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Banking on Fulton Street

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Twenty-seven blocks.

For the past several years, that’s how far you had to go on Fulton, starting at Flatbush and traveling through Fort Greene and Clinton Hill to Bed-Stuy, before you would find a bank.

A Capital One branch now open at the corner of Fulton and Clinton has split that distance in half.

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CD 3: Caribbeans Say ‘Count Us in’

Friday, June 5th, 2009

Walk along Fulton Street in Bedford-Stuyvesant and the Caribbean presence is undeniable. Residents stop by the West Indian grocery store to pick up yuca and Jamaican cooking spices. Ali’s Roti Shop sells Trinidadian street food from a walk-up window, while the Jamaican bakery on the corner turns out fresh bulla cakes daily.

Despite the neighborhood’s large Caribbean influence, the government has no accurate count for how many residents of Caribbean descent are living here. One organization is trying to change this by urging the United States Census Bureau to add a Caribbean-American ethnicity option to Census forms. The next Census survey is scheduled for April 1st, 2010.

Misleading Numbers

“I was just sick and tired of being told that Caribbean nationals, they’re not really important because of the numbers,” said Felicia Persaud, founder of the advocacy group CaribID2010.

More than 570,000 New Yorkers were born in the Caribbean – 20 percent of the city’s foreign-born population, according to Census figures. But the number excludes U.S.-born citizens of Caribbean ethnicity.

“There are no accurate figures in terms of measuring their spending power, their voting power, their contribution,” she said. “In New York City especially, there is a huge undercount in Caribbean populated areas, which is also pulling down the federal funding level that the city could get.”

Persaud, who is Guyanese, argues that without an accurate count, the country’s Caribbean population is unable to meet its full economic and political potential. Census results are used to draw congressional districts and to determine how much funding communities receive.

Funds at Stake

In the 2000 fiscal year, 85 percent of federal grants to state and local governments were distributed on the basis of Census data, according to a report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office.

While there are no Census counts for the number of Caribbean-Americans in New York, they represent one of the more prevalent immigrant groups. Four of the countries on New York’s list of top ten countries of birth for the state’s foreign-born population are Caribbean nations — the Dominican Republic, Guyana, Haiti and Jamaica, government statistics show.

“The Caribbean community is very prolific in Brooklyn, in New York as a whole,” said Austin Tuitt, who runs the Global Caribbean Representation, a community organization that aims to connect Caribbean-Americans with their roots. Originally from Trinidad, Tuitt has lived in Brooklyn since the late 1960s.

“Everyone needs to be counted,” he said. “People are here.”

Bill Bid

In April, a bill was introduced in Congress by Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-Brooklyn) asking that a Caribbean origins category be added to Census forms. Clarke, the daughter of Jamaican immigrants, represents several Brooklyn neighborhoods.

Still, the bill is not likely to progress quickly enough for the change to be made in time for the 2010 Census.

“Category changes for race do not happen overnight,” said Tony Farthing, New York regional director for the U.S. Census Bureau. “This has to go through all levels of government, and Capitol Hill, and not just the Census Bureau.”

He noted that other changes to Census forms — like the addition of Hispanic as an ethnicity, first used in 1990 — were achieved after years of campaigning.

“Obviously we’re aware it’s not going to happen for 2010 unless it’s a miracle,” said Persaud, who started CaribID2010 last year. “For 2010, we really want to reiterate that Caribbean nationals must fill out the form and write in their country of origin on Question Eight. It’s about whether they want to exist in this country and be counted, or remain invisible.”

Check Off Drama

Question Eight asks the race of the person filling out the form, with an option underneath for “some other race.” Ali Shah, who’s owned Trinidad Ali’s Roti Shop on Fulton Street for the past 15 years, said he checked off “black” on the last Census survey.

On a recent Wednesday afternoon, he chatted with two friends inside nearby Charlie’s Calypso City, a record store that sells reggae and steel drum music.

“I’m a West Indian just like these gentlemen here,” he said, pointing to his friends, who are also Caribbean.  ”They would put black automatically. I do the same.”

The “black” option is described by the Census Bureau as for someone who is “black or African American, a person having origins in any of the Black racial groups of Africa.” Originally from Trinidad and Tobago, this description does little to accurately describe Shah and his friends.

“I don’t know where they put me,” he said.

New York Cheers Obama Victory

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

“Obama! Obama!”

The chants and the beat of drums overwhelmed the Harlem State Office Plaza last night on 125th Street and Adam Clayton Powell Blvd. When CNN declared at about 11 p.m. that Barack Obama had won the presidency , the crowd erupted in a glorious, pulsing frenzy.

“We makin’ history tonight,” said Sharon Farley as she danced joyfully on a bench. “No sleep for us! We’re gonna celebrate all night!”

From Times Square to Bedford-Stuyvesant, to livingrooms to church basements to bars around the the city, New York marked the election of the country’s first African-American president with dancing, horn-honking, hollering and tears of joy.

But the biggest display of emotion came in Harlem, where thousands – including big name politicos like U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel and Gov. David Paterson – gathered in the plaza to watch the election returns on a loud jumbotron.

Eugene Rounds, 61, four Obama buttons on his lapel, took in the crowd, breaking into a wide smile. “I could not be more proud,” he said.

Rounds voted early in the morning and talked about how his 96-year-old mother followed him to the polls later. “She said, ‘God allowed me to be alive to see this change in America,’” he said.

On the other side of the plaza, Maxine Murrell gazed toward the TV screen, her eyes welling up. “This make me want to cry because my father used to be a poor man porter,” she said. “This means a lot. Just standing here. And I know I’m going to cry.”

Amidst the crowd, Anthony Fleming, a 20-year Harlem resident, carted out his store-bought life-size cut-out of Obama to the sidewalk across from the brand new neon-lit H & M Department Store.

“America’s on fire and we have to put the fire out,” said Fleming, who parked himself just beyond the frenzy, charging passersby $5 to have a shot with his cardboard Obama. “White or black. If we’re in the same neighborhood and your house is burning and my house is next to yours, I’ll bring you water.”

The magnitude of the moment — and its impact on the nation — didn’t escape a family standing nearby. Jose Perkins, 42, took in the scene with his daughter Nicole, 25, and his son Julian, 17.

“I can see the hope, because now my son can become president,” said Perkins.

Julian piped in, “I sure hope so.”

Brooklynites Beat Sun to the Polls

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

At the crack of dawn on Election Day, 44-year-old Aaron Cook headed to the polls in Bedford-Stuyvesant to vote for the first time.

“I didn’t think it was necessary,” Cook said. “I said ‘Why waste my time?’ But this time, I felt a little different. I felt maybe something could happen.”

With record numbers expected to vote in the presidential election, many Brooklynites showed up as the sun rose. Dozens joined Cook and as he lined up at the Cornerstone Sandy F. Ray Senior Housing Center.

“Getting up early this morning standing on line wasn’t a problem for me,” said Shara Martinez, 30, an Obama supporter and second-time voter. “I think it was a beautiful experience because I’m glad that we’re gonna get a president that can help [the country] and bring it back up to par where it once was before Bush came into office.”

Kanke Ikpi, 26, said that she was not bothered by the early morning. In fact, she said she had trouble sleeping Monday night because it felt like the day before Christmas.

“I’m really excited,” Ikpi said. “Hopefully, at the end of the day it goes the way I want it to go.”

Many voters shared her excitement as they exited the double doors of the senior center this morning.

“It’s been a very exciting, historical election for me,” said 18-year-old Terrell Johnson, a first- time voter who arrived at the center before it opened to voters at 6 a.m. “I’ve been looking forward to this for a while.”

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