You are reading

Donovan Richards Unveils Transition Team for Queens Borough Presidency

Queens Borough President-elect Donovan Richards (Emil Cohen/ NYC Council Flickr)

Nov. 30, 2020 By Allie Griffin

Rockaway Council Member Donovan Richards, who won the Queens Borough President race, has put together a team of diverse leaders and experts to advise him as he prepares to take office.

Richards will look to the team members — who total more than 100 people — to shape new policy as he moves from his position on the City Council to Queens Borough Hall.

He will lean on the transition team for council before taking the reins from Acting Borough President Sharon Lee.

Richards’ team – which he unveiled Monday – includes elected officials, activists, nonprofit heads, union leaders and experts from a variety of different backgrounds and experience.

“As we look towards the future of Queens it’s so important that we have community input from every corner of our borough…,” Richards said in a statement. “There’s no question we have a tough road ahead, but with this diverse team of advocates, community leaders, and policy makers I know that we will start off on the path to success.”

The borough president-elect has chosen three co-chairs to lead his transition team — Jackson Heights Assembly Member Catalina Cruz; former Manhattan Borough President Ruth Messinger and Queens Public Library President & CEO Dennis Walcott, who previously served as NYC Schools Chancellor and Deputy Mayor.

Rhonda Binda, Chair of the organization South Asian American Voice, will serve as the executive direction overseeing the transition.

In addition to Cruz, Richards has appointed two Queens council members and another state assembly member to his transition team which includes 14 committees.

Richard’s former opponent in the borough president race, Astoria Council Member Costa Constantinides, will serve as chair of the Planning Committee that oversees land use and development.

Southeast Queens Council Member I. Daneek Miller will serve as co-chair of the Transportation Committee alongside Juan Restrepo, the Queens organizer for Transportation Alternatives. Before taking office, Miller was president of a transit union.

Both Constantinides and Miller are term-limited and must vacate their City Council seats by the end of next year.

Meanwhile newly-elected Assembly Member Khaleel Anderson will serve on two committees within the transition team. The youngest Black assembly member in New York’s history at 24 years old, Anderson was aptly named to Richard’s Youth Committee as well as his Personnel Committee.

The Personnel/Appointments Committee will be co-chaired by Franck Joseph, the Deputy Commissioner of the New York City Commission on Human Rights and Ibrahim Khan, the Chief of Staff to the New York Attorney General.

The Youth Committee will be chaired by political strategist Martha Ayon, the head of Azul Public Solutions.

Other appointees include Executive Director of the Asian American Federation Jo-Ann Yoo as chair of the Immigration Committee; Director of Communications for Council Member Danny Dromm Michael Mallon as chair of the Community Boards Committee; pastor and community leader Bishop Taylor as chair of Community Affairs; media diversity consultant Juana Ponce de Leon as chair of the Communications Committee and Executive Director of The Black Institute Bertha Lewis as chair of the External Affairs Committee.

Richards has also named VP for Communications and Marketing at Queens College Jay Hershenson as the Education Committee chair; Executive Director at Community Voices Heard Afua Atta-Mensah as chair of the Policy Committee; Executive Director of Chhaya Annetta Seecharran as chair of the Economic Development Committee; Executive Director at the Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning Cathy Hung as chair of the Tourism, Arts, Parks, Entertainment and Sports (TAPES) Committee and Major Sharon Sweeting-Lindsey, of VETS, Inc, as Chair of the Seniors and Veterans Affairs Committee.

Richards has also appointed three advisors to his transition team.

Cecilia Gentili, principal and owner at Transgender Equity Consulting, will serve as Richards’ LGBTQ+ Advisor; Mike Schweinsburg, president of the 504 Democratic Club, will serve as his Disability Advisor; and Mark Gold, venture partner at Acronym Venture Capital, will serve as his Technology Advisor.

Richards has yet to announce any cabinet picks, but members of transition teams often go on to serve as permanent members of a borough president’s administration.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

FDNY fights 2-alarm blaze in Rockaway Beach at BBQ joint with a rich history of a bygone era

The FDNY battled a two-alarm blaze at a restaurant in Rockaway Beach that stirred up some ghosts for residents of the neighborhood.

The fire broke out just after 7 p.m. at the Smoke and Barrel BBQ at 97-20 Rockway Beach Blvd., in the same location as the old Boggiano’s Bar and Grill. It stood for three-quarters of a century across from the entrance to Rockaway Beach’s Playland Amusement Park, which drew visitors from across the city to what was known as the Irish Riviera, an alternative to Coney Island on the Brooklyn side of Jamaica Bay.

Amazon faces largest U.S. strike as Maspeth teamsters join nationwide picket lines Thursday

Hundreds of warehouse workers and drivers walked off the job and joined the picket line outside the massive DBK4 Amazon fulfillment center in Maspeth on Thursday morning as the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT) launched the largest strike ever against the $2 trillion corporation in New York City, Atlanta, Southern California, San Francisco, and Illinois.

Amazon workers at other facilities across the country say they are prepared to join them to protest unfair labor practices after the IBT set a Dec. 15 deadline for Amazon to begin negotiations on a new agreement. The union was ignored.