ENCO BALACIC

Enco Balacic passed away on Saturday August 5, 2023 at the age of 80. Beloved husband of Celestina Balacic, loving brother of Onorato Jelovcic, Valnea Smilovic and the late Celestina Travalja, and also survived by many loving nieces and nephews. In Lieu of Flowers, memorial donations may be made to: American Cancer Society.  Mass of Christian Burial offered at St. Mary’s Church on Thursday, August 10, 2023, Private Cremation followed at Fresh Pond Crematory, Middle Village, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 720-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth NY 11378.

DANIEL JOHN PRENDERGAST

Daniel John Prendergast passed away on Saturday, July 22, 2023 at theage of 40. Devoted husband of Marie Prendergast, adoring father of Alannah and Lauren, cherished son of Kathleen and Dan and loving brother of Christine. Deeply missed and mourned by his adoring family, brothers-in-law Adrian (Mahony) and Ciaran (Walsh), nephews Paddy, Conor and CJ, niece Ali, relatives, neighbors near and far, and his many, many friends. May Dan’s larger-than-life, gentle soul Rest in Eternal Peace. In Lieu of Flowers, memorial donations may be made to: Irish Cancer Society -or- American Cancer Society. Funeral Services held at Papavero Funeral Home on Friday, July 28, 2023 from 6-9pm. Interment followed at Shanagolden Cemetery, Shanagolden, Co. Limerick, Ireland under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY.

MARY L. WILEY

Mary L. Wiley passed away on Thursday, July 27, 2023 at the age of 83. Beloved wife of Herbert Wiley, loving mother of Michael Wiley, Edward Wiley, Donna Wiley and Joseph Wiley, mother-in-law of Kathleen, Lorraine and Dawn, cherished grandmother of Jennifer, Jaclyn, Daniel, Joseph, Ronan and Ian, and great-grandmother of Amelia, Savannah, Lillian, Mackenzie and Scarlett. Mass of Christian Burial offered at St. Mary’s Church on Monday, July 31, 2023 at 9:45 AM. Interment followed at Calvary Cemetery, Woodside, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY

JULIO CESAR FERNANDEZ

Julio Cesar Fernandez passed away on Friday, July 21, 2023 at the age of 82. Beloved husband of Andrea Isabel Fernandez, loving father of Kenneth Lew Fernandez, Jenny Rose Barranco and Katherine Sorelly Fernandez, father-in-law of Gladys Fernandez and David Barranco, cherished grandfather of Kenneth Brandon, Krysten, Jessica and Karem, adored great-grandfather of Kathalyn, Kelvin, Kiliana and Katherine, and dear brother of Maritza, Mario, Livardo, Ruth, Carlos and Cesar. Mass of Christian Burial offered at St. Fidelis Church on Monday, July 31, 2023 at 10:30 AM. Interment followed at St. Charles Cemetery, Farmingdale, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY.

Court Reporter Symposium Kicks Off Amid Worker Shortage

two black tables sit before a black backdrop with "AM970" written in white in a grid pattern. A tablecloth on the table to the right reads "AM970, THE ANSWER, NEWS. OPINION. PASSION." Six people sit at the tables, some wearing headphones.

The panel at the symposium.

By Carmo Moniz | news@queensledger.com

The Court Reporter Symposium returned to Plaza College in Forest Hills for its seventh year on Friday, amid a current national shortage of people in the profession.

Court reporters exist at every level of the court system, and are responsible for creating official transcripts of legal proceedings. There is currently a shortage of around 5,000 court reporters across the country, with an estimated 27,000 in the industry, according to the National Court Reporters Association.

The event featured prominent figures in the court reporting industry in a discussion moderated by celebrity lawyers Arthur Aidala and Kevin McCullough, both Fox News legal commentators.

Plaza College has the largest court reporting program in the country, and is the last remaining court reporting school in New York City. The school’s program began when it took over the New York Career Institute’s program in 2016, according to Plaza College Court Reporting Program Adviser Karen Santucci.

“We thought it was important to let the court reporting community know that we were the only school left in the New York City area,” Santucci said in an interview. “This field is a field that most people don’t know about, the job opportunities are endless, and the problem is getting the word out.”

Nationally, court reporters can earn anywhere from around $30,000 to over $100,000 per year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. In the same data, salaries were found to be on the higher end in New York, averaging out at around $106,000.
David Gordon, said it took him about four years to get to typing at a rate of 225 words per minute, the program’s requirement for graduation. Gordon said that he recently took a job at the grand jury across the street from the school.

“You don’t even need to graduate to get a job, but you will get a job immediately once you finish, ” Gordon said. “It’s very very rewarding, you turn out a transcript, you look at it and it’s perfect, and you just feel good. And the money is amazing.”

Cecilia Kurtz, who is currently enrolled in the program, said she is hoping to graduate by the end of the year.

“It’s definitely a lot of work, you definitely need dedication and practice,” Kurtz said. “Everybody keeps saying that there’s a shortage and pushing us to get out of class, get out of school, practice.”

Less than 10 years ago, in 2014, the number of court reporters was enough to address demand across the country, according to a report sponsored by the National Court Reporters Association. The same report estimated that there would be a shortage of 5,500 court reporters by 2018, only a small overprediction of today’s numbers.

In New York’s court system, the shortage means that court reporters are not guaranteed to be available to cover arguments on motions, according to the New York State Unified Court System website. Assistant Supervisor of the Queens Grand Jury Pam Fuller said that court reporters play a critical role in grand jury operations.

“You just need to really be able to take down testimony at 175 words a minute,” Fuller said. “[Grand jury proceedings] require an exact record of what occurred in each case that is being presented to a grand jury, so, with that you are really gearing yourself for lower courts and then moving on to the Supreme Court.”

New York State Court Reporters Association president Reid Goldsmith, who worked as a court reporter in the New York State Queens Supreme Court for nearly 40 years before retiring, said that he is not concerned about technology like artificial intelligence taking over court reporting jobs because the quality those technologies provide is not as high.

“We are often seen but not heard, so the tendency is to overlook us as a profession,” Goldsmith said in an interview. “But we’re at the front row of everything.”

Delivery and Rideshare Workers Demand Exemption from Congestion Tax

A group of around 30 people protest outdoors while holding signs. A tent is visible behind them.

Rideshare workers protesting outside MTA headquarters.

By Carmo Moniz | news@queensledger.com

Delivery and rideshare app workers are demanding to be exempt from the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s planned congestion tax, a fee ranging from $8 to $23 that will be charged to anyone entering Manhattan from below 60th Street.

These workers already pay a for-hire transportation specific tax of $2.75 every time they enter the city from below 96th Street, and are urging the MTA not to impose an additional tax. The agency has not yet decided on what groups will be exempt from the tax, and has received requests for exemption from more than 120 different groups.

On Wednesday, the same day the MTA’s Traffic Mobility Review Board held a public hearing to discuss the details of the congestion pricing plan, dozens of drivers with the organization Justice for App Workers took to the agency’s headquarters to voice their frustrations.

“We understand, the MTA needs money, but we can’t be the people that they turn to to get the money all the time,” said Justice for App Workers co-chair Naomi Ogutu. “We are people who don’t want trouble, but then every time they want to come to us to get extra taxes, they want to get extra money from us, for how long are we going to be milked by this city?”

The MTA is currently projected to have close to a $3 billion budget gap by 2025 due to declining fare revenue and COVID-19 funds drying up.

Larry Penner, a transportation advocate and who worked in the transit industry for over 30 years, said the different groups looking to receive exemptions are creating “tremendous political pressure” for the MTA to grant them, but that allowing more exemptions will lead to less revenue.

“You need political clout,” Penner said in an interview. “It’s a question of who their lobbyists are and who their elected officials are.”

The congestion pricing plan is expected to bring $15 billion in revenue for the MTA’s capital plan, which is aimed at improving public transit infrastructure. It could be implemented as soon as this coming spring.

“The number of taxi and For-Hire Vehicle trips has doubled in recent years while travel speeds in Manhattan dropped precipitously,” MTA spokesperson John J. McCarthy said in a statement. “Congestion pricing provides a solution and improves mass transit for the vast majority of people.”

The plan was recently hit with a lawsuit from New Jersey officials claiming that it would unfairly impact the state’s residents, both financially and environmentally. The federal lawsuit calls for a more in-depth environmental review of the pricing plan, and was followed by a similar lawsuit from Staten Island Borough President Vito Fossella.

McCarthy denied that not enough study was done ahead of the federal government’s approval of the plan, adding that New Jersey residents and public officials had multiple opportunities to voice their concerns during the outreach process.

“This lawsuit is baseless,” McCarthy said in a statement. “We’re confident the federal approval — and the entire process — will stand up to scrutiny.”

Asad Ijaz, a Brooklyn native who has been driving for Uber and Lyft for over nine years, said that the tax would prevent him from picking up larger fares in Manhattan and keep him confined to driving in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx.

“We are delivering New Yorkers from point A to point B, if we have to go empty-handed to Manhattan that’s going to be unfair,” Ijaz said. “The only thing is to keep fighting with the MTA not to implement this, we have to gather and we have to fight.”

A day before the protest, five Brooklyn pols signed a letter to the TMRB chair calling for the congestion tax pass down to passengers using services like Uber and Lyft, rather than be paid by drivers.

The politicians, including Greenpoint Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and North Brooklyn State Senator Julia Salazar, proposed increasing the $2.75 tax that drivers already pay when entering from below 96th Street, with the added cost being paid by the passenger. Discounts would be provided at night, and yellow cab rides would be exempt from the added tax under the proposal in the letter.

“Our view is that taking an Uber from Tribeca to Central Park is a luxury and should be priced as such,” the letter reads. “Concerns about worker dislocation should be taken with utmost seriousness during the shift to new policies and technologies, but we should not accept the argument that polluting industries be protected for the sake of preserving jobs and profits.”

Another group of 16 politicians representing communities in Brooklyn, including Gallagher, Salazar and councilmember Lincoln Restler, signed a letter addressed to the TMRB calling for tolling fees to be equalized across entrances to Manhattan.

“We are focused on making sure that no single crossing into Manhattan disproportionately bears the burden of traffic,” Restler said in an interview. “I hope that the Traffic Mobility Review Board will take our concerns into account as they develop policies for how congestion pricing will work.”

How Are CD Rates Changing?

CD Rates Could be Amiss

By Claire Baierl and Alison Grillo
news@queensledger.com

On the sun filled street of Fresh Pond Road in Ridgewood, sits Maspeth Federal Savings bank. It’s a small building on the corner of the street, lined with bricks and bright green shades. Just a six minute drive away is Ridgewood Savings bank, a tall building rich in history that sits right in the center of bustling Myrtle Avenue.
What makes these banks stand out from your Chase or Bank of America on practically every block of Queens? Is it the warm smiles that greet customers, the bank teller that knows your name, or could it be something more concrete, something like Credit Deposit rates.
While some may not be familiar with Credit Deposits, for others, this savings product can offer a vital influx of money each month. The type of account and rate one holds could be the difference between getting a Toyota or a Lexus.
Credit Deposits (CD) are savings accounts for those that want to hold a lump sum in the bank for a fixed period of time. The bank, in turn, pays the holder interest on that lump sum. And yet, this rate of interest is constantly changing.
CD rates fluctuate depending on a variety of factors, and in the past two-decades, bankers have seen dramatic highs and lows. The 1980s saw one of the highest rate increases in over 60 years. Rates rose to double digits, banks were giving out 3-month CDs at 18.65% at its peak.
On the other side of the spectrum, after the housing crisis of 2008, banks were flush with cash infusion bailouts given to stabilize the economy. What this meant was that banks no longer felt dependent on competitive interest rates to bring in deposits. And with banks less focused on attracting CD accounts, interest rates on these accounts fell to record lows between 0.20-0.30%.
These fluctuations are based on a variety of factors. At its most basic level, the CD rate one receives depends on the CD length. In the past, at times of economic stability borrowers often received higher rates the longer they kept their money in the account.
Another main driver of what rate a CD can earn is the Federal Funds Rate. This rate, determined by the Federal Reserve, can change up to eight times a year depending on the economic stability of the country. As the funds rate rises, banks often follow suit.
Another factor is changes in the Treasury yield, the interest rate the government pays on its debt. Similar to the Federal Funds Rate, as the interest for Treasury yield increases, CD rates increase as well.
Banks sometimes find it hard to attract customers and CD rates are one way they can draw in borrowers. Competition among banks is another factor that affects rates, the higher the rate, the more competitive stand in the market.
Competition between banks can be dramatic, with some rates for national banks such as Bank Of America as low as 0.02% for a 12 month fixed term CD with a minimum deposit of $1,000 versus at your local Ridgewood Savings Bank, one can open a 12 month CD at a rate of 4.25% with a minimum balance of 100$.
For Neil Hect, a Gowanus native, CD rate competition has about everything to do with where he banks. You won’t catch him in a Bank of America either, as a former local bank manager, he joked, “I wanted our slogan to be, ‘we won’t screw you like bank America will.”
“Higher interest rates do bring about a competitive nature for banks, causing clients to feel if they want higher rates they have to move, or open up several banking relationships,” said Anna-Marie Vallone, vice president of First Central Savings Bank, which has branches throughout Queens.
With the rise in demand for high yielding CDs in our current economic cycle, rates between banks have risen fast enough to constitute a “CD war,” said Christian Hernandez, vice president and director for retail banking at Maspeth Federal Savings Bank.
And yet, as more and more customers seek the highest rates possible, banks that cannot compete are left in the dust. “Everybody is now hurting the banks by trying to find better interest rates,” said Hect. “Your little bank down the street needs to make loans. They need to get deposits,” he urged.
There are large differences between certain banks, whether a local branch or your neighborhood Bank of America, each with their own perks and disadvantages. But one thing is certain, banks need funds, whatever that source may be.
For your local bank, one of these ways to maintain funds can be the lending of deposits such as a CD. And often, income will come from borrowing deposits at a low rate for shorter term investments while lending for long-term investments at a higher rate. Yet in our economy today, this is where the story begins to complicate.
“In a perfect world, when somebody sits in economics class, they’re taught the time-value of money. The longer you agree to lock in your money, the higher the rate of interest you should expect,” said Mark Sanchioni, Chief Banking Officer for Ridgewood Savings Bank. “Right now, that principle is not holding true.”
In our current economy, CD rates are in a uniquely confusing state. Now, shorter-term investments often have higher interest rates than their long-term counterparts. This phenomenon is called the inverted yield curve.
The inverted yield curve is a downward-trending curve that displays for investors in simple terms the differences between yields on bonds of different maturities. This doesn’t happen often, but when the curve inverts, it is a sign of something amiss.
Since 1978, the yield curve has only inverted six times in total not including this current term, and a recession has followed shortly after in each of those cases. The current market shows a steeply curved inversion, which explains the current high rates of over 5% returns.
“Bankers need to be careful,” said Sanchioni. “We’re always mindful of what our loans are earning, and what our deposits pay. You want to make sure the numbers aren’t inverted.”
And yet, past performances do not always guarantee a future recession. The last inversion was in 2019, and while a short recession did follow, many other factors were in play at the time that could have been a part of the cause.
While the future is still up in the air, borrowers still have time to take advantage of the current high rates. “I do see deposit rates stabilizing and plateauing, and then I see them decreasing. I do not see them going up,” said Hernandez.
As for a recession, no one can be sure.
“Is it gonna start next week? I hope not,” said Hect. “I’ve got two second interviews lined up next week and if a recession shows up next week, they may cancel one or both. I want to get a job.”

 

 

 

GERALD F. McNAMARA

Gerald F. McNamara passed away on Tuesday, July 18, 2023 at the age of 80. Beloved husband of the late Louise McNamara and loving father of Teresa McNamara. Mr. McNamara was a United State Marine Corps Veteran who served during the Vietnam Era. In Lieu of Flowers, memorial donations may be made to: St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Mass of Christian Burial offered at St. Mary’s Church on Friday, July 21, 2023 at 10 AM. Interment followed at Calverton National Cemetery, Calverton, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY 11378.

LEO E. FRANCISCI

Leo E. Francisci passed away on Thursday, July 20, 2023 at the age of 76. Beloved husband of Carol Jean Francisci, loving father of Christie Straviskufis, Steven Francisci, Thomas Francisci and Tara Buete, cherished grandfather of Anthony, Christian, Juliette, Giavanna, Ava, Alisa, Charlie, Mason and Eason, dear brother of Bruno Francisci, and also survived by many loving nieces, nephews, cousins and friends. Mr. Francisci was a United State Navy Veteran during the Vietnam War. In Lieu of Flowers, memorial donations may be made to: Wounded Warrior Project. Mass of Christian Burial offered at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church on Monday, July 24, 2023 at 10 AM. Interment followed at Calvary Cemetery, Woodside, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth NY 11378.

ANA ANGELICA PEREZ

Ana Angelica Perez passed away on Saturday, July 1, 2023 at the age of 89. Beloved wife of Israel Perez, loving mother of Vilma Perez and Madeline Perez, cherished sister of Monserrate Acevedo and Antonio Ruiz, also survived by numerous nieces, nephews, grand nieces and grand nephews. A Mass of Christian Burial ws offered at Most Holy Trinity Church, 138 Montrose Avenue, Brooklyn, NY on Friday, July 7, 2023. Interment followed at St. John Cemetery, Middle Village, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth NY 11378.

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