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Tag: staten island

  • Teen stepson charged with murder after decapitation, stabbing of man on Staten Island

    WEST BRIGHTON, Staten Island (WABC) — A 19-year-old man is facing charges after his 45-year-old stepfather was found stabbed to death on Staten Island.

    Damien Hurstel is charged with murder and criminal possession of a weapon.

    Officials say police received a call for a person stabbed at 380 Cary Ave. in the West Brighton section just before 4:30 p.m. Monday.

    When officers arrived, they discovered the 45-year-old victim in the bathtub with multiple stab wounds to his head and neck.

    The victim was pronounced dead. Police identified him as 45-year-old Anthony Casalaspro.

    “This whole world is upside down. This is like a terrible, horrible, to do this to a person you know not even to an animal, you don’t do that,” a neighbor said.

    That’s when Hurstel was taken into custody.

    Police say the stepson’s sister walked into the home around 4 p.m. and found blood in rooms throughout the home. She then discovered the victim in the bathtub.

    According to police sources, the victim wasn’t just stabbed, but decapitated, with the knife still in the body of the victim when police arrived on the scene

    They say it’s unclear what led to the violent stabbing. Hurstel has no prior arrests.

    Hugh Nembhard told Eyewitness News that he has lived across the street for some 60 years.

    “I’m not familiar with the stepson. I never saw him. I saw the father, but never the stepson,” he said. “I don’t know what to make of it. I don’t know what to make of this. This is a shock to me. The neighborhood has changed.”

    Police said Hurstel may have a history of mental illness.

    The investigation is ongoing.

    ———-

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  • One woman set out to visit every museum in New York City. Here’s what she’s learned so far

    Museums throughout New York City were just reopening in the wake of the COVID pandemic when Jane August launched what seemed like a straightforward plan: She would travel to every single museum in the city, producing a short video log of each one. She figured it would take three years at most.

    But with 136 museums documented since 2021, she still has about 64 to go by her estimation. And with new museums opening and some old ones changing so dramatically that they deserve a revisit, the 26-year-old now says she’s realistically aiming to complete the project before she’s 30.

    “At first, I started the project for myself to safely get out of my house and experience culture in the city again,” said August, who grew up in Arizona and has lived in New York for nine years. She said she wasn’t a big museum person before starting the project, and had only been to around seven at the time.

    But as she began, the plan quickly evolved.

    “I decided TikTok would be a cool way to document this so my friends could keep up with my journey and maybe discover something new,” August said. Her audience has since far expanded with about 40,000 followers across social platforms.

    Museums big and small, Manhattan and beyond

    Visiting its museums has sparked a new appreciation for New York City, she said, as well as for the sheer breadth of what’s on offer, particularly for those willing to explore smaller museums and those in the boroughs beyond Manhattan.

    And yes, she has favorites.

    “I love Poster House. It’s the first poster museum in the country, has great programming and is free on Fridays,” she says of the largely unsung museum at 23rd Street and Sixth Avenue, which features graphic design and advertising posters ranging from Art Nouveau to political propaganda.

    Others on her list of favorites include the Tenement Museum in lower Manhattan and the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens, as well as three Brooklyn museums: the Brooklyn Seltzer Museum, the New York Sign Museum and the Red Hook Pinball Museum. She also has a soft spot for The Paley Center for Media NYC in midtown Manhattan.

    “They have archives with every TV show you could possibly think of. It’s amazing,” she said of The Paley Center.

    Staten Island offerings are worth the ferry ride

    As for the city’s smallest borough, the ferry ride to Staten Island (free, with views of the Statue of Liberty along the way) is well worth the trip for museum-goers, she said.

    The borough features the Newhouse Center of Contemporary Art, as well as the Alice Austen House, a Victorian Gothic house important to LGBTQ+ history. It was the home of one of the country’s earliest and most prolific female photographers, famous for documenting the city’s immigrant communities.

    “You wouldn’t imagine that Staten Island had one of the gayest museums in New York, dedicated to a queer photographer, but it does,” August said.

    Staten Island is also home to the Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art and the Chinese Scholar’s Garden, which claims to be one of only two authentic classical outdoor Chinese gardens in the United States.

    “It’s so peaceful and quiet, and I love riding the ferry,” August said.

    Taking advantage of free days and slow hours

    While museums can be expensive, she said she makes good use of museum passes at her local library, and that many museums have days or times when they are free.

    And because her “day jobs” tend to be at night — she works at different venues in ticketing and production, and also bartends — she’s able to visit museums in the middle of weekdays, when they tend to be less crowded.

    August recently became a licensed New York City tour guide, and she says it’s given her a renewed appreciation both of the city and its visitors.

    She’s also seen a few trends take hold, like the rise in museum programming aimed at younger audiences and the trend away from chronological exhibits, which she says make return visits less enticing.

    “So many of us are desperate for third spaces,” she said, referring to a place distinct from both home and work where people can relax or socialize. “For a lot of us, we have a hunger to come back and visit again, especially when it’s free.”

    Although big museums like the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art can certainly be crowded, August says New York isn’t facing nearly the level of overcrowding as in European cities like Paris.

    And at peak times and seasons, like summer, it’s nice to know there are plenty of smaller museums to visit.

    Seeing the whole city

    “I think this is especially important for the lesser-known museums that don’t often get press or social media features,” she said. “There are some small museums that get a huge bump in attendance and press after I have posted my videos so it’s exciting to be able to play a small role in that success.”

    As for her motivation to continue the project, she said “it boils down to the people. I get to connect with fascinating and passionate people who are making these museums what they are and I get to connect with enthusiasts who want to find something fun to do with their weekend.”

    For anyone interested in giving something like this a go for themselves, she says it takes a lot of endurance.

    “Be prepared to go to corners of the city you never considered — I’m talking edges of the Bronx and middle of Staten Island,” she said. “But if you’re up for the challenge, you’ll probably gain a lot of insight on not just the museums and their content, but also the communities they serve.”

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  • Death mix-up leaves Staten Island family in anguish on Halloween morning

    Death mix-up leaves Staten Island family in anguish on Halloween morning

    ELTINGVILLE, Staten Island (WABC) — A family on Staten Island got the scare of their lives on Halloween, when police arrived at their door to deliver tragic news that a woman — a beloved sister and daughter — was killed after being hit by a car… except it wasn’t her.

    It was a case of mistaken identity that took 18 anguishing hours to correct.

    “My sister is a mental health person,” said Sheila Nagengast, the sister of Denise Owen.

    She got the door knock that everyone dreads.

    “They said, ‘I’m sorry to inform you but your sister has been killed fatally in a car accident,’” Nagengast said.

    Nagengast got the devastating news from NYPD detectives at 1:30 a.m. on the morning of Halloween.

    They informed her that her little sister, 44-year-old Denise Owen of New Dorp Beach, was hit by a car on Hylan Boulevard and thrown into the air, suffering fatal injuries.

    “They flew into the sky, landed on the pavement and their face was unrecognizable,” Nagengastsaid. “My question was: how did you identify my sister? They said that there was some sort of ID there, that they were able to identify her.”

    She was in shock for the next few hours, consenting to organ donation before rushing to the hospital morgue.

    Her sister suffered from schizophrenia, was at times homeless and in need of mental health help.

    Word spread fast with friends and family, sharing the news on Facebook, and sharing an article stated that Owen was walking against traffic when she was fatally struck by a Nissan Maxima, according to NYPD’s Highway District Collision Investigation Squad.

    “In 35 years of handling accident cases, I’ve never had this mix-up, I’ve never seen this mix-up,” said attorney John D’Agostino.

    Nagengast was meeting with D’Agostino, a local injury attorney, to file her sister’s wrongful death suit, when her phone rang.

    It was Nagengast’s other sister who said that she spotted Owen alive at the 7-Eleven near the intersection where police said she had been struck and killed.

    “She FaceTimed me, and my sister Denise, who was pronounced dead by NYPD, Staten Island Hospital North, the morgue who has all her information and everybody else… the newspapers, is standing directly in front of my sister… alive and well,” Nagengast said.

    “It takes us from a wrongful death action to a possible action for negligent infliction of emotional distress,” D’Agostino said.

    The NYPD apologized to Nagengast, and said they corrected the records and have taken her sister’s name off, and informed the correct family that it was their loved one who died.

    “Nobody should go through what I’ve been through in the last 24 hours… nobody,” Nagengast said.

    ———-

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    Nina Pineda

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  • 10-year-old boy critically injured after struck by car on Staten Island: Police

    10-year-old boy critically injured after struck by car on Staten Island: Police

    A 10-year-old boy was critically injured after being struck by a vehicle on Staten Island, according to police.

    The incident occurred just after 3 p.m. Tuesday near the intersection of Richmond Terrace and Nicholas Street in the St. George neighborhood, police said.

    It was not immediately clear what led up to the child being struck, but the boy was taken to Richmond University Medical Center after suffering critical injuries, according to police and FDNY officials.

    The driver of the vehicle was arrested at the scene, but information on charges was not available.

    This is a developing story, please check back for updates.

    Tom Shea

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  • Man in ‘XA’ duds sought for unprovoked attack against Staten Island man: NYPD

    Man in ‘XA’ duds sought for unprovoked attack against Staten Island man: NYPD

    A man wearing a matching hoodie and baseball cap with the letters “XA” repeatedly printed on them is wanted for stabbing a man with a broken bottle during an unprovoked Staten Island attack, police said Wednesday.

    The 50-year-old victim was inside the Deja Vu sports bar on Port Richmond Ave. near Post Ave. in Port Richmond about 12:05 a.m. Monday when the suspect, who is believed to be in his 20s, struck him in the face with a glass bottle, cops said.

    The suspect then grabbed one end of the broken bottle and jammed it into the back of the victim’s head before running off down Port Richmond Ave., witnesses told police.

    The victim suffered deep cuts to his face and head as well as a broken nose, police said. He was taken to an area hospital where he was treated and released.

    He claimed that he never saw his attacker before nor didn’t know why he was targeted.

    Cops on Wednesday released surveillance video of the attacker taken at a nearby deli in the hopes that someone recognizes him.

    On the night of the attack, the man was wearing a white hoodie and baseball hat. The letters “XA” were printed on the hat as well as the arms of the hoodie, police said.

    Anyone with information regarding this incident is urged to call NYPD Crime Stoppers at (800) 577-TIPS. All calls will be kept confidential.

    Thomas Tracy

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  • NYPD: 13-year-old Syles Ular stabbed to death on MTA bus on Staten Island, teen in custody

    NYPD: 13-year-old Syles Ular stabbed to death on MTA bus on Staten Island, teen in custody

    14-year-old in custody in stabbing death of 13-year-old boy on MTA bus


    14-year-old in custody in stabbing death of 13-year-old boy on MTA bus

    01:57

    NEW YORK — A 13-year-old boy was stabbed on an MTA bus and later died Friday on Staten Island

    We know a 14-year-old boy is now in police custody.

    It happened just after 2:30 p.m. as the bus was on Hyland Boulevard near Littlefield Avenue.

    Witnesses say a 13-year-old boy was riding the bus when another teenager got on, and the two started yelling at each other.

    “Witnesses state there’s an argument on a bus. A knife is produced, and gang signs were being shown back and forth,” NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell said.

    The second teenager then allegedly stabbed the 13-year-old in the chest.

    “The other kid who got stabbed was sitting on the bus with us, like a few seats ahead of us, and the other kid walks in and they started yelling at each other. I guess they knew each other, had beef or something. And he walked over, pulled a knife out of his pocket, grabbed him and started stabbing him. They started like wrestling back and forth, and just kept stabbing him and stabbing him until he left the bus and ran off,” said another teen who was on the bus. 

    According to witnesses, the victim then stumbled off the bus, calling for help.

    “He screamed, ‘Help, someone call the cops, I can’t breathe,’” the teenage witness said.

    The assailant took off running.

    “He was very fidgety and he kept staring back down and looking all around and dipping, then he made a left,” witness Anthony Esemplaire said.

    The NYPD says two passersby, a state environmental conservation officer and a retired NYPD sergeant, tracked the 14-year-old suspect down before police arrived.

    “The retired sergeant starts to follow the male who did the stabbing. At this time, another witness points him out and says, ‘This person just stabbed somebody,’ and the sergeant effects the arrest,” Chell said.

    The victim was rushed to a local hospital, where he succumbed to his injuries. He has been identified as Syles Ular, of Staten Island.

    Investigators scoured the scene for evidence Friday and are reviewing video from on-board cameras.

    The MTA says the bus driver is traumatized.

    “He’s broken up right now from what he experienced,” said Demetrius Crichlow, with the MTA.

    “This is one of the safest neighborhoods. I’ve never seen anything like this go on,” Esemplaire said.

    Police believe the motive for this stabbing may be gang-related.

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  • Neighbors mourn Staten Island grandfather butchered by crazed neighbor

    Neighbors mourn Staten Island grandfather butchered by crazed neighbor

    A beloved 81-year-old Staten Island man butchered by an unhinged neighbor was remembered Saturday as the “grandfather” of the block as residents tried to wrap their minds around the bloody melee that ended his life.

    “It’s heartbreaking. The guy never harmed a fly,” one resident of Sunnyside Terrace said of Frank Pompilii, who was stabbed to death by a longtime neighbor during a bloody clash Friday night. “Frank was friends with everybody.”

    Pompilii was repeatedly stabbed in the neck in the body down the block from his home on Sunnyside Terrace, a bucolic, tree-lined street near Grand Ave. in Sunnyside during the 4:40 p.m. clash Friday.

    It’s believed Pompilii was trying to break up a fight between three other neighbors — identified by residents as Redzep (Richie) Cobaj, 78, his son Skender Cobaj, 51, and Ramazan Ramusevic, 57 — when Ramusevic began stabbing the two older men, block residents said.

    Cops responding to the scene found the elder Cobaj outside, suffering from multiple stab wounds. Entering the home, they found Ramusevic, a bloody knife still in his hand.

    The officers tased and disarmed Ramusevic before taking him into custody. During his arrest, he admitted to stabbing another man. Pompilii was found stabbed in the neck and body a short distance away.

    Gardiner Anderson for New York Daily News

    Police on Saturday were still trying to determine what sparked the bloody carnage. In this photo, police investigate after three people were stabbed on Sunnyside Terrace near Clove Road in Staten Island on Sept. 22, 2023.

    He died at the scene.

    Skender Cobaj was also at the home, suffering from a cut to his hand he received defending his father, cops and neighbors said.

    Redzep Cobaj remained hospitalized in critical condition.

    “He was with a cane, he was almost 80 years old,” the resident, who wished not to be named, said of Cobaj. “If he got stabbed it’s going to be hard for him to survive.”

    On Saturday, a line of mourners was seen going in and out of Pompilii’s home, where he and his wife of 56 years raised two children and six grandchildren.

    “It’s our grandpa,” one mourner said to reporters in hushed tones outside Pompilii’s home as a bird feeder swayed in the rain outside.

    Pompilii was an “old school Italian guy” everyone on Sunnyside Terrace loved, resident Ron Romano said.

    “(He) was kind of the nicest neighbor on the block,” Romano said. “He would clean up the street. He was a wonderful person.”

    Ramusevic has a history of mental health problems. He was hospitalized at Richmond University Medical Center in March for a psychiatric issue and sued the hospital in June for medical records after he injured himself during an unsuccessful escape from the hospital, according to court documents.

    The alleged stabber once owned a pizzeria nearby but was always standoffish to neighbors, residents said.

    In fact, the only people he seemed to get along with was Pompilii and Redzep Cobaj, neighbors said.

    Police investigate after three people were stabbed on Sunnyside Terrace near Clove Road in Staten Island on Sept. 22, 2023.

    Gardiner Anderson for New York Daily News

    Ramusevic was recently hospitalized at Richmond University Medical Center for a psychiatric issue. In this photo, Police investigate after three people were stabbed on Sunnyside Terrace near Clove Road in Staten Island on Sept. 22, 2023.

    “They were always talking to each other, these three,” the neighbor said. “They were always hanging out and talking, they knew each other very well.”

    Police on Saturday were still trying to determine what sparked the bloody carnage.

    “Even the detectives were like ‘We have no idea, we literally don’t know why he did it,’” said one neighbor, who would only identify herself as Christina. “I heard (Pompilii) was going to visit his neighbor, and they were attacked by the other neighbor.”

    Charges against Ramusevic were pending Saturday.

    Liam Quigley, Thomas Tracy

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  • 10 arrested, NYPD cop hurt as protesters block bus of migrants arriving at Staten Island shelter

    10 arrested, NYPD cop hurt as protesters block bus of migrants arriving at Staten Island shelter

    Ten people were arrested when a protest over migrants being housed on Staten Island ended in a violent clash with cops, police said Wednesday.

    One of the protesters faces an assault charge while the other nine were given summonses for disorderly conduct following the Tuesday night protest at Father Capodanno Blvd and Midland Ave. in Midland Beach, cops said.

    A busload of asylum seekers were being sent to the Island Shores Assisted Living Facility when protesters blocked the path to the former assisted living facility, cops said.

    Responding officers ordered the demonstrators to move out of the way but they refused, sparking a stand-off.

    Cops stepped in and dragged demonstrators from the street. A cop suffered a knee injury when 48-year-old Vadim Dlyakov, who lives down the block from the assisted living facility, put up a fight, cops said.

    Dylakov was charged with assaulting a police officer, resisting arrest and obstructing government administration. His arraignment in Staten Island Criminal Court was pending Wednesday.

    Eight men and one woman were taken into custody and let go with disorderly conduct summonses that they will have to answer in court at a later date.

    Tuesday’s unrest was the latest in a string of protests over migrants and asylum seekers being housed in the outer boroughs.

    Protesters have also picketed outside of Gracie Mansion as more than 110,000 migrants have come to New York City over the last several months.

    About 10,000 migrants are making their way to New York a month, which is becoming an untenable burden on the city, which has to shelter and care for them as they get on their feet, Mayor Adams recently said.

    Thomas Tracy

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  • “I Was Actually Stone-Cold Sober”: Colin Jost Can’t Blame Weed for Buying Staten Island Ferry Boat (Unlike Pete Davidson)

    “I Was Actually Stone-Cold Sober”: Colin Jost Can’t Blame Weed for Buying Staten Island Ferry Boat (Unlike Pete Davidson)

    Everyone has had a questionable online shopping moment: It’s late at night, you’re having fun with your friends, things go a little too far, and before you know if you’re calling up Cameron Crowe to see if he’s ever considered following up We Bought a Zoo with a sequel called We Bought a Decommissioned Staten Island Ferry Boat and Oh My God Now What?

    Pete Davidson has (kind of) explained the purchase he and Colin Jost made with comedy club owner Paul Italia by saying that “we were very stoned” when they bought the allegedly roach-and-asbestos-infested boat for $280,100 back in January 2022.

    Speak for yourself, Jost recently added, with what we imagine was the deepest of sighs.

    “Is it worse that I was actually stone-cold sober when we bought the ferry?” he asked in an Instagram post on Wednesday that featured a headline referencing Davidson’s explanation.

    Instagram content

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    Honestly, the vibe is that in his heart of hearts, he knows the answer to the question. Colin, do you need a hug? A nice glass of cold seltzer and a quiet place to sit for a few minutes?

    While Davidson seems to be actively praying for someone to sink the behemoth boat he and Jost bought and then christened Titanic 2, Jost, in his caption, said, “We’re excited to prove the non-believers wrong. You’re going to be BEGGING to get on this ferry in two years. Mark my words.” In the past, the pals, who worked together on Saturday Night Live, have mentioned plans to turn the ferry into a floating comedy venue. They have also mentioned that this would be very expensive, to say the least. 

    So it makes sense that Jost’s third item on the Instagram caption agenda reads, “UNRELATED I’m going on a Ferry Money Tour this week and next week.” He helpfully designed a poster for the mini-tour, featuring the bright-orange boat in the same carousel, then later shared a more tasteful fan-made poster for the shows. Graphic design does appear to be his passion. Sorry, comedy, and big ups to “izzy whoever you are.”

    Instagram content

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    Since our last coverage of the only ship more delightful than friendship, where Davidson admitted he had no idea where the ferry was currently moored, multiple Staten Island locals have reached out to offer boat intel, telling us that it is at a boat repair place along the island’s Kill Van Kull, and it has not yet sunk. A big thank you to our ferry godparents: Pete may not know where his boat is, but now we do.

    Kase Wickman

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  • A grassroots group took on Amazon and won. Then came the hard part | CNN Business

    A grassroots group took on Amazon and won. Then came the hard part | CNN Business



    CNN
     — 

    When the Amazon Labor Union shocked the world last April by successfully forming the first US union in the e-commerce giant’s history, Chris Smalls, the president and face of the organization, celebrated by making champagne rain on the street and thanking Jeff Bezos “for going to space” while workers organized.

    Smalls, a worker who was fired by Amazon

    (AMZN)
    in the early days of the pandemic and then labeled as “not smart or articulate” by a company lawyer, quickly emerged as an icon for the resurgent US labor movement. He went on a media tour that took him from the red carpet to the White House, often clad in his “Eat the Rich” jacket and Versace sunglasses.

    But in the year since the landmark victory, Smalls and ALU appear to have fallen back to earth. Amazon still refuses to recognize the union or come to the bargaining table, dashing the Staten Island workers’ hopes of creating their first contract. The group fell short in its campaigns to organize two other Amazon warehouses in New York, including one across the street from the unionized facility. Meanwhile, Smalls and the union have been grappling with public infighting which, combined with its stalled progress on other fronts, could threaten the union’s future.

    The early struggles for ALU highlight the challenges of taking on one of the biggest employers in the world. It has also renewed questions about whether a grassroots organization, rather than a more established union, is best suited for the task, even though no established union has ever made it this far in organizing a US union at Amazon.

    “I think that’s a lesson here, that an established union would have helped the local leaders in these internal battles to get worked out, and to help them prepare and structure a bargaining approach and strategy,” said Thomas Kochan, a longtime labor researcher at the MIT Sloan School of Management’s Institute for Work and Employment Research.

    But in a recent interview with CNN, Smalls was enthusiastic about the state of his union, noting that “it’s been going great,” while pointing to the realities of being a grassroots group.

    “If anybody could do it better, please be my guest,” Smalls said of running ALU. “This is not an established union that’s been around, this a grassroots movement that’s going to have growing pains, and there’s a lot of uncharted water because it’s never been done before.”

    “Our expectations is insane,” he added. “People expect us to be moving like we’re an established union that’s been around for 100 years. That’s not the case, we’re as grassroots as they come.”

    When Heather Goodall and her colleagues started organizing at an Amazon warehouse in Albany, they met with representatives from multiple established unions, including the Teamsters, to discuss the effort. But ultimately, they decided to organize with ALU.

    In the grassroots group, Goodall initially saw a fighter. The union, founded by Smalls after he was fired from the Staten Island warehouse following his decision to lead a protest over pandemic working conditions, was the one group to actually “beat the billion-dollar bully,” as she put it to CNN last year. And the decision of the Albany workers to organize with ALU suggested Smalls’ group could extend its influence throughout Amazon’s sprawling network of warehouses.

    Instead, ALU lost the fight to unionize in Albany in October and tensions later boiled over between Goodall and Smalls, with the Albany organizer telling CNN she pushed back on Smalls’ pay, travel and leadership.

    “I told Christian, ‘We have a problem, you need to stop traveling, you need to focus on the workers,’” Goodall told CNN. “I wanted to protect the integrity of the ALU, so I kept it internal, but some of the challenges that I was arguing with him about started to really shake the foundation of the ALU.”

    Heather Goodall and Amazon Labor Union members rallied at the ALB1 Warehouse in Schodack ahead of their labor union election on October 10, 2022.

    Goodall said the tensions only increased in January, when she said she learned Smalls was earning a salary of $60,000 from the union, and as she questioned how much was being spent by the group to rent office space in New York City.

    “I started to realize that Christian had really convinced himself that he is the end-all and that’s not how a union is run,” Goodall said. “That was kind of the beginning of end.”

    Goodall said she was told to “get on board” and when she continued to raise concerns about union leadership, she said she was eventually removed from her role as chairperson for the ALB1 Amazon facility, and stopped receiving her $300 weekly paycheck from the union in early February.

    Smalls, for his part, did not directly address the claims about her removal when asked. “First of all, there is no infighting because they’re not in,” he said.

    Smalls said that “every union president in this country travels” and defended his salary as a fraction of what other union presidents earn. He said he sees his travel as important for getting young people excited and involved in the broader labor movement, saying, “I’m fighting for workers on a greater scale.”

    He also said he earns money from some of his public appearances, but added that, “I put my life on the line long enough,” after spending more than 300 days unemployed and at the bus stop across the street from the Staten Island facility trying to unionize it. “My speaking engagements is yeah, for my own personal well-being, I was out of a job from 2020 with no help, I have a lot of bills and a lot of debts that I accumulated that I need to get rid of.”

    And despite now rubbing shoulders with celebrities like Zendaya, appearing on Time’s list of the 100 most influential people and gracing the cover of New York magazine, Smalls insists the fame hasn’t changed him. “I’m still a worker who was fired three years ago during the pandemic,” he said. “I’m the same person who I was in 2020, I’ve always done as much as I can, I’m only one person and I can’t be at every place at every given time.”

    Chris Smalls in front of the Amazon LDJ5 fulfillment center in the Staten Island borough of New York, on Feb. 7, 2022.

    Even with her criticisms, Goodall echoed Smalls in calling the infighting at the organization “growing pains” for the budding union and said she is hopeful that ALU will soon make a “comeback.”

    “I don’t care about the money, I’m continuing everything that we’ve been doing,” Goodall said.

    “This can be a learning experience,” she added. “We are going to elect strong leadership and we are going to make this a historic movement going forward and make it about the workers.”

    The union’s stated goal is to fight for better pay, benefits and working conditions for warehouse staff. For ALU to prove itself now, it ultimately needs to be able to get Amazon to the bargaining table and secure its first contract for workers at the Staten Island facility — and show workers that it can win some negotiations with the e-commerce giant.

    “They’re under a lot of pressure,” said Kate Bronfenbrenner, the director of labor education research at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations, “because they went around talking about what a great victory they have. Then everybody says, ‘Okay, what’s next?’”

    Bronfenbrenner, who is also the co-director of the Worker Empowerment Research Project, an interdisciplinary network of labor market researchers, added that not having a first contract a year after an election is “not a big deal” for the union, as “only a third of a third of newly-organized workplaces” meet this milestone in that timeframe.

    “What’s different about this,” she said, is that Amazon is challenging not just ALU’s win but also the “legitimacy” of the National Labor Relations Board. The company has claimed the independent federal agency tasked with overseeing union elections exerted “inappropriate and undue influence” with the Staten Island effort. (The NLRB has pushed back at that claim.)

    An Amazon employee signs a labor union authorization for representation form outside the Amazon LDJ5 fulfillment center in the Staten Island borough of New York, on Monday, Feb. 7, 2022.

    Amazon, which has long said that it prefers working with employees directly versus through a union, has signaled it’s prepared to take its fight through higher courts. In remarks late last year at the New York Times DealBook conference, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said, in his opinion, the legal battle with the union was “far from over with.” He added: “I think that it’s going to work its way through the NLRB, it’s probably unlikely the NLRB is going to rule against itself, and that has a real chance to end up in federal courts.”

    As Bronfenbrenner put it, “Amazon could stall it forever, and they know that.”

    The union was likely caught off-guard by the struggles that come after winning an election, Bronfenbrenner said. “They were very focused on the organizing, and not having had a lot of experience, they didn’t really think about the battle for a first contract.”

    Now, the public infighting only risks making it harder for ALU to accomplish its goals.

    “They have to resolve those differences, and go to the bargaining table as one united organization,” MIT’s Kochan said. “The longer those internal divisions persist and get publicity, the more emboldened Amazon is going to be to say, ‘See, they can’t even agree among themselves, and we don’t have to do anything, but sit on our hands and this thing is going to fail on its own accord.’”

    But ultimately, Kochan said he thinks it’s important to remember that the workers are fighting a system that is rigged against them.

    “I think the biggest lesson is our labor laws are so badly broken,” he said, “and it needs fundamental change so that we don’t frustrate workers who want to have a union and recognize the uphill battles they have to fight to get a first contract.”

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  • Passengers evacuated after Staten Island Ferry engine fire

    Passengers evacuated after Staten Island Ferry engine fire

    NEW YORK — Emergency personnel evacuated nearly 900 passengers from a Staten Island Ferry vessel Thursday evening following a fire in the ship’s engine room.

    The New York City Fire Department said units responded to a report of a fire in the mechanical room of a ship in upper New York Bay shortly after 5 p.m., WNBC-TV reported.

    Five people were reported injured, three of them requiring hospital treatment, WNBC-TV said.

    The U.S. Coast Guard evacuated the passengers, including several wearing life jackets, to the St. George Ferry Terminal on Staten Island. The ferry’s 16 crew members were also taken off the boat. The evacuation took less than an hour, WNBC-TV reported.

    The NYC Department of Transportation said the vessel, the Sandy Ground, was temporarily anchored near Bayonne, New Jersey, as passengers were transferred. A spokesperson for NY Waterway said one of its ferries assisted with the evacuation.

    The fire department said the fire was contained to the ship’s engine room and stack.

    ———

    Video producer Annika Wolters contributed to this report from Bangkok.

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  • Amazon workers vote against forming union in upstate New York, dealing setback to grassroots labor group | CNN Business

    Amazon workers vote against forming union in upstate New York, dealing setback to grassroots labor group | CNN Business



    CNN
     — 

    Amazon workers in upstate New York have voted against forming a union, dealing another blow to a grassroots labor group attempting to organize several of the tech giant’s US warehouses.

    In total, 406 workers at the Amazon facility near Albany voted against unionizing and 206 voted for it, according to a preliminary tally Tuesday from the National Labor Relations Board. There were some challenged and void ballots, but not a big enough figure to sway the final results.

    Workers at the facility, called ALB1, were seeking to organize with the Amazon Labor Union, the same grassroots worker group that successfully formed the first-ever union at a US Amazon facility in Staten Island, New York, earlier this year. The Albany vote was the ALU’s third attempt to unionize an Amazon warehouse, after it fell short of securing a union win at a smaller Amazon facility also located in Staten Island. It also comes as Amazon has still not formally recognized the union in Staten Island or come to the bargaining table.

    After the vote count concluded on Tuesday, ALU President Chris Smalls said his labor group is “filled with mixed emotions” over the results and pledged: “This won’t be the end of ALU at ALB1.”

    Smalls also accused Amazon of retaliating against union organizers at ALB1, which Amazon has previously denied, and blasted the vote as a “sham election.”

    Amazon, meanwhile, welcomed the results of the election in a statement Tuesday.

    “We’re glad that our team in Albany was able to have their voices heard, and that they chose to keep the direct relationship with Amazon as we think that this is the best arrangement for both our employees and customers,” Kelly Nantel, a spokesperson for Amazon, said in a statement. “We will continue to work directly with our teammates in Albany, as we do everywhere, to keep making Amazon better every day.”

    The Amazon organizing efforts have come amid a broader reawakening of the US labor movement during the pandemic, with some early union victories at companies such as Apple and Starbucks. Smalls, in particular, has emerged as a face of this labor movement since the win in Staten Island, making appearances at the White House and posing with celebrities at the Time 100 summit.

    Smalls previously told CNN Business that the ALU has been fielding an explosion of interest from Amazon workers at other facilities since its original victory. In addition to the ALB1 facility, an Amazon fulfillment center in Moreno Valley, California, also recently submitted a petition for a union election with the ALU.

    But ahead of the Albany vote last week, Smalls appeared to play down the ramifications of the outcome, suggesting the organizing activity itself is a victory. “The expansion of the ALU is definitely historical by itself,” he previously told CNN. “I don’t think nothing’s up for stake.”

    Smalls echoed that sentiment in a tweet on Tuesday before the vote tally kicked off. “Proud of the brave workers of ALB1 regardless of todays results,” he tweeted, adding: “You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take!”

    Amazon’s worker-organizers at the Albany facility say they were inspired to form a union after seeing the success of the ALU in Staten Island. Some workers in Albany said they were also motivated to organize after witnessing colleagues get injured on the job. A report from the National Employment Law Project found that the ALB1 facility had the highest rates of “most serious injuries” among all Amazon facilities in the state.

    An Amazon spokesperson previously told CNN Business that Amazon ramped up hiring to meet demand from Covid-19 “and like other companies in the industry, we saw an increase in recordable injuries during this time from 2020 to 2021 as we trained so many new employees.” The spokesperson added that the company has invested billions of dollars in new operations safety measures.

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