What Changed?

Nov. 28th, 2025 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] gregwilson_feed

Posted by Greg Wilson

Your company brought in a new CEO, and she believes that you can’t manage what you don’t measure. One of the first things she does is dig up historical data on how long developers and testers have spent fixing bugs over the past year. When she plots the data quarter by quarter, she gets the following plots:

no rework
First Quarter
10% rework
Second Quarter
30% rework
Third Quarter
50% rework
Fourth Quarter

The number of bugs taking more than 20 hours to close is clearly going up over time, but why? There hasn’t been any turnover in the team, or a major rewrite of the product. What has changed?

After a bit of digging, she discovers that developers were reporting time in 10-hour blocks in Q1, so that sharp cutoff is an accounting artifact. However, that doesn’t explain why the number of issues taking more than 10 hours has slowly but steadily been creeping up from Q2 to the end of the year. I’ll post the reason tomorrow; for today, see what theories you can come up with and what data you would need to confirm or refute them.

siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
I see that I didn't note last year's Annual Introverts Liberation Feast. Perhaps I wrote a draft that I never got around to posting. It was something of a grueling deathmarch. Because my physical disability makes me largely unable to participate in food prep or cleaning, it almost entirely falls on Mr B to do, and he is already doing something like 99% of the household chores, so both of us wind up up against our physical limits doing Thanksgiving dinner.

But the thing is, part of the reason we do Thanksgiving dinner ourselves to begin with, is we manage the labor of keeping ourselves fed through meal prepping. And I really love Thanksgiving dinner as a meal. So preparing a Thanksgiving dinner that feeds 16 allows us to have a nice Thanksgiving dinner on Thanksgiving, and then allows us to each have a prepared Thanksgiving dinner every day for another seven days. So this is actually one part family tradition, seven parts meal prep for the following week, and one part getting homemade stock from the carcass and weeks of subsequent soups. If we didn't do Thanksgiving, we'd still have to figure out something to cook for dinners for the week.
The problem is the differential in effort with a regular batch cook.

So this year for Thanksgiving, I proposed, to make it more humane, we avail ourselves of one of the many local prepared to-go Thanksgiving dinner options, where you just have to reheat the food.

We decided to go with a local barbecue joint that offered a smoked turkey. It came in only two sizes: breast only, which was too small for us, and a whole 14 to 16 lb turkey, which is too large, but too large being better than too small, that's what we got.
We also bought their mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, and – new to our table this year – baked macaroni and cheese. Also two pints of their gravy, which turned out to be spectacularly good. We also got a pan of their cornbread (also new to our Thanksgiving spread), for which they are justly famous; bizarrely, they left the cornbread off their Thanksgiving menu, but proved happy to add it to our order from the regular catering menu when we called it in.

We used canned sweet potatoes in syrup and grocery store cubed stuffing (Pepperidge Farm). The sweet potatoes were fine but as is traditional I had a disaster which coated half the kitchen in sugar syrup. The stuffing was... adequate. Our big compromise to save ourselves labor was that we didn't do the big stuffing production with the chopped and sauteed fresh veggies. The place we got the prepared sides has a stuffing but it's a cornbread stuffing, which is not the bread cube version I prefer. We did add dried sage to it.

Reheating the wholly cooked smoked turkey did not go great. We followed the vendor's instructions – leave it wrapped in foil, put two cups of water in a bottom of the roasting pan, 300° F for two hours to get the breast meat to 165° F – which turned out to be in Mr B's words, "delusional". We used a pair of probe thermometers with wireless monitor, one in the thigh and one in the breast, and an oven thermometer to make sure the oven was behaving. The oven was flawless. The temperature in the thigh quickly spiked up while the breast heated slowly, such that by an hour in, there was a 50° F difference in temperature between the two. The thigh reached 165 in about 2 and 1/2 hours, at which point the breast was 117 ° F. By my calculations, given how far it had gotten in 2.5 hrs, at that temperature we'd need another hour and a half to get the whole bird up to 165° F (for a grand total of 4 hours) at which point the drumsticks would probably be shoe leather.

There was a brief moment of despair while we entertained heating the turkey for another hour and a half, but then decided to just have dark meat for Thanksgiving.

The turkey turned out to be 1) delicious and 2) enormous. Mr B carved at the rest of the bird for our meal prep and picked the carcass; I broke the carcass and other remains into three batches this year. There is going to be so much soup.

Mr B had the brilliant idea to portion the sides leftovers into the meal prep boxes before the dinner, so we dispensed two servings of each side into the casseroles we were going to warm them in, and portioned out the rest.

I had the brilliant idea of checking the weather and realizing we could use the porch as an auxiliary fridge for all the sides we had sitting there in the crockery waiting for the tardy turkey to be done so they could go in the oven. Also it was wine degrees Fahrenheit out, so that worked great too.

For beverages, Mr B had a beer, and I had iced tea and a glass of wine. Happily, the packie near the caterer's 1) has introduced online shopping for easy pickup, and 2) amazingly, had a wine I have been looking for for something like 20 years, a Sardegnan white called Aragosta, to which I was introduced to by the late lamented Maurizio's in Boston's North End. Why the wine is called "lobster" I do not know, but it is lovely. The online shopping did not work so happily; when we placed the order the day before (Tuesday), we promptly got the email saying that our order was received, but it wasn't placed until we received the confirmation email. Forty minutes before pick up time (Wednesday), since we still hadn't received a confirmation email, Mr B called in and received a well rehearsed apology and explanation that there was a problem with their new website's credit card integration, so orders weren't actually being charged correctly, but to come on down and they would have the order ready for payment at the register.

As is our custom, we also got savory croissants for lunch/breakfast while cooking from the same bakery we also get dessert. As is also our custom, we ate too much Thanksgiving dinner to have room for dessert, and we'll probably eat it tomorrow.

The smoked turkey meat (at least the dark meat) was delicious. I confess I was a little disappointed with the skin. I'm not a huge skin fan in general, but I was hoping the smoked skin would be delicious. But there was some sort of rub on it that had charred in the smoking process, and I don't like the taste of char.

The reason the turkeys I cook wind up so much moister than apparently everybody else's – I've never managed to succeed at making pan gravy, for the simple reason I've never had enough juice in the pan to make gravy, because all the juice is still in the bird – is that I don't care enough about the skin to bother trying to crisp it. There really is a trade-off between moistness of the meat and crispness of the skin, and I'm firmly of the opinion that you can sacrifice the skin in favor of the meat. The skin on this turkey was perfectly crisped all over and whoever had put the rub on it managed to do an astoundingly good job of applying it evenly. It was a completely wasted effort from my point of view, and I'm not surprised that the turkey we got wound up a bit on the dry side.

That said the smokiness was great. I thought maybe, given how strongly flavored the gravy was, it would overpower the smokiness of the meat, but that was not the case and they harmonized really nicely.

The instructions come with a very important warning that the meat is supposed to be that color: pink. It's really quite alarming if you don't know to expect it, I'm sure. You're not normally supposed to serve poultry that color. But the instructions explain in large letters that it is that color because of the smoking process, and it is in fact completely cooked and safe to eat.

(It belatedly occurs to me to wonder whether that pink is actually from the smoke, or whether they treated it with nitrates. You know, what makes bacon pink.)

The cavity was stuffed with oranges and lemons and a bouquet garni, which was a bit of a hassle to clean out of the carcass for its future use as stock.

The green bean casserole was fine. It's not as good as ours, but then we didn't have to cook it. The mac and cheese was really nice; it would never have occurred to me to put rosemary on the top, but that worked really well. The mashed potatoes were very nice mashed potatoes, and the renown cornbread was even better mopping up the gravy.

The best cranberry sauce remains the kind that stands under its own power, is shaped like the can it came in, and is perfectly homogeneous in its texture.

We aimed to get the bird in the oven at 3:00 p.m. (given that the instructions said 2 hours) with the aim of dinner hitting the table at 6:00 p.m. We had a bit of a delay getting the probe thermometers set up and debugged (note to self: make sure they're plugged all the way in) so the bird went in around 3:15 p.m. At 5:15 p.m. no part of the bird was ready. Around 5:45 p.m. the drumsticks reached 165° F, and we realized the majority of it was in not going to get there anytime in the near future. At this point all the sides had been sitting on the counter waiting to go into the oven for over a half an hour, so we decided to put them outside to keep while we figured out what we were going to do. We decided to give it a little more time in the oven, and to use that time to portion the sides into the meal prep boxes. Then we brought the casseroles back inside, pulled the bird from the oven and set it to rest, and put the casseroles in the oven. We microwaved the three things that needed microwaving (the stuffing, which we had prepared on the stove top, and was sitting there getting cold, the gravy, and at the last moment the cornbread). After 10 minutes of resting the turkey, we turned the oven off, leaving the casseroles inside to stay warm, and disassembled the drumsticks. Then we served dinner.

After dinner, all ("all") we had to do was cleaning dishes (mostly cycling the dishwasher) and disassembling the turkey (looks like we'll be good for approximately 72 servings of soup), because the meal prep portioning was mostly done. We still have to portion the turkey and the gravy into the meal prep boxes, but that can wait until tomorrow. Likewise cleaning the kitchen can wait until tomorrow. This means we were done before 9:00 p.m. That has not always been the case.

Getting the cooked turkey and prepared sides saved us some work day of (and considerably more work typically done in advance – the green bean casserole, the vegetable sauté that goes into the stuffing) but not perhaps as much as we hoped.

Turns out here's not a lot of time difference between roasting a turkey in the oven and rewarming one. OTOH, we didn't have to wrestle with the raw bird. Also, because we weren't trying to do in-bird stuffing, that's something we just didn't have to deal with. OTOOH, smoked turkey.

But it was still plenty of work. Maybe a better option is roasting regular turkey unstuffed and shaking the effort loose to make green bean casserole and baked stuffing ourselves a day or two ahead. We were already getting commercially made mashed potatoes. It would certainly be cheaper. OTOOH, smoked turkey.

This was our first year rewarming sides in the oven. We usually try to do the microwave, and that proves a bottleneck. This time we used our casserole dishes to simultaneously rewarm four sides, and it was great. Next time we try this approach, something that doesn't slosh as much as the sweet potatoes in syrup goes in the casserole without a lid.

But I think maybe as a good alternative, if we're going to portion sides for meal prep before we sit down to Thanksgiving dinner, we might as well just make up two plates, and microwave them in series, instead of troubling with the individual casseroles. This does result in our losing our option for getting seconds, but we never exercise it, and maybe some year we will even have Thanksgiving dessert on the same day that we eat Thanksgiving dinner.

Just One Thing (28 November 2025)

Nov. 28th, 2025 08:08 am
nanila: me (Default)
[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 48 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
brokenframe: (Default)
[personal profile] brokenframe posting in [community profile] fandom_fanvids
Movie: Read My Lips/Sur Mes Lèvres
Title: Protège Moi
Vidder: brokenframe
Song: Protège Moi by Placebo
Characters: Paul Angeli/Carla Behm
Warnings: Some blood and violence.
Streaming/Download at: DW | Tumblr

Thanksgiving

Nov. 27th, 2025 07:57 pm
[personal profile] ndrosen
One thing for which we can be thankful — to God, if there be a God, and to some exceptional statesman almost two and a half centuries ago — is the United States Constitution, as as Veronique de Rugy writes. Immigrants, they get the job done, including the job of explaining to Americans what is special about this country. May the United States of America and its experiment in republican self-government survive our appalling current president, his cronies, and the fools or worse on both sides of the political spectrum.

In an attempt to share my good fortune with some of those in need, I made a donation yesterday through the Combined Federal Campaign to several organizations which I believe to be doing good in the world; the largest donation was to the International Rescue Committee, as I was thinking in particular about the hideous situation in Sudan. Today, I made a donation to assist with the defense of Ukraine.

Question thread #146

Nov. 28th, 2025 02:06 am
pauamma: Cartooney crab wearing hot pink and acid green facemask holding drink with straw (Default)
[personal profile] pauamma posting in [site community profile] dw_dev
It's time for another question thread!

The rules:

- You may ask any dev-related question you have in a comment. (It doesn't even need to be about Dreamwidth, although if it involves a language/library/framework/database Dreamwidth doesn't use, you will probably get answers pointing that out and suggesting a better place to ask.)
- You may also answer any question, using the guidelines given in To Answer, Or Not To Answer and in this comment thread.

Volunteer social thread #159

Nov. 28th, 2025 02:04 am
pauamma: Cartooney crab wearing hot pink and acid green facemask holding drink with straw (Default)
[personal profile] pauamma posting in [site community profile] dw_volunteers
I'm about to have dinner (at 2am, as one does).

How's everyone else doing?
[personal profile] ndrosen
James Bovard has reviewed a new biography of Franklin Delano Roosevelt by David T. Beito, and considers it an antidote to the FDR cult, portraying Roosevelt as a scoundrel. He very much had his moral failings, and I believe that many of his policies were harmful (not quite the same thing). I am not sure that I would agree with Bovard’s and Beito’s criticisms of Roosevelt for getting us into World War Two. True, he was shifty, and true, American entry into the war cost hundreds of thousands of American lives. On the other hand, not entering the war on the Allied side could have resulted in a world dominated by Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, which might have caused major long-term problems for the United States, to say the least.

I do agree, though, that the New Deal failed to end the Great Depression, did considerable harm of its own, and contributed to a cultural and political shift in favor of activist government that was generally not beneficial, and set us on the road to the current situation of huge deficits and the prospective bankruptcy of Social Security and Medicare.

Recipes

Nov. 27th, 2025 11:37 am
totient: (Default)
[personal profile] totient
Huh, my most recent recipe is from nearly two years ago.

It's not that I haven't been developing recipes. Some of that has been small changes to existing recipes. But a little of it is also that I am finally writing my own garam masala recipe, and that is going to be a lot of iteration.
[syndicated profile] cooltools_feed

Posted by claudia

Apps You Need for China

Traveling to China is not like traveling to other places. The heavy-handed government blocks any website or app it doesn’t like or control, so you have to install a whole suite of different tools than you use anywhere else. Partner Kevin Kelly was just there and laid out the apps he used in China that worked. Chris Christensen of the Amateur Traveler podcast and blog says Express VPN was a bust for him though and he had better luck with Total VPN. Kevin says an Airalo eSIM might negate the need for that additional step because one is built in.

2 Vacations for a Lower Price With a Stopover

One reader sent an e-mail last week saying, “I don’t know if you know this, but it’s cheaper to fly through Panama to Colombia or Peru and stop off than it is to just fly to Panama.” That may not be true every time, but it’s worth checking into destination and airline combos that allow you to stay for a night or more on a stopover instead of just changing gates at the airport. Copa and Panama City are one such combo and you’ll find others from the HQ cities of Emirates, Turkish Air, Iberia, and others. Check this article of mine for the official stopover cities and airlines, plus some ideas for cobbling together your own stopover in other cities.

Save the Bees, Save Our Food

I just stayed at a Kimpton beach resort in Baja that must have had a thousand native plants on the property, with the flowering ones making the pollinators happy so the organic garden on site would thrive. Bees, butterflies, and their buzzing kin are hugely important to the crops that feed us but human threats are numerous. You can counter this by seeking out hotels that try to aid the environment instead of destroying it. Consider choosing lodges where they cultivate native plants to attract pollinators. Or think like a beekeeper and sign up for a beekeeping safari to support biodiversity.

All You Can Fly From Frontier Airlines

I’m not in a market where Frontier flies so I haven’t tried it, but the company just unveiled the details of its annual pass and it’s attractive if you can use it enough. The GoWild All-You-Can-Fly Pass is only $349 through December 2, which is cheaper than the Volaris Pass in Mexico that I had mixed feelings about. It’s a crazy good deal that would be worth taking a gamble on because you can start using it this year and keep using it through Spring of 2027. So you get way more than a year’s worth of flights. It’s best for spontaneous passengers because of all the restrictions, like only being able to book a day in advance on domestic flights. Plus there’s a limit to how many seats are available for passholders on each flight and you’ll need to pay extra for taxes and luggage.


A weekly newsletter with four quick bites, edited by Tim Leffel, author of A Better Life for Half the Price and The World’s Cheapest Destinations. See past editions here, where your like-minded friends can subscribe and join you.

muccamukk: Héloïse's faceless portrait in the hearth, a real flame rising from her painted heart. (Lady on Fire: Burning Art)
[personal profile] muccamukk


(When I saw her in concert, she was very pleased with that line).

(Video has a thread of a butch teen being socially pressured to feminise. But there's a happy ending.)

Not Created Equal

Nov. 27th, 2025 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] gregwilson_feed

Posted by Greg Wilson

Yesterday’s post pointed out that it can be hard to distinguish cause and effect from random variation. One way to tell them apart is to vary the simulation parameters systematically to see when various phenomena appear and disappear. For example, suppose we modify the simulation to account for the fact that not all tasks are created equal. Some bugs and features have higher priority than others, and our team will generally work on more important items before they work on less important ones.

Alongside the Store we have been using to model our work queue, SimPy offers a PriorityStore that keeps items sorted in priority order. (The lower the item’s score, the higher its priority.) Let’s modify the Simulation class to make the development and testing queues priority stores:

class Simulation:

    def __init__(self, params):
        self.params = params
        self.env = simpy.Environment()
        self.dev_queue = simpy.PriorityStore(self.env)
        self.test_queue = simpy.PriorityStore(self.env)
        self.queue_log = []

and then add a new parameter task_priorities whose value is a list of probabilities:

PARAMS = {
    previous code
    "task_priorities": [0.1, 0.3, 0.6],
}

The list shown above tells us that there’s a 10% chance of a new task having priority 0, a 30% chance of it having priority 1, and a 60% chance of it having priority 2. When we create a task, we assign it a priority at random with these weights:

    def task_priority(self):
        return random.choices(
            list(range(len(self.params["task_priorities"]))),
            weights=self.params["task_priorities"],
            k=1
        )[0]

(We need the [0] at the end because random.choices always returns a list of choices, even when we tell it we only want one value.) Finally, when we’re adding a new task to the development queue we wrap it in a PriorityItem to pair the task with its priority:

    def generate(sim):

        while True:
            yield sim.timeout(sim.task_arrival())
            task = Task(sim)
            yield sim.dev_queue.put(simpy.PriorityItem(task["priority"], task))
10/30/60
Queue lengths: 10/30/60
30/30/40
Queue lengths: 30/30/40
40/30/30
Queue lengths: 40/30/30
40/40/20
Queue lengths: 40/40/20

The top (green) line in these four charts is the number of priority-2 tasks waiting in the development queue. It grows steadily because developers are basically busy at all times with higher-priority tasks; it’s only when 80% or more of tasks are higher priority that we start to see a backlog of priority-1 tasks build up. I don’t know if I expected this or not, but I certainly didn’t expect that the testers would always be able to keep up with tasks of all priorities.

These curves look familiar to me. In my previous role at Plotly, I was responsible for managing the backlog of bug reports and feature requests for the open source libraries. When I started in April 2025, nobody had gone through them for several years; over that summer, I cleared out enough stale and duplicated items to get the three main repositories from about 7000 issues down to about 1700. I then watched as the number grew slowly but steadily over the next twelve months. Everyone on the team was working hard, but if your library, tool, or application is useful, there will always be more work to do than people to do it. The only “solution” is to be ruthless about labeling so that you don’t get demoralized.

How Are You? (in Haiku)

Nov. 27th, 2025 06:32 am
jjhunter: Watercolor sketch of self-satisfied corvid winking with flaming phoenix feather in its beak (corvid with phoenix feather)
[personal profile] jjhunter
Pick a thing or two that sums up how you're doing today, this week, in general, and tell me about it in the 5-7-5 syllables of a haiku.

=

Signal-boosting much appreciated!
gentlyepigrams: (books - magic)
[personal profile] gentlyepigrams
Books
Higher Magic, by Courtney Floyd. I want a book about magical grad students but this is not it. DNF about 75 pages in.
The Library at Hellebore, by Cassandra Khaw. DNF about 50 pages in. I really want to like her books but I just don't like horror.
The Kamogawa Food Detectives, by Hisashi Kashiwai, translated by Jesse Kirkwood. Sweet stories about a man and his daughter who run a very special restaurant and a detective agency that finds the food that people used to love.
A Murder for Miss Hortense: A Mystery, by Mel Pennant. Miss Hortense founded the Pardner investment club but was booted from it For Reasons and in the present (2000), she has to open the case that got her booted up all over again after her former friend who was running the club dies. The early Pardner history reminded me a bit of community stories from Call the Midwife but the patois accents, which I presume are realistic, drove me a little crazy.
Murder at the Wham Bam Club, by Carolyn Marie Wilkins. Perfectly adequate mystery that is clearly first in a series featuring a Black psychic in 1920s small-town Illinois. The setting is more interesting than the main character. A student ran away from the boarding school for Black girls where the protagonist had once been a student; she has to save the school by finding the girl, who ends up accused of murder when the lead musician at the local jazz club gets himself killed. The psychics/hoodoo in this book do a lot of telling, not showing, and a bit too much deus ex machina for my taste. I wouldn't turn down a sequel but will not prioritize it, which is a shame because this setting could hold some interesting mysteries.
The Nightshade God, by Hannah Whitten. Third in this trilogy about incarnated gods and the mortals they possess. The worldbuilding is cool, the plot is twisty, and the minor characters are actually more interesting and likeable than the protagonist (if not than her two OT3 boyfriends). I'm glad I finished this but I don't think I'll chase down more from this author.

Music
Florence + the Machine, Everybody Scream. Still digesting this. It's a little more rockist than her early stuff, which I think is true of much of her later music. It's also really angry, which I don't say in a negative way. I liked it.
[syndicated profile] thecityny_feed

Posted by Gwynne Hogan

A child's toy sits on a Corona street.

A 28-year-old Queens construction worker was headed to work one morning in early November when a man came up to him dressed in a blue vest that said “POLICE” on it. 

The Central American man, whose name THE CITY is withholding, said he wanted to help, concerned the officer was investigating a crime in his neighborhood, Corona. The officer showed him a picture and asked if he’d seen the man in it, but when he said he hadn’t, the questions quickly shifted to his own identity and legal status in the United States. 

Moments later, the construction worker found himself surrounded by several other officers, who handcuffed him and drove him away. He spent two weeks in Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention in New Jersey before a federal judge ordered his release. 

“I considered myself a strong person, a resilient person, but I’ve never gone through something like this,” the man told THE CITY in Spanish. “Leave your family out of nowhere, the uncertainty of what’s going to happen to you. I was in shock.”

Seemingly random street arrests of immigrants by federal authorities, previously nearly unheard of in New York, are now a common occurrence, according to legal filings reviewed by THE CITY, and local activists and advocates who’ve been documenting the trend in federal lawsuits and on social media. 

Attorneys Harold Solis and Paige Austin, who work for the immigrant advocacy group Make the Road New York have described the recent arrests as “a coordinated campaign of race-based stops in largely Hispanic and immigrant neighborhoods in New York City,” in one legal filing reviewed by THE CITY, describing the Nov. 18 arrest of a longtime Bushwick resident who ICE agents stopped, questioned and arrested at a bus stop near his home.

While such stops and arrests have been widely documented for months in Los Angeles, Chicago and other cities, immigration enforcement in New York City during the first several months of President Donald Trump’s second term was focused primarily inside immigration courts and at ICE offices, targeting immigrants who had appeared voluntarily for hearings in their deportation cases or check-ins with the agency.

But the winds shifted in early September, when Supreme Court Judge Brett Kavanaugh published a concurring opinion that found ICE agents have authority to stop and question people they suspect of being undocumented based on their appearance or the language they speak. Civil rights advocates have chided the ruling as a green light to racially profile, dubbing such encounters “Kavanaugh Stops.” 

Data on the arrests remains scant. ICE hasn’t released updated arrest data since late July, and typically does not identify location beyond 26 Federal Plaza, which serves as a centralized booking office for ICE arrests in the New York City area. A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security hasn’t responded to a request for comment. 

Advocates and activists have been tracking the New York street arrests, rushing to the scene when agents are spotted. They are documenting and filming incidents and racing to file habeas corpus writs in federal court, which can help prevent a person from being swiftly transferred to a far-off detention center in a region where courts are less favorable to immigrants. Local activists have launched a citywide hotline to report ICE activity and have passed out whistles by the thousands so New Yorkers will alert those within earshot if they see agents. 

Meanwhile, legal advocates observing immigration courts in New York City say they haven’t witnessed an arrest inside the facilities in weeks, even though masked agents still patrol the floors regularly. 

A taco truck sits near the 111th Street station in Corona, Queens.
Community members say they’ve seen increased immigration enforcement around 111th Street and 41st Avenue in Corona, Queens, Nov. 18, 2025. Credit: Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY

At Make the Road New York, Austin represents a number of people arrested randomly in recent weeks.

“They often are showing a photo and that’s how they’re getting people to stop and engage with them,” Austin said of the federal agents who pounce. Austin said it wasn’t clear if agents are actually looking for the pictured person, or if they’re using a photo as a ruse. 

“They’re just claiming to be looking for a person to get, people to stop and engage with them, and we absolutely think that it’s race-based.”

Austin’s account parallels one described in a federal court filing by attorney Heather Axford of the group Central American Legal Assistance, regarding the arrest of her client, a Guatemalan man who was detained by agents near his home in Jamaica, Queens, on Nov. 16. 

“They showed him a picture of a man he did not know. Then they asked [him] questions about himself and his status, which he honestly answered,” Axford wrote.

‘Recurring Visits’

Natalia Aristizabal, deputy director of Make the Road New York, said her group has tracked federal agents repeatedly returning to the same location, making multiple arrests sometimes over the span of hours, or days.

“When they go to a house or they go to an intersection, they go back to the house and that intersection, so recurring visits,” she said. “That’s been the pattern.”

Activists have tracked sightings and arrests by masked federal agents in heavily immigrant neighborhoods including Bensonhurst, Sunset Park and Bushwick in Brooklyn, Corona, and Manhattan’s Washington Heights over the past month. 

Last week City Councilmember Susan Zhuang (D-Brooklyn) confirmed one such arrest of a young mother of an 8-month-old baby outside her home, amNewYork reported. “If ICE only detained violent criminals, that’s one story, but now they are randomly snatching people from the streets. This is outrageous,” said Zhuang, a conservative Democrat who often sides with Republicans on public safety and other issues.

A month after its first arrest sweep there, over the weekend before Thanksgiving ICE agents returned to a street vendors’ zone on Canal Street in Manhattan’s Chinatown, arresting one person, the Daily News reported. ICE called that arrest a “targeted operation” and said that the individual had prior NYPD arrests related to selling counterfeit goods. 

While the Oct. 21 military-style raid on Canal Street was carried out by dozens of masked federal agents in tactical gear who combed the block, triggering a spontaneous protest from witnesses, the arrests since have involved small groups of agents who make one or two arrests swiftly, then leave the block.

A Corona home had a statute of Jesus and picture of the Virgin Mary on a front window.
Community members say they’ve seen increased immigration enforcement around 111th Street and 41st Avenue in Corona, Queens, Nov. 18, 2025. Credit: Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY

In one spate of arrests in Corona, near the intersection of 97th Street and 41st Avenue on Nov. 1, local activists with the group Queens Neighborhoods United documented agents arresting seven people over the course of the afternoon. 

Agents arrested a blind man and took him to 26 Federal Plaza. They later called his son saying they would release his father if he surrendered to them, and when the son arrived, they arrested him as well, according to legal filings reviewed by THE CITY. ICE detained both men for several days, transferring the father to a jail in Orange County and son to Delaney Hall in Newark, before releasing the father, the New York Times reported. His son is still in custody. 

In some cases federal judges have been sympathetic and ordered detainees’ immediate release. In the case of an El Salvadorean man arrested while walking his sister’s dog in The Bronx on Nov. 14, a judge ordered his release a week later. 

But advocates fear many more people are not able to get connected to legal services fast enough. 

Edison, a 31-year-old construction worker who lived in Corona with extended family, was arrested by ICE on the morning of Nov. 4 while briefly stepping out to get a coffee. 

His relatives had no idea where he went for hours until later that afternoon he sent a message of an immigration document from 26 Federal Plaza. He was quickly shipped to Delaney Hall in New Jersey, to a detention site in Missouri and then to Texas, where he was being held as of Tuesday night, ICE records show.

“We’re destroyed. We have no idea what to do,” said his aunt Yolanda, 58,  a U.S. citizen from Ecuador who spoke in Spanish and asked that her last name not be published. 

“I understand if there needs to be control because there’s a lot of crimes. But this is a disaster, they’re destroying families,” she said. 

Yolanda said she’s warning friends and neighbors to be on guard. 

“If you don’t have to go out, don’t go out. If there’s a party, better you don’t go. Take care of yourself until this passes,” she said, adding, “this is chaos.”

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The post Sidewalk Arrests Seize New Yorkers in ICE’s Latest Surge appeared first on THE CITY - NYC News.

Queens residents divided over IBX

Nov. 26th, 2025 07:29 pm
[syndicated profile] queens_eagle_feed

Posted by Noah Powelson

Queens residents gave contrasting opinions on the impact the IBX would have on their community.  Eagle photo by Noah Powelson

By Noah Powelson

After years of garnering excitement almost exclusively, the state’s plan to build a light rail through parts of Queens and Brooklyn ruffled some feathers at a public hearing in Middle Village earlier this month.

Held in the basement of the Trinity Lutheran Church on Dry Harbor Road, more than one hundred Queens residents from the local area and beyond gathered to hear about the Metropolitan Transit Authority’s development of the Interborough Express – a 14-mile light-rail line that would run from Jackson Heights to Southern Brooklyn.

The night was not a traditional Q&A, as some residents hoped for. Following a brief presentation, MTA officials stood by with display materials of the proposed transit project, ready to answer what questions they could. But for the most part, they devoted their time to taking comments and concerns.

The presentation for the IBX’s development was answered with equal parts tepid applause and angered jeering, as some residents came to the night’s event not to give feedback but to voice their outright disapproval of building a new train line in the area.

One such Middle Village resident was Lisa Lunden, who said she and her community felt they were not consulted about the planning of the IBX, which would include stops on Eliot and Grand Avenues. Lunden, who commutes to Manhattan for work, said the IBX would do nothing for her and that she’s concerned it would change the neighborhood.

“Our communities will be changed,” Lunden told the Eagle. “These neighborhoods are very quiet, small low-rise homes. In bringing in all this traffic, what’s in place for this traffic? Will there be NYPD, will there be security...The trains will be running 24/7, what’s to stop people from living there or teens from hanging out there? It’s a real safety issue.”

“We don’t want this and we weren’t even asked,” Lunden added.

Tony Nunziato, the chair of the Queens County Republican Party and president of the Juniper Park Civic Association, was also at the open house. Nunziato voiced his opposition to the IBX, saying developments like this would punish the long-time residents of these communities.

“I’m totally against this entirely, it doesn’t make sense at all. It doesn’t serve us in any way or form,” Nunziato told the Eagle. “These people worked hard all their life to have a nice secluded home…They’re railroading us, and we’ll fight this all the way.”

But the night was not just about voicing anger. Many residents in attendance approached MTA officials with curiosity and optimism about how the IBX would help them.

Residents like Stacy Woods, an attorney who works in Brooklyn and has lived in Middle Village for the past 15 years with her parents and teenage children, said those opposed to the IBX are a small vocal subset of the community, and that people like her have long called for more public transit options that would ease her daily commute and give her more options to explore the city.

“This would be wonderful for me,” Woods told the Eagle. “I have to commute to Brooklyn every day for work, and my children have been spending more and more time in Brooklyn, as well. I wish we had something like this years ago.”

Another resident, 26-year-old Frances, made the trip from her parents’ home in Corona to find out more about the IBX. Frances, who did not wish to give her last name, said that she’s searching for work and has felt funneled into finding jobs in Manhattan due to the lack of transportation options.

“My options are very limited while I live with my parents,” she told the Eagle. “I don’t have a car, and I don’t feel safe riding my bike in the late night or during these cold seasons.”

The divide of opinion over the IBX was best represented by a poster map at the open house that showed the proposed station sites. Attendees were asked to write comments, questions, and concerns on sticky notes and place them on the map, turning it into a mosaic of divided emotions and opinions.

For every sticky note demanding the IBX stay out of the neighborhood, cursing the MTA or calling the open house a sham, there was another note expressing excitement for future transit options, dismissing naysayers, or noting how the IBX will build upon the community.

But even residents optimistic of the IBX like Woods had concerns about the development it might also bring. Woods also said she was concerned about the years of construction.

Governor Kathy Hochul first proposed the IBX in 2022 during her first-ever State of the State address, and the project has become a signature goal of her administration.

State officials say that when all is said and done, the $5.5 billion IBX will offer 160,000 daily riders a faster ride between the two boroughs. Currently, the G line is the only train that runs directly between Queens and Brooklyn.

The MTA plans to construct the light rail on an existing freight track that’s rarely used, hitting 19 stops along the route that snakes through a number of neighborhoods currently lacking reliable public transportation options.

Though enthusiasm for the IBX was high during early proposals, skepticism and concern have grown after the MTA struggled to get full funding for the project last year.

The IBX project is currently in the midst of the design planning and environmental review phase, which will likely take around two years to complete. As part of that phase, the MTA will be hosting several public forums across Queens and Brooklyn for community feedback while potential impacts on the land and communities are assessed.

The environmental review was officially started in October.

But until the review process is finished and the IBX design is finalized, MTA officials will not be able to answer some of the most common questions at the open house on Wednesday.

When asked if eminent domain would be used in the future to acquire property, MTA officials said “it’s too soon to say.”

“We’re in the design phase now, and the first step to knowing what properties might need to be acquired is to do surveying,” Jordan Smith, project director for the IBX at MTA Construction and Development, told the Eagle. “We haven’t done any surveying yet, so that’s what we are doing now. Surveying and data collection is really the point of the design phase, to get a better understanding of those issues.”

When asked what he would say to residents who feel their input on the transit project was intentionally ignored, Smith said that their presence in Middle Village this month shows the opposite.

“The whole point of coming out here is to listen,” Smith said. “We want to hear what people have to say and we take all the feedback seriously…This is not our last time here. We’re still early in the process overall. We’ll have more meetings.”

[syndicated profile] queens_eagle_feed

Posted by Ryan Schwach

Queens officials, Jewish leaders and other representatives including Queens Borough President Donovan Richards, First Deputy Mayor Randy Mastro and Assemblymember Sam Berger broke ground on a planned Holocaust memorial outside of Borough Hall on Tuesday.  Eagle photo by Ryan Schwach

By Ryan Schwach

Queens Jewish leaders and elected officials broke ground on a planned memorial dedicated to the victims of the Holocaust outside Borough Hall on Tuesday.

It will become the only standalone Holocaust memorial in the entire borough of Queens, which is home to 11 percent of the city’s Jewish population.

The Queens Holocaust Memorial Garden was advocated for by the borough's Jewish community and funded with the help of the mayor’s office, the borough president and other local electeds.

“A memorial like this is so important, right here in Queens, where so many Holocaust survivors, so many Jews have made their home just nearby,” said First Deputy Mayor Randy Mastro. “We're going to see a beautifully landscaped memorial that honors the memories of so many who lost their lives, tragically, senselessly, and we will never forget.”

Final design and construction of the memorial have yet to be completed, but the property outside Borough Hall has passed from the city onto the Borough President’s office so work can begin.

“There has to be design and acceptance with community input,” said Mastro. “We have to go through the city's process to create a fitting memorial that we can all be proud of, and that will happen in the coming months.”

Initial designs include two ringed areas, a “Ring of Immortality,” and a “Ring of Peace,” which includes a garden space for respite and reflection.

Between the rings there will be a “Path of Remembrance” walkway, which will include Holocaust artifacts as symbolic reminders.

The path will be flanked by 12 trees symbolizing the twelve tribes of Jacob.

New York-based architecture firm Rafael Viñoly Architects made the initial designs.

The project will not just be there to memorialize those lost, but to educate visitors on the Holocaust and its impact.

The mayor’s office has committed $2 million toward the project, with another $1 million from the borough president, who on Tuesday said he would allocate an additional $1 million dollars.

“Today we commit, as a borough, to never forgetting what they went through,” said Richards. “We commit to never again allowing that kind of evil and hatred to take hold in our society, and that's why we are building this holocaust memorial at Queens Borough Hall, to send a message to the world that the world's borough will not sit by and let antisemitism rule the day, that we will learn from the mistakes of the past and the lessons history teaches us about runaway hate.”

“You cannot tell the story of Queens without talking about our Jewish community, without talking about the community's strength, resilience and dedication to service,” added Richards.

The project was pushed by members of the Queens Jewish community, and the Queens Jewish Congress.

A rendering of the Holocaust Memorial Garden local leaders hope to construct outside Borough Hall.  Rendering via Queens Holocaust Memorial Garden  

“We are going to make this a beautiful Holocaust Memorial Garden for everyone in New York and particularly those in Queens,” said Michael Nussbaum, chairman of the Queens Holocaust Memorial Garden who spearheaded the project and who also serves as the Eagle’s publisher.

“In the months and years ahead, as we build upon this and it now becomes a memorial garden, let us not forget that we still have a great many challenges ahead of us,” he added. “Similarly, let this memorial garden be a place where anyone could come to reflect and seek peace. Let it always be a remembrance of the past but a hope for the future.”

Several members of the Queens political delegation pledged on Tuesday to also help fund the project.

State Senator Toby Ann Stavisky announced she would throw in an additional million.

“I see the memorial garden not just as a voice against antisemitism, but also against Islamophobia, against racial incidents, and every other crime against humanity,” she said.

Assemblymember Sam Berger, who spoke about his family’s own experiences with the horrors of the Holocaust, said he and the Queens Assembly delegation hope to lobby in next year’s budget for more money.

“My grandfather was born in Hungary, and they had everything taken from them,” Berger said. “Their homes were stripped away, friends were murdered, loved ones butchered. My own great grandfather, Schmuel, who I am named after in part, was murdered by the Nazis in Auschwitz, along with my great uncle, but my grandparents survived.”

“Today's announcement honors that foundation and the memorial that will be built on this site will ensure that their story, my grandparents' story, and the stories of countless others, of their resilience and their legacy will be remembered forever,” Berger added.

Queens Imam Muhammad Shahidullah, who runs a program that helps facilitate conversations between Jewish and Muslim students in Queens, supports the memorial and stressed the importance of Queens’ diverse communities communicating and working with one another.

“We work together, we live together,” he told the Eagle.

With the Adams administration already on its way out the door of City Hall, design and construction of the memorial will fall on the incoming Mamdani administration.

Ali Najmi, who served as both the top attorney to Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s campaign and transition, represented the incoming administration at the groundbreaking.

“This project will continue,” Najmi told the Eagle. “It will be great for Queens.”

The memorial will be built on the plaza at the corner of Queens Boulevard and 82nd Avenue across the street from Queens Criminal Court.

The lot was the former site of the old Redbird train car which was at Borough Hall until 2022.

The Redbird, the last of the vintage train cars that prompted the use of the term “straphanger,” was retired in the early 2000s, and was sold at auction for over $235,000 and moved.

Editor’s note: Michael Nussbaum is the chairman of the Queens Holocaust Memorial Garden, and is also the publisher of the Queens Daily Eagle.

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