Federal funding cuts under the Trump administration’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” have set the stage for nearly 500,000 New Yorkers to lose coverage from the Essential Plan on July 1, while 1.3 million will remain insured. The state will notify the…
As New York’s Rent Guidelines Board kicked off deliberations on rent-stabilized increases, the word “freeze”—last year’s rallying cry—was conspicuously iced out, even by Mayor Mamdani, who recently stacked the board with allies but now treads carefully amid landlord lawsuits. While landlords decry misleading income metrics, tenants press for relief; as ever, we brace for a verdict somewhere between arithmetic and alchemy.
As New York ponders the future of its ailing Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, we might recall Boston’s “Big Dig,” which buried a highway and freed up land—only to worsen congestion by expanding lanes. Politicians from Eric Adams to incoming mayor Zohran Mamdani offer conflicting blueprints, with demolition daydreams competing with expansion plans. Past experience suggests that widening a bottleneck rarely unlocks the open road, but hope, unlike traffic, springs eternal.
ICE agents, temporarily filling in for absent TSA staff during the U.S. government shutdown, are now patrolling LaGuardia, JFK, and Newark airports, spooking New York’s immigrant travelers. Legal advocates report a spike in frantic queries as heightened airport arrests under President Trump’s 15-month-old crackdown put myriad non-citizens—undocumented, DACA recipients, green-card holders, activists—on edge. Security lines, alas, remain as glacial as agency communications.
An earnest bid to reshore American industry—Build America, Buy America, tucked into the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act—has left affordable housing projects from Houston to Seattle at the mercy of pricier, rarer domestic materials and paralyzed supply chains. Developers report 20–35% higher costs and mounting delays for components like HVAC systems, as waivers wander through bureaucracy; it’s supply-side patriotism, but with fewer front doors for now.
Just as Holtec’s bid to revive Michigan’s Palisades plant has left watchdogs in a cold sweat, the firm now eyes Indian Point near New York City, prompting local tremors. Governor Kathy Hochul and regulators once opposed such “zombie nuke” plans, yet political winds and impatient electricity bills change fast. Transparency over $2.4 billion in decommissioning funds remains elusive—a poignant reminder that nuclear nostalgia is rarely cheap.
In a bid to sidestep Washington’s erratic approach to vaccines, New York Governor Kathy Hochul, Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie have introduced two bills widening access to immunizations; insurers would cover jabs approved by either federal or state experts, and pharmacists could immunize children as young as two. With the ACIP advisory panel dissolved by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., we trust Albany can at least vaccinate against confusion.
Governor Kathy Hochul wants New York to exempt most new housing from state-level environmental scrutiny, suggesting local watchdogs can keep rivers unsullied while letting shovels break ground. Critics fret this could undermine protection, but with the state’s housing shortfall nearing a million units, we suspect red tape may need slimming—even if some pristine views now risk featuring a crane or two in the background.
Donald Trump signed an executive order instructing the Department of Homeland Security to release overdue paychecks to Transportation Security Administration staff, after 42 days of bureaucratic gridlock shuttered the agency. While the Senate unanimously passed a funding bill, House Speaker Mike Johnson torpedoed it, objecting to limits on ICE. TSA agents, desperate for pay after three shutdowns in six months, might finally clear security—at least at the bank.
El Diario NY
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