Congressman Adriano Espaillat (D-NY13), the nation’s first Dominican American elected to Congress, announced on Feb. 18, his endorsement of Oswald Feliz in the upcoming City Council special election for the 15th District in the Bronx. Feliz, a tenant lawyer and Hostos Community College adjunct professor, previously profiled by the Norwood News, served as a campaign aide to Espaillat in the past. Feliz has also received the endorsement of Bronx Assemblyman Victor Pichardo and the Northwest Bronx Democrats.
Espaillat described Feliz as someone who has spent his life in the Bronx, and deeply understands the challenges local families face. “He understands the need for affordable housing, funding for our public schools, and access to economic opportunity,” the congressman said. “Oswald knows our community, and he is the trusted partner I need in the City Council to help create more economic opportunity for Bronx working families. He has my full support, and I know he will provide the 15th District the representation and results that they deserve.”
Reacting to the announcement, Feliz said Espaillat has been a transformational and inspiring leader in the Bronx, and that he was truly humbled by his endorsement. “Together, we’ll make sure the people of the 15th District are heard, and get the support we need to secure better jobs, stable housing, thriving public schools, and safer streets in the Bronx,” Feliz said. “For decades, opportunity has been severely limited for too many Bronxites based on the neighborhoods we live in. The fight to change this reality has never been more urgent.”
The son of immigrants from the Dominican Republic, Feliz was born in New York City and raised in the Kingsbridge section of the Bronx, where he attended local public schools. His campaign said that as a tenant attorney, Feliz successfully defended vulnerable Bronx residents who were at risk of eviction, and sued landlords who were in the practice of tenant harassment.
Feliz helped form a tenant association of over 50 tenants, and successfully negotiated a settlement from a powerful landlord in the Southern Boulevard section of the Bronx, providing tenants with nearly $100,000 in damages as a result of the poor conditions in the building.
Prior to his work as an attorney, Feliz served on behalf of Bronx families as a legislative staffer for State Sen. Gustavo Rivera. He then joined the 2016 campaign for Espaillat in the 13th Congressional District. Feliz also co-founded the Northwest Bronx Democrats for Change, where he has worked to increase political participation by organizing community town halls and holding voter registration drives in the Bronx.
In addition to Feliz, according to the New York City Board of Elections and Ballotpedia, nine other candidates are running in the District 15 race.
These are Kenny Agosto, district director to New York State Senator Jamaal T. Bailey, Ischia Bravo, Bronx Community Board 7 District Manager, Elisa Crespo, education liaison at the Bronx borough president’s office, Bernadette Ferrara, president of the Van Nest Neighborhood Alliance, Latchmi Gopal, a community organizer and former staffer for U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, Jose Padilla, former Independence candidate for both the New York State Assembly and the New York State Senate, Arial Rivera-Diaz, a former finance clerk with the City’s Board of Elections and former official at the Republican National Hispanic Assembly, Bronx Community Board 6 District Manager, John Sanchez and Altagracia Soldevilla, another community organizer.
Julian Sepulveda, an official at the Department of Education, suspended his campaign in November and endorsed Crespo, and Lilithe L Lozano and Troy Blackwell did not make the ballot.
As reported by the Norwood News, in terms of campaign contributions raised to date, according to the latest CFB figures filed last month by candidates in the race, Sanchez leads with $56,649, followed by Crespo with $37,743, Bravo with $36,216, Feliz with $32,272, Gopal with $17,805, Altagracia with $7,182 and Agosto with $1,175. No information was available for Ferrera, Padilla or Rivera-Diaz.
Candidates were required to gather a minimum number of signatures from local residents in order to qualify for the ballot in the special election which is due to take place on March 23. As reported by the Norwood News, that minimum had been 450 signatures until Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced on Jan. 7 that he was reducing it to 315.
A Board of Elections public hearing was held on Feb. 4 to assess which candidates had collated the minimum number of signatures needed to proceed. Troy Blackwell, a former White House and Obama administration aide and who, apparently, has not made the ballot had raised $5,152, and Lilithe L. Lozano, a former district chair of NYCHA’s Bronx North council, who, apparently, has not made the ballot either had raised $1,236. Julian Sepulveda, an official at the Department of Education, suspended his campaign in November and endorsed Crespo.
Some candidates had previously raised concerns during prior weeks about the impact on people’s health of the signature collection process, and had called for for the signature requirement to be waived amid fears of exacerbating the spread of the coronavirus through mass person-to-person contact.
Two candidates in the District 11 City Council race, for which a special election is also being held on March 23, Mino Lora and Jessica Haller, announced at different points that they had both previously contracted the coronavirus. Meanwhile, as also reported previously by the Norwood News, Marcos Sierra and Abigail Martin have withdrawn from that District 11 special election, both citing health risk concerns associated with the virus, though both have said they plan to participate in the June primary.
District 15 includes the neighborhoods of Belmont, Crotona Park, Fordham, Van Nest, and part of Bedford Park. A candidate’s forum with six of the ten candidates in the District 15 special election race was held on Saturday, Feb. 13, hosted by Little Africa Bronx News, a “Social Impact Strategies” project, an intersection of community relations, issue advocacy and public policy. The forum can be viewed here. Mona Davids, founder and publisher, issued a Facebook statement following the event, explaining that only viable candidates had been invited to participate in the forum.
The nonpartisan special election in District 15 is the first of two elections in the Bronx which will incorporate the new method of Ranked Choice Voting (RCV), the other being the District 11 City Council special election.
RCV is a voting method whereby voters can rank up to five candidates in order of preference, instead of choosing just one. If a candidate receives more than 50 percent of first-choice votes, that candidate is the winner. If no candidate earns more than 50 percent of first-choice votes, then counting will continue in rounds. At the end of each round, the candidate with the fewest votes will be eliminated.
If a voter ranked the eliminated candidate first, then the next highest ranked candidate on the voter’s ballot will be taken into account in the next round of counting. The process continues as such until there are two candidates left. The candidate with the most votes wins. For official information on ranked choice voting, go to the NYC Campaign Finance Board FAQ page or the New York City Board of Elections website.
The Bronx Democratic Party recently hosted an informational session on Ranked Choice Voting which can be viewed here in conjunction with the group, Rank the Vote NYC. Norwood News checked with the City’s Campaign Finance Board about the expertise of Rank the Vote NYC and were advised that the group is a reputable source on the topic and is a voter education campaign that is run by Common Cause NY.
Early Voting Hours
Saturday | March 13, 2021 | 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM |
Sunday | March 14, 2021 | 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM |
Monday | March 15, 2021 | 7:00 AM to 3:00 PM |
Tuesday | March 16, 2021 | 12:00 PM to 8:00 PM |
Wednesday | March 17, 2021 | 12:00 PM to 8:00 PM |
Thursday | March 18, 2021 | 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM |
Friday | March 19, 2021 | 7:00 AM to 3:00 PM |
Saturday | March 20, 2021 | 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM |
Sunday | March 21, 2021 | 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM |
The Bronx Board of Elections confirmed that it is now accepting applications for absentee ballots from voters in District 15 (and in District 11) who wish to vote by mail. Further information can be found here or by calling the Bronx Board of Elections at (718) 299-9017 and selecting Ext. 1875. Polls are open on election day from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. The Early Voting Period is from March 13, 2021 to March 21, 2021. Voters must vote at their assigned early voting site.
Editor’s Note: A previous version of this story described the candidate, José Padilla, as a former judge of the New York City Civil Court. The information was based on the candidate description listed for the New York City District 15 City Council race set for March 23, 2021 on Ballotpedia. We contacted Ballotpedia on Feb. 19, to clarify the description when it was brought to our attention by a resident, and on March 4, a Ballotpedia representative emailed us to confirm they had made an error with the original candidate description and have now updated it to the following:
José Padilla (Safe & Stable) is running in a special election to the New York City Council to represent District 15. He is on the ballot in the special general election on March 23, 2021.
Padilla was a 2014 Independence candidate for District 33 of the New York State Senate. He also ran as a 2012 Independence candidate for District 79 of the New York State Assembly.
We thank the resident in question for bringing this to our attention.