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The Pratt Center welcomes media inquiries. Please contact Myles Lennon with requests to speak to our experts on community and economic development in New York City.

Pratt Center Helps Local Manufacturer Secure Sizable Contracts

News last updated April 16, 2013

 

In the spring of 2012, Pratt Center’s Made In NYC initiative released a company profile of Carry Hot, a thermal delivery bag manufacturer based in NYC. The company profile brought attention to Carry Hot’s innovative products, and helped the Manhattan-based company win a sizable contract with the New York City Department of Education. And they are very close to winning several other contracts with other U.S. cities. We’re pleased to report that these new contracts will create over a dozen quality manufacturing jobs for New Yorkers. At the same time, Carry Hot’s thermal delivery bags will now keep more public school lunches hot and fresh. The Pratt Center is proud to support local manufacturers like Carry Hot through our Made In NYC initiative. The original company profile is below. 

Carry Hot   511 West 33rd Street  New York, NY 10001   www.carryhot. com

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Rebuild an Equitable and Just New York City!

News last updated January 15, 2013

The Pratt Center for Community Development joined over 50 community, faith, labor, environmental organizations, elected officials and New Yorkers affected by Sandy on Tuesday, January 8 at City Hall to announce recommendations for a just and equitable rebuilding of New York City

These recommendations, also released in a joint open letter the week of December 31, call on the City to rebuild New York’s infrastructure to address economic inequality and to include affected communities in a transparent process when making decisions that impact their neighborhoods. Our recommendations ask not just for increased but equitable investment, focusing on the hardest hit communities first. This increased investment should create new jobs to help regrow the damaged economy. The broad alliance of sinatories request immediate relief for residents displaced from their homes or without power and heat as well as increased transportation options and access to food and fresh water. Finally, we urge the City to build sustainable infrastructure, and have continuously stressed the importance of transparency and community input when making decisions. The same diverse group of labor, community and faith-based organizations who worked on the drafting of these recommendations should be consulted by the City in their rebuilding efforts.

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Making It Cool: Generation Z Meets Manufacturing

News last updated December 11, 2012

 

On November 12, Pratt Center Director Adam Friedman participated in a webinar panel on engaging members of Generation Z (young people born between 1990-2002) in the field of sustainable manufacturing. The panel took the following questions as a catalyst for discussion: what makes manufacturing cool? How do we get today’s youth excited about new opportunities in manufacturing? The discussion was led by Anita Brown-Graham, director of the Institute for Emerging Issues.  

Manufacturers and allied organizations are concerned that young people come to the workforce armed with a variety of stereotypes and other assumptions that make them less inspired to take on careers in manufacturing. They worry that manufacturing is not in-keeping with the values of sustainability and environmental protection and preservation. Manufacturing portends a lack of job-security as evidenced by massive layoffs and the closing of plants and production facilities in decades past. But as Mr. Friedman pointed out, manufacturing now seeks to merge environmental and economic concerns. Manufacturers are at the forefront of green infrastructure and design, creating sustainable products for a variety of uses while facilities are complying with new environmental standards aimed at increasing productivity and efficiency while protecting and improving the natural environment.  The entire webnar is featured below.

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Your Holiday Shopping Can Help Rebuild NYC!

News last updated November 27, 2012

 

While we have seen a robust and inspiring recovery effort from Superstorm Sandy, many of New York City’s communities remain without shelter, heat, electricity, and food. We urge you to donate or volunteer here to help address the most urgent needs. But you can also help rebuild the city by doing your holiday shopping through Made In NYC

The city’s small manufacturers are critical to a healthy diverse economy with good jobs for New Yorkers, and to the character and soul of our neighborhoods. Yet Sandy threatened many of these businesses’ ability to operate, and in some cases, to survive. Many lost all their inventory, supplies and equipment at what is often their busiest season.

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Ron Shiffman, Receives 2012 Jane Jacobs Medal for Lifetime Leadership

News last updated October 17, 2012

On October 11, 2012, The Rockefeller Foundation President, Judith Rodin announced: Ron Shiffman, the founder of the Pratt Center for Community Development, is the recipient of the 2012 Jane Jacobs Medal for Lifetime Leadership. The medal recognizes his lifetime of achievement and leadership in promoting community-based activism.

As a student in the early 1960s, Mr. Shiffman, along with Professor George Raymond and others, worked on a study of Bedford-Stuyvesant, anticipating an urban renewal program planned for the neighborhood by the city's planning agencies. In partnership with the community, Shiffman and the Pratt planning school team developed a comprehensive plan to rebuild Bedford-Stuyvesant through economic development programs that became a model for the creation of community development corporations today. Mr. Shiffman’s work in Bedford-Stuyvesant inspired him and Prof. Raymond to found the Pratt Center in 1964. The Center is proud to carry on his legacy through its efforts to create a more equitable New York City.

This announcement comes parallel to the recent publication of Beyond Zuccotti Park: Freedom of Assembly and the Occupation for Public Space and the launch of the Democracy, Equity and Public Space initiative on which Mr. Shiffman is a lead editor and organizer. Democracy, Equity and Public Space is a collaborative initiative to promote discourse on public spaces as hubs for civic and political engagement through the publication of Beyond Zuccotti Park and through a national program of public forums, exhibits, and public policy advocacy. For more information on the book and the collaborative initiative, click here

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The Sheridan Expressway Saga - a community fights to be sustainable

News last updated September 20, 2012

 

In June, Pratt Center joined our partners, members of the Southern Bronx River Watershed Alliance (SBRWA), and walked out of a meeting in protest of the City’s announcement that its federally-funded TIGER study would exclude further consideration of removing the Sheridan Expressway. The SBRWA is a coalition of community-based and citywide organizations that has worked together since 1997 to create a new vision for the Sheridan Expressway corridor– an underutilized highway that is part of a transportation system that serves neither truckers nor community residents well.

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The Mural Mile program - empowering a community

News last updated September 18, 2012

 

In August, ARTS East New York, with the support of Pratt Center and the Rockefeller Cultural Innovation Fund, launched The Mural Mile program – an empowerment and community beautification initiative along Livonia Avenue, considered by most residents a dark and dangerous stretch plagued with crime. As part of the initiative, young men of the East New York community will research, examine and discuss the poetry and speeches of noted African American and Latino artists and learn how to interpret that work into visual imagery to bring their artistic vision to fruition. On August 17, Pratt Center took part in ARTs East New York’s unveiling of a new mural to start the program.

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Plan to Raze Sheridan Left on the Side of the Road

News last updated June 29, 2012

Two Pratt Center Experts, Elena Conte, Organizer for Public Programs, and Joan Byron Director of Policy, were quoted in a WNYC story on the Sheridan Expressway in the Bronx, New York. Activists have been working on a plan to tear the highway down and redevelop the site as residential and park land. The city, meanwhile, has removed the plan from consideration due to traffic concerns. To read or listen to the full story, click here.

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Urban Manufacturing Alliance

News last updated June 12, 2012

 

In cities across the U.S., the public and private sectors are working together to grow small manufacturers and create thousands of good jobs through innovative land use strategies, local branding, and sustainable product design.

The Urban Manufacturing Alliance (UMA) builds off this momentum by connecting small business advocates, city governments, manufacturing associations, and urban industrial experts to:

  •  Develop and advance public policy and non-legislative initiatives to grow the urban manufacturing sector at the local and federal levels; and 
  • Build a networking platform and communication infrastructure for sharing best practices and connecting U.S. cities around urban manufacturing.

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Verde Summit Gives Voice to Cypress Hills and East New York Residents

News last updated February 7, 2012

On October 21st and 22nd, 2011, over 200 Cypress Hills and East New York community members came together to re-envision the way their neighborhoods look, feel and work at the Cypress Hills Local Development Corporation (CHLDC)’s Verde Summit, an inclusive, bi-lingual community planning event held at the Cypress Hills Community School. Pratt Center worked closely with CHLDC to plan the summit, with sponsorship from the Brooklyn Community Foundation. The Summit incorporated themes that were revealed by more than 600 responses to a Community Satisfaction Survey, designed by Pratt Center and conducted by CHLDC during the spring and summer of 2011, which assessed resident concerns about living, working, eating and learning in their neighborhoods.

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