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Vol. 61 No. 2
January 10, 2026
$1.25
Riverbay Appoints New 17-Year-Old Arrested for Robbing Metro by T-Mobile Deputy General Manager Store in Co-op City On Friday morning, January 2, at approximately 11:00 a.m., the Metro by T-Mobile store in Mall #2 was robbed by a male, non-resident of Co-op City. Armed with a knife, the 17-yearold masked perpetrator entered the store, placed the female store clerk in a chokehold and threatened her, ordering her to place cell phones in a bag. He then ran out of the store with the bag of stolen merchandise worth approximately $10,000, heading towards Bartow Avenue. Officers from the Co-op City Public Safety Department (CCPD) and the 45th Precinct promptly arrived on scene and conducted a search. The male was found and apprehended by
CCPD in Garage 5. Most of the stolen cell phones were recovered. The perpetrator was arrested and transported to the 45th Precinct for processing. The teenager is charged with robbery, grand larceny, criminal possession of a weapon, obstruction of breathing snd criminal possession of stolen property. Surveillance footage from the store was instrumental in the investigation. “This was another example of the teamwork between CCPD and the 45th Precinct, as well as the exceptional work that the Officers of CCPD exhibit time and again to keep this community safe,” said CCPD Chief Andre Waring, following the arrest.
Congressman George Latimer Recognizes the Co-op City Times A proud moment for Co-op City! Thank you to Congressman George Latimer for recognizing the Co-op City Times on the U.S. House floor. This acknowledgment honors decades of community journalism and the voices of Co-op City shareholders. We’re grateful to Congressman Latimer for celebrating our work at the national level. Scan the QR code to watch the video live on Youtube. “I am deeply grateful to Congressman George Latimer for recognizing the Co-op City Times on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives. The newspaper has been serving one of the nation’s largest cooperative communities,
Co-op City, for more than four decades, and I thank Congressman Latimer for shining the light on our legacy and the important role of community journalism in strengthening civic life,” said Rozaan Boone, editor of the Co-op City Times. “This acknowledgment honors not just my work, but the dedication of our entire newsroom team, and the support of the Riverbay Board of Directors in sustaining our mission to inform and connect shareholders.”
What’s Inside: 1) Congestion Pricing One Year Impact, see pg.3 2) STAR Program Requirements. see pg.4 3) SUNY and CUNY Scholarship, see pg.5
revenue generation, and managing By DANIELLE CRUZ Riverbay has welcomed a new organizational change across multiple deputy general manager to its Man- properties. Mr. Scott also brings with him exagement team. In December 2025, Executive perience as a general manager and a General Manager Marvin L. Walton multi-site property manager. In those announced the appointment of Mr. roles, he oversaw internal operations across property portDwayne Scott to the folios and played a position. Mr. Scott key role in implebrings with him exmenting budgetary perience in property controls, preventive management, operamaintenance protions, and organizagrams, and collabotional development. ration with construc“Mr. Scott’s edution and development cational background teams. and professional exOriginally from perience highlight Baltimore, Mr. Scott diverse expertise in said that his interproperty manageDwayne Scott, ment, human sci- Deputy General Manager est in housing began early. He said he ences, and process improvements,” said EGM Walton. grew up in public housing and that he “We welcome Mr. Scott to Team Riv- started working in housing right after erbay and look forward to the many high school. Initially he had plans to contributions he will bring to the Cor- pursue a career in law, but his career poration in the role of deputy general path shifted after he gained hands-on experience in housing operations. manager.” “As a kid, I lived in public housPrior to joining Riverbay, Mr. Scott served as a regional property man- ing, and as a kid, I knew that I wanted ager, where he oversaw a portfolio to make a bigger impact,” said Mr. of properties throughout New York Scott. “So, I started working in public City. His responsibilities while in housing; that was my first job out of that role included property risk man- high school, and initially I wanted to agement, safety standards, liability be an attorney, and it changed because oversight, and directing the work of I started to enjoy the work I was doproperty managers and maintenance ing in public housing. So, I went from superintendents to ensure the timely an eligibility specialist to a property preparation of rent-ready apartments. manager, and then I worked my way He was also involved in marketing, up through the industry, learning the (Continued on page 2)
New Initiative Will Provide Free Child Care for 2-Year-Olds in NYC By DANIELLE CRUZ On Thursday, January 8, Governor Kathy Hochul and Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced 2-Care, a new program to provide free childcare for 2-year-olds in New York City as part of a broader effort to expand affordable early childhood care for families. The program will build upon the city’s existing universal pre-K and 3K programs and is intended to make high-quality childcare available to more families across the city. New York City currently offers free pre-K for 4-year-olds and free 3K for 3-year-olds through a combination of public schools and contracted community-based providers. While these programs have expanded access to early education, families with children under the age of three have largely had to rely on private childcare, which can cost tens of thousands of dollars annually. The 2-Care pro-
gram is intended to help close that gap by extending publicly funded childcare to include 2-year-olds. “There’s one thing that every family in New York can agree on, the cost of childcare is simply too high,” said Governor Hochul during the press conference. “So today, we’re working together with the mayor at this incredible place to announce the first major steps to make childcare universal, truly universal, here in New York City. As well as transforming the lives of children and parents all across the state.” Governor Hochul also announced that the state will fully fund the first two years of the program. “And today, I’m proud to announce that New York State is paying the full cost to launch 2-Care for the first time, a universal daycare for two-year-olds, as proposed by Mayor Mamdani,” said Governor Hochul. (Continued on page 7)