NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: How Prosecutors Share Info about Legal Cases in NYS, A Look at Safe Havens in NYC, and a New Exhibit Explores the Legacy of Slavery in Brooklyn
Episode Date: January 31, 2025There’s a push among some district attorneys to change the laws that decide how prosecutors share information about legal cases. Plus, WNYC’s Caroline Lewis visits a safe haven shelter in Harlem. ...Finally, a new exhibit at Brooklyn Public Library's Center for Brooklyn explores how slavery shaped the history of the borough.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to NYC Now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WNYC.
I'm Sean Carlson.
New York State's District Attorney's Association is rallying behind a proposal to change the laws that decide how prosecutors share information about legal cases.
They're backing Governor Kathy Hokel's plan to give prosecutors a break on what information they need to share with defendants right after an arrest.
Staten Island District Attorney Mike Mahan says the current law.
is unworkable. It's a much-needed adjustment that will relieve prosecutors of onerous burdens
and make certain that cases are not being dismissed wholesale. Public defender groups like the
Legal Aid Society oppose the plan. They argue that the current law passed in 2019 protects
people's rights. Here in New York City, Mayor Adams is looking to open 900 more beds in safe havens
and other, quote, low-barrier shelters as part of a $650 million housing and mental health plan.
These sites are designed to bring unsheltered New Yorkers off the street
by offering more privacy and fewer rules than traditional shelters.
WNIC's Caroline Lewis takes us inside an existing safe haven in Harlem
run by a nonprofit called The Bridge.
This is the one we're going to visit?
I'm getting a peek inside a single room with a window and a large locker for belongings.
Way more privacy than you'd find at a large congregate city shelter.
He welcomes the client in, the staff member, and to help them out in.
The building's fluorescent-lit common areas are sparse but tidy.
On a weekday morning, just a few residents are up and about.
Lisa Green, the chief program officer for housing at the bridge,
says many clients come here after years of living on the street and need a gentle touch.
They can come in, have a nice warm shower, have a nice bed, have a warm meal,
and then start working with staff slowly.
City officials say safe havens are a key stop on the trajectory,
from the street to stable housing.
But they're not a silver bullet.
City data shows that only about 28% of Safe Haven clients
have subsidized housing lined up when they leave.
Kenneth Harris is 60 years old.
He had been homeless for over a decade
when he arrived at the Harlem Safe Haven three months ago
and said he'd been promised housing before.
It's never happened.
But the moment I got here,
I felt like this was where it was going to happen.
Harris's intuition was right.
He's moving into an apartment in the Bronx at the beginning of February with the help of a rental assistance voucher.
He said he's most excited to have his adult children and grandchild come visit.
Now they can come and be with me at times, you know, instead of having to wonder where I'm at or me wondering where they are.
So this is going to help with the connection.
Mayor Adams is trying to replicate the Safe Haven model in more shelters throughout the city.
Some of the 900 beds he recently announced are already in the works,
and could open as soon as this summer.
That's WNMI sees Caroline Lewis.
Coming up, a new exhibit explores the legacy of slavery in Brooklyn.
Stick around.
A new exhibition at the Brooklyn Public Library's Center for Brooklyn History
goes in depth on the impact of slavery on the borough's past and present.
The exhibit traces family history research and the legacy of slavery open this week,
and it asks visitors to explore their own history.
and identity. My colleague Michael Hill spoke with Dominique Jean-Louis. She's the chief historian
at the Center for Brooklyn History. Dominic, the history of slavery in Northern States is not
always as well known as that of the South. Would you go into some of the history in our area
specifically as it relates to slavery? Many people would be surprised to learn what slavery
looked like. Sometimes there's a misconception that slavery in the South was more plantation-based
agricultural, whereas slavery in the North was more domestic household slavery. And maybe on mass,
that's true. But specific to Brooklyn, you had enslaved African people working on farms,
growing produce. And Brooklyn was a major supplier of produce in the North. So those farms were
critically important and pretty widespread. Brooklyn was an enormous center of slavery in the
North. Numbers like 60% of what would become Brooklyn, 60% of white household. And so,
holds owned slaves. And in specific areas of Brooklyn, like Flatbush, which is covered quite a bit in
our exhibition, that number was as high as 75%. In what ways has slavery shaped the borough of Brooklyn
throughout time? Brooklyn really grows as a place and eventually as a city. It will become the third
largest city in the United States before it joins Greater New York. It becomes a borough. And that growth
is really facilitated by the plantations and the farms that are growing all this produce. That's
really allowing for Brooklyn to rise in prominence. It's drawing people to move to Brooklyn.
And of course, it's increasing wealth for the families that were slave-owning families.
On the other hand, speaking of that wealth, that's really going to shape Brooklyn while slavery
exists. So that's roughly from the mid-1650s to 1825 where slavery thrives in Brooklyn.
Over the course of that long period, wealth is concentrated in the hands of just a few families, those larger slave-owning families.
They're keeping all the profits that their farms are generating.
They're intermarrying so that wealth is being consolidated, you know, generationally, people are inheriting enslaved people, people are inheriting wealth.
And at the same time, those who were enslaved and those who didn't have the means to become slave owners, they are continually not able to generate wealth, not able to generate wealth, not able to.
to preserve and pass down those funds.
And so some of the social inequality
that we've seen in Brooklyn's history
throughout the years
really has its beginnings
in the system of slavery
that thrive for so long.
The exhibit also features
some large-scale portraits
of two families important to this story.
Who are those families?
So we're so excited for people to see these portraits.
They are really the center of the exhibition.
So on the one hand, we have a portrait
that has long been in the collections
of the Center for Brooklyn,
history of John A. Lott. John A. Lott was a prominent Brooklyn lawyer and then a state judge in the
state of New York. He was very influential in building up the infrastructure of what will become
the city and then the borough of Brooklyn. So he's a very influential Brooklynite. And as such,
his portrait is in our collection. It also hangs in Burrow Hall. It also hangs in Albany.
So he represents the prominent Brooklyn families that were also prominent slave owners.
So John A. Lott grows up in a household with enslaved people.
And he is also the nephew of a man named Jeremiah Lott, who owns, among other enslaved people, a young man named Samuel Anderson.
And the other portrait we have in our gallery is the great, great granddaughter of that enslaved man, Samuel Anderson.
Her name is Mildred Jones.
and we discovered this connection she has with the Lott family,
with her family's experience of slavery.
Her brother was a very talented genealogist,
discovered this connection, published about it.
Sadly, her brother, Gus Anderson, passed away,
but we were able to get in touch with Mildred,
and she agreed to have her portrait painted
at the same scale as the John Lott portrait,
which is pretty large scale.
This is about four feet long, or four feet high.
This is a large portrait.
So seeing these life-sized portraits side by side of these two families that were changed by slavery, we hope is really impactful.
Dominique, as we mentioned, the exhibit is titled Traces, Family History Research and the Legacy of Slavery.
Are you encouraging people to come there to help trace their family history?
We've definitely recognized that family history and researching it can be painful.
Sometimes you uncover things that you didn't know, that you maybe didn't want to know.
But what we're trying to do is explain why it's valuable to do so.
And in conjunction with the exhibition, we'll also be holding a number of genealogy workshops
in partnership with Augs, New York that will help train people to use the various research databases
and other resources that are available through the Brooklyn Public Library to trace their own family history.
But on the other side, the exhibition really underscores how important it is for people to be doing their family history because it
teaches all of us a little bit more of a fuller picture about the past. There are things we know,
and some of that is in the exhibition, about how census documents or slave bills of sale can
explain to us the who, what, when, where, why of slavery. But some of that family history and
the way people go about, the care people put into researching their own family's history
really helps us to tell a fuller story. Our guest has been Dominique John Louise. She's the chief
historian at the Center for Brooklyn History. Dominic, thank you so much for this.
Thank you so much, Michael. This has been lovely. That's Michael Hill in conversation with
Dominique Jean-Louis, the chief historian at the Center for Brooklyn History.
Thanks for listening to NYC now from WNYC. I'm Sean Carlson. We'll be back on Monday. Have a good
weekend.
