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Editors Picks: 11 Events for Your Art Calendar This Week, From a Celebration of Maurice Berger to a Talk With Wade Guyton
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MTA Touts Tunnel Fixes But Sandy Subway and Rail Repairs Still Have Long Way to Go
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Trent Reeves/MTA Construction & Development
When repairs to the F line’s East River tunnel wrapped in late March, the MTA hailed the earlier-than-expected completion of work inside the last of the eight subway tubes damaged by Hurricane Sandy back in 2012.
But nearly nine years after the superstorm, dozens of other projects designed to strengthen the transit system against future catastrophic weather events remain unfinished with the pandemic slowing some for months at a time, an examination by THE CITY found.
Photo Courtesy of Wikimedia/Hleong
According to the assemblymembers, residents who live in the communities that surround Aqueduct Racetrack have had difficulty scheduling appointments to receive vaccinations.
By Forum Staff
Assemblywomen Stacey Pheffer Amato (D-Howard Beach) and Jenifer Rajkumar (D-Woodhaven), and Assemblyman Khaleel Anderson (D-South Ozone Park), recently penned a joint letter to Gov. Andrew Cuomo requesting priority access for local residents in the neighborhoods surrounding the Aqueduct Racetrack Vaccination Hub to receive appointments for vaccinations.
Currently, residents in the surrounding neighborhoods have had difficulty scheduling appointments to receive vaccinations.
“Having the vaccination hub in this community is incredible, and we are grateful it is here, but the next step is making sure our neighbors have priority access to a vaccine,” Pheffer Amato said. “These communities were some of the hardest hit by the pandemic and still have some of
A Drop on the Tongue: Looking Back on Development of the Polio Vaccine
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ArtsWestchester CEO Janet Langsam By the sixties, the vaccine became a drop on the tongue – so easy that polio was been all but eliminated. Can’t wait until COVID-19 becomes just a drop on the tongue, said ArtsWestchester CEO Janet Langsam WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (PRWEB) March 10, 2021
ArtsWestchester CEO Janet Langsam looks back on the development of the polio vaccine.
Polio was all around me as a kid growing up in Far Rockaway. It was in every whisper, every newspaper, every mother’s nightmare the idea that the simple act of going to a swimming pool or a movie could cripple you for life. Those were the stark choices we had to make as kids growing up in the fifties. Going to summer sleepaway camp was suddenly as dangerous as jumping off a cliff. The tragedy was that we kids all knew someone who got it. That’s, in fact, how
Readers sound off on Cuomo, Johnson & Johnson and cultural sensitivity
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