Celebrating Holidays and Partnerships

On December 6th, 2008 the Immigrants and Parks Collaborative - Jamaica Branch, held the 5th annual Jamaica Community Tree Lighting at Rufus King Park to celebrate the holidays and community unity.
Led by Immigrants and Parks collaborative members Centro Hispano Cuzcatlán (CHC) and Greater Jamaica Development Corporation (GJDC) the celebratory holiday tree lighting and present give away was attended by over 300. The event has become an important neighborhood holiday tradition for Jamaica, and additional organizations have been brought into the fold as a consequence of the Immigrants and Parks initiative. This year, in addition to CHC's traditional leadership role in the tree lighting, fellow community groups like Cultural Collaborative Jamaica, Friends of Rufus King Park, GJDC, and King Manor Museum participated.
“The tree lighting at Rufus King Park is an important tradition for the community of Jamaica,” said Eduardo Barahona of CHC. “The event continues to bring unity to our diverse community and grow every year because of the collaboration between so many community groups.”
The event is a great example of a unique partnership between the community organizing-based nonprofit CHC and the local development corporation GJDC that could serve as a model for park-centered community development in other areas. CHC’s considerable constituency within the community - built up by years of organizing around immigration, housing, and park issues – coupled with GJDC’s 40 years of economic development and considerable financial and administrative resources make them a potent pair in tackling issues revolving around Jamaica’s most important open space. The two organizations’ complimentary strengths have contributed to improved physical conditions in Rufus King Park, a big increase in the park programming, and a decrease in tensions between various segments of the surrounding neighborhood.
Neighborhood residents paired with the resources of local business is a very potent collaboration indeed.
Can You Read This Sign?

Many New Yorkers cannot. Many New Yorkers do not have access to public spaces for the simple fact that signs in parks most often times cater to only groups who speak one language.
As a country whose greatness is based on diversity through immigration, it is important to outreach to all people in the community.
Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice, or YMPJ, has been working Environmental Justice issues in the Soundview area of the South Bronx for approximately 14 years. One issue is the lack of open space in our neighborhood. YMPJ has been successful in creating open spaces within our community. Concrete Plant Park is scheduled to be opened for the public during the Spring of 2009. Concrete Plant Park is located near the Bronx River, which has a problem, as all open bodies of water in New York City do, with Combined Sewer Overflows, or CSOs. CSOs occur during rain events, dumping pollution into the river.
Immigrants who will use this park may not know what CSOs are and may use the Bronx River when it is polluted. Signag
e in the park in several different languages will help.
Or.....
How about a mural created by the community that doesn’t use words?
We’ve just finished a mural explaining some of YMPJ's work and why we are a part of the Immigrants and Parks Collaboration…. To improve the neighborhood by empowering the people who live here- all were at one time immigrants- of course!
RAIN RAIN go away?

It’s raining today! And although most New Yorkers associate rain with inconvenience- as evidenced by broken umbrellas abandoned along the sidewalks, delayed commutes due to flooded subways and buses stuck in traffic, and wet people decked out in waterproof boots and jackets- RAIN actually provides as an essential resource for our city’s green, open spaces. Trees, plants, and grass that we all enjoy at city parks need water from RAIN to survive. So why do we still design infrastructure that keeps RAIN from the plants that need water?
The covering of our city’s land with hard surfaces-
roofs, parking lots, streets and sidewalks- prevents RAIN from entering the soil and forces this resource into the sewers. Unfortunately, our sewers cannot handle the volume of stormwater runoff created by RAIN falling on hard surfaces thereby creating one of the largest pollution sources to NYC’s waterbodies, Combined Sewage Overflow. What is CSO? Runoff combines with sewage from our buildings- think toilets, sinks, showers- in a single pipe to be treated at one of NYC’s 14 wastewater treatment plants. When too much sewage and runoff enters the sewers during RAIN storms, the excess combined sewage dumps into our waterways. There are over 400 overflow points throughout NYC, contributing about 27,000,000,000 (BILLION) gallons of sewage per year!
So what does this mean for our parks? Parks along NYC waterbodies- Hudson River, East River,
