nydia velazquez

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.

Little Poland Gets Smaller

In a small coffee shop near Manhattan Avenue in Brooklyn, 33 year-old Junusz serves coffee and greets costumers in English and Polish. Mostly in Polish.

His coffee shop, like dozens of restaurants, groceries and bookstores along the Williamsburg-Greenpoint border, has been decorated since last Sunday with red-and-white flags and a black strip. Next to signs indicating “We speak polish” there are more signals of mourning for the Polish President and the 95 dead who were killed in a plane crash a week ago.

More than 150,00 Poles bade farewell to the Polish President Lech Kaczynski and his wife Maria today, as they were buried in Krakow. In Greenpoint, dozens of Polish-Americans gathered in the Polish and Slavic Center on Kent street to pay their final respects.

Earlier this week Nydia Velazquez followed President Obama and Mayor Bloomberg in offering condolences to Brooklyn’s Polish community.

“Our nation enjoys deep ties to Poland. Communities across our country have been shaped and built by millions of Polish immigrants who came to the United States seeking a better life. These immigrants – and their descendants – have added invaluable contributions to the rich tapestry of American culture,” Velazquez stated.

Greenpoint received a lot of attention this week.  Local and national news used the neighborhood as the domestic angle on the “Poland Crash” story, shedding light on the large community.

But the large population of working-class Polish immigrants – the second largest concentration in the United States after Chicago – rarely makes headlines.

“Greenpoint, Brooklyn, in my district, has one of the most vibrant Polish-American communities in the nation. During the 1980s, many Poles took refuge in this ‘Little Poland’ when martial law was imposed against Solidarity, back home,” Velazquez said in a letter of condolence.

The Poles did take over Greenpoint in the 1980s, but the vibrant community has been shrinking in the last five years.

The 2000 census registered nearly 40 thousand people in the 11222 zip code of Greenpoint. Of them, 43.6 percent claimed Polish ancestry. Hispanic or Latino were 19.5 percent of the neighborhood. The 2010 census will likely show a different picture when the count is completed.

Thirty years after their big immigration influx, it’s not as easy to get a visa to the US, and since 2004, when Poland joined the European Union, many Poles opt to travel shorter distances and make more money in the United Kingdom.  For those in Greenpoint, without a legal status, going back home becomes a popular option.

“The golden age for Poles in America is over,” said Junusz. “We make less money now, and I can’t even get a driver’s license here.” He said, “If things don’t work out soon, I will probably go back home.”

Economic problems, rising real estate prices and an exodus back to Europe of those who had no legal status here contributed to the decline in numbers.

Velazquez, Chair of the Hispanic Caucus in Washington and representative to one of the largest immigrant populations in the US, has  long been a vocal advocate for immigration rights.  Reaching out to the Poles in her district during a national tragedy is protocol, but are the Polish immigrants in her district on her agenda on less tragic days?

Not enough according to Junusz.

He won the green-card lottery 8 years ago, but his Polish lawyer in New York never managed to get him legal status. Nor did the Polish consulate assist him. Asked what he wants from Velasquez, he said, “Give us our status.”

The surprising non-believers of District 12

Across the nation, about 300 million people are marking this time of year a special occasion. Unlike Easter or Passover, this holiday is celebrated only once every ten years, and in its spirit everyone’s participation is more than welcomed.

It’s an ongoing feast, but the climax of the census high season 2010 was April 1st.
Since 1790, (unofficially since 1600), the Census Holiday is not only a tradition – it’s mandatory.

There are no Hallmark cards, no distinct spiritual ritual, and no special sales, but there’s no way you could have missed it. It’s a multi-million-dollar Federal budget holiday, led by special government offices, politicians, bureaucrats, a cross-media campaign, colorful fliers in dozens of languages and fancy interactive maps. Try to escape the festivities and they will come knocking on your door.

On Passover’s eve, around the “Seder” table we ask four questions, today we answer ten.
We, the people – young, old, legal or illegal as one, of all races and sex – are equally targeted on census day.

For others, however, it’s a period of lent. Those who invested money and energy, anxiously wait for successful results. Those like the 12th district Rep. Nydia Velazquez, responsible for one of the most heretic constituencies in the United States.

Only half of households in New York returned their census forms, but the record for the lowest rate of return (around 30 percent), belongs to Congresswoman Velazquez’s district.

Not the traditionally hardest to count poor immigrant neighborhoods, but the Indie music and skinny jeans Mecca – the hipster enclave of Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

“These young, recent graduates with ironic mustaches and plaid shirts are apparently too busy tweeting to fill out a simple census form,” NPR reported today.

The government promotes the population tally holiday in an effort to translate the head count into counting cash. The money will help provide much needed services, schools and hospitals but Williamsburg residents think the government doesn’t count them.

Four out of 20 hard-to–count areas are Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx and New York City. In the last census Kings County earned the 14th worst undercount rating nation-wide.

But according to NPR, the trust-fund kids are not the alone. If you skateboard only a few blocks from the hipsterland, you’ll find the Hassidic Satmar Orthodox community of Williamsburg, where only one in four households have participated in the census. They don’t watch television so they probably missed Velazquez’s campaign efforts to get more accurate results this time in her agnostic district.

The 12th district, which includes Queens, Brooklyn and parts of the lower east side and Chinatown in Manhattan has one of the highest immigrant communities in New York – with more than 67 percent speaking a language other than English at home. Among those 59 spoken languages that challenge the census bureau are: Polish, Russian, Romanian, Yiddish, Spanish, Italian, Spanish and Chinese. Still, it seems like it’s the native, legal citizens who are making Velazquez’s life more difficult.

The government spent over $130 million on advertisements, explaining the risk-free and crucial importance of the form, but the two polarized and hard-to count communities of Williamsburg have something in common this time: Disinterest in civic duty, or disbelief.

As the Census Holiday comes to an end on April 15th, the next national festival kicks in. A popular, historical and widely commemorated day – that recently  is evoking religious feelings: Tax day!

You Can't Always Get What You Want

In Washington, this past weekend, Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez and other fellow Democrats, took part in a great moment in the journey for improving millions of lives in America. It was a moment they have been preparing and anticipating – for a very long time, probably since November 2008.

Velazquez and her colleagues believed in the urgency and importance of this goal and made sure to be as outspoken as they could be, to make sure this opportunity will not be missed.

On Saturday, standing in front of 500,000 people, Velazquez called on Congress and the president to pass the immigration reform immediately.

Yes, perhaps the timing wasn’t perfect for the “March for America” rally, the nationwide rally for immigration reform. Not when the health care reform was being voted on in the house.

“We stand here to say to the Republican leadership in the Senate, to the Democrats in the Senate and also in the House, and the President Barack Obama, we want immigration reform now,” Velazquez called Sunday.

Velazquez, with more than 20 Congressional Hispanic Caucus members behind her, has already decided on Thursday, to support the health care bill. The CHC supported the bill, despite the fact that it prohibits illegal immigrants from buying health care from the proposed health exchanges. “The broader impacts of the legislation, override the other concerns,” The CHC statement said.

So maybe, the timing of the rally wasn’t so poor after all.

Congresswoman Velazquez has many different chairs to sit in.
She Chairs the Hispanic Caucus, the Small Business Association and Rep. of New York City’s Congressional District 12. She’s a Democrat-Latina with close ties with the Speaker of the House.
Most of the time, all these roles go together well, but on rare occasions, they can conflict. Generally, immigrants and small businesses, her constituency and her party share congruent interests.

Was it her loyalty to the CHC, SBA, to her constituency? Was it to Pelosi, her party, to America, her career, or all of the above that convinced her to support the controversial overhaul?

As for the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, Velazquez says its good news after all.
Only a week before the vote, the CHC threatened to derail the health care bill unless changes were made to the bill’s immigration provisions. But Velazquez and the caucus said that the 8.8 million Latinos who will benefit from the reform, are good enough reasons to support it.

“In my home district, it improves options for 324,000 residents, and expands care to 86,000 more,” she said in a statement on Monday.

For Small Businesses, the bill will provide tax credits for up to 249,000 New York small businesses to help make coverage more affordable.

“In my district alone, 33 clinics will see critical improvements, meaning more options for the men and women of Brooklyn, Queens and the Lower East Side,” Velazquez said.
[NYC Health and Hospitals Corporation will issue a statement Friday regarding the reform]

Her constituency doesn’t really care or understand, how their women in DC will vote. And those who are informed -don’t always agree.

In Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on a sunny Wednesday, a day before the CHC announced they unanimously support the reform, residents and business owners of Congressional District 12 weren’t following closely after Pelosi’s head-count.

Senior Italian residents were strolling, Hispanic school kids were playing in the streets, and Hassid Jews in long black coats were busy unpacking, reorganizing grocery shelves and replacing goods with “Kosher for Passover” products.

They were busy taking care of their small businesses and hardly gave any thought to the Washington thriller

On Grand Avenue, Willferd Ochoa sat in the back room of a small car service office. His cell phone was constantly ringing. Between conversations he said that Velazquez should vote against the bill.

“It has to be for everyone,” he said. “If someone is illegal but he has money to buy it, he should be able to.”

In the 21 years Willfred has been living in the US, he never visited a doctor here. Only when he goes home, to Ecuador, he gets all his check-ups -usually all in one day.

In an accounting office in Bushwick, Refael was also very busy. He had been helping small businesses and immigrants with their accounting papers and legal aid.

“We never know how many, or what kind of changes were made,” he said.
“I support the amnesty, but this is how the system works, you have to respect the law. If you’re illegal – you’re illegal,” Refael said, regarding the illegal immigrants provision.

Last week, Obama embraced a framework for legislation offering a new high-tech identification card for U.S. citizens and legal immigrants who want a job.
But on Friday, Sen. Lindsey Graham who offered the legislation said:

“If the health care bill goes through this weekend, that will, in my view, pretty much kill any chance of immigration reform passing the Senate this year.”

The health care bill passed 219-212, but the immigration reform will probably have to wait.

After clashing recently with another Democrat, Rahm Emanuel, who has been pushing for his own goals,Velazquez stated “he’s always about winning”, she found out you sometimes have to sacrifice to be on the winning side.

Velazquez Joins the Anti-Rahm Emanuel Choir

Obama’s Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel is the man everyone loves to hate recently – or once again. He’s being blamed for either being too pushy (and naked), or not pushy enough.

With a health care reform to pass, Emanuel has received growing attention for various reasons; mostly unsympathetic.

Immigrant and minority groups, who played a role in getting Obama into the White House, feel that their interests have been pushed back. Emanuel, possibly the closest man to the President, could have acted as the catalyst or the roadblock. It all depends on what his most pressing issue is.

And all other issues, inevitably, have to wait.

This week, Nydia Velázquez, Chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, expressed her concerns regarding “The Limits of Rahmism”.

“There are strong feelings about Rahm Emanuel among members of the Hispanic caucus,” Velázquez told The New York Times Magazine.

“People feel Rahm Emanuel has not been helpful in moving forward. He’s always about the numbers. He’s always about being the pragmatist. He’s always about winning,” Velázquez stated in the 8,000-word Emanuel profile. (A profile Emanuel himself didn’t take a part in.)

No legalization, no reconciliation

Velázquez and Hispanic lawmakers blame Emanuel for barring illegal immigrants from buying policies on new insurance exchanges in the Senate health care bill.

His caution on easing rules for immigrants, The Wall Street Journal wrote, derive from fearing such a position will hurt Democrats at the polls.

Immigrant rights groups slammed Obama for slow action with the bill legalizing the status of undocumented immigrants, and health care for illegal immigrant, but is the former Illinois Senator the (only) one to blame?

Frienemies

But Velázquez and Emanuel couldn’t have been in greater harmony over the years – at least throughout their shared time in Congress, between 2003-2007. They voted together 95.65 percent of the time, (23 out of 22 votes).

In 1114 floor votes, they disagreed only 97 times. And only one of those 97 instances was an immigration related bill (Border Security — Diversity Visa Program, HR4437).

Even with her BFF Nancy Pelosi, Velázquez voted the same way only 87.5 percent of all floor votes. On immigration issues, however, they voted together.

But even since he’s been in office, Emanuel hasn’t always been an immigration antagonist. Last year, he got credit for clearing the path for increased benefits for immigrant children and pregnant women in the State Children’s Health Insurance Program. It was Obama’s first major legislative victory.

As a religious pragmatist, Emanuel’s stance on immigration, may be, like Velázquez unintentionally suggested this week, the winning one. Focused on the health care bill, some say winning passage of an amnesty bill for the undocumented immigrants is unlikely.

Velázquez could be rightfully mad with Emanuel, and so may other minority interest groups, but right now, they all need to take a number. He’s set on finding a majority.

Velazquez's Instrumental Role in Cleaning the Gowanus Canal

After a major snowmelt, like the one we had this week, there’s toilet paper floating, condoms and raw sewage on the Gowanus Canal. And it smells even worse than usual.

Despite the water overflow, residents of South Brooklyn were relieved this week. On Tuesday, the Environmental Protection Agency named the Gowanus Canal a federal Superfund site, making it a national priority.

With the government allocating half a billion dollars for the clean-up program, the canal’s neighbors can finally breath freely. Or at least they will be able to in the future, as the remediation work will not start until 2014.

Still, this was good news for Brooklynites of Carroll Gardens, Red Hook and Sunset Park, who have been advocating for over a decade to clean the Gowanus.

Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez, whose Congressional district includes the polluted waterway, was among the few politicians who supported the move.

“The EPA has the proven expertise to oversee a comprehensive clean-up, while holding accountable those responsible for the pollution,”

Velazquez wrote this week.

The EPA’s win, means Mayor Bloomberg’s plan is out. Supporters of the city’s plan are saying it offers a cheaper and faster way to get rid of the toxic brew. It would also hurt less for the Real Estate around the canal, but choosing experience over efficiency wasn’t what stirred the controversy.

The government plans to make polluters around the canal pay for the cleaning.

The EPA already named responsible parties, such as National Grid – expected to pay the biggest share – Con Ed, the U.S. Navy and New York City.
“Now, they’re eying 20 other companies, including Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Kraft and Citigroup,” The Daily News reported.

According to Katia Kelly, a blogger and a community activist, Velazquez was at the forefront of the controversial issue.

“Most of our politicians were sitting on the fence about it, but Nydia, very quickly organized a meeting to talk to the people, to explain what the EPA plan is, what the consequences are,“ Kelly said in a phone interview.

“She was the very first politician to look into the city’s plan, and after talking to the Mayor, she said the money wasn’t there, and she went right out and said it – she urges the Superfund.“

Not Super fun for everyone

Kelly also said, that the Superfund was a ‘make or break’ elections issue for the gentrifying heart of Brooklyn. “The community will not forget those politicians that were silent about this.”

One of those silent politicians was Congresswoman Yvette Clark.

Clark attended a public meeting in January and told residents that she had talked to the EPA in Washington, but refused to make a statement.

[Possibly, because of her close ties with Bill Deblasio and (Carroll Gardens developer) Buddy Scotto were supporters of the city’s DEP plan.]

Brooklyn residents are not the only ones who won a cleaner future, as Velazquez scored some important political points with a good sense of smell, she spotted the source of the stench.

Huck on the Gowanus from ckelly on Vimeo.

Please watch this cute “short animated history of the Gowanus Canal in reverse and back again.” Thanks to the “Pardon me for asking” blog.

A Health Care Reformer

Washington was under a thick blanket of snow this week, but Speaker Nancy Pelosi didn’t stop working for a minute. She was trying to shovel in any vote she could get, from fellow Democrats to Non-Democrat fellows.

But there’s one person she doesn’t need to worry about convincing to vote for Obama’s health care overhaul.

With one of the most liberal voting records in the House, Velazquez has voted 99.3 percent of the time with the Democratic Party so far in the 111th Congress.

This is not to say that New York is usually a source of concern for Pelosi, but Massachusetts didn’t used to be one either until recently.

As a Chairwoman of the Small Business Committee and Chairwoman for the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, most of Velazquez’s effort, time and PR are devoted to either loans for small businesses or Hispanic education and immigrant rights.

This week, however, Velazquez released a statement on health insurance and lowering health care costs for New Yorkers.

Yes, she’s a progressive democrat, committed to small businesses and representing her majority immigrant, working families constituency. Supporting a public option is not a political risk for Velazquez, it’s a given.

On Friday, Velazquez released a statement, on congress’ recent approval of the Health Insurance Industry Fair Competition Act, (H.R. 4626). A legislation that will lower health care costs by promoting competition among providers.

“In New York State, the two biggest health insurance companies control 46 percent of the market, and premiums for families increased by 97 percent between 2000 and 2009. Subjecting the health insurance industry to the same anti-trust laws as other industries will help prevent price fixing and monopolizing of the market. H.R. 4626 passed the House by an overwhelming bipartisan vote of 406-19 and must now be considered by the U.S. Senate.”

The Daily Gotham reported that Velazquez wasn’t always committed to the Obama’s health care reform, but since she joined her party’s stance, Velazquez made a fairly convincing performance last July

Velazquez Picks Gillibrand – Blocks Ford

“If Harold Ford, Jr. had his way, he would seal all of America’s borders, and deploy the military and police to conduct raids on households,” wrote Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez in a letter supporting Kirsten Gillibrand on February 3rd, 2010.

Did Velazquez became a passionate Gillibrand supporter only once Ford was in the picture?

Elections for the New York Senate seat are not for another seven months, but the prospect of Ford challenging Gillibrand made Velazquez lose her cool last week.

In her statement supporting Gillibrand, Velazquez chronicled the junior New York senator’s achievements and portrayed Gillibrand as her political sister on these points:

  • Velazquez, who was instrumental in appointing Judge Sotomayor, lists Gillibrand among the first in the Senate to ensure that New York’s own judge was at the top of President Obama’s list for the Supreme Court.
  • Gillibrand, like Velazquez, opposed holding the 9/11 terror trials in downtown Manhattan (Though, most prominent New York politicians such as Schumer and Bloomberg, expressed the same opposition.)
  • Both are in agreement on more broad (and vague) issues as well, from health care reform to “creating jobs for New Yorkers through small businesses,” wrote Velazquez.

Then Velazquez moves on to the most important agreement with Gillibrand, or the greatest disagreement with Ford.
For Congresswoman Velazquez there’s one big reason she cannot afford to have the former Memphis congressman in the New York Senate.

Immigration.

As chairwoman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, Velazquez’s stance on immigration is as far from Ford’s as Puerto Rico is from Tennessee.

In 2005, Ford voted in favor of the Sensenbrenner bill, which would have allowed local police to arrest illegal immigrants and made it a crime for nurses, priests and others to help them.

A year later, President Bush signed the “Border Fence Bill,” a bill Ford voted for. The bill authorized the construction of 700 miles of fencing along the U.S.-Mexican border, to prevent the entry of terrorists, unlawful aliens, etc.

But, recently adopted political sister of Velazquez or not, Gillibrand hasn’t exactly been an obvious pro-immigrant advocate. Two years ago El Diario ran a front-page article on Gillibrand, citing her votes in favor of English-only regulations and a bill deputizing local police officers to act as immigration agents.

When Gillibrand was first appointed by Gov. Paterson, one Latino official said her House voting record on immigration bordered “on xenophobia.”

“…But as soon as she [Gillibrand] moved from her rural Republican-heavy congressional district to the Senate, Gillibrand pivoted to the left,” The Daily Beast wrote in November 2009.

But for Velázquez, Gillibrand’s record tells a different story:

“Kirsten has been a strong and consistent voice for New York’s immigrant communities,” she writes in the letter.

She mentions the senator’s co-sponsorship of the DREAM Act, the bill that, if it passes, will enable – under certain circumstances – high school students to legalize their status.

Perhaps Gillibrand was able to convince her constituency she’s ready to help New York’s immigrants, but in case Ford tries to change his mind, here’s his former testimony on the issue, courtesy of your congresswoman, Nydia Velazquez

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.