changes and have become models for cities across the country. She served for ten years as the Executive Director of the Northern Manhattan Coalition for Immigrant Rights, where she prevented thousands of deportations and co-developed the nation’s first universal court-appointed legal representation program for detained immigrants. Most recently, she was the NYS Commissioner of Human Rights, where she won millions of dollars in settlements for those discriminated against in housing, employment and more. Angela is ready and eager to co-govern with the community and take our ideas for housing, economic and environmental justice to City Hall.

 

A daughter of immigrants, born and raised in this district, single working mother raising three children, education leader, and Senator Robert Jackson’s Chief of Staff, Johanna Garcia knows the struggles, challenges, and aspirations of District 10 because she has lived them and made a difference.

Johanna is a proud product of New York City public schools—PS 173, Mott Hall, and LaGuardia High School for the Arts. She got her first job as a teen via the Summer Youth Employment Program (SYEP) and she’s been working nonstop to lift up her community ever since.

A parent leader and Community Education Council President, Johanna stood up to the hedge fund millionaires to stop extreme testing and protect student data, sued the state to lower class sizes, and was one of the first to highlight the crisis of lead in our children’s schools.

A Northern Manhattan Not for Sale founder, she stood up to the big developers to stop the massive Inwood rezoning that would displace senior citizens and working families and has been a leading advocate for affordable housing.

A community leader, she is the only candidate who fought to defeat the fake Democrats known as the IDC, enabling Democrats to lead the State Senate and pass important tenant protections, climate change, immigrant rights, and gun control laws.

Johanna will fight to provide a good education for every child, protect tenants’ rights, fight for a healthy environment and a Green New Deal, and ensure the economic recovery from COVID-19 includes every single New Yorker, including undocumented and excluded workers.

 

Josue Perez is a father of three young boys who currently attend the NYC public schools. He is a union member, a union delegate, and an educator for 20 years, and a baseball coach. Josue migrated to the USA from the Dominican Republic as young boy. He is also a product of the New York City public schools system. He graduated from Lehman College earning a degree in Education. Josue has been a hard and dedicated worker. He climbed the ladder by performing different jobs: He worked as a delivery boy, cashier in a supermarket and worked in a fast food restaurant.

Josue Peres is a community leader and long-time community organizer. He is the co-founder of FDC (Fuerza Dominicanos Por el Cambio), NCHR (National Commission of Human Rights), and TELLNY (Teacher Educator Latin Leadership). He has volunteered his time to several nonprofits and community programs. Moreover, he is an advisor to the Dominican Movement, Circulo Peñagomista, INDEX and, UTANY, among other organizations. Josue has fought and advocated tirelessly for issues that affect his community, such as housing, paid family leave, the opening of schools during the pandemic, the increase of the minimum wage to $15, and the opposition to rezoning. He is currently the UFT chapter leader of his school. He has fought diligently for the right of his constituents; this includes the rights of students, reducing class sizes, and more importantly making sure the funds for ESL and ED are equitable.

During his early life, Josue was the president of the student body of his high school. He led the fight for education equality and a leader of his baseball team. He was a manager of a bodega at the age of 14. He graduated high school and college with high honors. Josue has earned two masters degrees in Math and Secondary Education. I would like to thank everyone for supporting me in achieving my goal of becoming your next city councilman of district 10. If you choose me to represent you in the city council, I promise you that I would represent this district with honor and dignity. My goal as a city councilman is to make this district a more suitable place for us to grow as a community.

Josue Perez for City Council.

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