Monday, June 29, 2015
Bedford Park News: Gotta Go? Better Have the #Dough!
Bedford Park News: Gotta Go? Better Have the #Dough!: Gotta Go? Better Have the #Dough! Restaurant Charges to Use Bathroom By David Greene BRONX, NEW YORK, J...
Gotta Go? Better Have the #Dough!
By David Greene
BRONX, NEW YORK, JUNE 29- Residents and visitors of Norwood got a shock recently when one popular restaurant began charging a $3 fee to use the restroom.
Those entering the El Caribe Restaurant located at 2 East Gun Hill Road were immediately confronted with a pair of signs that read, "Bathroom is only for the customers. You want to use it? You will have to pay $3.00."
The resident added, "C
ustomers may want to go in there and wash their hands before a meal. Now they’re going to charge you to use the bathroom and wash your hands? That's crazy."
One East Gun Hill Road street peddler offered, "Since they started doing that we walk around the block and use the bathroom at North Central Bronx Hospital, so we just won't patronize them anymore. It's a shame and it's a lousy policy. No other restaurant is doing that, so we'll just go somewhere else."
Asked if he'd ever used the bathroom, the peddler replied, "Yes, it's a nice bathroom, but it's kind of small. It's not like the gas stations, but I don't think it's worth three bucks."
Repeated attempts for comment were met with employees slamming down the receiver of the telephone on two separate occasions.
The trend appears to be growing as the front door to the Mosholu-Montefiore Community Center a block away, now has a sign on it's from door that reads, "Sorry no public restrooms."
Bedford Park News: Beloved Monte Employee Remembered as Humanitarian
Bedford Park News: Beloved Monte Employee Remembered as Humanitarian: Beloved Monte Employee Remembered as Humanitarian By David Greene BRONX, NEW YORK, JUNE 29- Friends and co-work...
Beloved Monte Employee Remembered as Humanitarian
By David Greene
BRONX, NEW YORK, JUNE 29- Friends and co-workers from a popular program implemented by Montefiore Hospital were saddened to learn of the untimely death of Michael Joseph Walsh, who died of lung failure at the age of 51.
Walsh was found dead inside his Mosholu Parkway North apartment where he had lived for the last 18-years, discovered by police officers on Tuesday, May 26. His death over the Memorial Day weekend came just days before his 52nd birthday.
Walsh, who grew up in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn, was a gifted pool player who gave local pool sharks a run for their money.
However, childhood arthritis prevented him from joining the professional circuit, but Walsh would spend years working for the owner of the local pool hall where he developed his skill, spending countless hours assisting players in perfecting their game.
Longtime friend Ileene Mark recalled meeting Walsh when he began to drive a taxi at Gateway Car Service, "I remember the day I met Michael, He was walking in. I worked nights and he worked days. He came in with this New York Met's bag and we were friend's ever since."
Soon after Walsh began helping recovering alcoholics and drug abusers at The Bowery Mission before coming to Street Smart, a program previously known as The Woman's Center, which got it's start at Montefiore Hospital, with a grant from the Centers for Disease Control, where he was the coordinator of the HIV prevention program for adolescence.
According to his boss at Street Smart, Anitra Pivnick, for the last decade Walsh would go into local schools and places like the South Bronx Jobs Corps where he instructed teens about the prevention of HIV.
Pivnick said of Walsh, "He was just an extremely kind man and he had an extraordinary gift to communicate with young people and that's no easy thing to do."
"They saw him as a mentor," Pivnick added, "He was wonderful with kids."
Friends say Walsh was a very private person who loved baseball, music and was an avid coin collector. Walsh shared his love for animals with his two brother's Tommy and Eddie and shared his love for them when he opened his home to them briefly in 2010.
Walsh kept it hidden from many of his co-worker's and clients, but was devastated by the death of his youngest brother Eddie, who died from the effects of diabetes on March 31, 2012.
Co-worker Paulette Gordon who affectionately called Walsh "Fabio" for his long-wavy hair, recalled, "He was a dedicated worker who loved his job and the people that he worked with. He was really a good guy."
Another co
-worker Mike Henderson said of Walsh, "We did outreach together. Mike was the kind of guy who was more than willing to share information through his wisdom."

Henderson added, "He was very dedicated to his work and did his best at what he did. Mike did presentations to teens at schools and had a group of adolescents who admired and loved him."
During a June18 memorial for co-worker's at the Church of St. Brendan's, Father George Stewart said of Walsh, "He had a great love for youth, a great love for the poor. He had a great love for the underdog."
Recalling the 24-hour opening of the lower church that houses the Holy Eucharist, which began on December 8, 2013, Stewart said over 400 volunteers have given one-hour a week for the last year and-a-half to sit vigil at the open church and pray.
Stewart revealed,
"The very first hour when we began, was manned by Michael. Michael was our very first to do it."
Walsh is survived by bothers Thomas and half-brother Allen.
Friday, June 26, 2015
Bedford Park News: Pols Hail Supremes on #GayMarriage Decision
Bedford Park News: Pols Hail Supremes on #GayMarriage Decision: Pols Hail Supremes on #GayMarriage Decision BRONX, NEW YORK, JUNE 26- Officials throughout the Bronx hailed the Suprem...
Pols Hail Supremes on #GayMarriage Decision
BRONX, NEW YORK, JUNE 26- Officials throughout the Bronx hailed the Supreme Court’s decision making gay marriage the law of the land.
The court’s 5-4 decision allows gay and lesbian couples the right to marry in any of the 50 states.
“Today is a historic day in the United States,” said Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. “The Supreme Court has made history and affirmed a basic human right today by allowing men and women to legally marry throughout this nation, regardless of their sexual orientation.
“After two decades of litigation, the Supreme Court has finally expanded equal rights and marriage equality to all. I would like to thank the Supreme Court for having the courage to make this bold decision, and I congratulate this nation’s LGBT community for their efforts on this issue,” Diaz said.
“Today the Supreme Court put to rest a decades-long civil rights struggle for marriage equality,” said Rep. Joe Crowley. “In its decision the Supreme Court affirmed what a majority of Americans believe, that marriage between two loving individuals, regardless of their sex, deserves full protection under the law as afforded under the 14th Amendment. History will remember this day as a watershed moment, a day when ‘we the people’ took another major step toward justice in our enormous and enduring struggle to form a more perfect union.
“So today, as we celebrate this momentous victory for our gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender brothers and sisters let us also remember those we lost along the way. Those who came before us as activists, advocates, and allies who, when faced with bigotry and violence, did not shrink, but rather stood for the belief that discrimination based on sexual orientation has absolutely no place in the laws and policies of our country. We stand on the shoulders of those giants today, and proudly proclaim love is love.”
“America will never forget this day, and neither will people all across the world who know the meaning of love and compassion,” said Mayor Bill deBlasio “June 26, 2015, will forever be memorialized as a pivotal moment in the history of our nation – the day the Supreme Court affirmed our core values of love, equality, and justice, rejected ignorance and malice, and appealed to the humanity in us all. Our country will finally afford millions of Americans the rights they have always deserved, but until now were unable to exercise. Today, this country is richer – filled with
more equality, more acceptance, and more love than yesterday. And for the people of this city, where the movement for LGBT rights began in 1969 at the Stonewall Inn, we can be proud that we helped blaze the trail to this great victory.”
Congressman Charles B. Rangel, who represents the 13th Congressional District of New York that includes Upper Manhattan and parts of the Bronx, released the following statement on the Unite States Supreme decision on same-sex marriage:
"Indeed, all love is equal. I applaud the Supreme Court ruling on the same-sex marriage case and reaffirming that the union of the LGBT community should be treated equally. This decision marks another milestone toward American progress as the court reaffirms equal protections guaranteed to all Americans under the 14th Amendment. Today, a long overdue justice and equality have been served.
“Far too many couples have been denied protections by their governments, rights to legally commit to one another, and basic responsibilities as spouse and parents. The Court's ruling today makes it loud and clear that same-sex marriage is less about redefining the institution of marriage, but more so to ensure fundamental rights and dignity that gays and lesbians across the country deserve.
“As our nation celebrates Pride Month, this ruling could not come at a more appropriate time. I am proud that New York State is a leader in marriage equality and I look forward to other states across the nation recognizing this important right for all people. Let us continue on our path towards progress and let nothing stand in the way of ensuring equality for all,” Rangel said.
#SupremeCourt #GayMarriage #Bronxnews
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Bedford Park News: #Marriott Opens Door in Metro Center
Bedford Park News: #Marriott Opens Door in Metro Center: Bronx Now has a First-Class Place to Stay Marriott Opens Door in Metro Center By Dan Gesslein BRONX, NEW ...
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)



