America Voted

Congratulations America, my hope is that after the celebration dies down, we all become more of a part of how to make our Country better.  This election for me was personal about women, equality in marriage, and immigration rights.  This election proved we are no longer a white man's majority.  When diversity rules the day, then we are growing, only then will we create a better future.  I am deeply optimistic.

Now that the election is over, here in our area we are still dealing with the aftermath of Storm Sandy. My sister and so many others are still without power in New Jersey and outer lying areas. And a new storm is on it's way. So many have found their homes, neighborhoods devastated by Sandy and remember this was a category 1 hurricane, what would have happened if it was stronger?

Continued thoughts to those still unable to use easy mass transit.

NYC commuter transit info from MTA

 

I'm looking forward to a full subway gig week next week.  Here's my schedule 

 

South Ferry subway art under water

Concerned about the fate of the Arts For Transit installation in South Ferry by artists Mike and Doug Starn, I emailed them about their South Ferry Artwork now underwater. I had the pleasure of performing in the station the day the artwork installation was unveiled in 2010. Mike replied. Take special note of Mike's comment about the changing island:

We are in Rome now and have not seen the devastation in lower Manhattan in person, but we think that there will not be any permanent damage. the glass is solid 1.5" thick and the stainless steel fence will be fine. The only thing that could remain as evidence is the possibility of  a stain on the marble mosaics.

the map piece we did is all about the changing island- the same island drawn in 1640 and we over laid with the contemporary map--- climate change will also have its affect on the island, and we think seeing some of that evidence would be a good thing. you can see the water height in this picture.

 

on a brighter note, we liked the Colbert Report moments….

Hurricane Sandy devastates 60 million Americans and seven subway tunnels, which means it could be weeks before they're able to restore the scent of urine down there. (04:51)

and the next day with Vince and Shamwow

 

VOTE a privilege Please use it

Today we VOTE, it is a privilege and a right.  I have a post about how the right to vote for women was painfully fought.  It was incredulously not that long ago, my grandmothers were alive to witness the momentous historic event.

So many are hurting from the Storm-Hurricane Crisis, still I do hope you will make every effort to get out and go to the polls.

Read about the amazing group of women who fought for women's right to vote.

and the words from contemporary influential women and their thoughts about this important election.

Pumpkin - Vote - Elizabeth Davis.jpg

image by Elizabeth Davis

Return to subway after Sandy

I showed up at Grand Central Shuttle today and performed for a steady stream of commuters.  People seemed, tired, and focused on their movement. Lots of rolling suitcases which I interpreted as flights are now back on schedule, or people were moving to their next shelter.  No matter what, I could feel the energy as a sort of accepted shock, and I was glad to do my part and fill the station with song and positive vibes. I reminded people that we were all in this together and that kindness, patience and support were needed in a time like this.

People were kind, generous and well if I may say so, softer.  It wasn't as noisy as usual either and I found singing to be effortless. I had a nice chat with "Piano Red" who told me he had been playing on the street to a daily crowd of generous New Yorkers.  I chatted with Calvin who traveled here to run in the Marathon, and although disappointed to not have run in dedication to his grandparents, he was positive, inspired. He gladly let me film him for my Inspiration Project.  What Inspires Calvin?

I talked with an MTA worker who had been working non stop, since last week. Nousha Salimi a wonderful photo journalist came by to capture the day and sent me some great shots. One of me and Brisdane Ford, another Music Under NY musician who sadly lost many of his possessions including his keyboard a few years ago in a fire.  It was great to see him. 

Nousha Salimi photographs

I walked past the Public Library on my way to Grand Central.  Do you know that by Thursday 55 branches were open?  I applaud Tony Marx the President of NYPL for mobilizing his staff to provide not only a place for people to read books, but to charge phones, connect to the internet or meet up with friends and neighbors. To know the doors were open, this is what a great institution is all about.

Encouraging words from NYPL President Tony Marx:

I hope that you and your family are safe. As our city recovers, we at The New York Public Library are working to provide essential services to New Yorkers who have been affected by Hurricane Sandy. 

In the aftermath of this disaster, families across the city have relied on our branches to meet crucial needs. With the support of friends like you, we have built a Library system that is far more than a repository of books; it is a place where neighbors come together, resources are freely available, and New Yorkers can find information and a place to work together when schools and subways are closed. Over the past few days, we have served countless New Yorkers by providing welcoming spaces and making computers, Internet, and charging stations readily available. We've also added programming for thousands of public school students -- and we will continue to offer enriching activities and services in the days and weeks to com

For New Yorkers seeking reliable information, librarians have been helping patrons navigate the FEMA and Con Edison websites. We've also been providing resource and reference assistance via our Ask NYPL phone line (917-275-6975). In addition, we've waived fines and given automatic renewals to all borrowers, extending the due dates for 390,000 items. When the storm caused the cancellation of Library Lions, our annual fundraiser, NYPL decided to donate the evening's food -- enough to feed more than 600 people -- to the residents of hurricane-ravaged Staten Island. We're striving to ease the burden on New Yorkers in every way we can.

 

and on a personal note, 57 years ago today my parents were married in NYC. Both native New Yorkers. My father who sadly died young, is remembered every day. He was a civil engineer and there are many bridges in NYC that he worked on including the Broadway Bridge across the Harlem River. My mother no longer lives in NY but enjoys the NY stories I tell in my blogs.  Happy Anniversary.

1 week later new challenges

! week ago we were plunged into crisis. Today I hope people can be patient as the new week begins. I know some are still unable to return to work, others have children at home unable to go back to school. Stories I have heard have made me feel so lucky and blessed. I returned last night to my building in full power, a not unexpected garbage odor and the smiles and hugs of neighbors who stayed throughout the power outage.  Stories of pitch dark hallways and staiwells that meant many just stayed put and never left.   I am heartened to hear of others who ventured down multiple steep flights to bunk in with neighbors on lower floors. 

There is so much we can do.  For me right now I'm going out to sing.  Best way I know is to bring some joy back into an otherworldly, intense, scary week where many things will never be the same.

Transit update: Most subway lines are working but the B G Z lines are still without service, no PATH trains, ferries have returned, Holland tunnel open to only buses, and no longer HOV restrictions for car occupancy.

more info here.

My sister living in NJ has seen gas and battery rationing, power lines and poles still down and power out. It's hard to wrap our heads around the massive widespread devastation. Many areas will take a long time to clean up and get back on track. 

For those in need here are important #'s:

FEMA 1-800-621-FEMA 

Red Cross tri-state 1-877-733-2767 

NJHelp -800-Jersey 7

 

Vote despite hardship + Sandy Relief info

We continue to live in crisis mode, for some much more than others. Still, we have an important election this Tuesday.  I urge you to vote and to find ways to help your friends and neighbors get to the polls.  

I just read a fantastic article on Huffington Post by Marianne Schnall Influential Women Speak Out On The Election it's reposted it on my Guest Blogger section of my site.

For those in need of Storm Sandy Relief I have an older post with lots of info

Follow hyperlink for MTA transit info

and this from my friend Chris regarding lots of places to get help.  What I love is that born from the Occupy Wall Street Movement is a group of individuals now wonderfully skilled at moblizing people.  Their efforts "Occupy Sandy" are amazing.  This is power to the people, for the people and by the people. see for yourself in this clip:

read on:

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/11/02/1154537/-AMAZING-Occupy-Wall-Street-Leading-Massive-Volunteer-Powered-Recovery-Efforts-in-New-York

Excerpts (originally posted Friday 11/2/12 to Writing by David Harris Gershon)

They are thousands-strong and growing: entering devastated neighborhoods yet to see outside help from established aid organizations.

They are staffing donation drop off sites, running mobile food kitchens and delivering hot meals. They are distributing food and supplies to the stranded, locating trapped seniors, and aiding clean-up efforts.

In short, they are helping some of New York's most vulnerable right now, and the work being done is simply breathtaking. And that work is growing by the hour.

Loosely organized under Occupy Sandy, Occupy activists have, in conjunction with 350.org and Recovers.org, created in very short order a massive, malleable volunteer network that is reaching untold numbers of New Yorkers still in the dark and cold.

The Red Cross and FEMA are operating shelters, food kitchens and distributing supplies as well. My point here is not to malign them.

My point? To shine a light on the incredible work Occupy activists are doing in locations where aid organizations have yet to lay roots. And to shine a light on the work they will continue to be doing, perhaps with your help.

Update

on 2012-11-05 02:47 by NYC Subway Girl

I received this email from a photo journalist Nousah Salimi, it really tells the story of the crisis through the eyes of someone there:

Good morning,

I went to Manhattan, on Thu and Fri walking around town, it was truly heartbreaking to see the city that never sleeps so empty and deserted, but looking at the bigger picture still very lucky compared to NJ, Long Island and even further out Haiti and surrounding areas which also have been affected but this time under the shadow of NY they are not really making it to breaking news.

Also I was impressed by how hard they are working to bring things back to normal asap, it's amazing.

I bumped to the mayor and governor on Tuesday giving a live announcement in the Battery Tunnel and took some photos of them too!

It was a bit twisted to get to Manhattan, as I could only go with the train either to Borough Hall and then walk and cross Brooklyn Bridge (which I did on Thu) or go to Atlantic Ave and then get the shuttle bus which rides on third ave all the way up to 57 st which I took on Frid and walked all the way down to brooklyn bridge and back home, so lots of walking :)

Anyhow it seems the green line is fully operational now although I believe it will make different stops so that's great already.

have a lovely day.

Nousha

battery tunnerl - nousha salimi 1.jpg

Battery tunnel

Union SQ chging station - Nousha Salimi.jpg

Union Square charging station

Union Square closed - Nousha Salimi.jpg

this one really made me weep

Update

on 2012-11-26 23:26 by NYC Subway Girl

OCCUPY SANDY mobilizes, turning last years uprising against the financial world into action to help victims of Hurricane-Storm Sandy.  Article by ALAN FEUER in NYTimes

Influential Women Speak Out on the Election

I have posted this from an 10-28-2012 Huffington Post article

Marianne Schnall is a widely published writer and interviewer whose writings and interviews have appeared in a variety of media outlets including O, The Oprah MagazineIn Style, CNN.com, EW.com, the Women's Media Center, and many others. Marianne is a featured blogger at The Huffington Post and a regular contributor to the nationally syndicated NPR radio show, 51% The Women's Perspective. She is also the co-founder and executive director of the women's web site and non-profit organization Feminist.com, as well as the co-founder of the environmental siteEcoMall.com. She is the author of Daring to Be Ourselves: Influential Women Share Insights on Courage, Happiness and Finding Your Own Voice based on her interviews with a variety of well-known women. You can visit her website atwww.marianneschnall.com.


Influential Women Speak Out on the Election

Posted: 10/28/2012 11:10 pm

 

Featuring remarks from Isabel Allende, Joan Blades, Martha Burk, Eve Ensler, Gloria Feldt, Kim Gandy, Kirsten Gillibrand, Carol Jenkins, Shelby Knox, Elizabeth Lesser, Lisa Ling, Courtney Martin, Pat Mitchell, Robin Morgan, Samhita Mukhopadhyay, Kathy Najimy, Nancy Pelosi, Ai-Jen Poo, Amy Richards, Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, Gloria Steinem, Barbra Streisand, Loung Ung, Rebecca Walker, Marie Wilson

The inspiration to do this piece occurred when two very special people in my life highlighted for me how critical this election really is. The first was my good friend, playwright Eve Ensler, founder of the global anti-violence movement V-Day, who at the end of a recent interview, expressed to me her heightened concern about what she feels is at stake, followed later that evening by my spirited 14-year-old daughter who has been intensely engaged with this election. She made a compelling plea that I write an article about it. It is after all her future -- and the future of all girls and women -- that hangs in the balance of what path we pursue -- forward or backwards.

It was in that mind-set that I set out to do this piece. In my career as a journalist and as founder of the 17 year-old women's web site Feminist.com, I have been fortunate to have interacted with some of the most influential women of our time. I couldn't help but wonder - what were they thinking right now? So I posed the following question to some of them, "What message would you most want to get out to women about the upcoming election?" Here are their inspiring answers.

In alphabetical order: Isabel Allende, Joan Blades, Martha Burk, Eve Ensler, Gloria Feldt, Kim Gandy, Kirsten Gillibrand, Carol Jenkins, Shelby Knox, Elizabeth Lesser, Lisa Ling, Courtney Martin, Pat Mitchell, Robin Morgan, Samhita Mukhopadhyay, Kathy Najimy, Nancy Pelosi, Ai-Jen Poo, Amy Richards, Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, Gloria Steinem, Barbra Streisand, Loung Ung, Rebecca Walker, Marie Wilson

"Beware, there's a terrorist attack on women's reproductive rights by religious and right wing groups. If Republicans win the election, women may lose the rights they take for granted. Think of your daughters when you cast your vote!!!"
-- Isabel Allende, author of Paula and The House of the Spirits, founder of the Isabel Allende Foundation

"The middle class is being hollowed out as the division between the the haves and have nots has escalated over the last four decades with women, children, and families among the most adversely impacted. The influence of money and power on our political system underlies many of the dynamics creating this rift in economic health. Voting is the heart of citizen power, the time when we can elect leaders that fight corporate influence and pass laws that bypass legislatures that are beholden to special interests. This is our best opportunity to move toward a more fair and healthy society. Celebrate voting!"
-- Joan Blades, co-founder of LivingRoomconversations.orgMomsRising.org andMoveOn.org, co-author of The Custom-Fit Workplace: Choose When WhereHow to Work and Boost Your Bottom Line, and The Motherhood Manifesto


"I would want to tell women to do their own research, not only into what the candidates say (and look for specifics, not broad generalizations) but also their party platforms, since those are the official positions of the parties. Even if they say they will, for instance, keep abortion legal, if their own party is able to restrict it to the point of being meaningless through legislation, a president will not veto such legislation. Which brings me to the second point: who controls the Congress is every bit, if not more, important than who is in the White House. Veto proof majorities can indeed rule."
-- Martha Burk, Director of the Corporate Accountability Project for the National Council of Women's Organizations, author of Your Money and Your Life: The High Stakes for Women Voters in '08 and Beyond, Money editor for Ms. Magazine

"After witnessing the Republican party's siege on women's rights and bodies, after Romney choosing as his running mate Paul Ryan who tried to write "forcible rape" into federal law, after Romney standing by Richard Mourdock who believes in "God-intended rape," the mindset of the current Republican party and its leader has been revealed. A party that is blatantly contemptuous of women, their rights, their access to healthcare, to fair pay, to freedom. This mindset is both psychotic and terrifyingly ignorant of the core issue impacting women -- violence, which impacts one out of three women during their lifetime. It would be simply suicidal for any woman to vote for Romney. Voting for him is actively voting to erase yourself, your body, your rights, not to mention those of your daughters'."
-- Eve Ensler, playwright and author of The Vagina MonologuesThe Good Body andEmotional Creature: The Secret Lives of Girls Around the World, founder of V-Day,One Billion Rising

"Value yourselves. Don't let anyone put you into binders. The power is in your hands to determine the outcome of this election. But power unused is power useless. Vote. Vote your best interests. It's really OK to put yourself first for a change. If you want economic and reproductive justice, if you want your daughters to get fair pay, health care, and equal job opportunity, if you believe women should be able make their own childbearing decisions, if you want to safeguard Medicare and Social Security for yourselves and your parents, if you care about the Supreme Court, then you'd better vote for Obama and those who share his positions on down the ticket."
-- Gloria Feldt, author of No Excuses: 9 Ways Women Can Change How We Think About PowerThe War on Choice, former President of Planned Parenthood Federation of America

"With candidates who oppose women's rights, and in fact would like to roll back many of the very real gains women have made over the past 40 years, now is no time to sit home and let others make these decisions. Start now. Know the issues, ask questions, and vote as if your future depends on it, because in so many ways it will."
-- Kim Gandy, former President of the National Organization for Women (NOW), president and CEO of the National Network to End Domestic Violence (NNEDV)


"It's important for every woman to have their voice heard this election because decisions are being made in Washington every single day that affect every aspect of their lives, and if they don't participate, they will not like what they find. It is demeaning to keep having to fight the same battles our mothers and grandmothers had already won for access to basic health care. I hope that not only will every woman in America vote and hold candidates accountable, but also seize this historic opportunity to send more women to Congress than ever before. I can assure you that if women were 51 percent of Congress we would be debating the economy and not access to birth control." 
-- Kirsten Gillibrand, New York State Senator, founder of Off the Sidelines

"We are faced with many complex issues in this election, issues certain to be tempered by life experience, perhaps faith. But one unambiguous subject is equal pay for women. How, in 2012, could there be disagreement on this point? If women were paid their due, the economy would rebound, families would be lifted out of poverty, children would not know hunger. At its core, opposition to women's equality belies a sinister, mean-spiritedness that we must yank up by the roots from our society. And, absolutely, no candidate who shies away from this essential element of our democracy should be able to choose a Supreme Court Justice.That would be malfeasance of the highest order."
-- Carol Jenkins, writer, former television news anchor, and founding president of The Women's Media Center

"Women must understand that the votes we cast this election season are the most effective protest to talking points that distill 'women' into a monolithic special interest group rather than thinking human beings who happen to be the majority of the population. When we vote for candidates that understand that all issues impact women - and each issue and policy decision impacts each individual woman differently depending on the identity intersections at which she lives her life -- we show in numbers that we don't vote with our reproductive organs, we vote with our brains. That's the body part we'll use to 'shut that whole thing down,' thank you very much!"
-- Shelby Knox, writer, speaker and activist

"Besides the obvious message -- that there's an international war on women and its showing up here in the States in this heated election and it's critical that we vote for candidates who value women's bodies, minds, spirits, opinions, wages, jobs, families, and health -- the message I am most interested in is something that Eleanor Roosevelt said: 'It is better to light a candle than curse the darkness.' Let's be light-bearers in these dark times. Let's not succumb to cursing the darkness, which seems to be the prevailing modus operandi of this election: the mean-spirited, macho, rooster-strutting, and lie-spewing behavior of so many candidates and their supporters. Can we get our message across by lighting truth candles? By using loving, passionate, funny, bold and beautiful words and actions? Can we model a new way without getting run over by the tanks? I think we can. It starts with us."
-- Elizabeth Lesser, co-founder Omega Institute and the Omega Women's Leadership Center, author of The Seeker's Guide and Broken Open: How Difficult Times Can Help Us Grow

"This is a vital election that will determine whether women move forward or backwards. Our rights are being threatened, our bodies are under attack. We must not ignore the fact that the winner of this election will appoint one if not more Supreme Court Justices to the highest court in the land, this could hugely affect women for generations. We cannot be complacent, far too much is at risk." 
-- Lisa Ling, Executive Producer and Host of Our America on OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network and Co-Founder of Secret Society of Women

"The mind and heart play strange tricks on the American voter in the circus that is campaign season, often luring her to vote against her best interest. I say, block out the posturing and the politicking, and take a hard look at what values and policies make your life healthier, safer, and more community-oriented. Vote for the guy that gets those things best."
-- Courtney Martin, blogger, speaker, and author of Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters: How the Quest for Perfection is Harming Young Women and Do It Anyway: The New Generation of Activists

"VOTE!!! Remember what the suffragists said when they finally won their long hard battle to get us the right to vote, knowing that they probably would never get to exercise the right or see the results; they said, 'this is not for ourselves alone.' It was for us and every generation of women to come. If we don't vote, we are ignoring history and giving away the future."
-- Pat Mitchell, President and CEO of the Paley Center for Media, organizer ofTEDxWomen

"It took women 100 years to win the right to vote. Since the Gender Gap is alive and well, if we don't exercise that right in massive numbers on Election Day, it will take only four years of right-wing government to send us back to the Dark Ages."
-- Robin Morgan, author of Sisterhood is Global and Sisterhood is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New Millenium, founder and President of The Sisterhood is Global Institute, co-founder The Women's Media Center

"There are many things that need to happen for women to have full recognition and participation within our current political system. The first is supporting politicians and legislation that actually impacts our life being fair and maintains accessibility to services that make our day-to-day lives livable (whether that be access to abortion or fair wages). And the second is an ability to participate in the political process. As of right now, the amount of money that has been fed into the election prioritizes the needs of constituents that are not us -- this is not just about women, this is about all voices that are drowned out and not answered to when their only interest is lobby groups (especially ones that support retrograde anti-woman legislation). Justice is the ability to fully participate in the political process, be represented by it and demand that our needs are met and it's important we don't let this issue die down after the election."
-- Samhita Mukhopadhyay, Strategist at Purpose.com and the Executive Editor ofFeministing.com

"Here is the message I would like spread far and near to ALL of you about the upcoming election. If you go online the morning of Nov. 7th (perhaps The Huffington Post?) and read that Romney is our president... Your heart will sink, your back will kink and I promise you your uterus will retract and shrink.

You may not see the bitter fruitcake fruits of his untimely victory that minute. But when your friends and neighbors, daughters and sons, nieces and nephews or granddaughters and grandsons, stand in front of you in their glorious, authentic selves -- asking for access to important information about their bodies and their sexuality, asking for accurate information about birth control and reproductive rights... AND their freedom to choose... you will see it then.

And when they have the courage and honor to stand in front of you as a proud gay young woman or gay young man seeking support, advice, love, acceptance, and RIGHTS... IF you haven't voted or didn't vote in favor of freedom and respect and choice... knowing you the way I do? That is the day you will put down your blueberry scone, double latte and iPad copy of The Huffington Post and feel remorse.

So my dears -- I implore you to DO it -- VOTE and encourage others to -- and vote not only from your hearts, souls, consciences and minds... but from the bottom of your vaginas."
Kathy Najimy, actress, activist and writer

"There are few elections in our history in which there has been more at stake for America's women: everything from our health care to the economic security of our families and opportunity for our children is on the ballot this November. Women understand the real impact of public policy on their families - what it means for their jobs, their children's education, and for the future of our middle class. I feel great optimism because the voices of America's women will decide the path our great nation takes in this election."
-- Nancy Pelosi, Democratic Leader of the House of Representatives

"When women vote our values, we make a decisive difference. When women organize and build our power together, we make history. Let's vote, and let's organize. Our leadership is needed to bring the country together toward a thriving, caring future for everyone." 
-- Ai-Jen Poo, director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance and Co-Director ofCaring Across Generations

"Nothing gives me faith that the Romney ticket will take women's issues seriously when he is so closely aligned with The Tea Party, which would strip women of their political power if they could. In the specific, Obama certainly needs prodding when it comes to women's issues, and that's unfortunate, but he knows enough to consult the strong women who surround him and not ignore their value in shaping this country."
-- Amy Richards, author of Grassroots: A Field Guide for Feminist Activism,Manifesta: Young Women Feminism and the Future, and Opting In: Having A Child Without Losing Yourself, co-founder of Third Wave Foundation and Feminist.com

"Women and mother voters matter. Women are more than half the electorate, and 80 percent of women in our nation have children by the time they're 44 years old. Women's votes determined the outcome of the last presidential election, and are poised to do so again. But not only are women's votes powerful, we have a tremendous amount at stake in this election. Women are central contributors to our economy and now comprise half of the paid labor force for the first time in history. Three-quarters of moms are now in the labor force, with half of those moms serving as the primary breadwinner. We're concerned about being able to provide for our families financially, making sure we and they have accessible health care, equal pay for equal work, affordable child care, access to earned sick days, and that there are structures in places so that we can raise healthy, happy kids who can be a vital part of our nation's future success. It's time to use our power, and our votes, to elect candidates on November 6th who will fight for women and families on Main Streets across the nation and not just Wall Street."
-- Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, co-author of The Motherhood Manifesto and Executive Director/CEO of MomsRising

"Do what Democracy demands. And, that is to make change from the bottom up. It is a lie that it comes from the top down. No. That's what they want us to think -- to disempower us. No, it comes from us. Like a tree, it comes from the bottom up.

Mitt Romney is the most undemocratic, anti-equality, authoritarian, extremist candidate I have ever seen, and there is the most distance between what he says and what he does.

He has the nerve to say he is for job creation. His entire career has been job elimination. He is not even willing to say he is for equal pay. And it happens that equal pay for women of all races is the greatest economic stimulus this country could ever have. Equal pay, and I mean for equal work, would put $200 billion more into the economy every year. That means about $137 for every white woman per pay check -- something like $300 for every woman of color who are doubly discriminated against. And you know that those women are not going to put that money into a Cayman Islands bank account -- they are going to spend that money, and that is going to create jobs...

[Romney] has pledged, on the Republic Party platform, to go around the Supreme Court, and achieve the human life Amendment to the Constitution, which would declare the fertilized egg to be a person. I would like to say that neither the corporation nor the fertilized egg is a person. Pregnant women do not have two votes.

... This voting day is the one day of our lives and on Earth and I have to say we owe this to people in the world whose lives are dictated by U.S. policy, too, but this is the one day on Earth where the least powerful equal the most powerful. I hope that however you can, you will make sure that from now until voting day, you make sure people are not only going to vote, take 10 people with you, take 100 people with you -- make it a party. Sit with people's kids so they can vote. And they are not only going to vote, they are going to fight to vote. If we can't vote, we are going to sit there until we can vote. We are not going to take no for an answer. We are going to get rid of these crazed extremists who do not represent the majority even of their own party."

Excerpt of Gloria Steinem's speech, Saturday, October 20, 2012, St. Petersburg, Florida

Gloria Steinem, activist and writer, author of Revolution From WithinOutrageous Acts and Everyday RebellionsMoving Beyond Words and co-founder of Ms. Magazine and the Women's Media Center

"If you want to protect the air we breathe, the water we drink, the food we eat... you know who to vote for. If you want more money spent on education... on alternative forms of energy... on our crumbling infrastructure... because investing in our country will promote the growth we seek... you know who to vote for. And, if you believe in affordable healthcare, a woman's right to choose what happens to her own body and in protecting Planned Parenthood, the largest provider of health care to low income women... you know who to vote for. If you want to move the country forward, rather than go backward... then you certainly know who to vote for. So on November 6th, no one, especially women, can afford to stay home. We have two candidates with very different views of what America should be. Inform yourself, engage in discussion, make a decision about the kind of country you want to live in... and VOTE." 
-- Barbra Streisand, singer, actress, director, founder of The Barbra Streisand Women's Heart Center at the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute

"Voting is not only our right, it is our power. When we vote, we take back our power to choose, to speak up, and to stand with those who support us and each other."
-- Loung Ung, human rights activist, author of First They Killed My Father, Lucky Child: A Daughter of Cambodia Reunites With the Sister She Left Behind and Lulu in the Sky

"Vote your uterus." 
-- Rebecca Walker, author of Black, White and JewishBaby Love and Black Cool, co-founder of Third Wave Foundation

"Choose wisely or we'll lose our right to choose at all."
-- Marie Wilson, founder and former President of The White House Project, co-creator of Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day and author of Closing the Leadership Gap: Why Women Can and Must Help Run the World

***

 

Follow Marianne Schnall on Twitter: www.twitter.com/marianneschnall

Weekend brings better news for some

News this morning at 5:30 am is my apartment has regained power.  I hope for those of my neighbors who were stuck without power all week, sthat they are enjoying heat, their first hot shower and a flushing toilet.  But for others who have lost so much I am mindful, thoughtful and humbled.  Joe who works in our building lost his home. We are not over this yet. With every new day, as water recedes and people are able to return to assess the damage, I realize 1000's of people have a new life to rebuild. My hope is our collective human spirit will not be dimmed.

I am grateful that Mayor Bloomberg cancelled the Marathon.  I know it was a hard decision to do, but it was the right thing to do. I look forward to being on the street to cheer the runners on whenever it is rescheduled.

MTA website continues to have information about transit schedules and disruptions.

Also a previous blog of mine has lots of important #'s and information for those in need of help, and those who want to help.

May this crisis continue to bring us more gifts and show the beauty of human resiliency.

Day 4 post Sandy

My building is still without power, and  hoping to be back by Sunday.

Since I can't be in the subway to help by singing, I can at least use this space to give info for those who might need.

Like so many people I am thankful for the lifeline of radio to inform. WNYC has been amazing to listen to,

to hear of the journalists traveling around the city on foot, and bikes to be able to bring to us the news is heart warming.

You can follow their Transit Tracker to see what commuter lines are working.

 

I applaud Manhattan Borough Pres Scott Stringer who wants to cancel the Marathon.  I agree, why not get those healthy

runners here to volunteer their efforts to help carry water up flights to stranded residents, and other relief efforts.  

Now that would be power people! 

 

 For those in need here are important #'s:

FEMA 1-800-621-FEMA to start process of support

Red Cross tri-state 1-877-733-2767 

NJHelp -800-Jersey 7

 

 Link for shelter and info in NYC area

 

Here's info from the MTA regarding what commuters lines are open.

 

As news is arriving little by little and we learn of the devastation,my heart goes out to those

unable to enjoy the luxury of sitting in front of their computer (like me) warm and cozy blogging about the tragedy.  

Areas devastated, South Street Seaport, Piers in Red Hook Brooklyn, Staten Island, 100,000+ homes destroyed.

 

If you have any info on someone PRICE GAUGING here's a # to report 1-800-771-7755

Also go to the website of Office Of New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman to post any complaint

 

Where can we get food?

Food Bank of New York is distributing food via mobile distribution centers, and Meals on Wheels is continuing

to deliver food to the elderly. City Harvest is delivering food to soup kitchens and food pantries throughout the city.

Food and water distribution sites will open from 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Friday. The locations in Manhattan are:

  • 10th Street between Avenues C and D
  • Catherine Street between Monroe and Cherry Streets (Smith Houses)
  • Pitt and Houston Streets
  • Grand and Clinton Streets —water only
  • Bowery and Division Street (Confucius Plaza)

In Brooklyn:

  • Coffey Park at Richards Street
  • West 25th Street and Surf Ave.

In Staten Island:

  • Mill Rd. and New Drop Ln.
  • Yetman Ave. and Hylan Blvd.

In Queens :

  • Beach 51st Street and Rockaway Beach Blvd.
  • Red Fern Ave. and Beach 12th St.
  • Beach 84th Street and Rockaway Beach Blvd.
  • Vernon Blvd. and 30th Rd.

Where can we get ice?

ConEd is keeping a list of distribution centers in each borough where wet and dry ice are being distributed.

Brooklyn (dry ice) - WalgHreen's, 532 Neptune Ave. (between W. 5th & 6th Streets)

Bronx (dry ice) - 1200 Waters Place at the entrance to the Hutchinson Metro Center

Queens (dry ice) - 121-10 Rockaway Blvd.

Staten Island (dry ice) - The entrance to Great Kills Park on Buffalo Street

Westchester County (dry ice) - Yonkers Raceway, 810 Yonkers Ave., Yonkers

Manhattan (wet ice) - Union Square Park, Union Square East and East 17th Street.

 

My friend Sherry shared with me this post from the artist community in Brooklyn:

Here are updated links to organizations who are taking volunteers, donations and providing support toward

Hurricane Sandy Relief efforts. Thanks to all of you who are sharing your information, supportand resources

during this critical time. Many of the most impacted neighborhoods are those with the fewest resources already.  

Occupy Sandy 

Occupy Sandy Donations 

Red Hook Recovers 

Lower Easy Side Recovers  

Astoria Recovers 

Brooklyn Based: How to Help 

Brokelyn: How to Help  

Rockaway Relief 

Food Not Bombs: Sandy Relief 

The Week: How to Help 

Art in American: Chelsea Galleries Hit Hard by Storm Sandy  

Free Showers and Exercise at New York Sports Clubs  

 

New York Foundation for The Arts NYFA

For Climate Change Bloomberg endorses Obama

A Vote for a President to Lead on Climate Change

By Michael R. Bloomberg Nov 1, 2012 

    The devastation that Hurricane Sandy brought to New York City and much of the Northeast -- in lost lives, lost homes and lost business -- brought the stakes of Tuesday’s presidential election into sharp relief.

    The floods and fires that swept through our city left a path of destruction that will require years of recovery and rebuilding work. And in the short term, our subway system remains partially shut down, and many city residents and businesses still have no power. In just 14 months, two hurricanes have forced us to evacuate neighborhoods -- something our city government had never done before. If this is a trend, it is simply not sustainable.

    Our climate is changing. And while the increase in extreme weather we have experienced in New York City and around the world may or may not be the result of it, the risk that it might be -- given this week’s devastation -- should compel all elected leaders to take immediate action.

    Here in New York, our comprehensive sustainability plan --PlaNYC -- has helped allow us to cut our carbon footprint by 16 percent in just five years, which is the equivalent of eliminating the carbon footprint of a city twice the size of Seattle. Through the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group -- a partnership among many of the world’s largest cities -- local governments are taking action where national governments are not.

    Leadership Needed

    But we can’t do it alone. We need leadership from the White House -- and over the past four years, President Barack Obama has taken major steps to reduce our carbon consumption, including setting higher fuel-efficiency standards for cars and trucks. His administration also has adopted tighter controls on mercury emissions, which will help to close the dirtiest coal power plants (an effort I have supported through my philanthropy), which are estimated to kill 13,000 Americans a year.

    Mitt Romney, too, has a history of tackling climate change. As governor of Massachusetts, he signed on to a regional cap- and-trade plan designed to reduce carbon emissions 10 percent below 1990 levels. “The benefits (of that plan) will be long- lasting and enormous -- benefits to our health, our economy, our quality of life, our very landscape. These are actions we can and must take now, if we are to have ‘no regrets’ when we transfer our temporary stewardship of this Earth to the next generation,” he wrote at the time.

    He couldn’t have been more right. But since then, he has reversed course, abandoning the very cap-and-trade program he once supported. This issue is too important. We need determined leadership at the national level to move the nation and the world forward.

    I believe Mitt Romney is a good and decent man, and he would bring valuable business experience to the Oval Office. He understands that America was built on the promise of equal opportunity, not equal results. In the past he has also taken sensible positions on immigration, illegal guns, abortion rights and health care. But he has reversed course on all of them, and is even running against the health-care model he signed into law in Massachusetts.

    If the 1994 or 2003 version of Mitt Romney were running for president, I may well have voted for him because, like so many other independents, I have found the past four years to be, in a word, disappointing.

    In 2008, Obama ran as a pragmatic problem-solver and consensus-builder. But as president, he devoted little time and effort to developing and sustaining a coalition of centrists, which doomed hope for any real progress on illegal guns, immigration, tax reform, job creation and deficit reduction. And rather than uniting the country around a message of shared sacrifice, he engaged in partisan attacks and has embraced a divisive populist agenda focused more on redistributing income than creating it.

    Important Victories

    Nevertheless, the president has achieved some important victories on issues that will help define our future. His Race to the Top education program -- much of which was opposed by the teachers’ unions, a traditional Democratic Party constituency -- has helped drive badly needed reform across the country, giving local districts leverage to strengthen accountability in the classroom and expand charter schools. His health-care law -- for all its flaws -- will provide insurance coverage to people who need it most and save lives.

    When I step into the voting booth, I think about the world I want to leave my two daughters, and the values that are required to guide us there. The two parties’ nominees for president offer different visions of where they want to lead America.

    One believes a woman’s right to choose should be protected for future generations; one does not. That difference, given the likelihood of Supreme Court vacancies, weighs heavily on my decision.

    One recognizes marriage equality as consistent with America’s march of freedom; one does not. I want our president to be on the right side of history.

    One sees climate change as an urgent problem that threatens our planet; one does not. I want our president to place scientific evidence and risk management above electoral politics.

    Of course, neither candidate has specified what hard decisions he will make to get our economy back on track while also balancing the budget. But in the end, what matters most isn’t the shape of any particular proposal; it’s the work that must be done to bring members of Congress together to achieve bipartisan solutions.

    Presidents Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan both found success while their parties were out of power in Congress -- and President Obama can, too. If he listens to people on both sides of the aisle, and builds the trust of moderates, he can fulfill the hope he inspired four years ago and lead our country toward a better future for my children and yours. And that’s why I will be voting for him.

    (Michael R. Bloomberg is mayor of New York and founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP.)

     

    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/02/nyregion/bloomberg-endorses-obama-saying-hurricane-sandy-affected-decision.html?hp&_r=0

     

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-11-01/ny-mayor-bloomberg-endorse-obama-in-presidential-race.html

     

    And on the same subject, here's a compelling article We Are Not Powerless To Confront Climate Change  by Democracy Now's Amy Goodman 

     

    Day 3 No subway gig today

    with only some transit service running and my apartment still without power I am unable to perform again today.  Here's more updates from MTA be safe.

    MTA Service Advisory

    Nov 1 subway lines 1st day back.jpg

    Limited Fare Free Service To Be Restored On Subways, Full Service Rolls on Buses

    Subway service will be limited Thursday, due to ongoing water remediation, infrastructure repairs and power related problems. Limited service will operate along parts of several routes between The Bronx, Upper Manhattan and Midtown. Other lines will run in parts of Queens and Brooklyn, with service terminating in Downtown Brooklyn. Shuttle Bus service will be available at Jay St - MetroTech, Atlantic Ave - Barclays Center and Hewes St in Williamsburg to 57th St and Lexington Ave in Midtown Manhattan. See Bus Stops in Manhattan.

    The restoration of subway service was made possible by the hard work of hundreds of Transit Workers who inspected miles of track, removing debris that washed into the system, dried out components and made necessary repairs. In other parts of the system heavy duty pump trains continue to evacuate thousands of gallons of water that filled 7 underwater tunnels. Station Environment crews removed and repaired canopies on elevated stations ripped off by Sandy's strong gusts, while cleaners removed debris. Track Workers checked rails for damage while Signal Maintainers inspected and tested equipment that was submerged under water. Electronic Mchecked critical electrical systems, including crucial communications equipment. 

    Late Wednesday night, the system was energized and 3rd Rail power was restored. During the night crews will begin running trains throughout the system to polish rials and ensure there are no track or other component defects before service begins.

    Because subway service will be limited to roughly half of the system's subway lines, waits will be longer and trains will be more crowded. Customers are advised to consider changing their normal routines to travel later in the morning or later in the evening.

    See Hurricane Recovery Subway Map

    Bus service will be operating on a near normal weekday schedule.  Some routes may be operating with minor detours due to street conditions, customers are advised to look for signage at bus stops. Customers should also expect longer waits and crowded conditions.

    Click Borough names for PDF maps:

    Manhattan

    Bronx

    Brooklyn

    Queens

    Staten Island

    Day 3 some transit running

    MTA Service Advisory

    Limited Fare Free Service To Be Restored On Subways, Full Service Rolls on Buses


    Subway service will be limited Thursday, due to ongoing water remediation, infrastructure repairs and power related problems. Limited service will operate along parts of several routes between The Bronx, Upper Manhattan and Midtown. Other lines will run in parts of Queens and Brooklyn, with service terminating in Downtown Brooklyn. Shuttle Bus service will be available at Jay St - MetroTech, Atlantic Ave - Barclays Center and Hewes St in Williamsburg to 57th St and Lexington Ave in Midtown Manhattan. See Bus Stops in Manhattan.

    The restoration of subway service was made possible by the hard work of hundreds of Transit Workers who inspected miles of track, removing debris that washed into the system, dried out components and made necessary repairs. In other parts of the system heavy duty pump trains continue to evacuate thousands of gallons of water that filled 7 underwater tunnels. Station Environment crews removed and repaired canopies on elevated stations ripped off by Sandy's strong gusts, while cleaners removed debris. Track Workers checked rails for damage while Signal Maintainers inspected and tested equipment that was submerged under water. Electronic Mchecked critical electrical systems, including crucial communications equipment. 

    Late Wednesday night, the system was energized and 3rd Rail power was restored. During the night crews will begin running trains throughout the system to polish rials and ensure there are no track or other component defects before service begins.

    Because subway service will be limited to roughly half of the system's subway lines, waits will be longer and trains will be more crowded. Customers are advised to consider changing their normal routines to travel later in the morning or later in the evening.

    See Hurricane Recovery Subway Map

    Bus service will be operating on a near normal weekday schedule.  Some routes may be operating with minor detours due to street conditions, customers are advised to look for signage at bus stops. Customers should also expect longer waits and crowded conditions.

    Click Borough names for PDF maps:

    Manhattan

    Bronx

    Brooklyn

    Queens

    Staten Island


    South Ferry Memories

    I travel to South Ferry regularly as I perform in the Station and in the nearby Staten Island Ferry terminals.  It is so sad to realize this newly designed station only open for 2 years, is now under water.  I had the wonderful opportunity to be invited to perform in the station as part of the opening celebration on March 8, 2010, showcasing the gorgeous art of the Doug and Mike Starn designed for the MTA's Arts For Transit program.  I know it will be back soon, and appreciate the amazing work of all those helping us to recover after the storm.

    Here's a funky clip of me on the opening day.  

     

    And a clip of the submerged station from the MTA youtube channel. Very chilling to see.

     

     

     

    Halloween trick Storm Sandy no treat

    At least some kids in the upper east side were able to get out and enjoy some normal fun amidst the craziness of the storm devastation.  Thanks Katie for sending me a picture of these kids who were out at 70th and Park (Katie had to walk to midtown from 86th st to get to work).

    Happy Halloween

    Halloween kids 70Park.jpg

    (I didn't correct the red eye, found it goulishly Halloween perfect)

    Pumpkin - Vote - Elizabeth Davis.jpg

    Halloween message for November 6th sent from Elizabeth Davis

    Am a lucky one

    Every hour I seem to think of someone else that I know whom I haven't heard from.  I send an email, funny how we've arrived at the point where no one has a land line. The few I know who do still have one, it's hard to get through, the line just beeps a busy signal.  Or the circuits are busy.

    This storm, (and I am somehow irritated by announcers who call it "Super Storm Sandy"  sounds way too cute and slick, has affected me not unlike September 11.  I can't ever equate the tragedy and loss of life, the panic, the hour of that day to this storm, but there is something in my personal human condition that is overtaken by the event.  Sure I've cancelled all my gigs this week, I'm privileged to have another home to escape to, and am with power while my own apartment building has been dark since 9pm on Sunday night.  This is the inconvenient catastrophe and the longer it goes on the bigger the issues.  For many it's the lack of water, a hot meal, any possible way of getting to work besides on foot if there is even a work to go to. 

    Many friends have offices flooded or still without power.  Food supplies are drying up fast. How long can you go without flushing a toilet? When will if ever the salt water contamination be cleaned form the subway station.  I personally have lost my place of work, my public stage in the NYC subway and main train terminal stations.

    I hear limited train service will begin tomorrow, I hear of grid lock. I am happy Bloomberg has called for car pooling and only allowing vehicles with 3 or more people to cross bridges and tunnels.  I remember after 9-11 how they tried to establish a commuter zone to limit traffic coming in and out of the city and how it was scraped after things returned to normal. Maybe now we can reconsider the benefits of such a plan. The 14th st sub-station is still out keeping most of lower Manhattan in the dark. The Staten Island ferry docks and terminals were damaged, not sure when they'll be running,

    I am scheduled to perform in Grand Central tomorrow.  I don't know how I can get there. Trains along the Hudson and Harlem lines are limited, traffic will be insane.  All I can say New Yorkers is I'll be back as soon as I'm able.

    Your Right To Vote Painfully Earned

    As we head into the election next week I urge you to vote. Recently I was forwarded an email about how the right for women to vote was hard won.  I haven't been able to find out who the original author is, but the text and photos create a very emotional and powerful story. And on the personal humorous side of reading the story I had to look up what Bunco night is!

    Read on Thank you anonymous contributor.

    Please Vote November 6th

    Only 90 years ago... 

    Whether you vote democratic, republican or independent - remember to VOTE. 

    This is the story of  OUR  Grandmothers and their Mothers who lived only 90 years ago. Remember, it was not until 1920 that women were granted the right to go to the polls and vote.

    The women were innocent and defenseless, but they were jailed nonetheless for picketing the White House, carrying signs asking for the vote. And by the end of the night, they were barely alive. Forty prison guards wielding clubs and their warden's blessing went on a rampage against the 33 women wrongly convicted of 'obstructing sidewalk traffic.' 

    Thus unfolded the 'Night of Terror' on Nov. 15, 1917, when the warden at the Occoquan Workhouse in Virginia ordered his guards to teach a lesson to the suffragists imprisoned there because they dared to picket Woodrow Wilson's White House for the right to vote. For weeks, the women's only water came from an open pail. Their food- all of it colorless slop--was infested with worms. Additional affidavits describe the guards grabbing, dragging, beating, choking, slamming, pinching, twisting and kicking the women.

    So, refresh my memory. Some women won't vote this year because - why, exactly? We have carpool duties? We have to get to work? Our vote doesn't matter? It's raining? 

    (Alice Paul) When one of the leaders, Alice Paul, embarked on a hunger strike, they tied her to a chair, forced a tube down her throat and poured liquid into her until she vomited. She was tortured like this for weeks until word was smuggled out to the press. 

    (Berthe Arnold, CSU graduate)

    (Conferring over ratification [of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution] at [National Woman's Party] headquarters, Jackson Pl[ace] [ Washington , D.C. ]. L-R Mrs. Lawrence Lewis, Mrs. Abby Scott Baker, Anita Pollitzer, Alice Paul, Florence Boeckel, Mabel Vernon (standing, right) 

    (Dora Lewis) They hurled Dora Lewis into a dark cell, smashed her head against an iron bed and knocked her out cold. Her cellmate, Alice Cosu thought Lewis was dead and suffered a heart attack. 

    (Helena Hill Weed, Norwalk , Conn. Serving 3 day sentence in D.C. prison for carrying banner, 'Governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.')

    (Lucy Burns) They beat Lucy Burns, chained her hands to the cell bars above her head and left her hanging for the night, bleeding and gasping for air. 

    (Miss Edith Ainge, of Jamestown , New York)

    (Mrs. Pauline Adams in the prison garb she wore while serving a sixty-day sentence.)

    All these years later, voter registration is still my passion. But the actual act of voting had become less personal for me, more rote. Frankly, voting often felt more like an obligation than a privilege. Sometimes it was inconvenient.

    Last week, I went to a sparsely attended screening of HBO's new movie 'Iron Jawed Angels.' It is a graphic depiction of the battle these women waged so that I could pull the curtain at the polling booth and have my say. I am ashamed to say I needed the reminder.

    My friend Wendy, who is my age and studied women's history, saw the HBO movie, too. When she stopped by my desk to talk about it, she looked angry. 'One thought kept coming back to me as I watched that movie,' she said. 'What would those women think of the way I use, or don't use, my right to vote? All of us take it for granted now, not just younger women, but those of us who did seek to learn.' The right to vote, she said, had become valuable to her 'all over again.'

    HBO released the movie on video and DVD . I wish all history, social studies and government teachers would include the movie in their curriculum I want it shown on Bunco night, too, and anywhere else women gather. I realize this isn't our usual idea of socializing, but we are not voting in the numbers that we should be, and I think a little shock therapy is in order. It is jarring to watch Woodrow Wilson and his cronies try to persuade a psychiatrist to declare Alice Paul insane so that she could be permanently institutionalized. And it is inspiring to watch the doctor refuse. Alice Paul was strong, he said, and brave. That didn't make her crazy. The doctor admonished the men: 'Courage in women is often mistaken for insanity.'

    We need to get out and vote and use this right that was fought so hard for by these very courageous women. Whether you vote democratic, republican or independent party - remember to vote.

    the end

    written by anonymous

     

    2012 Pumpkin carving by Elizabeth Davis

    Stirred Not Shaken

    I continue to be stirred no shaken.

    In the years since the event of the 9-11 tragedy, we have spent billions to stop the "war on terror" to stop the next terrorist attack and spent little of our resources on the true threat, that of Natures ability to respond to climate change and her own set of rules.  Now then I ask, when are we going to collectively wise up?

    Impossible to war with Nature and expect to win. There can only be humble respect, submission and understanding that maybe we've been too complacent about Natures ability to destroy and disrupt in favor of being afraid of the unknown terrorist.

    Food for thought.

    For me this storm devastation in NYC is compared to the blackout of 1965, 1981 subway and garbage strikes, September 11, 2001, all in one……

    Remain calm folks and when we are done cleaning up the mess from Natures wrath, let's get together and plan our future cities and towns with the Environment in mind.

    Subway musicians off line off track

    Day 2 post Storm Sandy and subway musicians have discovered our place of work still off limits. Would love to be able to perform though.  Subway lines, Grand Central, LIRR, Staten Island Ferry all shut down.  These are places I and many musicians were scheduled to perform in this week.  My apartment is still without power along with millions of others.  We have to remain calm and get through this.  As you can imagine I have been in contact with friends and fans from all over the world concerned about our situation.  This from my friend Sabine in Paris who emailed to check in with me:

    No elec chez toi? We had 2 weeks without elec, heating in Paris last Feb. Our area and apartment building was really bad then. No hot water, no light for many many days. It was horrible.

    So I know what you're going through. We're all so used to comfort that it's hard to deal without it and are lost when the unexpected hits us so suddenly. Take care! 

    Thanks Sabine, the message here is NYers take heart and be safe.  I'll keep posting and will let you know when it's safe to peform in the underground of the city I love! In the meanwhile here's a link to MTA for any transport information.  and why not check out some of my Inspiration Project clips and see why NYC is so special.

    If your apartment is still without power, please make sure to knock on the door of your neighbors and check in. Especially the elderly need to be heard from.

    In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, Metro-North is still unable to operate regular service on its Hudson, Harlem and New Haven Lines 

    Grand Central Terminal and all outlying Metro-North station buildings will remain closed.

    subway suspended 2012-10-31.jpg

    follow these links for important information from our municipalities and state government:

    New York State official website

    New York City website

    New Jersey State website

     Connecticut State Website

    Update

    on 2012-10-31 19:32 by NYC Subway Girl

    as of 2pm this afternoon some light rail in NJ an some Metro-North lines are working.