Preston White was fatally shot inside King Comfort on E. 183rd St. in Belmont on April 16, 2025
GMaps
In an effort to scale back crime in comfort shops throughout New York Metropolis, a Bronx state lawmaker has launched the Bodega Act of 2025, a measure that would supply grants to small companies for panic buttons and surveillance tools.
The New York State Bodega Act of 2025, launched by Bronx Assemblymember George Alvarez final month, would direct the Division of Legal Justice Providers to determine a grant program supporting safety upgrades for bodegas, meals marts, and related small retail institutions.
The proposed laws goals to boost protections for these companies by masking the prices of putting in emergency alert techniques and different security infrastructure. The laws doesn’t specify a funding quantity.
The state invoice mirrors and expands upon Mayor Eric Adams’ current $1.6 million “SilentShields” initiative, which is able to outfit roughly 500 metropolis bodegas with panic buttons instantly linked to the NYPD. Collectively, each efforts replicate a rising push to handle violent crime impacting neighborhood companies.
The urgency behind these security initiatives has been amplified by current deadly assaults. On April 16, 24-year-old Anthony Diaz was fatally stabbed inside a bodega in Inwood, Manhattan. That very same night, 38-year-old Preston White was shot and killed inside a Bronx bodega in Belmont.
“Many bodegas serve their communities 24/7-365,” stated Alvarez. “Leaving them vulnerable to, and placing them on the front lines of violent crime. Crime that originates both inside the store, but also on the street that spills over into the store.”
Alvarez believes the proposed funding will assist retailer house owners defend themselves and their prospects, fostering a better sense of stability and security in native communities.
For years, the United Bodegas of America (UBA) has urged town to implement stronger security measures in comfort shops. Advocates have repeatedly cited lack of funding and authorized mechanisms as the first limitations to defending enterprise house owners.
The Bodega Act of 2025 would instantly tackle these gaps by guaranteeing monetary help for panic buttons and different security measures. Mayor Adams has individually allotted $5 million for small enterprise safety upgrades citywide, together with funding for panic button techniques.
“Violent crime jeopardizes the ability of such small businesses to stay afloat,” Alvarez stated. “Ensuring and enhancing the security of these businesses from violent crime will allow these businesses, which often serve needs critical to community residents, to both survive and thrive. The enhanced security will also result in faster response times by the NYPD to such incidents.”
The invoice has already obtained bipartisan backing in Albany. Alvarez stated he’s hopeful it would go “sooner rather than later,” noting that his workplace has collaborated intently with bodega house owners, NYPD officers, and constituents to form the laws.
Assemblymember George Alvarez. Picture courtesy of the NYS Meeting
The hassle has additionally drawn endorsements from key stakeholders, together with the United Bodegas of America, the Bronx Financial Growth Company, and the Bronx Chamber of Commerce.
“We have no choice,” Alvarez stated. “It is our responsibility to ensure the safety of men and women, and families of our communities.”
Representing the 78th Meeting District within the Bronx, Alvarez stated the laws is meant to create a future the place tragic incidents grow to be far much less widespread — or are prevented altogether — by way of higher protecting measures.
“Aside from what we’ve seen make the headlines,” Alvarez stated, “I’ve heard from countless bodegas, small businesses, and customers, about the risks and dangers they face. And for the business owners, it’s not a matter of safety, but also a matter of their abilities to earn an honest living. Oftentimes, these businesses are their livelihoods, and really, all that they have.”