Congress members Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ritchie Torres, representing the Bronx, have joined the chorus lambasting Donald Trump for launching deadly strikes against Iran—including the unprecedented killing of Ali Khamenei—without Congressional …
New York’s Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani has pitched to President Donald Trump an audacious $21 billion federal grant for decking over Sunnyside Yard to make way for 12,000 affordable homes—half with Mitchell-Lama pedigree—plus new schools and parks. Both sides claim to relish transparency and speed, though such mega-projects tend to encounter more meetings than milestones, especially when union jobs and fiscal prudence are in the air.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani has revived New York’s Sunnyside Yard deck plan—originally mothballed in 2020’s Covid fog—by pitching it to President Donald Trump. The $14.4bn scheme envisions 12,000 affordable homes atop Amtrak’s Queens rail hub, assuming federal chequebooks and inter-party amity materialize. Much like the city’s planners since the 1960s, we await the day developers finally outwit a stubborn tangle of steel and ambition.
New York City’s new mayor, Zohran Mamdani, has inherited a yawning $5.4 billion budget gap and proposes trimming private contracts to help plug it—hardly a novel prescription for urban fiscal headaches, but one that tests his social democratic vows early and often. We will see whether pragmatism trumps principle, or if Gotham’s contractors should start packing up their golden staplers.
Having once championed New York’s 2019 climate law, Governor Kathy Hochul now urges revisions, citing fresh NYSERDA data warning that emission caps could send utility bills soaring by up to $4,000 for upstate households. With legal battles brewing and elections in the offing, she insists cost, not climate, is her chief concern—a political climate forecast that, like the weather, may change by morning.
A federal judge sided with New York in its perennial joust with Washington, ruling the Department of Transportation cannot scrap the Value Pricing Pilot Program—thus, cameras for the city’s oft-disputed congestion pricing scheme stay on, for now. The ruling, however, leaves a crack for further legal wrangling. Meanwhile, funding for the Gateway Tunnel again hangs in suspense, proving infrastructure relies on both steel and stubbornness.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani marked Holi by visiting Lucy’s Rainbow Daycare in South Richmond Hill, spotlighting the debut of New York City’s “2K” plan to provide free childcare to 2,000 two-year-olds starting this autumn. Governor Kathy Hochul has set aside $73 million for the launch and promises more, though funding remains only pencilled in after next year—public toddlers may yet need to mind the ledger as well as their manners.
As New Yorkers grumble over spiralling energy bills, lawmakers in Albany debate whether the state’s bold 2019 climate law—mandating sweeping emissions cuts—can survive grumbling voters and budgetary headaches. The power play pits ambitious green targets against ratepayer realities, and we’ll soon see if environmental virtue or wallet-vexation wins in the land of Broadway, bagels, and occasionally hot air.
Mount Sinai’s hospitals and its 9,000 doctors have exited Anthem’s insurance network after months of increasingly theatrical wrangling over rates, late payments, and contract fine print—an impasse now affecting nearly 200,000 New Yorkers. Both sides dispute the numbers: Mount Sinai wants faster, heftier payments; Anthem warns of rising costs for patients. Perhaps clarity will arrive before anyone needs emergency care—or a calculator.
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