Vacca and Palma Sponsor Blizzard Bill

It’s hard to think about snow right now, with the weather outside hitting a sunny 73 and the Mister Softee trucks finally making their rounds through the neighborhood, but try to remember that post-Christmas blizzard that dumped two feet of snow on the city, leaving a string of stranded MTA buses-and perturbed residents-in its unplowed wake.To avoid another snow fiasco like that one, Bronx City Council Members James Vacca and Annabel Palma sponsored a bill, passed last week, that requires the Department of Sanitation to prepare and publish snow-removal plans each winter for all five boroughs.”Last December’s blizzard revealed how woefully unprepared the City was to deal with these kinds of major storms,” Palma said in a press release. The required plans must include a list of primary, secondary and tertiary streets (the terms the Sanitation Department used to classify blocks in order of plowing-importance) to be published online, along with criteria for each ranking.”During the December blizzard, we heard a lot of talk about tertiary streets and how they were the lowest priority for snowplows. Well, tertiary streets are where taxpayers like you and I live, and many of us didn’t see plows until days after the blizzard was over,” Vacca said.”That’s unacceptable. This bill will put the City’s feet to the fire so that they are forced not only to have a plan but also to explain why they chose to have the plan they chose to have.”During this winter’s blizzard, some outer borough streets and neighborhoods went unplowed and snowed-in for several days, to the frustration of those who lived there.The new law also requires the Sanitation Department to provide detailed plans for removing snow from bus stops, an

Bronx Weekend News Roundup, Monday, April 11

Weather: Dense fog in the Bronx today will give way to a partially cloudy, partially sunny afternoon with highs in the low 70s. Chance of thunderstorms later tonight.Story of the Day: Bronx’s MS 223 Embodies Public School ChallengesSpent a good chunk of this morning reading Jonathan Mahler’s extensive NY Times Magazine piece about MS 223, a South Bronx school opened during the early days of former Chancellor Joel Klein’s reform movement. Through his profile of 223 and its energetic and highly-optimistic principal, Ramon Gonzalez, Mahler, who wrote the fabulously entertaining “The Bronx is Burning,” deftly captures the challenges of not only running, but improving, public schools in the Bronx (and much of NYC, for that matter). If you don’t have time to read the piece (as I mentioned, it’s “extensive,” to the tune of 20 printed out pages), I’ll summarize the key take away points.-The charter school paradox: Gonzalez uses many ideas and strategies promoted by charters schools. MS 223 starts school early and entices kids to stay late.