You are reading

Moya Denounces Vandalism at Winter Wonderland Display in Corona Park

Damage at Winter Wonderland installation in William F. Moore Park (Council Member Francisco Moya)

Dec. 7, 2020 By Allie Griffin

A winter wonderland display in a Corona park was trashed over the weekend with vandals ripping ornaments off the main Christmas tree, damaging smaller trees and tearing down dangling snowflakes.

The festive holiday display at William F. Moore Park was vandalized overnight Saturday — less than two days after an official unveiling, Council Member Francisco Moya said.

Moya’s office had hosted a tree lighting ceremony Friday night to celebrate the opening of the winter wonderland installation at the park.

On Sunday morning, the council member was notified that ornaments had been pulled off the main tree structure, hanging snowflakes were torn down and several smaller trees that were part of the installation were bent over and knocked down.

“We only did the tree lighting on Friday — it didn’t even last two days,” Moya said in a video posted to Facebook.

The installation, designed by local artist Yessenia Calle, took hours of work to construct and was “very expensive,” he added.

“To wake up and see things like this makes me very sad that people would go out there and really try to destroy and damage a piece of artwork,” Moya said.

Moya said he had hoped to spread holiday cheer with the display and that he was disappointed that someone would try to destroy it.

“Corona was hit so hard by COVID. We wanted people to be able to enjoy and celebrate the holidays by sending a positive message here and instead we have this,” Moya said in the video, gesturing to the damaged display behind him.

A spokesperson for the council member’s office said the installation will be repaired in the next few days.

Vandals also targeted Moya’s district office. An autumnal display — featuring a leaf-covered arch— was torn down from the building overnight Saturday as well.

The winter wonderland installation on Friday night during the tree lighting ceremony (Council Member Francisco Moya)

email the author: news@queenspost.com

3 Comments

Click for Comments 
Never Socialist

If you keep protecting criminals, gang members and lawless people, this is what you get.

5
2
Reply

Unfortunately these vandels cause much damage to parks & recreation areas and comfort station , littering and graffiti

5
1
Reply
Anonymous

(Romans 10:9 KJV) That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.

Reply

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

QBP Richards, advocates rally to demand Mayor Adams restore funding to City’s libraries

May. 17, 2024 By Gabriele Holtermann

A rally was held at the Queens Public Library at Forest Hills on May 16, during which Queens Borough President Donovan Richards, Queens Public Library President and CEO Dennis Walcott, union reps and library advocates called on Mayor Eric Adams to reverse the proposed $58.3 million budget cuts to the New York Public Library (NYPL), the Brooklyn Public Library (BPL), and the Queens Public Library (QBL) for Fiscal Year 2025, which begins on July 1, 2024.

Queens elected officials secure $70 million from New York State Budget for school safety equipment in religious and independent schools

May. 17, 2024 By Anthony Medina

Religious and independent schools throughout the city will soon receive additional funding for school safety equipment, thanks to Assemblymember Andrew Hevesi and State Senator Michael Gianaris, who, after extensive advocacy efforts, successfully secured $70 million from the New York State Budget for 2024-25 for Non-Public School Safety Equipment (NPSE) grants.