Cornegy organizes a baby shower
On Wednesday, Councillor Robert Cornegy Jr. hosted his third annual birth party in partnership with Campaign Against Hunger, Bedford-Stuyvesant Family Health Center, Bridge Street Development Corporation, Bed Stuy Restoration and other network partners. The baby shower presented gifts to new and long-term mothers. He took position at Restoration Plaza.
Hospitality Alliance demands to return to indoor catering
The New York City Hospitality Alliance and restorers in the five counties held a news convention Wednesday calling on Governor Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio to expand and put in place a quick plan for the return of indoor restaurants to New York City. More than six weeks after internal food was suspended indefinitely, plans were announced to reopen gymnasiums, schools, museums and bowling alleys. New York City’s restaurants and bars predicted that indoor food can resume at 50% of its capacity as a Component of Phase 3 reopening July 6, but restaurants in other parts of the state have been serving consumers indoors since June 17. Outdoor food The bloodless winter months are expected to be tenuous, inmates predict a coup de grace for the industry if indoor food does not resume until mid-September.
Gillibrand seeks health investments
U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N. And.) Recently suggested that The Senate leadership make a strong investment for substance use disorders and intellectual fitness care in the upcoming coronavirus relief program. “As the drug crisis grows, Americans and their families urgently want resources to keep them and their loved ones safe. The coronavirus pandemic has imposed a heavy burden on the care of intellectual fitness and substance use and we want to make sure that the millions of Americans in need can help,” he said.
Missing Brooklyn discovered in East Hampton
Casie Penatello, a Brooklyn woman whose jeep was discovered on a beach in Bridgehampton, has been discovered. East Hampton Village police discovered the 22-year-old woman in good health, local police said. Southampton detectives and NYPD had been working together since Sunday when he noticed he had left his home. No other data are available, according to The Independent, a publication on East Long Island.
“I’m on the seafront”
Permits were requested for a 3-story residential construction at 102 Summit St. in the Columbia Street Waterfront District. The site, between Columbia and Hicks Street, is now occupied through a 3-story reddish stone house and is six blocks west of The Carroll Street Metro station of the F and G. Anthony Prestiagia as indexed as the owner and Paul Lombardi of Design Studio Associates is indexed as official architect. The construction will come with 3 apartments, probably condos, as well as a penthouse and backyard, according to New York YIMBY. Demolition permits have not yet been announced.
Melody Lanes reopens, the long term remains uncertain
Aleven, although granted permission to reopen the bowling alleys on August 14, Melody Lanes’ owner at Sunset Park said his company had not yet left the forest. Just before the pandemic, Melody Lanes completed a $1.5 million renovation of the company’s interior, however, bowling is used very little, even though consumers are welcome. This is possibly because of COVID’s new restrictions that have closed all other lanes, banned the sale of food and beverages, and forced managers to hang plastic sheets to separate bowlers’ teams. Gary Beshara, the owner, says the opening is not a financial success, but he does so to help his 30 people, many of whom have worked there for decades, according to amNewYork. Despite the long closure related to the pandemic, Beshara had to pay $110,000 in asset taxes for the 47th Street and Fifth Avenue building.
New condos in east New York
A nine-story mixed-use construction is expected to be built at 495 Sutter Avenue, on the corner of Snediker Avenue. The city’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development is indexed as an owner. With 184 apartments planned, this is a great progression for the low-level neighborhood. The construction, however, will not have accessory parking, depending on eastnewyork.com. Now it’s a big wasteland.
Family seeks devoid grandmother
A circle of Sunset Park relatives is looking for a 72-year-old woman with dementia two days after she went to the store and never returned home. Policewoman Ann Mariel Thompson would possibly have turned the other way on 45th Street on his way home from his normal trip, which is just a minute from the family circle apartment near Sixth Avenue. It hasn’t been noticed since 6pm. Sunday. The cashier told the police that Thompson had gone to the store, but that she had gone in a different direction than usual. “Normally he has no challenge to go to the store,” his son, Sam, told Patch.
Five-story construction planned for Crown Heights
Permits have been submitted for a five-story construction to be built at 188 Utica Ave., Crown Heights. The site, recently occupied through a convenience store, is at the intersection of Park Place and four blocks north of Utica Avenue 2, 3 and four trains. Construction will come with 15 apartments, maximum likely rent, as well as 1,875 square feet of advertising area and 625 square feet of network area. Zeidan is indexed as owner, and Charles Mallea of M Architecture is indexed as an architect, according to New York YIMBY.
Compiled through Raanan Geberer.
Brooklyn, New York’s most populous district, has a population of approximately 2.6 million. If Brooklyn were an independent city, it would be the fourth largest city in the United States. While Brooklyn has the quintessence of “fresh and modern” in recent years, for those born here, raised families here and taken a step forward in communities over the years, Brooklyn has never been “not great.”
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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle and brooklyneagle.com cover Brooklyn 24 hours a day, 7 days a week online and five days a week in print with the slogan “All Brooklyn All The Time.” With a history dating back to 1841, the Eagle is the only true New Yorker exclusively in Brooklyn.
© 2020 All Brooklyn Media