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January 20, 2012

“Mary”

We were in housing court recently with one of our new clients. “Mary” has the kind of case that makes people shake their heads in disbelief, and explains why housing lawyers, like me, are sadly necessary.

Mary is a single working mother, who, thankfully, lives in a subsidized building. That means her rent is supposed to be based on her annual income, but because her work income fluctuates, and the landlord’s staff took only a small sampling of pay stubs to calculate what her rent should be this year, they were overcharging her quite a bit. She’s now facing eviction for unpaid rent.

It’s these kinds of very human errors — coupled with very human pride and unwillingness to acknowledge the errors — that lead to evictions.

We’ve provided all the documentation to the landlord’s attorney to show that they haven’t calculated Mary’s income correctly. Remarkably, we haven’t been able to get them to even read our papers explaining their error. So, we were in court again recently. This time they offered us a new rent, that was, once again, miscalculated. Although the landlord’s attorney was willing to listen to what I had to say (to some extent) it seemed that he mostly wanted the case resolved without it taking too much of his time. My client and I were both getting yelled at by the landlord’s representative almost as soon as he arrived on the scene. I shudder to think how things would have gone for Mary if we weren’t involved! We’ve adjourned the case once more, in hopes of resolving the differences, but if we can’t, we’re prepared to put everything in front of the judge, and I’m confident the judge will agree with our calculations, thus finally resolving the question of how much her rent should be.

Sandhya Reju Boyd, Director

January 19, 2012

Welcome, Owen Field!

Brooklyn Jubilee is very pleased to announce our newest staff member, Owen Field. A recent graduate of the University of Buffalo Law School, Owen has been volunteering with Brooklyn Jubilee since September of last year, meeting clients at several of our sites.

With another lawyer on staff, we’ll now be able to do more for our clients, such as “Jane” who’s case I’ve told you about in recent posts. Owen’s place on our staff comes through our new partnership with Graffiti Ministries, which has been serving New Yorkers since the 1970s, with programs in Manhattan and the Bronx. Expanding now to Brooklyn, Graffiti’s latest project will offer free legal services, as well as GED training, and other programs, in the Brownsville neighborhood.

When Graffiti asked us to partner with them in establishing their new program, we gladly agreed to join their efforts. Brooklyn Jubilee will join Graffiti in helping to establish a program to provide free legal services at partner venues in Brownsville. Owen will split his time between Graffiti’s new sites, and Brooklyn Jubilee’s current sites. Welcome aboard, Owen!

Sandhya Reju Boyd, Director

January 13, 2012

The First Brooklyn Jubilee Cooking Club Meeting

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Brooklyn Jubilee’s Cooking Club met for the first time on Saturday, December 10, 2011, at Baptist Church of the Redeemer in Flatbush. A new endeavor that is part of Brooklyn Jubilee’s developing food and nutrition ministry, the aim of the Cooking Club is to create a space where people in the Flatbush area might learn and share healthy cooking tips.

Cooking Club 2011-1-2

While advice on healthy eating is abundant (and, sometimes, conflicting), there is little tailored to West Indian cuisine. How do we tap into existing knowledge in the community and come up with recipes for meals that are healthy, nutritious and affordable?

We set out to answer that question in three groups, which included Brooklyn Church of the Redeemer attendees, as well as, Brooklyn Jubilee staff, volunteers and clients. The professional chef in the house, Lauren Pilgrim, had laid out the ingredients and prepped three recipes –rice and peas (beans); sweet potato and vegetable curry; and Jamaican slaw–for us to make.

Also at hand were Leisa Bryant, a dietician, and Michelle Pink, a family nurse practitioner, to offer their expertise on nutrition and health. However, it was evident that the non-professionals knew more than a thing or two about cooking and eating well!

More than just prescriptive, the recipe handouts and nutrition guides served as prompts for exchanging knowledge. As they chopped, measured and stirred, participants shared their own cooking stories, demonstrating that there are a myriad ways of personalizing dishes–such as varying the mixture of spices (a great taste substitute for salt) in the curry to one’s taste.

At one point, a debate ensued on whether it was better to go with the high calorie content of real mayonnaise or the fat-free “fake stuff” kind in the slaw. The real stuff won out, although there were strong proponents for using olive oil and lemon juice as healthier substitutes.

The teenage participants, accompanying their mothers, also displayed a general ease in the kitchen, whether cultivated from helping out at home or from restaurant work experience. A couple of them showed some really decent knife skills, which were further sharpened that morning. Here is Chef Pilgrim imparting a handy tip on how to avoid accidents on the cutting board: curl and tuck the fingertips of the hand that’s holding the vegetable steady, using your knuckles instead to guide the blade, like this:

Cooking Club 2011-1

After a morning of learning, sharing and making, participants were able to take home a healthy meal of their own making. Addressing immediate and long term needs, the first Cooking Club meeting was an encouraging start to a ministry that hopes to build on the knowledge of the community it aims to serve.

—  Fiona Lee

Cooking Club 2011-1-3

December 14, 2011

In The Loop: Follow-up on The “Jane” Post

Last week I wrote about Jane, our client whose public assistance benefits were cut off, and how we’ve gone to court to get her benefits returned. The city has contacted us and agreed they made a mistake here. As a result, most of Jane’s benefits were put back in place, though not all of them. Rent is still not being issued to her landlord, her healthcare is not back in place and she’s getting caught up in the bureaucracy trying to get it back.

Please pray that Jane’s healthcare is straightened out right away, by the end of the week, so she and her children can see a doctor before Christmas. Please also pray that the rent issue gets straightened out right away, before her landlord decides he needs to take Jane to court forcing her and her children to risk eviction.

We’re very thankful they have their food stamps back, and that they will have plenty of food on the table for Christmas.

Sandhya Reju Boyd, Director

December 8, 2011

In the Loop: A Client Story that Makes Me Angry

I’m angry. I’ve been angry a lot since I spoke to our newest client. “Jane” is a public assistance recipient, not by choice, but by desperation. She is a remarkably wise, very articulate, and godly woman who worked for decades, providing for her family, but then she got sick and it all fell apart.

Most working people think that once you get sick in this country our support systems will take care of you, but the truth is the disability system completely fails many very sick people. About half the people applying for disability get rejected. That’s an actual statistic, not an exaggeration. Those who have the courage to push forward and appeal often wait two years for a hearing. Again, not an exaggeration.

Jane’s chances of success on appeal are very good, and knowing her situation, I think she’s sure to win. But how does she survive in the meanwhile? Public assistance is her only option, but her benefits were cut off earlier this year, because they claim she missed an appointment of some kind, which she denies. This means her landlord hasn’t gotten any rent in months now, and Jane has no funds to buy basics like subway tickets or new shoes for her kids. When Public Assistance started the process to cut Jane’s benefits, they didn’t even send the warning notice to the correct address, so any opportunity to prevent the cut off was missed because of their mistake. She took the matter to a fair hearing (an administrative process to protest agency decisions) and even though she had no attorney to fight for her, she won the case. Remember I said she was very articulate? What’s more, Public Assistance agreed it was wrong, and was ordered to repay all of her lost benefits, reopen her case, pay all the back rent and cash that had not been paid.  Remarkably, Public Assistance still hasn’t done so, months after Jane’s winning decision was issued. That’s when we spoke to her. At this point, there was little choice but to file a lawsuit, asking a court judge to compel Public Assistance to simply comply with the order and pay the back benefits. So two weeks ago, we filed a case on her behalf. I don’t think I’ve ever been so proud to file a case, and so angry that I had to. I’m confident the matter will be resolved within the next couple of months once the city attorneys see our papers, but it is a crime and a tragedy that it had to come to this.

We’ll keep you posted, and, Lord willing, will have good news for you in a month or two. In the meanwhile, please keep Jane and her two children in your prayers this holiday season, that they’d have all the food, shelter, and healthcare they need to be safe and healthy.

Sandhya Reju Boyd, Director

November 30, 2011

Meet Kristin Goodwin

Brooklyn Jubilee is delighted to introduce our newest board member, Kristin Goodwin. Raised in Ohio, where she was in campus ministry for six years, Kristin has been in New York for almost seven years. A qualified social worker, Kristin has spent the past three years at Housing Works, Inc. where she is a policy and advocacy director. Housing Works is known throughout New York for its excellent thrift stores and coffee shop/book store in SoHo. Its broader mission is to end the dual crises of homelessness and AIDS through relentless advocacy, the provision of life-saving services, and entrepreneurial businesses that generate revenue for the organization’s services.

Kristin, therefore, brings a wealth of expertise and a heart for service to the table. The Brooklyn Jubilee board position is an almost perfect marriage of her pastoral experiences in college ministry and big picture, organizational and policy issues — particularly with regard to the healthcare needs of low-income populations.

Kristin thrives on working with clients, “I have been able to work with and for people who have experienced significant poverty and oppression,” she says, “and to be a part of them finding the voice they need to make a change in their lives. It’s amazing to see God’s vision of the world more clearly, and to work for justice, and I’m thrilled to be able to do more of that through my involvement with Brooklyn Jubilee.”

Much of Kristin’s experience has been in a setting where medical care is directly tied to housing, nutrition and public benefits — as well as emotional and spiritual health. These holistic connections are ones Brooklyn Jubilee sees as crucial, and is pursuing with its new healthcare ministry. Welcome aboard, Kristin! We’re excited to have you.

Meet Lauren Pilgrim

Raised in small-town Pennsylvania nutritionist and personal chef Lauren Pilgrim has lived in Brooklyn for fourteen years, and is the latest addition to Brooklyn Jubilee’s health care ministry. Lauren’s expertise, insights and recipes will be key to our holistic approach to wellness, especially as we try to tackle the diet-related disorders such as high blood pressure and diabetes are endemic in low-income areas of Brooklyn.

Initially drafted to work on healthy versions of traditional West Indian recipes to use in our Flatbush ministry, Lauren’s enthusiasm for food is always part of her conversation;  “I’ve loved cooking since I was very young, but didn’t decide to pursue food as a career until I was 30.  Although I grew up eating healthy — my parents were careful about that kind of thing, we didn’t eat a lot of processed food and weren’t allowed sodas —it wasn’t very good food. It was good for me, but not particularly well prepared or enjoyable to eat.”

Lauren pursued a culinary qualification at The Natural Gourmet Institute (NGI), because the school has the only program in New York focused on health in relation to cooking. Its emphasis is on primarily organic, local, sustainable food.

Dealing with her own health issues at the time, Lauren says “I chose NGI because I was always in the arduous process of doing elimination diets and struggling with my health. I wanted to be able to eat, and really enjoy what I was cooking, rather than going to a traditional cooking school where I would have felt like I was eating foods that make me unwell.”

Lauren is very calm and measured in conversation, so her assertion that she “can be pretty preachy about food” has to be taken with a pinch of salt. A tiny pinch, probably, given the concerns about salt and high blood pressure. “I’m pretty strict with what I eat but I feel a million times better than before I changed my diet.” She cites improvements in her physical health, but also in her mood and outlook. She’s firmly convinced that good eating is part of a holistic approach to health and wellness. “It’s really rewarding to see people benefit from dietary changes and from eating my food! And of course, eating well can clearly be preventative medicine, especially in diabetes, high blood pressure and obesity.” Leaning on her culinary training, Lauren has adapting West Indian recipes, pouring through cookbooks and, “figuring out what I can do to make the dish healthier without sacrificing anything delicious, and while keeping it as authentic as possible.”

In mid-December she will lead our new West Indian Cooking Club in Flatbush — a chance for community members and food professionals to share their knowledge, cook together and produce healthier versions of traditional recipes. The group will then share the recipes with soup kitchens, neighbors and, eventually, with clients of Brooklyn Jubilee’s healthcare ministry. Lauren will be the first member of our volunteer team to guest chef at soup kitchens, run workshops and hand out recipes designed to empower people to feed themselves well and deliciously.

“Eating well is empowering,” says Lauren, “if a person can take control of at least this one aspect of their health, it’s a huge step in the right direction.”

September 30, 2011

In The Loop: A Word From Our Director

Yesterday, God’s recent provision of an amazing law firm, perfect for our program needs, had me overjoyed. They are remarkably excited to give their time and talents to help us launch our healthcare ministry. I continue to marvel at how I met the young associate from Manatt apparently by happenstance (though I don’t believe in coincidence, and see God’s gift in our meeting). Her willingness to lend her skills, and the support of her sizeable law firm, to our work, is very encouraging.

Today, though, I am a little dejected, to be honest, having received some discouraging news. A potential new partner church told us that although they are excited about our work, we shouldn’t expect active involvement from their congregation, because people are just too busy. I’ve carried the weight of that disappointment with me all day long.

I know it’s foolish to try and read God’s will into my circumstances. I know that apparent success doesn’t mean I’m on the right path. Apparent failure is almost never a true failure, but unexpected re-direction. My mistaken expectations are almost always to blame for the stress that follows apparent failure. That, and fear of failure itself. What is the answer, when the life of any ministry is fraught with highs and lows? Last year I had the chance to ask Tim Keller how we are supposed to understand our failures when we emulate a God who never fails. His answer was beautiful and comforting, and will help me sleep tonight. He quoted me this verse from I Corinthians 15:58: “Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain.”

We have sought the Lord’s guidance over and over again, and prayed for his grace and direction. We’re confident in the path he’s leading us, though we may only see one step at a time, and have many questions about what lies beyond what we can see. Nevertheless, we are not “moved by” our questions, though they are many. We labor for the Lord, and it is not in vain.

Sandhya Reju Boyd, Director

August 23, 2011

In The Loop: A Word From Our Director

We’re very pleased to welcome Lauren Pilgrim to the Healthcare Ministry Planning Committee. Lauren is a professional chef trained in natural, healthy, gourmet cooking who will be working with the rest of the team to build our contacts and resources for presenting healthy eating options to the Flatbush community.

Please pray for Lauren and her efforts to build this collection of healthy West Indian recipes, and for her efforts to identify other chefs and food professionals who will share her passion and willingness to serve. She’s presently developing some recipes, and I can’t wait to try them.

The vision of the new Brooklyn Jubilee Healthcare Ministry is to equip neighbors with diabetes and high blood pressure to take control of their health, and to enable those without diabetes and high blood pressure to avoid these life-threatening conditions. We want to move beyond just a doctor’s visit. Patients can experience how nutrition and diet can improve their health, and their quality of life.  So, in advance of opening our healthcare clinics, we hope to host “Healthy West Indian Dinner Nights” where the doors of a church in Flatbush will be opened to the community to enjoy good food that is healthy, but doesn’t sacrifice, culture, history, or flavor.

Sandhya Reju Boyd, Director

July 26, 2011

In the Loop: A Word from Our Director

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This morning, all over New York, would-be lawyers are sitting down to take the bar examination ‑  the professional exam one must pass in order to become a practicing lawyer. More than a third will not pass.

It’s been twelve years since I sat for this exam, and even though I’d already passed one bar exam in another state the previous year, I still remember it as the physically and mentally grueling test of strength that it is. Did I mention that it’s 12 hours of written examination, over two days? By the end of it, your writing hand is going numb.

This morning I think particularly of Owen Field, a young man whose only professional desire is to serve low-income Brooklynites in East New York. The  neighborhood is one facing many challenges, but blessed with a wealth of committed church families, a number of whom are signed on already to support Owen in his future ministry. Brooklyn Jubilee, too, intends to support Owen in whatever ways God will allow us to. Please pray Owen today and Wednesday. Pray  that he will have a clear mind, a calm heart, and the sheer physical endurance needed to get through the next two days of the bar exam. Please also  pray for Graffiti Ministries, which is sending Owen to East New York, and for our continued efforts to find ways to support Owen’s future service in that neighborhood.

Sandhya Reju Boyd, Director

Sandhya Reju Boyd, Director

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