Following Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.'s appointment as Health and Human Services Secretary, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention amended its website to question decades of evidence dismissing a vaccine-autism link, earning rebukes from the Auti…
Seventy former New York City Housing Authority staffers were convicted for taking $2.1 million in bribes to steer plum repair contracts, the Justice Department’s biggest single-day corruption sweep to date. The scam, touching a third of NYCHA sites, cost public coffers over $15 million; officials now promise restitution. We trust forthcoming repairs will target leaky pipes as efficiently as these workers siphoned trust.
After weeks of bureaucratic freeze following Washington’s shutdown, New York’s Home Energy Assistance Program expects to finally thaw out some $400 million in federal funds by early December, delivering aid of up to $996 per household as the city’s chill sets in. Emergency payments may come in January—though, as ever, federal punctuality remains as elusive as summer in Syracuse.
According to consultants at California Hard Money Lender and North Coast Financial, Americans will need to earn $80,000 to $90,000 per year by 2026 merely to keep inflationary stress at bay. As rising costs push basics like rent and food ever higher, we are reminded that financial “peace of mind” now means a full wallet and a modest helping of financial worry—just in case the basics grow more ambitious.
A new Center for NYC Neighborhoods report confirms that over 60% of New York City home buyers paid entirely in cash in early 2025—double the national share—giving deep-pocketed individuals and institutional investors the upper hand from Pelham Bay to Queens. Mortgages have become the rare currency here; it seems financial liquidity now opens more doors in Manhattan than a charming brownstone ever could.
New York state regulators approved a tamer-than-requested rate hike for Consolidated Edison: electricity bills will rise by as much as 3.5% in 2026, while gas will jump 4.4%, disappointing President Donald Trump and incoming Mayor Zohran Mamdani, whose rare agreement on urging lower rates arrived too late. Residents can thank a record 20,000 complaints for curbing grander ambitions—if not for the candlelit romance it portends.
The US government has quietly backed away from its September deadline to scrap paper Social Security checks, admitting that millions of older Americans remain stubbornly analog. While officials had trumpeted a move to exclusively digital payments—faster, cheaper, and allegedly more secure—they now concede that sudden change might spark chaos among the digitally disenfranchised. Flexibility, not efficiency, will oversee this transition—at least until the nation's broadband reaches more than its bingo halls.
New York’s City Council is mulling the Community Opportunity to Purchase Act, granting nonprofits first dibs on multifamily buildings but, critics say, likely embroiling up to 90,000 properties in an extra six months of procedural limbo. Housing advocates spy a route to more affordable homes; small landlords and realtors foresee depressed prices, sluggish sales, and thinner city coffers—a classic New York standoff where even compromise may demand a down payment.
Letitia James, New York’s attorney general, leads 21 states in suing the Trump administration over new federal guidance that could bar green card holders—once refugees or asylees—from SNAP food aid. The USDA’s October memo, following a recent tax-and-spending law, may affect 35,000 in New York alone and threatens states with hefty penalties—a heaping helping of bureaucracy for already hungry residents.
Gothamist
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