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  • WCBS 880 Weekly Rewind: New Jersey Parents Wage War Against Masks in Schools

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    Produced by Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY (WCBS 880) — A group of New Jersey parents want their kids to have freedom.

    Parents suing Gov. Phil Murphy and members of his administration argue that children are at lower risk and that masks, as well as plastic partitions around school desks, do irreparable harm and violate children’s civil rights, said Kelly Ford, who started the group Free NJ Kids.

    https://omny.fm/shows/880-weekly-rewind/gun-violence-new-breast-cancer-trial-and-rememberi

    “We have pictures of masks with nose bleeds in them,” Ford said. “We have a story of one parent whose daughter threw up in the mask and did not remove it because she was afraid of getting in trouble.”

    Masks are proven effective in preventing the transmission of COVID-19. The Delta Variant of COVID-19 is responsible for soaring infections in 48 states plus Washington, D.C. with severe cases attacking mostly unvaccinated people.

    New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is maintaining the mask mandate for students and teachers in the city’s public schools as the COVID positivity rate accelerates in the five boroughs. It’s most prevalent on Staten Island where vaccination rates are lowest and the positivity rate is above two percent. On The 880 Weekly Rewind, WCBS reporter Marla Diamond covers the nuanced issue around mask requirements.

    Also on Rewind, Lynda Lopez looks at a new medical trial that aims to help better treat the most serious breast cancer cases and remembers the tragic TWA Flight 800 explosion off Long Island on its 25th anniversary.

    Subscribe and download The 880 Weekly Rewind podcast for in-depth reporting and deeper analysis of the top stories of the week, produced by Neil A. Carousso, for WCBS-AM New York.

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  • Queens Juice Bar Owner’s Recipe for Success Blends Passion for Nutrition, Mentorship

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    By Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — Making the leap to start your dream business can be daunting, especially in uncertain economic times.

    While a record number of new businesses have been formed during the pandemic, succeeding in a new venture presents a myriad of challenges, and for that reason, roughly 20 percent of small businesses fail within the first year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    Dawn Kelly was let go from Prudential Financial in 2015 after 16 years leading its global communications team. Before that, she spent about nine years with AARP and roughly five years as director of public relations for York College. She combined her severance pay from Prudential and her savings to fund The Nourish Spot – a juice bar she opened in Jamaica, Queens with her daughter.

    “When we started The Nourish Spot, I spent over 30 years as a public relations practitioner for a number of different brands and organizations, so I lean on that for the business,” she told Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso on the WCBS Small Business Spotlight, sponsored by Dime Community Bank.

    Now a mentor at the NYC Department of Small Business Services, Kelly says anyone looking to start a business does not necessarily need an infusion of capital. She advises small business owners to never feel shy about promoting themselves because it is essential for marketing any business.

    “I was taking clients before The Nourish Spot opened to help them promote themselves,” Kelly said.

    “This wasn’t really a dream for me. I’m an employee,” she explained on the Small Business Spotlight as her workers made smoothies behind the counter in the background.

    But, her passion for nutrition and mentorship is palpable.

    “I actually thought that I would work until I didn’t anymore. But, God had another idea for me. He gave me this idea to do the juice bar and I’m really proud that it’s actually working,” said Kelly, flashing a smile from ear-to-ear.

    She was accepted into a program through the Rockaway Development & Revitalization Corporation and took online classes during the pandemic to guide her through managing the business and launching new services.

    While most people walk in to The Nourish Spot to order a smoothie off the menu, Kelly realized there was a market for people with medical conditions. One of her customers is a home health aide in Queens who walks in with a prescription from her client’s doctor.

    “Her client doesn’t eat as much fruits and vegetables as they’re supposed to. And so, the way she makes sure that her client consumes the balanced diet, is she comes and makes a smoothie for them and then takes it to them,” she said.

    She also worked with non-profit organizations during the pandemic to help combat food insecurity in her neighborhood, which was once the epicenter of the coronavirus in the spring of 2020.

    Kelly lives by the principle of treating people the right way. She empowers her workers to pass on joy with a smile and grace. Many of them, Kelly sourced from local non-profits when she opened The Nourish Spot.

    “These young people came into us as interns. And, those that showcased themselves as dependable, honest, passionate about food and people, we’ve hired them,” she told Connolly and Carousso.

    She said she tapped into a “community pipeline” of talented, hard-working people who just need an opportunity to prove themselves and flourish. Some of her employees have worked at the juice bar for nearly four years.

    “We’re really really proud,” said Kelly.

    See her story and pickup ideas for new services on the WCBS Small Business Spotlight video above.

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  • WCBS 880 Weekly Rewind: NYC Throws Ticker Tape Parade for Pandemic Heroes; Health Officials Point to Surging COVID Cases in Unvaccinated Locales

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    Produced by Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — We may be spiking the football before the End Zone.

    New York City celebrated frontline workers this week in a parade down the famed Canyon of Heroes, but health officials point to evidence of rising COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths in places where the vaccination rate is low. As the highly contagious Delta variant of COVID-19 spreads rapidly across the United States, more variants are emerging, which is fueling concern about weakening vaccine efficacy and the need for booster shots.

    https://omny.fm/shows/880-weekly-rewind/ticker-tape-parade-for-pandemic-heroes-race-to-ino

    Lynda Lopez explores the top stories from the latest in the pandemic battle to Tropical Storm Elsa complicating the recovery effort at the site of the Surfside, FL condo collapse to Eric Adams winning the Democratic nominee for Mayor of New York on The 880 Weekly Rewind.

    Subscribe and download The 880 Weekly Rewind podcast for in-depth reporting and deeper analysis of the top stories of the week, produced by Neil A. Carousso, for WCBS-AM New York.

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  • WCBS 880 Weekly Rewind: Inside NYC’s Election Debacle, Trump Org. and CFO Charged in Alleged Tax Scheme, and Celebrating Independence in 2021

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    Produced by Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — It was a busy news week that left New Yorkers unconfident in the mayoral primary after the Board of Elections claimed their initial ranked choice voting results were messed up by human error leaving pre-election test results in the new system.

    https://omny.fm/shows/880-weekly-rewind/nyc-primary-debacle-if-covid-booster-shots-will-be

    The Trump Organization and its long-time Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg were charged in what prosecutors labeled a “sweeping and audacious” 16-year tax fraud scheme. Plus, Bill Cosby was released from prison after his sexual assault conviction was overturned by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.

    WCBS 880’s Lynda Lopez also talked to Kathleen Wright, production director of the Macy’s 4th of July Fireworks Show as Independence Day takes on a whole new meaning 245 years after the declaration to form the United States of America.

    Subscribe and download The 880 Weekly Rewind podcast for in-depth reporting and deeper analysis of the top stories of the week, produced by Neil A. Carousso, for WCBS-AM New York.

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  • Small Business Spotlight: What NYC’s New Normal Will Look Like this Fall

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    By Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — The post-pandemic future could be a win-win for workers.

    Many businesses are preparing to welcome their employees back to the office after Labor Day, but they’ll be returning to a new normal.

    “I think this time there’s going to be much more of an interconnected expansion and that that you’ll have more people that might be working in satellite offices or remotely in the suburbs, have a quality of life that’s more affordable, more open space, but then be able to come to the city when they want to be in the city and interconnect with these companies,” said Scott Rechler, chairman and CEO of RXR Realty, which owns large office buildings in New York City and the suburbs.

    On the WCBS Small Business Spotlight, sponsored by Dime Community Bank, Rechler told Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso he expects both the city and the suburbs to recover “collectively.” He said most of his business tenants anticipate being back in September, but not at full capacity.

    “We need to start reimagining a post-pandemic playbook,” he said.

    That playbook includes hybrid schedules and a redesign of the city.

    “There’s some office buildings and there’s frankly some retail buildings and hotels that just will not be competitive in a post-COVID world,” said Rechler. “The right thing to do in that instance is to convert them to multi-family.”

    The Regional Plan Association Chairman told WCBS 880 adding multi-family apartments in place of empty office buildings could improve New York’s affordability and attract people to work and live in the five boroughs.

    New apartment leases in Manhattan are at record levels as tenants gobble up rentals at a discount while preparing to return to offices. The number of new leases increased fourfold in May from the year previous to 9,491, according to Miller Samuel Inc. and Douglas Elliman Real Estate.

    “(It) gives me confidence that people believe in the future of New York,” said Rechler, adding, “If they’re here, the big companies that want to attract that talent, that bring that talent in to grow their businesses, are going to be here as well. So, it’s a great leading indicator of what’s to come.”

    Rechler, who oversaw the redevelopment of the World Trade Center as the vice chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, told Connolly and Carousso hybrid work schedules are here to stay, though, because there is a “quality of life” balance that many people have enjoyed while working from home.

    He’s advising businesses, telling them, “Don’t be a prisoner of the past, be a pioneer of the future.”

    While productivity was high during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in the spring of 2020, the developer said businesses are finding productivity is slumping now that the U.S. has largely reopened 15 months after the initial shutdown.

    “This is about bringing people back so they can build culture, they can have mentorship, collaboration, a sense of community, and create that corporate value set that makes their team members feel part of something bigger,” Rechler said. “You’re not going to get that if everyone’s in different satellite offices.”

    See how developers are planning New York City’s post-pandemic future on the Small Business Spotlight video above.

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