Maria Baez

Dinowitz Says He Didn't Start Fight at Bronx Democratic Meeting

Assemblyman Jeff Dinowitz called to dispute City Councilwoman Maria Baez’s account of what happened last night at a meeting of the Bronx County Democratic Party.

Baez, who supports Jose Rivera, told me she saw Dinowitz "fighting" with some attendees.

As Dinowitz tells it, he walked into a conflict that had already started between supporters loyal to Rivera—who Dinowitz says were trying to remove sign-in sheets recording who was eligible to vote—and supporters of Assemblyman Carl Heastie, who's trying to unseat Rivera. (And may have succeeded, depending on what the court says.)

Then the usually mild-mannered Dinowitz took a (figurative!) shot at his accuser.

“I’m amazed, considering her attendance record, that you found her at City Hall,” Dinowitz said.

Baez recently faced criticism for have the worst attendance record in the City Council.

Maria Baez on the Bronx Democrats' Drama


Here's City Councilwoman Maria Baez, an ally of Jose Rivera, describing last night's contentious Bronx County Democratic Party meeting.

According to Baez, she is one of four people authorized to start a county committee meeting. She says that when the group alligned with her political opponents failed to open the meeting, she did.

Liz Benjamin reports that, according to Carl Heastie, Baez did not have authority to begin the meeting. 

Candice Giove also has a different version of events. 

Bronx County Leader Rivera Facing Crucial Vote

Jose Rivera’s fate as the Bronx Democratic County Leader will be decided at a meeting of the party’s executive committee at the Paradise Theaters at 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, September 28, according to a Bronx source.

The vote is crucial to Rivera's future, because he's facing major backlash from a group of Bronx elected officials that call themselves the "Rainbow Rebellion." They say Rivera has not been an inclusive leader and has been mostly interested in helping his own family members and other Puerto Ricans.

This source, aligned with Rivera, said there are 10 votes in the executive committee, and that most of them are with the current chairman.  read more »

More on the Withdrawn Budget Requests

Among the funding requests cut by the Council from its budget was one for the Bronx African American Chamber of Commerce, which was slated to get $10,000 at the request of City Councilman Larry Seabrook. The organization earned some attention when it came out that they never accounted for the ultimate destination of $994,488 they received last year.

After voting in favor of the budget, Seabrook told me, “I didn’t put it in -- that was a mistake on their end,” referring to the Council staff.

A spokesman for the City Council explained the mistake, saying that Seabrook had initially asked for the money but later recsinded the request.  read more »

Katz Event Shows Off Diverse Support

Katz Event Shows Off Diverse Support
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Council member Melinda Katz, a candidate for city comptroller, is having a June 19 fund-raiser that will showcase strong support from black and Latino lawmakers.

The elected officials on the host committee for the event include Yvette Clarke, Jeff Aubry, Jose Peralta, Maria del Carmen Arroyo, Maria Baez, Helen Foster and Melissa Mark Viverito.

One of her strongest opponents is Adolfo Carrion, the only Latino in the race.

It’s worth noting that Arroyo, Baez and Foster are also, like Carrion, from the Bronx.

The invitation also includes a number of big real estate people who sit on Katz’s finance committee: Douglas Durst, Peter Kalikow and Richard Ravitch. Katz recently said that her connections to the real estate industry are an asset to her.

Quinn: 'I am Not a Target'

Quinn: 'I am Not a Target'

In her clearest remarks to date about the slush fund scandal at the City Council, Christine Quinn told reporters today, “I am not a target of the investigation.”

The remark came during a Q&A with reporters following her announcement that legislation would be passed later today in order to rezone Harlem and create a permanent office of long-term sustainability.  read more »

Congestion Pricing Passes Committee

Congestion Pricing Passes Committee
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Congestion pricing just passed the City Council Committee on State and Federal Legislation, 6-4. Members who voted in favor included Maria Baez, Melissa Viverito, Larry Seabrook, Joel Rivera, Mike McMahon and Hiram Monserrate. Those opposed included Lew Fidler, Joe Addabbo and Erik Dilan.

It goes to the full council tonight.

Gaming Out the Congestion Pricing Vote

On March 8, The New York Times published a survey of where some of the City Council's 51 members stood on congestion pricing. At the time, 20 were against, 12 were for, and 19 were either undecided or did not respond to the survey.  read more »

The YES Network

The new Yankee stadium plan passed the City Council subcommittee (3-0) and committee (22-1) today and is awaiting near unanimous approval before the full body this afternoon. Council Member Tony Avella voted 'aye,' changing his mind from when he talked with us Monday for the article in today's paper. It was the Metro-North station that made him do it, he said.

Charles Barron voted nay; Helen Foster will also oppose it before the full Council but she is not on Land Use.

The community benefits agreement was not, Committee Chairwoman Melinda Katz kept reminding members, the issue on the floor, and yet it had a way of creeping into people's endorsements of the project. After the vote, Maria Baez, the "dean" of the Bronx delegation, told reporters that the agreement had not been signed yet but was complete. Final terms: The Yankees will contribute $1.2 million a year (up from $700,000) for nonprofit organizations and for park maintenance, a certain percentage of which must be in Community Board 4; $1 million a year for four years for a job training and apprenticeship program; and 15,000 game tickets to borough residents.

So who will sign this thing, and when? Baez told us Yankees President Randy Levine and Borough President Adolfo Carrion along with some council members, hopefully before the final vote this afternoon. We'd be surprised: in the past, these C.B.A.'s have avoided having any officials' signatures to make clear they are outside the city's land use process.

Outside, as in, being hashed out outside the City Council chambers and downstairs in the private conference room.

-Matthew Schuerman