congressional district 12

Paging Congresswoman Velazquez

Two things happened this week. They weren’t really aware of each other’s existence, but they had a mutual impact.  Something like spring and allergies.

The Congressional Hispanic Caucus under Congresswoman Nydia M. Velazquez announced its priorities for the Health and Environment Task Force in the 111th Congress.

And a mildly ill – non-Hispanic resident of the 12th District, paid a visit to the Williamsburg Health Center in Brooklyn.

Being sick sucks. No matter what your ethnicity is.

On a warm spring Tuesday, she schlepped her sweatpants-influenza-ish- self all the way to the closest clinic. “It’s better to be on the safe side,” her mother always said. Even if that side is on the South Side of the neighborhood, 16 blocks away.

The CHC’s announcement came just in time, the recent visit to the doctor shows.

In the heart of the Hassidic neighborhood, signs in both Yiddish and Spanish advise on hygiene and health rules.  The Orthodox woman at the reception desk, tried to be efficient and sympathetic. It wasn’t easy as she was alternating signing in patients and answering a constant stream of phone calls.

The waiting area that only minutes earlier was filled with nothing but Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s voice, talking about beets and cholesterol on the health channel, soon became crowded with real people and coughs.

One floor higher and 40 minutes later it was already a zoo.

A nurse – THE nurse – was hidden under a pile of files, medical records, manually filling out the paper work.
When the door opened the nurse mumbled, “They’re trying to make us quit our job,” an answer to one’s question – why are you here by yourself?

Then, she put an ad-hock sign on the door: Please knock once and take a sit.

There were no sits available.

About a dozen chairs were occupied (plus few kids running around). Young parents, babies, an elderly women – all Spanish speaking. Hispanics were on the other side as well, along with Afro-American, Asian, Jewish, and Indian doctors and nurses. A real hospital melting bed pan.

By the end of your visit you wished you had gone to work.

The lack of IT or manpower at health facilities is what the CHC Task Force will try to cure this year.
Here are selected examples of what The Health and the Environment Task Force priorities include:

  • Community Health Centers: Latinos comprise 34.8% of health center users. We support the development and expansion of community and migrant health centers and increasing funding for Federally Qualified Health Centers.
  • Health IT.  We support access to appropriate incentives to enable health care providers in low-income and medically underserved communities to move forward in adopting HIT.
  • Expansion of the Primary Health Care Workforce.  We support short term programs and policies to address immediate primary care and nursing workforce needs.

Congresswoman Velazquez should care. Not only as the chair of the CHC but also because the health industry is keeping her in good shape.

“Health Professionals” is the leading industry in donating to her 2010 campaign with $33,500, according to Opensecrets.com (Dentists $7,5000, Orthodontist with $5,000 and optometrists $5,000).

Although a very energetic supporter of Health Care, Nydia Velazquez’s legislative charts show that health issues were ill treated in the last decade.

With no major legislation record, some efforts can be traced, but not many. A million dollar program here, $500,000 health initiative there, Velazquez targeted AIDS, asthma and Obesity in Brooklyn’s Hispanic community. But no significant breakthrough on file.

Velazquez should follow the wise maternal advice and not neglect her health initiatives – because even just a minor inconvenience can lead to a more serious ailment – if not treated with care.

La Madrina*

“I know it’s not easy,” she said and then paused. She raised her eyes from the podium and looked at the young girls across the room, searching for their eyes behind long slanted bangs.

“Trust me. I KNOW,“ and then Congresswomen Velazquez cleared the stage for Nydia.

“I know, because I was there too… I came from Puerto Rico to New York when I was 19 years-old.”

Nydia Velazquez talked about how different the big city is from the warm country she came from. How every day brings new challenges, and how solitary it feels to be in a foreign country, without your family by your side.

She spoke of her brother’s drug addiction, and how frustrated it was for her, not being able to help him from afar.

The room was silent. A mother of five was drying her teary red eyes behind the glasses. The mother and her young daughter, like Nydia and one of seven Latina adolescents, tried to commit suicide.

An hour earlier, I got off at the Flushing Avenue stop. A couple of blocks from the train, I found the old facility for the new center, where the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new “Life is Precious” program was about to begin.

Located only three train stops away from my Williamsburg station, I was in the same 12th District, but stepped into a completely different world. It was bare, poor and neglected. No one was brunching, but a man who peaked out of his trailer grabbed something from a nearby pile of bags. The streets were quiet, but inside the decorated building, excitement and anticipation buzz was getting louder by the minute.

The room was full with more than 60 Hispanic teenage girls, mothers and therapists. There was one father and two male photographers. All were waiting for Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez: La Madrina.

As the godmother entered the room, she went straight to the girls. Hopping over the pre-cut red ribbon with her stilettos, she was kissing the girls, talking, taking pictures, spreading cherry blossom magic around the captivated crowd of Latina women.

“Velázquez to Announce Federal Support for Local Health Program,” the Thursday press advisory said, but something greater happened there. It was the first time Velazquez publicly spoke of her private experience, possibly, a more precious gift then the $167,000 Federal funding cardboard check she brought.

My internal debate was over. I didn’t have to wonder how to weave her personal narrative into the sunny Saturday “photo-op” event in Brooklyn’s suicide prevention center – she laid it all out there – her journey, her story, her struggle.

Then she delivered a few passionate words in Spanish. I didn’t understand much, but she said something about “Republicano” that instigated some laughs from the audience, and Congresswoman Velazquez was back.

Still, those few minutes, when the 19-year-old Puerto Rican newcomer Nydia was talking, for the girls, and mothers, both were present. She was both the powerful woman with an elegant white and navy stripe suite -Washington big shot – first Puerto Rican woman elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, and a Latina who tried to end her life.

Maybe it’s all part of the game. But even if so – for the teenage girls in this critical moment of their lives – their petite elected official who went through the same thing they’re going through, it was huge.

* Godmother, matron of honor, woman who launches ship.

Precious

This could have been the week of Attorney General Eric Holder’s decision to back down from the KSM trials in Manhattan.

Or the week Congresswoman Velazquez was quoted again, criticizing Obama’s SBA Express plan, as “giveaways to big banks.”

But it was a week that the NYDailyNews reported on an issue that got very little attention. An issue that concerns a very large community in New York—and the largest community in Congressional District 12.

It’s about a new project but a very old epidemic and for some reason it’s under-reported and ignored in Congress.

Last month, a new center for suicide prevention for Latina teenagers opened in Bushwick. The program, ‘Life is Precious,’ started in the Bronx in 2008, and helps 41 Latina teenage girls and their families. According to research, Latina girls in New York are at the highest risk of attempting suicide.

A Bill co-sponsored by Velazquez in 2000, the `Latina Adolescent Suicide Prevention Act’ to promote awareness and allocate money for programs such as this. The bill was re-introduced in 2003, but never passed, according to Velazquez’s office.

A 2007 study, conducted by the ‘Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,’ found that one out of every seven Latina teens, or 14 percent, attempts suicide.

This number, although down in the last decade, is still higher than black non-Hispanic girls (9.9 percent) girls and is almost double the rate of white non-Hispanic girls (7.7percent). Nationally, Latina girls in New York City are at the highest risk in the country.

“When Nydia Velázquez heard about the program in the Bronx, she said: ‘I need this in my district too’,” the creator of the program, Dr. Rosa Gil said.

In Brooklyn’s Bushwick neighborhood, Velázquez’s Congressional District 12, there is a 67 percent Hispanic population majority.

Dr. Gil explained that poverty, low-wage jobs, inadequate housing and domestic violence all contribute to high rate of mental illness in Hispanic communities.

Last summer, the Congresswoman worked to secure $3.5 million from federal funding, to support local initiatives. Of this, $167,000 was dedicated for the opening of the “Life is Precious” program.

“I think her commitment to her constituents is real and she gets involved in many issues that affect their quality of life such as domestic violence, the suicide prevention center, immigration, etc,” said Albor Ruiz, the NYDailyNews reporter.

Although there’s a tremendous need for this program, ‘LIP’ is only open Monday, Wednesday and Saturday, supporting four girls and their families. “If I get more funding I can open every day,” said Gil. Also, they’re hoping at some point to receive more funding to open one in Queens.

Expanding the successful project to other neighborhoods, raise awareness and to help immigrants deal with cultural, social daily difficulties is obviously a priority. Furthermore, efforts should focus on the larger epidemic—the source of depression and distress.

This is one small business the congresswoman should keep promoting, in Washington, and in Congressional District 12.

small business woman

Elected for the 9th term, with the 90 percent majority vote, 56 year-old Nydia M. Velazquez maintains model citizen status. Aside from a misstep in the earlier years of her career, Velazquez has kept a clean slate. For the duration of her 18 years of service representing the 12th congressional district of New York, not a scandal or controversy was revealed.
Past work has proven Velazquez to be a vocal patron for immigrant rights and ending the war in Iraq, and with 2010’s dramatic shift in political priorities she has shifted her focus to:
1. Economic development through small business growth
2. Relocating the 9/11 trials away from Manhattan

1. Obama’s SBA plan – Supporting the strategy, disagreeing with the tactics?
Velazquez dedicates a great deal of her time to the Small Business Administration. Recently, Obama has pledged support, efforts and money to the same cause.
Last month’s State of the Union Address zeroed in on the SBA when Obama announced his plan to allocate $30 billion of the repaid bailout money for small business loans.
On January 27th, Velazquez applauded the President for putting economic growth through America’s small businesses on his agenda, but yesterday, she expressed concern (criticism?) with Obama’s plan to give more money to what she believes to be an unstable program –

“With loan defaults on the rise, we should not base our strategy on increasing the size of the least stable SBA lending program,

“The House has already approved legislation that would be much more effective for promoting small business lending and investment and I look forward to working with the President to see those measures enacted.”

Once suspected a Blue Dog on the healthcare public option, how far would Velazquez go with opposing Obama’s economic policies?

2. Terror trial and the City. Big trouble for small business?

As the representative of the Lower East Side and chairwoman of the House Small Business Committee, Velazquez is against holding the 9/11 terror trials in Manhattan. She emailed the Attorney General Eric Holder last month, stating her concern that the trials will paralyze commercial and residential life down town.

While this statement might seem legitimate, a counter argument in the NYDaily News paints the other half of the picture:

“ …The hundreds, if not thousands, of extra federal prosecutors, defense lawyers, cops, U.S. Marshals, FBI agents and international news media who will prosecute, defend, protect or cover the biggest terror trial in history will be spending millions in hotels, eateries, bars and shops. You might even argue they’ll surely more than offset any losses from the added inconveniences.”

Schumer, Gillibrand and other party members are not psyched about the idea of holding the trials in lower Manhattan, but none opposed as directly and vocally as Velazquez. Is she reflecting her constituency’s and small business owners’ wishes? Or is this a populist opportunity to gain bipartisan support?

*The last time we had a glimpse to her personal life, was in 1991, when her medical records leaked about how she washed down with Vodka 21 sleeping pills. Even then, she did a good job in damage control. She held a press conference and talked openly about dealing with depression. Six months later the 39 years-old Velazquez was elected to office.