More than 5,200 New Yorkers face losing federal Emergency Housing Vouchers this year as NYCHA scrambles to rehouse the vulnerable—part of a sudden nationwide withdrawal of support affecting 70,000, after rescue funds from Congress ran dry years ahea…
Bracing for a hotter, drier summer, New York’s power grid—managed by the New York Independent System Operator—faces its thinnest reserve in over a decade: just 417 megawatts, less than half last year’s buffer. Coal and nuclear retirements outpace new supply, as rising electrification strains capacity. Operators hope to avoid rolling blackouts, though, preferably not relying on neighborly goodwill from New Jersey by candlelight.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority is charting a course around Washington, seeking alternative funds for the $5.5 billion Interborough Express rail between Brooklyn and Queens after President Trump’s second-term habit of throttling federal transit dollars. Undeterred, planners foresee swift progress on a project set to connect 200,000 daily riders—provided the MTA needn’t wait for Santa Claus or a more generous mood at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Governor Kathy Hochul and New York lawmakers inch closer to a budget deal that would waive a decades-old environmental review for many housing projects, to the delight of builders and officials like Mayor Mamdani. The reform aims to shave years off the state’s notoriously sluggish construction timelines, though wrangling continues over how much building is too much. Even in Albany, some red tape apparently resists every pair of shears.
Despite Governor Kathy Hochul’s much-touted $1.7 billion universal childcare plan, thousands of New York families remain stranded on waitlists as providers warn of chronic understaffing and vanishing funds. A proposed $500 million boost—backed by the Senate, but curiously absent from the Assembly’s budget—aims to patch workforce gaps before the program collapses under its own ambitions. As ever, dreams of seamless policy await a matching checkbook.
A new Pratt Center report pins much of New York City’s recent home price surge—and a notable decline in Black residents—on a brisk trade in home flipping, which topped 10,000 sales since 2021, especially in Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx. Real estate groups protest that such turnover keeps old buildings standing. We suspect the only thing truly secure is the flippers’ profit margins, if not the neighbors.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani, recalling his own epic Bronx commutes, has promised New Yorkers buses at least 20% faster, though recent language hedges that to “up to” 20%. The forthcoming “Streets Plan” aspires to untangle delays worsened by double-parked cars and sluggish curb management, offering dignity (and minutes) to far-flung riders—an ambition previous mayors missed, but hope in New York, like its traffic, rarely travels in a straight line.
New York City Council has passed a raft of laws promoting vaccine education, defying falling immunisation rates and a US measles uptick—1,800 cases in 37 states, the Council warns. The plan mandates public schools to distribute materials from the city’s health department and launches a new awareness campaign by 2027. Washington may dither, but the city appears determined to stick a needle in misinformation’s side.
Claire Valdez, eyeing Nydia Velázquez’s seat in Congress with a wink from the NYC-DSA, has called for both a citywide rent freeze and universal rent control, pitching herself as a champion for beleaguered tenants in Queens and Brooklyn. While rivals Antonio Reynoso and Julie Won echo her freeze demand, only Valdez stretches for controls on all rentals—ambitious, given Congress can’t set NYC rents, just the political temperature.
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