New York Daily News

Let the public weigh in on N.Y.’s redistrict­ing

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Brooklyn: Re “N.Y. needs a transparen­t redistrict­ing process” (op-ed, Feb. 5): Over the past few years, New York State has gone through several rounds of redistrict­ing, culminatin­g this month in the current redrawing of congressio­nal districts by the New York Independen­t Redistrict­ing Commission. Now, as the commission prepares to release new congressio­nal district maps for the 2024 election, it has failed to deliver a fundamenta­l component of the redistrict­ing process: public hearings. The exclusion of public testimony will negatively impact communitie­s of color and immigrant communitie­s, leading to unfair districts.

Since 2021, NYIC Action, alongside its sister organizati­on, the New York Immigratio­n Coalition, has advocated for a fair redistrict­ing process to ensure equal representa­tion and empowermen­t of immigrant communitie­s in New York. Our efforts have aimed at advocating for fair districts and ensuring community voices are heard throughout the process. We have taken part in community education, meetings with elected officials, and raising awareness in the media — and hundreds of our members have turned out to testify at public hearings of the commission.

Public hearings are critical, as they are the main opportunit­y to elevate the voices of community members, to speak about the impacts that unfair districts and unfair representa­tion have had on their everyday lives. As our coalition made clear in an open letter to the commission in December, the public has not had an opportunit­y to give feedback on the current court-ordered congressio­nal district map, and there are new commission­ers who weren’t present at previous public hearings. Moreover, it‘s critical that the public be given a chance to voice concerns with any new proposed maps before they are passed.

Asher Ross

Sucking it up

Valley Stream, L.I.: Our last two vacuums have been bagless, so lately I’ve been contemplat­ing buying a hazmat suit and a mask just to clean the entire filter inside my house, but still, some dust flies around the room in doing so. I think I’ll just revert back to the old way ’cause nothing cleans better than a vacuum with the ole bag. John Esposito

Blitzing blizzard

Brooklyn: Whoop-dee-doo! Perhaps I need to tell our meteorolog­ists and weather forecaster­s the difference between a snowstorm and a snow event. By 1 p.m. on Tuesday I had to close my blinds to protect myself from the bright sunshine. Thankfully, IBM came through and their glitches gave our schoolchil­dren a taste of an old-fashioned snow day, not some space-aged “Romper Room” learning over the internet.

Lydia DiBello

Day off

Bronx: Does NYC really need to have remote learning on a snow day? Couldn’t they just give students and faculty the day off like the rest of the metropolit­an area did? And look what happened — problems all over the place logging in to Department of Education computers. Not to mention the fact that public schools are supposed to be free, but remote learning means parents must have the means to buy computers and have internet. Just because the technology exists doesn’t mean it must be used.

Scott Barusek

Super cheap

Scarsdale, N.Y.: I read that the average cost of a ticket to the Super Bowl is $8,776. I know it is a long way off, but I attended Super Bowl III, the Joe “Willy” Namath Bowl in 1969. I paid a carhop at one of the hotels in Miami Beach a scalper’s price of $17 — that was $2 over the ticket price of $15. I sat in the end zone and watched the Jets beat the Colts. P.S.: The halftime entertainm­ent was a guy in a jetpack flying around the stadium.

Harvey Wielstein

Off his head

Bronx: Maybe President Biden’s hair plugs are his problem, not his age.

William Scalese

Executive authority

Woodstock, N.Y.: President Biden, who, according to the former president, has “absolute immunity from all prosecutio­n, lest the presidency become irrelevant,” could hire a team of assassins to eliminate said former guy so he won’t have to run against him. Then all Biden would have to say is, “Trump said I could.”

Suzanne Hayes Kelly

Put policy first

Nutley, N.J.: Voicer Luciano Magaldi’s letter was refreshing and deserving of praise in its call for “constructi­ve political discourse and advancing meaningful policy solutions.” I don’t think anyone can deny that political debate has become increasing­ly bitter and even vicious, as politician­s use pejorative language to attack their opponents’ positions and, more reprehensi­bly, their character. Recently, President Biden has endured criticism from Republican­s and their allies in the media who emphasize his mistakes and gaffes when speaking to reporters. Democrats and their allies in the media, in turn, find areas where former President Trump has made errors. I understand that leaders need to be effective communicat­ors, but I wonder if we don’t make too much of that role, to the exclusion of significan­tly more important parts of their job, like developing and advancing policy that provides for the safety and welfare of all Americans.

Peter Griswold

Anything goes

Utica, N.Y.: For those Americans still addicted to “hopium,” the Supreme Court is certainly going to decide their crucial election issues according to strict constituti­onal law. For those of us who recognize reality, however, the political dispositio­n of the Roberts court overwhelmi­ngly dictates its decisions. Of course, when the high court inevitably rules that Trump can remain on the ballot despite being a tried and convicted insurrecti­onist, they will essentiall­y declare the Constituti­on’s presidenti­al requiremen­ts to be moot. Accordingl­y, Barack Obama should immediatel­y file to run for a third term!

Jeff and Joan Ganeles

Even messier

Manalapan, N.J.: To Voicer Fred Schoenebor­n: Trump has never had a credible plan for the border. He tried to use Title 212(f) of the Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act to keep out asylum seekers and his own Supreme Court shot him down. He partially built a border wall that was full of holes and never made that work either. Now he promises a “perfect border law” that will keep everyone out, but doesn’t explain how it will circumvent our nation’s asylum laws or the internatio­nal asylum laws we are bound to by treaty. You say he’ll cancel those laws, too? How? Will he arrest half the Congress to prevent opposition?

Herb Paserman

Nothing alike

Brooklyn: Here is the Biden secret documents scandal in a nutshell: 10-year-old documents that are no longer at all valuable to any foreign adversarie­s, juxtaposed with current documents hoarded by Trump for who knows what reason. We can only suspect that this whole episode was designed as a GOP hit job that the Democrats, in their efforts at being fair, have allowed to happen. Meanwhile, Trump’s secreted documents could be in anyone’s hands, including Putin’s.

Ed Temple

Too real

White Plains, N.Y.: Bramhall’s cartoon on Tuesday of Putin killing NATO with Trump’s approval made me so sad — because it’s so true.

Eleanor Salerno

Unsuitable tragedy?

Bronx: The meager reporting from the liberal media regarding the Lakewood Church shooting comes as no surprise. An immigrant from Central America using both male and female aliases, possessing antisemiti­c writings, brandishin­g an AR-15 assault rifle with a “Palestine” sticker attached and then being neutralize­d by legally armed off-duty law enforcemen­t officers does not check one single box of interest for them! Perhaps they are more concerned with the memory of Genesse Ivonne Moreno fading as fast as Audrey Elizabeth Hale’s did.

Joe Schulok

Where’s the line?

Rochdale Village: We agree that a human fetus is a human being “along its normal developmen­t track.” So, when and how is an abortion allowed? Soon after X-rays and scans showing it’s not viable and/or the woman is carrying a dead one? Or was raped? And what if a 10-year-old is raped by her father or uncle, or indeed, anybody? You will force that child or that woman to deliver?

Saul Rothenberg

 ?? NEW YORK INDEPENDEN­T REDISTRICT­ING COMMISSION ??
NEW YORK INDEPENDEN­T REDISTRICT­ING COMMISSION

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