SCS News

  • The Office of Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez honored Michelle Bova, Director of Marketing and Community Relations for Sunnyside Community Services, for helping her neighbors during Covid-19. 

    Michelle has organized food deliveries and distributions for low-income residents, developed new partnerships with organizations and supermarkets, and reached out to local politicians to create a coordinated effort for food resourcews within our community.

    Read more about Michelle and her committment to helping her neighbors on Facebook.

     

     

  • June (Shun Hing), a home health worker at Sunnyside Community Services Home Care, was honored by the New York Yankees at a home game against the Boston Red Sox for her work as a front-line healthcare hero. Our home health aides have put in incredible amounts of work during this crisis, and they are truly front-line lifelines for the people for whom they care. Our sincere thanks to all of them for ‘stepping up to the plate’ during this crisis.

    Watch a short video of the special event.

     

  • Judy Zangwill, executive director for Sunnyside Community Services, and Shyvonne Noboa, division director for senior services at Sunnyside Community Services, spoke with City Limits reporter Roshan Abraham about the cut in the city’s budget for previously promised money for senior services. With seniors at high risk during the coronavirus crisis, Judy Zangwill says “It’s the worst time to cut services.” Read the full article online.

  • The Queens County Politics website explores how senior service providers like Sunnyside Community Services face government budget cuts amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The author of this piece spoke to a number of people at Sunnyside Community Services, including Executive Director Judith Zangwill, Associate Director of Development Monica Guzman, and Director of Sunnyside Community Services Senior Center Kerly Serrano. 

    Read the full article online. 

  • We as a nation, community, organization, and individuals are deeply hurting and, once again, deeply enraged. Emotions are raw right now, and most of us are in pain. For some, that pain is very personal and frighteningly real. The murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Abrey are brutal reminders of the evil racism that exists. The racist incident in Central Park could have easily had just as deadly an outcome. Tragically, none of this is new. There have been countless atrocities perpetuated where people have screamed; enough is enough. But we are still failing the most vulnerable. In 2020, and with heavy hearts, we are still enraged. Enough is enough!

    We are still in a pandemic that has particularly impacted black and Latino communities. There are so many things that need to be examined and addressed, so this nation can truly live up to its ideals.

    Our vision and mission at Sunnyside Community Services envisions diverse, inclusive, and caring communities where all people thrive and reach their fullest potential; to enrich lives and strengthen communities through services and engagement of individuals at all ages, beginning with those most in need. Never has the mission of SCS been more urgent in ensuring the needs of dignity, respect, safety, opportunity, being valued, heard, and seen.

    With many of us working and learning from home, it is even more difficult to vent and share our feelings. I am especially concerned about the young people we serve. While this is happening, we are also fighting against budget cuts to our programs that engage our community in meaningful ways. It is going to take all of us to be part of a movement to effect real change, address systemic inequalities, and acknowledge that Black Lives Matter.

    Sunnyside Community Services stands ready to be part of the conversation and solution.

    Judy Zangwill

    Executive Director, Sunnyside Community Services

  • The New York Times gives insight into the lives of home health aids in New York City, many of whom live in poverty or near it. When New York City public schools closed, Cindy Urena, a home health aide for Sunnyside Community Services, had to choose between seeing a client with severe epilepsy or leaving her 7-year-old daughter alone at home.

    Read the fuil article online.

  • The New York Times examines how steps to prevent the spread of Covid-19 increase teh risks of social isolation, particularly in seniors. Normally, programs for seniors aim to increase human contact, but during the pandemic, on-site programs have had to be cancelled. The Times spoke with our Executive Director Judy Zangwill, as well as with Sarah Arico, who regularly visits our senior center. 

    Read the article online.

  • Sunnyside Community Services and Sunnyside Post hosted a panel discussion on January 14 for members of the community to meet the candidates for the office of Queens Borough President: Costa Constantinides, Elizabeth Crowley, Anthony Miranda, James Quinn, Donovan Richards, and Jimmy Van Bramer. All candidates had the opportunity to address their positions on various topics of interest and reply to questions supplied by attendees. The event was live-streamed on the Sunnyside Community Services Facebook page. You can watch here.

  • New York, NY— Sunnyside Community Services is pleased to announce it has received a $150,000 award from the NYC Complete Count Fund — a partnership between CUNY, Mayor Bill de Blasio and the New York City Council. The NYC Complete Count Fund is a first-of-its-kind Census-related community organizing program that will support and resource community-based organizations to help NYC reach a full and accurate count in the 2020 Census. These funds will support Sunnyside Community Services’ outreach and engagement efforts to make sure that local western Queens residents are counted.

    The Complete Count Fund was built with the understanding that local community-based organizations — which serve New Yorkers in the communities where they live and in the languages that they speak — are the most trusted messengers of important and sensitive information.

    Sunnyside Community Services is proud to join this coordinated citywide effort to build awareness about the census, convey its importance, fight the spread of mis- and disinformation, and help bridge the digital divide that might prevent many New Yorkers from participating in next year’s first online census.

    “Advocacy is an important part of Sunnyside Community Services’ efforts to protect our community, especially vulnerable populations, and help make sure that all voices are represented,” said Judy Zangwill, SCS executive director. “Having our community accurately counted will ensure we have adequate resources for members’ needs to be met.  Thanks to this award, we will conduct census education with local residents, focusing on reaching immigrants, homebound seniors, and public housing residents. You will see our multilingual census outreach workers at local events, public plazas, and schools. Our Center in Sunnyside will lead computer workshops and host lab time for people who need a secure internet connection to complete their census forms, and we’ll have trained staff to help answer questions.”

    A complete and accurate count is critical to the future of New York City. The census will determine how more than $650 billion in federal funds for public education, public housing, roads and bridges, and more, gets distributed annually throughout the country. It will also determine the number of seats each state is allocated in the House of Representatives (and thus, the Electoral College). Based on current estimates, an undercount could cost the State of New York up to two congressional seats.

    In such a complex city, enriched by such linguistic and cultural diversity, New York City’s full participation in the first online census faces a unique set of challenges. As New Yorkers, we have embraced these challenges as an opportunity. Together, these citywide efforts will lay the groundwork for a civic engagement apparatus that will continue well beyond the 2020 census.

    The Complete Count Fund will launch in early January with an all-day kick-off event and training.

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    About Sunnyside Community Services

    Sunnyside Community Services (SCS) is a community-based nonprofit centered on the belief that every person deserves meaningful support to achieve their aspirations – especially struggling families and individuals. SCS serves a diverse community of over 16,000 people of all ethnicities and income levels throughout Queens with programs that range from pre-K to college and career readiness, home care and home health aide training, Beacon and Cornerstone community centers for children and families, a vibrant senior center and full range of services for at-risk older adults including social adult day care for individuals with Alzheimer’s, and a city-wide program of supportive services for those who care for them.  With programs designed to enrich lives and strengthen communities through services and engagement for individuals of all ages, beginning with those most in need, SCS has been lighting up lives with programs as diverse as the people they serve since 1974.  For more information visit scsny.org or email info@scsny.org.

    About NYC Census 2020
    NYC Census 2020 was established as a first-of-its-kind organizing initiative by Mayor de Blasio to ensure a complete and accurate count of all New Yorkers in the 2020 Census. The program is built on four pillars: (1) a community-based awards program, The New York City Complete Count Fund; (2) an in-house “Get Out the Count” field campaign; (3) an innovative, multi-lingual, tailored messaging and marketing; as well as (4) an in-depth Agency and Partnerships engagement plan that seeks to leverage the power of the City’s 350,000-strong workforce and the city’s major institutions, including libraries, hospitals, faith-based, cultural institutions, and higher educational institutions, and more, to communicate with New Yorkers about the critical importance of census participation.

  • Great Turnout for the Annual Sunnyside Post Mile

    This popular, family-friendly event, co-organized by the Sunnyside Post, the Woodside Sunnyside Runners and Sunnyside Community Services, started at Lou Lodati Park on 43rd Street and finished on Skillman Avenue and 44th Street on October 5, 2019.

    For more pictures, information about the race, and even more pictures, please click here