Bronx bodegas hope a pilot program can solve public safety concerns, as they serve busy and burdened communities

Bodegas in the Bronx occupy a unique space in the daily lives of residents. Bodegas perform the role of food source for a borough experiencing food scarcity and insecurity in its southern corridor, the role of a local pharmacy for minor illnesses and colds, and sometimes, a late-night therapy office for customers looking to vent.

On pay day, itโ€™s a banking hub for underbanked residents, where timely ATM withdrawals are made. Bodegas can be a daycare center, where longtime patrons in child care deserts, entrust owners and employees to look after their child during a work shift.

Depending on the day, it can be a public theater for communal hangouts, and at times, violent altercations and interactions.

โ€œMuch like a snowflake, not all bodegas are alike. And not all shifts are the same,โ€ said Hashim Ali, a longtime manager of one of the many Grand Concourse-centric bodegas. โ€œThe interactions are always different, some funny, some dangerous, some very unfortunate. โ€ฆ I remember being threatened twice in one week for money in our register. Some of my customers, after they get done with (the) ATM, might get robbed outside the store.โ€

In an effort to curb public safety incidents inside and outside the cityโ€™s bodegas, a new $1 million pilot program is offering up to $3,000 for security upgrades โ€” such as panic buttons and high-resolution cameras โ€” to participating bodegas in the South Bronx, Harlem and Washington Heights.

Applications for the Small Business Security Initiative open June 1, and funds for those upgrades will be distributed on a โ€œfirst-come, first-served basis.โ€ According to state Assemblymember Amanda Septimo, whose legislative district includes the South Bronx, applications for the program are on a rolling basis and will run until funds โ€” provided by the nonprofit Bronx Community Foundation โ€” are exhausted.

While crime incidents per bodegas are not tracked by the NYPD, small business groups and bodega associations cite an…

Read the full article here


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *