Walking in the rain after school.
3 Pm in the afternoon on Court Street
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To learn more about our own Community Board 6, which represents Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill, the Columbia Street District, Gowanus, Park Slope and Red Hook.I hope you'll consider applying for a seat on one of our neighborhood community boards. There will likely be a few vacancies on our local boards, and we want to encourage as many interested applicants as possible.Community boards are the most local body of government, and they play a role in many issues that affect our neighborhoods. The community boards weigh in on land use and zoning matters, local infrastructure needs, municipal service delivery and many other neighborhood issues.My City Council district overlaps with three community boards:Community Board 6 (covering Cobble Hill, Carroll Gardens, Columbia Waterfront, and Park Slope)Community Board 7 (covering Windsor Terrace and Sunset Park)Community Board 12 (covering Kensington and Borough Park).Each board consists of up to 50 volunteers — people who live or work in the area — appointed by the Borough President and City Council Members. Community boards meet once each month (except for the summer) and have a range of committees. There are always many more applicants than there are slots, but applications also stay on file from year to year, so we are encouraging anyone who is interested to apply.If you would like to submit an application, or to learn more, please contact me at lander@council.nyc.gov or 718−499−1090 and we will send you the materials that you need.It's a great way to be involved in making our communities even better places to live.Councilmember Brad LanderServing the neighborhoods of Cobble Hill, Carroll Gardens, Park Slope,Windsor Terrace, Borough Park, and Kensington456 5th Avenue, 3rd Floor * Brooklyn, NY 11215 * 718-499-1090
And did anyone notice that the day following the EPA presentation of both the RI and Risk Assessment--made less than a year after the Superfund designation, the NY Times runs a big story on the City Flushing Tunnel project?Could someone, maybe from city hall, have asked for such an article with this exact timing to try to steel the EPA limelight after the EPA preform beyond everyone's expectation--especially city hall.The Flushing Tunnel project in today's Times is the very same project the city presented about ten years ago. There is no news here. So why is it being featured with so prominently in today's paper? The Gowanus news for the day is how the EPA outperformed everyone's expectations.
Have you ever played trivia in a 19th-century landmark building in Brooklyn Heights? It's probably time you did. Join veteran trivia hosts Stuart Post and Chris Kelley and the rest of the team at the Brooklyn Historical Society for BHS' second pub-style trivia event featuring prizes, beer, food and, of course, competitive team trivia! Come test your wits with themed rounds about all sorts of Brooklyn ephemera including music, movies, geography and all-around general knowledge. We'll have music clues, movie clips and more! If trivia's not your thing, come by to cheer on the game and enjoy a Brooklyn Brewery beer in one of the most stunning interiors in Brooklyn. Come as a team, or come solo and we’ll find you a team. Come early to locate clues in BHS' exhibits and to ensure your seat.Prizes include tickets to Urban Oyster's Brewed in Brooklyn Tour, Brooklyn Brewery merchandise, Brooklyn Brewery Local 1, Brooklyn neighborhood guides, memberships to BHS and more.Tickets: $8 BHS members/$10 non-members. Ticket purchase includes admission to trivia event and one free Brooklyn Brewery beer or bottled water. Advanced ticket purchase recommended. Buy your ticket here.
My family ate here for over 50 years. Grandparents came every Sunday night till they died.I agree the food went downhill, but the cheesecake of course remained the best.It would be nice if they re-opened and re-vamped the food and chef!