News & Events

By Spectrum News 1
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October 16, 2025
In East New York, Brooklyn, signs of pride and progress are unmistakable. Rev. David Brawley of St. Paul Community Baptist Church believes the neighborhood has been able to turn around because “leaders, citizens, have imagination and are willing to do the work. Once known as the murder capital of New York City, the 75th police precinct had 126 murders in 1993. Last year, there were 12. For many residents, signs of economic development have brought new optimism. Now they hope the neighborhood’s comeback will continue under the next mayor. “As a pastor here in the East New York section of Brooklyn, every week it feels like I’ve got to say goodbye to members that I love because they can’t afford to live here,” Brawley told NY1. When he’s not in the pulpit, Brawley is focused on his other calling, building affordable housing in East New York. For 40 years, St. Paul has worked with East Brooklyn Congregations to transform parts of the community like Spring Creek. “This was a former landfill,” Brawley said. “Our leaders and our people saw more than garbage. We saw an opportunity to build affordable housing for the city of New York. There are 2,600 units here in this area.” Brawley hopes the next administration in City Hall comes in with a bold vision to build new homes that doesn’t leave longtime East New York residents priced out. “I would say to the next mayor that this is an urgent existential crisis that demands an urgent response,” he said. Along the New Lots Avenue corridor, residents Erica Townsend and Eleanor Pinckney shared their concerns about sanitation. “People are dumping,” Townsend said. “If you look down the street, you’ll see it’s bundles of garbage all along here, why?” Pinckney added. City Councilmember Chris Banks believes it’s important to continue “the upward trend in addressing quality-of-life issues.” Banks believes the next administration in City Hall should be attentive to the needs of NYCHA residents and public transportation in East New York.

By Queens Power Staff
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December 6, 2022
Every mayor tries to make his own mark on New York — in part by showing how he differs from his immediate predecessor, in part by choosing themes and programs that he can call his own. We have seen this pattern play out since the first term of the first “Mayor Swagger,” Ed Koch. As leaders who have created our own initiatives and developed our own programs, we’ve learned to operate with a combination of thick skin, a sense of humor, and a willingness to confront every mayor when they either ignore the successes of others or make claims that simply don’t reflect reality. Read Article>>

November 19, 2020
Thursday night at 7 p.m., we will gather virtually with over 1,000 leaders from 42 congregations, unions, schools and non-profits virtually to launch a new citizens organization: Queens Power. Our mission is to organize Queens residents to build the leverage needed to fight for and win justice for themselves and the communities they live in. Read Article>>





