Politics & Government

NYC Council District 9 Election: Cordell Cleare Seeks Harlem Seat

New Yorkers get to cast ballots this month for City Council, mayor and other local offices. Harlem Patch is profiling each candidate.

Cordell Cleare is one of 13 Democrats running for Central Harlem's District 9 seat on the City Council.
Cordell Cleare is one of 13 Democrats running for Central Harlem's District 9 seat on the City Council. (Campaign courtesy photo)

HARLEM, NY — Voters in New York City's 9th Council district, which includes all of Central Harlem and parts of East Harlem and Washington Heights, will see 13 names on their ballots when they vote in the June 22 primary election.

One of those names will be Cordell Cleare, a former chief of staff to incumbent Councilmember Bill Perkins, longtime district leader and founder of the Michelle Obama Community Democratic Club.

Patch reached out to all candidates in the election to create these profiles. Cleare's responses are below.

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Age (as of Election Day)

56

Find out what's happening in Harlemfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Position Sought

City Council

Party Affiliation

Democrat

Neighborhood of residence (i.e., East Village, Astoria, etc.)

Harlem

Does anyone in your family work in politics or government?

No

Education

Accepted for classes at Empire State College

Occupation

I am currently unemployed and presently serving as an elected District Leader. I have spent over 19 years staffing an elected official, over 10 years of service on my local community school board and education council, 15 years as a district leader, 35 years as a community advocate and activist fighting for educational, environmental, housing, food and healthcare justice and, racial equity on every level.

Previous or Current Elected or Appointed Office

District Leader, 70th Assembly District

Campaign website

Cleare2021.com

Why are you seeking elective office?

To serve as a voice for ALL of the people of Harlem. To protect renters, home owners and business owners from being pushed out and support pathways for current and future generations to rent, own homes and businesses, and thrive in the community. To fully fund and work to make our neighborhood schools quality schools. To help ensure that residents are safe in our streets without violating our civil rights. Work to increase black wealth and end racial disparities in all areas. To continue to work hard for the residents of Harlem and deliver the services and resouces they deserve.

The single most pressing issue facing our (board, district, etc.) is _______, and this is what I intend to do about it.

The single issue I am approached most with on a daily basis is housing. In most cases it is about the lack of "affordability" and familkies and individuals struggling to pay rents as well as those who are on the verge of or already experiencing homelessness.
1. Increase and strengthen tenant protections including succession
2. Allow basements in privately owned homes to be converted to apartments
3. Support the use of failed hotels and other commercial space to be developed as permanent affordable housing.
4. Mandate that remaining city owned land be used to create housing that is affordable to low income and working class families/individuals.
5. Work with the Mayor, my colleagues, state and federal elected officials to fund and develop a plan to build housing according to a neighbohood median income and not the current AMI.
6. Reduce and limit the grounds for eviction.
7. Preserve the affordable housing stock we already have. Stop deregulation of rent stablized units and recover units already lost.

What are the critical differences between you and the other candidates seeking this post?

I have a long record of community service and getting results. Both as a salaried staff person as well as a volunteer community advocate I have consistently and continously worked on behalf of this community. I have established roots and relationships throughout the community and in city and state government. I have worked with and built coalitions with people from all backgrounds and all walks of life on a variety of issues. I have participated in the writing of legislation and have worked to get it passed. I will represent the needs of and work hard for ALL of the residents of the district.

If you are a challenger, in what way has the current board or officeholder failed the community (or district or constituency)

The community has not heard much from the office. Our representative holds no committees in the Council.

How do you think local officials performed in responding to the coronavirus? What if anything would you have done differently?

There was a lack of communication and information going out to the community. The slow and inadequate response to COVID 19 in this community by the city accross the board was unacceptable. I demanded answers and resources from our city agencies and our Mayor early in the pandemic. I pushed for our schools to be closed and after they were closed pushed for remote devices and broadband for our students. I demonstrated and testified at DOE hearings calling for a safe reopnening of our schools. I called to redirect funding from the NYPD to other badly needed community programs including mental health services, cure violence, job training, employment and youth programs. I did constituent services daily from my home working on a range of cases from directly helping families find missing family members, helping families navigate through varoius systems to at least see their deceased family members one last time, assisting with food, rental and burial assistance and countless other matters. I made daily facebook live reports to the community for over 130 consecutive days during the early stages of the pandemic bringing information and how and where to find critical resources and services including helping to guide viewers through getting unemployment, stimulus payments, Covid testing, temporary housing, air conditioning and more. I protested and lobbied the Mayor and HHC executives to get PPE's for nurses at Harlem Hospital. I reached out to early in the pandemic to all area and citywide elected officials for a breakdown of deaths by ethnicity, race and neighborhood. i pushed for more testing sites and vaccine equity in our community.

Many in Harlem are worried about gentrification and the displacement of longtime residents. What is one specific policy you would push for to slow gentrification?

Good Cause Eviction

Some Harlem residents complain that the neighborhood is “over-saturated” with methadone clinics. Would you welcome more services for vulnerable people in the neighborhood, or push for a moratorium?

I would push for proper management of the facilities we have and for fair share distribution of facilities throughout the city.

Many Harlemites have complained of dirty streets during the pandemic. How would you help clean up the sidewalks?

I would push for more litter baskets and more frequent trash pick ups. I would initiate a public education and awareness campaign on littering and community clean up efforts.

Plans were recently unveiled for a large new development on 145th Street — it would include up to 282 affordable apartments, but some neighbors suggested that the buildings are too large for the neighborhood. As Council Member, would you support this project, oppose it, or push to change it?

Change it.

Describe the other issues that define your campaign platform.

Protecting Harlem's landmarks
Police free schools
Green jobs/businesses
Solar and Renewable Energy
Promoting and funding Arts & Culture
Restorative justice
Raise the cap on vending licenses

What accomplishments in your past would you cite as evidence you can handle this job?

- Led a citywide coalition of individuals and organizations in the fight agains childhood lead poisoning 1994 to 2004.
- The passage of Local Law 1 (the most comprehensive childhood lead poisoning prevention bill in the country) in 2004.
- Organizing community and working with students, teachers, parents, elected officials and others to successfully stop the Mayor's plan to close Wadleigh Secondary School of Visual and Performing Arts in 2018
- Worked to stop the widely opposed re-zoning plan to overbuild and further gentrify Lenox Terrace 2019 through organizing, public protest and testimony at the city council with tenants, clergy and other community stakeholders.
- Uncovered and triggered and investigation into the HUD 203K Scandal in the 90's resulting in numerous indictments nationally, compensation for scam victims and care and maintenance of the properties involved.
- Contributed to the authoring of the HALT legislation (a bill to limit the use of solitary confinement in NYS state penitentiaries and advocated for it's passage.
- Advocated for the exoneration and compensation of the "Exonerated Five".
- Worked to successfully resolve numerous community and constituent issues; helped secure and allocated millions of dollars in funding to community projects, organizations and facilities; was closely involved with the overseeing of major community projects including the building of the new Harlem Hospital building; renovation of Wadleigh and other school facilities, Harlem Libraries, and Parks, and much more over the past 35 years.

The best advice ever shared with me was:

Don't ever think you're less than anyone else and, don't ever think anyone is less than you.

What else would you like voters to know about yourself and your positions?

This community has been through some very difficult times particularly the past year and a half. I have lost loved ones, friends and neighbors to the Covid 19 pandemic. While we are still not out if the woods yet and there are still many pressing issues that existed pre pandemic still facing us I remain hopeful. We have come through hard times before. This community has suffered through widespread abandonment, neglect, heroin and crack epidemics. Yet we have persevered as a community and made signifigant strides. My lived experiences and years of service have taught me that the path to a brighter future is to stay the course, keep the faith and keep serving. My whole career has been about leadership through service to my community. I understand that to lead is to serve. i have watched, i have listened and i have learned from all that you have taught me. And as your Councilwoman I plan to continue to deliver the first rate service this community needs and deserves.

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