New York City unveiled its “True Cost-of-Living” index, finding about 62% of locals, or over five million people, cannot afford basic expenses—despite government benefits—if they hope to live with dignity, let alone the odd splurge. The Urban Instit…
Federal prosecutors indicted two men for plotting to detonate a homemade bomb near Gracie Mansion, citing plans to kill as many as 60—a scheme allegedly captured in an unambiguous dashcam recording. The target: Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s official residence in New York. We note that the duo’s ambition evidently outpaced their operational skills, as their aspirations fizzled long before any fuse was lit.
A New York Times exposé recounts how Stephen Miller, the White House advisor, shaped an expansive migration crackdown in Donald Trump’s second term, urging ICE agents to flex arrest powers—even sans warrants—targeting non-white migrants and refugees, notably Somalis. After deadly Minneapolis protests, Miller acknowledged possible “mistakes,” but kept nudging restrictive measures. Policy may be less visible on the streets, but its bureaucratic aftertaste lingers stubbornly in the corridors.
Transport and logistics firms across the United States are quietly reintroducing “fuel surcharges” as oil prices climb, partly owing to tensions with Iran, CNN reports. These subtle add-ons now appear in everything from shipping invoices to grocery deliveries, rarely flagged to consumers—who only notice their wallets slimming. We suspect this kind of creative accounting will be with us longer than the current price of oil.
Governor Kathy Hochul’s push to loosen New York’s vaunted Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, ostensibly to curb rising energy costs, has drawn local ire: advocates argue this would shackle the state to volatile fossil fuels, add to bills over time, and keep “Asthma Alley” wheezing. Renewable projects, they say, offer cheaper, cleaner power—and far fewer opportunities for understatement than the current political climate.
After years of keeping its chequebook stubbornly shut to youth mental health, New York State has settled a 2022 lawsuit and must now, by federal court order, boost access to Medicaid-funded services for over 300,000 underserved children from Brooklyn to Buffalo. The plan includes higher payments for nonprofit providers—perhaps enough to convince battered clinicians not to bolt for greener pastures this time around.
A Teamsters Local 804 report has accused Amazon of fuelling chaos on New York streets, citing some 90,000-330,000 likely parking violations by its delivery fleet between 2021 and 2025—most going unticketed. While the e-commerce giant points to subcontractor independence and insists on its safety cred, city data suggest enforcement alone is like delivering parcels with no address: necessary, but scarcely sufficient.
New York City officials, eager to revitalise four aging Manhattan public housing complexes, are courting private developers to erect new towers—a plan promising modern flats but stirring residents’ doubts about displacement and rent hikes. While the city touts this as a creative fix to chronic disrepair, those living in the old buildings wonder if the cure will prove pricier than the disease, with optimism peeping through the scaffolding.
A rare ceasefire between the United States and Iran, announced via Islamabad, will last two weeks while the parties attempt peace talks in Pakistan starting April 10th. Tehran’s proposed ten-point plan focuses on safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz—a vital oil artery—while Donald Trump claims he’s paused strikes thanks to Pakistani mediation. Energy traders can exhale, but we suspect their relief, like the ceasefire, may be fleeting.
El Diario NY
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