Federal budget cuts from the Trump-era One Big Beautiful Bill Act are set to bump nearly 500,000 New Yorkers off the state’s Essential Plan on July 1, thanks to a lower income cap. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will preserve coverag…
With New York’s Rent Guidelines Board reviewing a fresh report showing landlords’ net operating income rose 6.2% in 2024—especially in Manhattan and Staten Island—Mayor Mamdani’s pledge to freeze rents on around one million regulated apartments appears, on paper, newly feasible. With landlords and tenant blocs trading familiar barbs and the Bronx bucking the upward trend, we await June’s vote for clarity—if not exactly consensus.
The OECD now projects U.S. inflation to hit 4.2% by 2026—more than double the Federal Reserve’s 2% target—despite recent wage growth. American families, especially in Hispanic communities, are feeling the pinch as real incomes remain stubbornly below pre-pandemic levels. Evidently, in today’s economy, pay raises seem merely to help us tread water, not keep us dry.
The Rent Guidelines Board’s latest data showed landlord net incomes in New York rose 6.2%—less briskly than last year’s 12% jump—but this failed to revive last year’s “rent freeze” rhetoric at its first, notably muted, meeting. Mayor Zohran Mamdani, once a freeze champion, now treads carefully amid legality doubts and looming lawsuits, proving that, even in housing debates, elephants can be conspicuously silent.
New York’s Governor Kathy Hochul wants most new housing to dodge state environmental reviews, contending that local red tape will catch eco-ills just fine. The state’s acute housing pinch and its famously glacial permitting process set the scene, though greener minds fret about slipping standards. If nothing else, this may be the rare moment when YIMBYs and developers find Albany’s doors opening faster than usual.
As New York ponders the fate of its crumbling Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, we recall Boston’s Big Dig: billions spent to bury—and, fatefully, widen—a highway, only to fuel even worse traffic. Now, with City Hall dithering over whether to rebuild or rethink the BQE, some suggest scrapping it altogether in favor of greenery and transit. It seems congestion, like hope, springs eternal.
Governor Kathy Hochul is courting a coalition of developers, environmentalists, and politicians like Zohran Mamdani to back her plan to trim New York’s labyrinthine State Environmental Quality Review Act for multi-unit housing. Modest projects on old strip malls could skip costly hoops—potentially saving $80,000 a unit—while critics fret over details. For once, builders and green groups are singing in tune, if tentatively, from the same hymn sheet.
New York City's well-lubricated shelter machine can grind to a halt not for lack of apartments or funding, but for want of bureaucratic speed: families linger for weeks in taxpayer-funded shelters (at $200 a night) while agencies such as the Department of Homeless Services and Human Resources Administration shuffle paperwork between mutually oblivious systems—reminding us that sometimes, red tape beats real estate to the finish line.
America’s “Build America, Buy America” rule—part of the sprawling Infrastructure and Jobs Act—has gummed up affordable housing projects from coast to coast, as developers scramble to source costly, home-grown materials or wait months for 100%-US-certified HVAC systems to arrive. While the rule aims to bolster local supply, it mostly delivers delays and sticker shock, leaving would-be tenants caught in a patriotic, if rather inconvenient, waiting game.
El Diario NY
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