Showing posts with label Queens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queens. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

VIDEO : NYC Primary Election Day - Broken Lever Voting Machine - Queens 63rd Election District - No Paper Ballots

VIDEO : Broken Lever Voting Machine - Queens 63rd Election District - No Paper Ballots - NYC Primary Election Day

Voting problems with the single lever voting machine for the 63rd Election District in Jackson Heights, Queens. I was detained by a police officer and nearly taken into custody for using my iPhone to take a photograph and video of the broken voting machine.

We were denied paper ballots, as you will hear on the video. They tried to let us use another voting machine, but then we were taken back to the using the broken 63rd ED lever voting machine after it was "reset."

I'm taking a risk by uploading this video, but I feel it is important to document what happened and to register my vote.

Monday, December 31, 2012

Activists Demand That Christine Quinn De-Fund Stop-And-Frisk

Quinn pressed on NYPD frisk policy

From The New York Post :

Dozens of activists blasted the NYPD’s stop-and-frisk program yesterday and called on City Council Speaker Christine Quinn to reform it.

“We expect her to share the sensibility that people in this community have when they are being targeted based on the color of their skin and who they are and their identity,” Louis Flores said before a march in Jackson Heights, Queens.

Quinn, a leading Democratic hopeful for mayor next year, has called on Mayor Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly to reform the controversial practice. She has not yet taken a position on the four bills before the council to curtail it.

The group called on Quinn to cut the NYPD’s budget in order to do away with stop-and-frisk.

Although she negotiates and must approve the city budget every year, she can’t tell Kelly which programs to drop for lack of funds.

Critics decry as racist the practice of cops searching individuals they deem suspicious; Bloomberg and Kelly insist it has led to the city’s dramatic drop in murders.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

#myopinioncounts and @informedvoting to support community organising in New York City

#myopinioncounts is a new hashtag and @informedvoting is a new Twitter account launched to support community organising in New York City leading up to the 2013 mayoral election.

To support community organisers across the five boroughs of New York City, the blogger and activist Louis Flores has launched a new Twitter account, @informed voting. He has also launched a related hashtag, #myopinioncounts, to support reforms to improve the democratic participation of citizens in our own governance.

This Twitter account will follow the activists and citizens in Brooklyn, the Bronx, Manhattan, Queens, and Staten Island. This Twitter account will highlight areas, were we can find common ground and link up together, to bring about reforms in our government. For example, how did "stop and frisk" become the only acceptable answer to crime prevention, when the solution all along is passing stricter gun control laws ? The same thing goes for hospital closings : why are so many major hospitals closing, when Congress just expanded healthcare to tens of millions of Americans ? Cutting costs to healthcare are unacceptable, and yet where do politicians find the legitimacy to close down hospitals across all five boroughs ?

"If we are going to change the system, we need to organise. This means taking action together. With this new Twitter account and the related hashtag, I will support the work that others do," said Louis Flores.

Time is also running out to reach our goal for the Kickstarter project to support the publication of Roots of Betrayal : The Ethics of Christine Quinn, a work-in-progress survey of the political ethics of the New York City Council Speaker. Funding ends on August 16, and for this book to inform voters, the community must come together to support this project. Please make a pledge and help spread the word. Thank you for everything that you do.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Collapse of the Social Safety Net in New York City

Queens' Peninsula Hospital Center set to close ; New York Downtown Hospital putting patients on stretchers in the hallway to accommodate unmanageable influx of emergency patients.

Christine Quinn to City : Drop Dead

"Sources say the Far Rockaway, Queens, hospital will shutter after owing millions to vendors and falling behind on its union benefits funds payments; the closure would cost the area about 1,000 jobs," reported Crain's.

The Queens Crap blog published a post today, indicating that Peninsula Hospital Center had filed a 90-day closure plan, a requirement under the law that was violated when St. Vincent's Hospital closed on April 30, 2010. Meanwhile, the Real Deal blog reported that once the Peninsula Hospital Center closes, all healthcare emergencies are going to overwhelm St. Johns Episcopal Hospital, which will become the only healthcare facility servicing the distant Queens neighborhood of Far Rockaway. Separately, the True News From Change NYC blog linked the collapse of Peninsula Hospital Center with political corruption and possible kickbacks.

Is our social safety net not too big to fail ?

Does nobody in City Council have any concern about the financial collapse of so many hospitals across all five New York City boroughs ?

Does Mayor Michael Bloomberg not care, either ?

Meanwhile, following the illegal closing of St. Vincent's Hospital last year, there reamins only one hospital south of 16th Street in Manhattan, New York Downtown Hospital, which The New York Post has reported as being ''overwhelmed,'' and is leading to an ''emergency-care crisis,'' the newspaper reports.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Parkway Hospital - Berger Commission Closing

Parkway Hospital in Forest Hills was forced to close in November 2008 by the Berger Commission empaneled by, among others, then Gov. George Pataki (R).

Parkway Hospital was named on a 2006 list of New York hospitals that were told to close, but Parkway tried to legally fight the forced shut down in the courts.

According to Crain’s New York : “But that end-run around the state’s mandate failed last week when the state Department of Health let Parkway’s operating certificate expire on Oct. 30, bringing an abrupt end to the contentious battle. Last week, the judge overseeing Parkway’s court fight denied a motion to reargue a temporary restraining order on the closure, while an appellate court denied Parkway's request to appeal.”

The closing of Parkway Hospital left a lot of bitter feelings among the former employees. The experience that Parkway employees and patients had with the impact of the Berger Commission’s heavy-handed mandated closings created nothing but disruption, denial of healthcare, and the loss of jobs. (Read the comments on this Queens Crap post (and this recent one, too) – Queens Crap acts as a historical archive of all of the hospital closing in Queens.)

At the time of its closing, approximately 600 hospital workers lost their jobs. An unknown number of other jobs, which depended on the hospital, were also eliminated as a result of the hospital closing. (Click here for more information about : the Berger Commission Report.)

As more and more hospitals close in New York City, residents are finding themselves at greater risk of having fewer ER’s and trauma centers available to them in the event of health care emergencies. After other hospital closings, residents have complained that the New York State Department of Health lacked a plan for providing emergency healthcare for their respective affected communities. In technical terms, the area served by a hospital is called a catchment area.

Hospital Closure Planning Act

In September 2010, New York City leaders urged Gov. David Paterson to sign the Hospital Closure Planning Act, a bill which would have required the state’s Department of Health to hold a public forum and report on the impact of a hospital's closure on the surrounding community's access to medical care. The legislation, which was sponsored by Assemblyman Rory Lancman (D-Fresh Meadows) and Senator Shirley L. Huntley (D-Jamaica), came in response to the notorious closings of Mary Immaculate, St. John's, and Parkway hospitals in Queens, and St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan. After these four hospitals closed, each community was outraged and complained that the state lacked a plan for providing adequate and safe replacements of emergency healthcare for the catchment areas.

“A hospital's closing should not mean the closing off of healthcare services for the surrounding community, but that's what happens unless the state listens to the community and makes plans for meeting its healthcare needs," said Assemblyman Lancman.

“Losing a hospital can adversely affect a community and its residents. We’ve seen it happen here in Southeast Queens and most recently in Manhattan, with the closing of St. Vincent’s hospital. Due to current economic climate New York State is facing we must ensure that neighborhoods across the state can access alternative health care when a hospital closes. It is equally important to involve communities in the planned closure of a hospital and in replacing the most important services residents rely on. The residents of the community where a hospital is located have the best understanding of the services they need and what needs to be done,” said Senator Huntley. In October 2010, Gov. Patterson signed the Hospital Closure Planning Act into law after he had vetoed a similar bill in 2009.

Hospital Closure Planning Act Press Conference, September 24, 2010 from NYAD25 on Vimeo.

Hospital Closings As A 2013 Mayoral Campaign Issue ?

Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer is widely seen to be running for mayor of New York City in the 2013 election, and residents in the Lower West Side are hoping that hospital closings will become a campaign issue. At a community forum in Chelsea on Feb. 16, Mr. Stringer delivered a maverick speech, in which he committed to helping the Lower West Side of Manhattan fight for a full-service hospital to replace St. Vincent’s. He was the only major city politician to attend the forum. The city council member most residents are turning to for help in restoring a full-service hospital in the Lower West Side is Speaker Christine Quinn, but she has a predictably poor track record in fighting for working class New Yorkers (She refuses to support paid sick leave.), much less to save New York City hospitals from closing.

In the time that Ms. Quinn has been Speaker of the New York City Council, at least eight city hospitals have closed. In 2010, North General Hospital in Harlem declared bankruptcy and St. Vincent's Hospital in the West Village shut down after shady backroom meetings. In 2009, two hospitals in Queens – St. John's Queens Hospital in Elmhurst and Mary Immaculate Hospital in Jamaica – went bankrupt. In 2008, Cabrini Medical Center in Manhattan and Victory Memorial Hospital in Bay Ridge closed. And in 2007, St. Vincent's Midtown in Manhattan was closed. Separately, one other hospital in Brooklyn, Long Island College Hospital, was recently saved : it had been on the brink of closing, and the only way the hospital was saved was by merging it with SUNY Downstate.

The toll of all of these hospital closings is now being felt across the state, not just in New York City.

Community Imact of All These Hospital Closings ; Didn’t Anybody Predict ER Wait Times Would Rise As A Consequence ?

On average, New Yorkers in medical distress have to wait for almost five hours before they are examined in emergency rooms. This wait time means that New Yorkers have to wait longer for ER treatment than almost anyone else in the United States. The state-wide statistic ranks New York as 46th in the country for wait times, tying the state with Mississippi according to a Press Ganey hospital survey.

From the New York Post :

Industry sources said recent hospital closures have contributed to longer wait times. For example, St. Vincent's Medical Center and North General hospital in Manhattan shut down last year, and about a half-dozen city hospitals have shut down over the last several years.

Last October, New York magazine published an exposé written by Mark Levine, which described the dangerous public health issues resulting from all the hospital closings. “Last year, a pair of hospitals in Queens closed suddenly, just before the outbreak of H1N1, causing overflow conditions in the emergency rooms of nearby facilities, one of which set up a triage area on a loading dock," Mr. Levine wrote.

What is more, in January, The New York Post has made a list of a total of nine hospitals, which would be in danger of closing, if New York State government makes major cuts in Medicaid funding. In Brooklyn, five hospitals were identified as being in danger of closing : Brooklyn Center, Brookdale, Interfaith, Kingsbrook, and Wyckoff. In Queens, two more hospitals were named to be at a high risk of closing : Jamaica and Peninsula. Finally, in the Bronx, two hospitals made the list as being close to teetering onto financial collapse : Westchester Square and St. Barnabas.

Mary Immaculate Hospital Closing

Mary Immaculate Hospital in Jamaica went bankrupt in 2009.

When Mary Immaculate Hospital closed in 2009, the impact on Jamaica, Queens, was painful. Queens was also losing St. John’s Queens Hospital.

Just like the political triage that people would later wait for in Greenwich Village after St. Vincent’s closed in 2010, the residents in Queens were hoping that politicians and state agencies would work together to find a way to bailout their community hospital.

St. John’s and Mary Immaculate were sold for $40 million in 2006 to the Brooklyn Queens Health Centers of New York when the St. Vincent Catholic Medical Centers declared bankruptcy. BQHC, which operates Wyckoff Hospital on the borough’s border near Ridgewood, created Caritas as a separate subsidiary that would own and operate the hospitals and maintain their Catholic identity,” reported The Queens Tribune.

According to a 2006 study by Queens Borough President Helen Marshall’s office, Queens was being underserved by full-service hospitals when compared to Manhattan. (And these statistics were compiled before Mary Immaculate and St. John’s Queens hospitals both closed.) Queens had 1.4 beds per 1,000 people compared with Manhattan, which had 7.4 beds per 1,000 people.

After the doors of Mary Immaculate Hospital were boarded up in 2009, Queens Councilman Eric Gioia complained about the hospital closings taking place in Queens. "You already have overburdened hospitals," said Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Queens). "Good luck trying to get a loved one to emergency care." Eventually, no hospital ever replaced Mary Immaculate Hospital. Approximately 2,500 hospital employees lost their jobs when both Mary Immaculate and St. John’s Queens hospitals closed ; an unknown number of other jobs, which depended on the hospital, were also eliminated as a result of the hospital closing.

As more and more hospitals close in New York City, residents are finding themselves at greater risk of having fewer ER’s and trauma centers available to them in the event of health care emergencies. After other hospital closings, residents have complained that the New York State Department of Health lacked a plan for providing emergency healthcare for their respective affected communities. In technical terms, the area served by a hospital is called a catchment area.

Hospital Closure Planning Act

In September 2010, New York City leaders urged Gov. David Paterson to sign the Hospital Closure Planning Act, a bill which would have required the state’s Department of Health to hold a public forum and report on the impact of a hospital's closure on the surrounding community's access to medical care. The legislation, which was sponsored by Assemblyman Rory Lancman (D-Fresh Meadows) and Senator Shirley L. Huntley (D-Jamaica), came in response to the notorious closings of Mary Immaculate, St. John's, and Parkway hospitals in Queens, and St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan. After these four hospitals closed, each community was outraged and complained that the state lacked a plan for providing adequate and safe replacements of emergency healthcare for the catchment areas.

“A hospital's closing should not mean the closing off of healthcare services for the surrounding community, but that's what happens unless the state listens to the community and makes plans for meeting its healthcare needs," said Assemblyman Lancman.

“Losing a hospital can adversely affect a community and its residents. We’ve seen it happen here in Southeast Queens and most recently in Manhattan, with the closing of St. Vincent’s hospital. Due to current economic climate New York State is facing we must ensure that neighborhoods across the state can access alternative health care when a hospital closes. It is equally important to involve communities in the planned closure of a hospital and in replacing the most important services residents rely on. The residents of the community where a hospital is located have the best understanding of the services they need and what needs to be done,” said Senator Huntley. In October 2010, Gov. Patterson signed the Hospital Closure Planning Act into law after he had vetoed a similar bill in 2009.

Hospital Closure Planning Act Press Conference, September 24, 2010 from NYAD25 on Vimeo.

Hospital Closings As A 2013 Mayoral Campaign Issue ?

Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer is widely seen to be running for mayor of New York City in the 2013 election, and residents in the Lower West Side are hoping that hospital closings will become a campaign issue. At a community forum in Chelsea on Feb. 16, Mr. Stringer delivered a maverick speech, in which he committed to helping the Lower West Side of Manhattan fight for a full-service hospital to replace St. Vincent’s. He was the only major city politician to attend the forum.* (But Mr. Stringer, who had received almost $8,000 in campaign contributions from the Rudin family, voted to give the powerful real estate development family the right to build a $1 billion zone-busting luxury condominium and townhouse complex on the former site of St. Vincent's.) The city council member most residents are turning to for help in restoring a full-service hospital in the Lower West Side is Speaker Christine Quinn, but she has a predictably poor track record in fighting for working class New Yorkers (She refuses to support paid sick leave.), much less to save New York City hospitals from closing.

In the time that Ms. Quinn has been Speaker of the New York City Council, at least eight city hospitals have closed. In 2010, North General Hospital in Harlem declared bankruptcy and St. Vincent's Hospital in the West Village shut down after shady backroom meetings. In 2009, two hospitals in Queens – St. John's Queens Hospital in Elmhurst and Mary Immaculate Hospital in Jamaica – went bankrupt. In 2008, Cabrini Medical Center in Manhattan and Victory Memorial Hospital in Bay Ridge closed. And in 2007, St. Vincent's Midtown in Manhattan was closed. Separately, one other hospital in Brooklyn, Long Island College Hospital, was recently saved : it had been on the brink of closing, and the only way the hospital was saved was by merging it with SUNY Downstate.

The toll of all of these hospital closings is now being felt across the state, not just in New York City.

Community Imact of All These Hospital Closings ; Didn’t Anybody Predict ER Wait Times Would Rise As A Consequence ?

On average, New Yorkers in medical distress have to wait for almost five hours before they are examined in emergency rooms. This wait time means that New Yorkers have to wait longer for ER treatment than almost anyone else in the United States. The state-wide statistic ranks New York as 46th in the country for wait times, tying the state with Mississippi according to a Press Ganey hospital survey.

From the New York Post :

Industry sources said recent hospital closures have contributed to longer wait times. For example, St. Vincent's Medical Center and North General hospital in Manhattan shut down last year, and about a half-dozen city hospitals have shut down over the last several years.

Last October, New York magazine published an exposé written by Mark Levine, which described the dangerous public health issues resulting from all the hospital closings. “Last year, a pair of hospitals in Queens closed suddenly, just before the outbreak of H1N1, causing overflow conditions in the emergency rooms of nearby facilities, one of which set up a triage area on a loading dock," Mr. Levine wrote.

What is more, in January, The New York Post has made a list of a total of nine hospitals, which would be in danger of closing, if New York State government makes major cuts in Medicaid funding. In Brooklyn, five hospitals were identified as being in danger of closing : Brooklyn Center, Brookdale, Interfaith, Kingsbrook, and Wyckoff. In Queens, two more hospitals were named to be at a high risk of closing : Jamaica and Peninsula. Finally, in the Bronx, two hospitals made the list as being close to teetering onto financial collapse : Westchester Square and St. Barnabas.

St. John's Queens Hospital Closing : One More Sad Hospital Closing

5 March 2013 : Update ! Protest at the former St. John's Queens Hospital against Healthcare and Medical Debt

Join us for a protest against the debt-ridden healthcare system that pushes hospitals into closure : St. John's Queens Hospital : Sunday, March 24, at 1 p.m.

9 April 2011 : Update ! St. John's Queens Hospital is becoming a high-end development.

Queens Crap is reporting that the owners of the former site of St. John's Queens Hospital have received a certificate of occupancy for a mixed-use, housing complex-shopping mall-parking lot. That's how the dice roll under Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Deputy Mayor Christine Quinn, and City Planner Amanda ''the People's'' Burden, folks. (Original post follows.)

St. John's Queens Hospital in Elmhurst went bankrupt in 2009.

When St. John’s Queens Hospital closed in 2009, it was a harbinger of things to come.

Just like the rallies that people in Greenwich Village have been having after St. Vincent’s closed, before them, the community members and the staff of St. John’s Queens Hospital held the same kind of rallies, in an attempt to save their own hospital.

St. John’s and Mary Immaculate were sold for $40 million in 2006 to the Brooklyn Queens Health Centers of New York when the St. Vincent Catholic Medical Centers declared bankruptcy. BQHC, which operates Wyckoff Hospital on the borough’s border near Ridgewood, created Caritas as a separate subsidiary that would own and operate the hospitals and maintain their Catholic identity,” reported The Queens Tribune.

After the doors of St. John’s Queens Hospital were boarded up in 2009, Queens Councilman Eric Gioia complained about the hospital closings taking place in Queens. "You already have
overburdened hospitals
," said Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Queens). "Good luck trying to get a loved one to emergency care." Eventually, no hospital ever replaced St. John’s.

As more and more hospitals close in New York City, residents are finding themselves at greater risk of having fewer ER’s and trauma centers available to them in the event of health care emergencies. After other hospital closings, residents have complained that the New York State Department of Health lacked a plan for providing emergency healthcare for their respective affected communities. In technical terms, the area served by a hospital is called a catchment area.

Hospital Closure Planning Act

In September 2010, New York City leaders urged Gov. David Paterson to sign the Hospital Closure Planning Act, a bill which would have required the state’s Department of Health to hold a public forum and report on the impact of a hospital's closure on the surrounding community's access to medical care. The legislation, which was sponsored by Assemblyman Rory Lancman (D-Fresh Meadows) and Senator Shirley L. Huntley (D-Jamaica), came in response to the notorious closings of Mary Immaculate, St. John's, and Parkway hospitals in Queens, and St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan. After these four hospitals closed, each community was outraged and complained that the state lacked a plan for providing adequate and safe replacements of emergency healthcare for the catchment areas.

“A hospital's closing should not mean the closing off of healthcare services for the surrounding community, but that's what happens unless the state listens to the community and makes plans for meeting its healthcare needs," said Assemblyman Lancman.

“Losing a hospital can adversely affect a community and its residents. We’ve seen it happen here in Southeast Queens and most recently in Manhattan, with the closing of St. Vincent’s hospital. Due to current economic climate New York State is facing we must ensure that neighborhoods across the state can access alternative health care when a hospital closes. It is equally important to involve communities in the planned closure of a hospital and in replacing the most important services residents rely on. The residents of the community where a hospital is located have the best understanding of the services they need and what needs to be done,” said Senator Huntley. In October 2010, Gov. Patterson signed the Hospital Closure Planning Act into law after he had vetoed a similar bill in 2009.

Hospital Closure Planning Act Press Conference, September 24, 2010 from NYAD25 on Vimeo.

Hospital Closings As A 2013 Mayoral Campaign Issue ?

Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer is widely seen to be running for mayor of New York City in the 2013 election, and residents in the Lower West Side are hoping that hospital closings will become a campaign issue. At a community forum in Chelsea on Feb. 16, Mr. Stringer delivered a maverick speech, in which he committed to helping the Lower West Side of Manhattan fight for a full-service hospital to replace St. Vincent’s. He was the only major city politician to attend the forum. The city council member most residents are turning to for help in restoring a full-service hospital in the Lower West Side is Speaker Christine Quinn, but she has a predictably poor track record in fighting for working class New Yorkers (She refuses to support paid sick leave.), much less to save New York City hospitals from closing.

In the time that Ms. Quinn has been Speaker of the New York City Council, at least eight city hospitals have closed. In 2010, North General Hospital in Harlem declared bankruptcy and St. Vincent's Hospital in the West Village shut down after shady backroom meetings. In 2009, two hospitals in Queens – St. John's Queens Hospital in Elmhurst and Mary Immaculate Hospital in Jamaica – went bankrupt. In 2008, Cabrini Medical Center in Manhattan and Victory Memorial Hospital in Bay Ridge closed. And in 2007, St. Vincent's Midtown in Manhattan was closed. Separately, one other hospital in Brooklyn, Long Island College Hospital, was recently saved : it had been on the brink of closing, and the only way the hospital was saved was by merging it with SUNY Downstate.

The toll of all of these hospital closings is now being felt across the state, not just in New York City.

Community Imact of All These Hospital Closings ; Didn’t Anybody Predict ER Wait Times Would Rise As A Consequence ?

On average, New Yorkers in medical distress have to wait for almost five hours before they are examined in emergency rooms. This wait time means that New Yorkers have to wait longer for ER treatment than almost anyone else in the United States. The state-wide statistic ranks New York as 46th in the country for wait times, tying the state with Mississippi according to a Press Ganey hospital survey.

From the New York Post :

Industry sources said recent hospital closures have contributed to longer wait times. For example, St. Vincent's Medical Center and North General hospital in Manhattan shut down last year, and about a half-dozen city hospitals have shut down over the last several years.

Last October, New York magazine published an exposé written by Mark Levine, which described the dangerous public health issues resulting from all the hospital closings. “Last year, a pair of hospitals in Queens closed suddenly, just before the outbreak of H1N1, causing overflow conditions in the emergency rooms of nearby facilities, one of which set up a triage area on a loading dock," Mr. Levine wrote.

What is more, in January, The New York Post has made a list of a total of nine hospitals, which would be in danger of closing, if New York State government makes major cuts in Medicaid funding. In Brooklyn, five hospitals were identified as being in danger of closing : Brooklyn Center, Brookdale, Interfaith, Kingsbrook, and Wyckoff. In Queens, two more hospitals were named to be at a high risk of closing : Jamaica and Peninsula. Finally, in the Bronx, two hospitals made the list as being close to teetering onto financial collapse : Westchester Square and St. Barnabas.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Queens Hospital Closings

Last-minute deal saves Long Island College Hospital in Brooklyn. But with more hospitals at risk of closing in Queens, public healthcare will only get worse.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo has found enough state grant money to save Long Island College Hospital, NY1 reported. Because of the deal, 2,500 employees, who work at the Brooklyn hospital, will be able to keep their jobs.

In the time that Christine Quinn has been Speaker of the New York City Council, at least eight city hospitals have closed :

  • North General Hospital in Harlem declared bankruptcy in 2010 ;
  • St. Vincent's Hospital in the West Village was shut down in 2010 after shady backroom meetings ;
  • St. John's Queens Hospital in Elmhurst went bankrupt in 2009 ;
  • Mary Immaculate Hospital in Jamaica went bankrupt in 2009 ;
  • Parkway Hospital in Forest Hills decided to close in 2008 ;
  • Cabrini Medical Center in Manhattan closed in 2008 ;
  • Victory Memorial Hospital in Bay Ridge closed in 2008 ; and
  • St. Vincent's Midtown in Manhattan closed in 2007.

Last October, New York magazine published an exposé written by Mark Levine, which described the dangerous public health issues resulting from all the hospital closings.

"Last year, a pair of hospitals in Queens closed suddenly, just before the outbreak of H1N1, causing overflow conditions in the emergency rooms of nearby facilities, one of which set up a triage area on a loading dock."

In January, The New York Post has made a list of more Queens hospitals, which are in danger of closing, if New York State government makes major cuts in Medicaid funding :

  • Jamaica
  • Peninsula

For more information, see : Governor's Medicaid cuts may kill 10 city hospitals.