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Participatory Budgeting Ballot Items Revealed, Projects Focus On Schools and Public Housing

Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer revealing the results from a past participatory budgeting round (Photo: QueensPost_

March 20, 2019 By Christian Murray

Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer has released the ballot items for the fifth round of participatory budgeting in the district, with a significant number of the 13 projects listed dedicated toward schools and public housing.

Participatory budgeting is a process that allows constituents to vote on how capital dollars are spent in their district on items such as school improvements, libraries and parks.

Each year, more than $1 million is allocated via participatory budgeting toward neighborhood improvements in the 26th Council District, which covers Sunnyside, Woodside, Long Island City and a section of Astoria. The most popular items are funded until the $1 million is spent.

Four out of the 13 items on the ballot this year focus on public schools–with big ticket items including the $200,000 installation of a hydroponics science lab at P.S. 150 in Sunnyside, to a $450,000 upgrade to the stage lighting at the Academy of American Studies & Newcomers High School in Long Island City.

The ballot also includes tech upgrades to the district’s public libraries; the beautification of garden space in Ravenswood Houses; improved lighting at Woodside Houses; and the improvement to outdoor space at Queensbridge Houses.

The most expensive item on the ballot is for turf space at Lou Lodati Park in Sunnyside. The project would involve adding turf inside the baseball and volley ball areas at a cost of $650,000.

The 13 projects were selected after several community meetings were held in September and October last year, where attendees pitched their ideas. These ideas were then whittled down to 13 by community members in partnership with city agencies.

“Members of our community have been hard at work for months, narrowing down hundreds of ideas to make a final ballot,” Van Bramer said. “I am incredibly proud of these final 13 projects,” he said, adding that “all of these projects are fantastic, worthy causes that would undeniability benefit our neighborhoods.”

Voting will take place from Saturday, March 30 to Sunday, April 7. District residents ages 11 and up can cast up to five votes on the projects they want to see funded.

Residents are able to vote online—with the web address yet to be released—and at 10 voting locations.The 10 polling locations, however, are only open at specified times. (Click for locations)

Over 7,000 people voted last year, with Van Bramer allocating more than $2.5 million for projects—well above the $1 million threshold.

The winning projects are expected to be announced by the end of June so they can be added to the City Council’s budget for the following year.

“I encourage all residents of the 26th District to make their voices heard. Let’s aim for a record turnout,” Van Bramer said.

2019 PB Ballot Items by Queens Post on Scribd

email the author: news@queenspost.com

6 Comments

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43rd & 43rd

I would LOVE green space in Lou Lodati Park. It doesn’t have to replace the courts completely, I hope that isn’t the plan since I know the courts are very popular. I just want SOME grass somewhere in Sunnyside that I can sit. Because the other option is opening up Sunnyside Gardens Park to the public…

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Dear Boss

It’s interesting to hold the meeting in this library. Im sure the kids running rampant from one unpadded floor to the other masked the BS yakking.

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Anonymous

SCHOOLS, SCHOOLS, SCHOOLS.
Nothing else, forget the housing projects, forget the countdown clocks (which should be MTA’s responsibility with their $3 fare) and forget the green space, there is not enough room (but they should remove the seating area where drunk people just gather and pass out).

Sunnyside Post, please let us know when the website is up so we can vote!

PS: It costs $120,000 to install a sliding door? Where do we bid for that contract, we can do it for under $20k.

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John O'Reilly

Whatever happened to the $6.5 million for a “massive redesign” of the Woodside Library announced by Jimmy Van Bramer and Joe Crowley on June 18, 2018, a week before the Democratic Party primary for Mr. Crowley’s Congressional seat? Mr. Van Bramer at the time said Mr. Crowley “was instrumental” in obtaining the funding, although Mr. Crowley’s role as a member of the US Congress in deciding allocations for the New York City municipal budget was undefined.

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Stay Loose

Perhaps you didn’t read the article. This is about small projects that can be done within the $1,000,000 allocated for particapatory budgeting.

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