Letitia James Quotes
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New York is celebrated as a leader in our nation's quest for progress because ours is a city built by the labor of a thousand different shades and accents.
Establishing the two Eids as official holidays will carry important practical and symbolic significance.
During my campaign for Public Advocate, and Mayor Bill de Blasio's campaign for mayor, we committed to making Eid school holidays a reality.
World Aids Day is both a day of remembrance and a day of hope.
We cannot justly seek to expand access to HASA and enroll more New Yorkers in the program, if we do not act to improve the program to ensure that tenants receive the benefits and services they are entitled to.
Going forward, I am focused on rooting out discrimination against those living with HIV/AIDS.
I am proud of the advances we have made in New York where we have continued a legacy of substantive HIV/AIDS policy, but we must continue the fight to end the epidemic and ensure an AIDS-free generation.
As we express our gratitude to veterans for protecting our freedom, it is imperative that we provide them the necessary services and benefits they rightfully deserve.
On the local, state and federal level, government is working alongside veteran's organizations and other stakeholders to provide services such as medical assistance, employment resources, and housing support to veterans and their dependents and survivors. But there are still gaps in services that must be rectified.
It is no secret that New York City has an affordable housing shortage. For those who've returned from the battlefield, the problem is even more pronounced.
We have a moral responsibility to help veterans avoid homelessness and displacement.
For all the manufactured 'Republican versus Democrat' drama that dominates today's cable news and political rhetoric, the most striking feature of our present-day democracy is not partisan divide - it's a corrupt system that protects incumbents from the consequences that real democracy brings.
Around the nation, lawmakers have drawn up their districts with such perverse precision and aversion to competition, that legislators rarely face competitive challenges.
What's historically been referred to as 'gerrymandering' can more aptly be labeled an incumbent protection program.
Americans hate Congress but can't help ourselves from re-electing its members over and over again.
Gunfire tracking technology is improving every day and has been successful in many jurisdictions around the country.
No NYCHA resident should have to worry about the walk home at night through their neighborhood after they finish work. Yet for some NYCHA residents, worrying is a part of daily life.
To my dismay, inadequate signage, non-ADA compliant ramps, narrow doorways, and poorly-placed voting machines are preventing hundreds of thousands of people from exercising one of our most basic rights as Americans.
The ADA prohibits discrimination and guarantees that people with disabilities receive the same opportunities as everyone else to participate in the mainstreams of American life, which includes participating in government programs and services.
Voting is a fundamental right in our democracy.
Increases in stabilized rents impact rent stabilized tenants directly, but they also affect the affordability of all New Yorkers' rents.
All New Yorkers have the right to decent housing, regardless of income and rent.
New York should be a place where everyone can afford to live.
In today's world, access to the Internet is inarguably critical to function in informal and formal spaces - and the costs to digital segregation are rising.
If accessing the Internet becomes more difficult for low-income communities, academic and employment competition may be undermined, and could damage the prospects of upward mobility for low-income New Yorkers and further exacerbate income inequality.
The Internet serves as a channel of endless information through which individuals now access the news, employment opportunities, education, entertainment, etc.
Putting cops on streets is the most effective way to combat crime.
Without a doubt, the most fiscally responsible way to increase the number of officers on our streets is to mobilize uniformed officers in administrative jobs and to use civilian employees to fill those jobs.
More cops on our streets and in our neighborhoods mean safer streets and neighborhoods.
Most of those whom we honor on Memorial Day died young. They never had the chance to raise a family, build a career, attend the weddings of their children, or be honored in old age.
I have never had doubts about the courage of the young men and women we sent overseas wearing the uniform.
New York's buildings must be cleaner and more energy-efficient.
In light of the documented benefits of urban trees, we must also ensure that we increase green spaces in underserved communities throughout the city that lack adequate parks and other green spaces.
Brown v. Board of Education was arguably the most important decision of the Supreme Court in the 20th century.
In reality, handing over public space to private developers does not guarantee that new library spaces will be comparable in size or otherwise remain fully-functional.
It is imperative that we set the national example and make it clear that companies seeking to do business in New York City cannot be allowed to treat their workers like second-class citizens.
Telling the truth about domestic violence - and those who shield it - should not be punished.
For generations America and its institutions have refused to acknowledge the true severity of the harm that domestic violence imposes on our society.
Is truth about domestic violence and those who enable it more important than a company's corporate partnerships? I think so.
When it comes to climate change and the environment, President Donald Trump is plain wrong.
Human induced climate change is real, and the evidence is right in front of us. It threatens our shores. It promises to bring intense heat waves and powerful storms. It has the power to disrupt our economy, endanger our food supply, and imperil global stability. We must take action to stop it.
As Public Advocate for the City of New York, I have a duty to speak truth to power and do what is best for our City and its residents.
I say that our economic future is in the new technology that will lead to more fuel efficient cars and cleaner energy.
As Public Advocate for the City of New York, I will be working with the Administration for Children's Services and others to bring about necessary reforms - and ensure that our city meets its most solemn responsibility - protecting the welfare of our children.
We must simply do every single thing in our power to protect our children from abuse and help them live healthy, prosperous lives.
I've been independent all of my life.
The reality is that I've been counted out for a very long time and people continue to underestimate me and I continue to overperform.
The Office of Attorney General should be independent and the Office of Attorney General should have the power to investigate without the approval of the governor of the state of New York. It's absolutely critically important.
I've got a moral center.
I come from humble beginnings myself.
I've known struggle.
I just try to fight for the underdog, and try to fight for those who are locked out of the sunshine of opportunity.
All of my life and particularly throughout of my public career, I have been talking about the feminization of poverty. And one of the manifestations of the feminization of poverty is the issue of pay inequality in our society.
We have these events, 'Talk to Tish.' They're basically kitchen-roundtable discussions about issues in the City of New York, because you can learn more by listening.
I come from a long line of very strong, tough women. We stick to our principles and stand up for what we believe in, which is fundamental fairness, which is my raison d'etre.
The scales of justice often, in my head, are unbalanced. And so my job is to try to balance out those scales.
I was not born with a silver spoon in my mouth.
I come from a family of eight on public assistance, my parents were separated. My mother struggled, my father struggled.
I know what it's like to be on public assistance and to be unemployed. And I know what it's like to be evicted.
Part of the reason why I wanted to be involved in politics was to create and be a part of policy changes.
Like with all other crime, we must, of course, treat the perpetrators of these actions as the criminals they are. But unlike with the vast majority of other crime, justice is not delivered simply by punishing the perpetrator. This is because the harm associated with domestic violence extends far beyond the point of contact.
Children of domestic violence, of course, suffer terrible consequences.
New Yorkers would be shocked to learn of the conditions some construction workers in our city toil under.
Legally, many contractors are required to pay a prevailing wage. However, bad actors often find ways to get around this requirement.
Some contractors force workers to provide paybacks to keep their jobs. Others intentionally misclassify workers in order to underpay them - by, for example, paying a skilled construction worker as a general laborer.
The workers who get hurt by corner-cutting often do not realize they are being wronged. Even when they do, they do not have the support and resources to fight back. Without a union to stand behind them, these workers are forced to stay in bad jobs, or face no job at all.
While New York City cannot prevent other jurisdictions from selling firearms, it has taken a powerful stance against guns by divesting pension funds from gun manufacturers.
Walmart markets its gun department as 'sports and outdoors,' but let us get one thing straight: They are not just selling hunting rifles.
New York City must divest the hundreds of millions of dollars we have invested in Walmart for far too long, dollars that are only fueling violence and undermining the greater public interest. Once our nation's largest city does so, I know other states and municipalities will follow suit.
Dysfunction in Washington has stalled any meaningful federal action on gun control. So it's increasingly up to big cities like New York to take bold steps to get weapons off our streets and change the national discourse.
Under the not-so-watchful eye of ACS, children continue to die avoidable deaths. This is beyond unacceptable and betrays our moral conscience.
Before any family is placed in any type of shelter, there must be a thorough, top-to-bottom, building-wide inspection. These inspections must be ongoing and publicly accessible. There is no excuse for any person to be blindly put into an apartment without a guarantee that the space is safe.
The status quo is clearly broken, and we must strive for bigger, bolder solutions that will provide New Yorkers with the support they need to remain in their homes.
Within New York City and state, families in need face a confusing hodgepodge of supplemental rental assistance programs, many of which are ineffective individually and all of which are clearly ineffective in the aggregate.
New Yorkers want to be compassionate, and they want to live in a city where homeless people aren't stuffed into shelters, spilling out onto the streets. They also want a support system that works.
Home Stability Support is our best shot at creating an all-encompassing and effective system to ensure that our at-risk children and families can remain in the homes they deserve.
Wage discrimination lasts forever. The disparity haunts women beyond their years in the labor force, impacting how much they save for retirement and ultimately receive in Social Security benefits.
Being underpaid once shouldn't condemn you to a lifetime of inequality.
Our evenly matched rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness require an equal paycheck.
Though few hiring managers would deliberately choose to offer women less money than their male counterparts, when using salary history to determine compensation, they unintentionally preserve the status quo. Too often, women will have a lower salary history, and, therefore get a lower offer.
We must ensure that we are hiring and retaining qualified, diverse candidates not only to teach in our classrooms, but to work at the DOE overseeing our students' education.
The vast majority of our teachers, our principals and our PTAs are well informed and well meaning, but even those with the best intentions can benefit from cultural competency training.
Our schools should be sanctuaries of learning, not nightmares of cruel and racist behavior.
Only when we ensure that the mistakes of our past are not the vision for our future, will we truly have achieved justice.
The vast majority of our men and women in uniform are doing the right thing.
The reflex of police officers, when making the decision whether to use force and on what scale, must not be a result of instinctive bias, but on objective and discernible factors. As the enforcers of law and order, they have to adhere to the letter of the law and minimize the taints of biases and life long social conditioning.
Each day, millions of police officers do the selfless work of putting their lives on the line to protect civilians, frequently responding to or preventing crises completely with no recognition.
Our system of government works best when there are checks and balances led by independent entities that are empowered to conduct fair and rigorous oversight. These are the same principles enshrined in the founding document of our country - our Constitution.
District attorneys are often some of the finest public servants. However, the system in which they operate to investigate cases of police misconduct leaves a huge window for unintended bias.
Our justice system allows district attorneys to be charged with the great responsibility of prosecuting the very same police officers they work side-by-side with every day and whose union support they seek when running for reelection.
Any district attorney knows that an endorsement from law enforcement unions is vital to earning voters' trust. As a result, police unions play an outsized role in district attorney elections.
It's clear that the NYPD has prioritized creating a force as diverse as the vibrant city it protects.
The NYPD has taken steps to engage marginalized communities and attempts to bridge gaps between these neighborhoods and those sworn to protect and serve them.
No person should live in poverty after a life of hard work.
A comfortable retirement should not only be a luxury for the wealthy, but a reality for every New Yorker.
Retirement shouldn't be making the choice between buying much-needed medication or putting food on the table; making the choice between heating an apartment in the cold winter months or paying rent; making the choice between paying a phone bill or seeing a doctor.
Every hard working New Yorker, regardless of their income, race, or gender deserves an equal shot at attaining retirement security.
Wage violations are tantamount to theft.
We may not be able to make working at the airport stress-free, but we can at least give these workers the security of knowing they will be paid their due.
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Today's Shayari
उसकी चाहत का और क्या हिसाब दू.....
मैंने बिंदी भी लगाई तो अपने बाबू के आँखों में देखकर ।।
Today's Joke
लड़की अपने दोस्त से “फ्री हो क्या मुझे बाजार तक जाना है...
और मेरी स्कूटी खराब हो गयी है”
लड़का:...
Today's Prayer
Fill my heart with joy and gladness that will make my health spring forth. Fill my days with pleasure and...
Prayer Of The Day