CIty & State - May 13, 2013

Page 8

T H E F I V E B O R O U G H B A L LOT

MOTT HAVEN, THE BRONX CAMAGUEY RESTAURANT

Voters in Mott Haven are undecided about the mayor’s race, but they know what they want in their next mayor: the good of Bloomberg without the bad. BY MATTHEW J. PERLMAN

On a sunny Saturday in April, Gloria Cruz walked past St. Mary’s Park in Mott Haven on her way to Camaguey Restaurant. Kids were playing outside. Mothers went by pushing strollers. Cruz was talking about gun legislation and the recent debate in Washington. “It’s a national issue now,” she said. “But it’s been a problem here for a long time.” A stray bullet killed her niece in 2005, only blocks away. The next year Cruz began helping organize the Bronx chapter of the Million Mom March, an event that honors those lost to gun violence and raises awareness about the issue. Inside Camaguey Restaurant on 138th Street, sitting in a booth along the mirrored wall, Cruz talked about recent setbacks to national gun control, and the frustration it made her feel. “I spent the whole afternoon talking to crying mothers,” she said. Closer to home, Cruz feels Mayor Bloomberg is doing a better job. “He’s addressing the needs he needs to address,” she said. “He wants to make the city he

loves better, safer and viable.” She doesn’t know which candidate she’ll support in the upcoming mayoral election. She doesn’t know them well enough yet. “I haven’t heard their visions for the future,” she said. She says that’s because the candidates haven’t come to her community. “We’re the bottom of the barrel,” she said. “If they want to know what’s going on in the community, they have to be here.” Whoever gets elected, there are a few things she hopes they know a lot about: education, business and city planning. “Or they should surround themselves with the right people,” she added, something she said Bloomberg has done well. Cruz also appreciates the mayor’s pragmatism, citing his Young Men’s Initiative, a private-public partnership that connects black and Latino young men to educational, employment and mentoring programs. Cruz sees it as an example of the mayor perceiving a need and finding the money to get it fixed. “I’m hoping the next mayor is just as proactive,” she said. On a different day in Camaguey, the television plays a soap opera as customers order plates of yellow rice with roasted chicken or bowls of savory orange stew. Bernard Aguero, an electrician from Woodside, finishes his lunch and fiddles with his cell phone. “My ideal mayor would fix the education system,” he said. Aguero’s daughter is hearing-impaired, and he sends her to a private school so she can receive the attention of a specialized program. “The public standards are so low,” he

said about special education in the city. “I understand that my kid is my responsibility, but if the city could help…” He trailed off, shaking his head. “I hope it changes.” For Aguero, the problems with city schools are related to a wider sense that Bloomberg’s New York City caters to the upper crust—a common refrain in Mott Haven. “He’s helping the high class of New York, but he’s doing nothing in the boroughs,” he said. The music in Camaguey in the late afternoons fades in and out like the stream of regular customers. It alternates between salsa and pop songs. A familiar fixture sits on one of the counter stools: Vicente Mino, 68. Mino, a retired mechanic, lives in an apartment above the restaurant. During a lull, he talked about the possibility of former Rep. Anthony Weiner entering the mayor’s race. “These guys always make mistakes,” he said. “They’re never going to change. That’s it.” Mino said that a business background is good preparation for a mayor. “They know how to run a company, so they know how to run a city,” he said. But, he adds, he has had enough of Bloomberg. “What is he? A dictator?” Mino moved from Ecuador about 40 years ago, and has lived in Mott Haven for three decades. He says the neighborhood used to look like World War II. It’s gotten better, he says, but problems persist. “Number one,” he said, counting on his hand, “has to be the drugs. It keeps young people on the streets.” He has yet to choose a candidate for the election, and also said it seems like the campaigns are all focusing on Manhattan. “None of them come here to see what’s going on,” he

said. Later in the evening, as the music in Camaguey grows louder and more consistently salsa, Angel Ortiz, 53, makes small talk at the counter. The television plays a movie, but the volume is either turned off or completely drowned out. The bad thing about picking somebody to make decisions for you, he said, a smile breaking across his face, “is they aren’t you.” To make the process better, he said, the candidates should talk to all the communities they want to represent. “Politicians are the ones who create the environment that people live in, and people need to know about the decisions being made for them,” he said. Ortiz doesn’t have many specific requirements for the next mayor. He just hopes he or she will try to understand the needs of all New Yorkers, not just people like him- or herself. “A good mayor will recognize his shortcomings, and invite people into his cabinet that reflect the poorer communities,” he said. “We’re all in this together.”

THE FIVE

• EN ISLAND ENS • STAT • THE BRONX YN • QUE TAN BROOKL MANHAT ENS BRONX • ISLAND • YN • QUE TAN • THE BROOKL • STATEN MANHAT BRONX • QUEENS ISLAND • NX ISLAND • OKLYN • TAN • THE • STATEN • THE BRO • STATEN NX • BRO QUEENS • MANHAT HATTAN • QUEENS • THE BRO STATEN ISLAND OKLYN • ND • MAN • QUEENS HATTAN • NX • BRO ISLA YN MAN ENS BRO • EN OKL BRO ISLAND YN • QUE TAN • THE • QUEENS • STAT YN BRONX • ISLAND • BROOKL • STATEN MANHAT BROOKL OKLYN TAN • THE BRONX • • STATEN BRONX QUEENS ISLAND • BRONX • NX • BRO QUEENS • MANHAT OKLYN • TAN • THE TAN • THE • STATEN TAN • THE • THE BRO STATEN ISLAND OKLYN • NX • BRO MANHAT QUEENS • MANHAT MANHAT • QUEENS HATTAN • NX • BRO • THE BRO STATEN ISLAND ISLAND • OKLYN • YN MAN BRO ENS • EN OKL TAN BRO • ND QUE THE YN • • TAN • MANHAT NX • BRO BRONX ENS • ENS • STAT EN ISLA BROOKL YN • QUE • MANHAT EN ISLAND YN • QUE • THE BRO TAN • THE • QUEENS • STAT NX BRONX • • BROOKL MANHAT ENS • STAT TAN • THE BRO EN ISLAND BRONX • BROOKL ND • MANHATTAN YN TAN • THE ISLAND • BROOKL YN • QUE ENS • STAT • MANHAT EN ISLA • MANHAT TAN • THE BROOKL • STATEN BRONX • QUEENS YN • QUE ENS • STAT BRONX • EN ISLAND • MANHAT EN ISLAND OKLYN • TAN • THE BROOKL MANHAT ENS • STAT • THE BRONX • EN ISLAND • BROOKLYN • QUE MANHATTAN • THE • QUEENS • STAT THE BRONX • BRO ISLAND • YN • QUE YN TAN ENS • STAT TAN • BRONX • STATEN BRONX ISLAND • BROOKL • BROOKL MANHAT YN • QUE • MANHAT TAN • THE • QUEENS TAN • THE • STATEN BRONX • ISLAND • BROOKL • • MANHAT EN ISLAND NX • BROOKLYN ISLAND • MANHAT • QUEENS TAN • THE • STATEN BRONX • QUEENS BRO ENS • STAT EN ISLAND NX • BROOKLYN • MANHAT EN OKLYN • TAN • THE ND QUE THE STAT STAT • • HAT BRO • • • ISLA YN TAN MAN NX BRO ENS ENS EN BROOKL YN • QUE • MANHAT YN • QUE • THE BRO TAN • THE • QUEENS • STAT BRONX • • BROOKL MANHAT EN ISLAND BRONX • BROOKL ND • MANHATTAN YN TAN • THE ISLAND • BROOKL ENS • STAT • MANHAT EN ISLA TAN • THE • STATEN BRONX • YN • QUE ENS • STAT EN ISLAND • MANHAT TAN • THE BROOKL MANHAT ENS • STAT • THE BRONX • EN ISLAND • BROOKLYN • QUE YN • QUE • TAN NX ENS • STAT • BROOKL • MANHAT YN • QUE • THE BRO • STATEN ISLAND ND OKL TAN ISLA BRO HAT • • MAN QUEENS • STATEN BRONX OKLYN • EN ISLAND TAN • THE MANHAT ENS • STAT • THE BRONX • BRO YN • QUE TAN • BROOKL MANHAT ISLAND • STATEN

BALLOT

To follow this series as it unfolds, check back regularly at www.cityandstateny.com and www.citylimits.org, and subscribe to City & State’s morning email, First Read.

LEFT: MATTHEW PERLMAN/CITY LIMITS; RIGHT: MARC FADER

MOTT HAVEN UP FOR GRABS IN MAYOR’S RACE

Vicente Mino, a regular at Camaguey, says a business background is appealing in a mayoral candidate. But he’s had enough of the current businessman mayor. 8

MAY 13, 2013 | www.cityandstateny.com

CITY&STATE


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.