New York City’s CityFHEPS housing-assistance scheme, originally budgeted at $25 million in 2019 under Mayor de Blasio, now costs $1.7 billion—about 29% of the city’s $5.9 billion budget deficit, and keeps 70,000 families housed. As Mayor Zohran Mamd…
A federal judge held this week that New York’s congestion pricing plan, championed by the outgoing Biden administration and fiercely opposed by the Trump team, can proceed despite efforts by Secretary Sean Duffy to scrap it. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority won on the grounds that pulling the plug was “arbitrary and capricious”—a useful reminder that, in New York, changing lanes may be harder than it looks.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani has unveiled a plan to expand New York City’s free child care, promising coverage for 2,000 two-year-olds this autumn and aiming to reach 12,000 toddlers by 2027, using state funds. Parents, previously daunted by the city’s $20,000-a-year child-care bills, now weigh adding to their broods with slightly less trepidation—though, as ever, bureaucratic details threaten to leave optimism in the stroller.
New York City’s much-ballyhooed plan to shutter Rikers Island and swap in four borough-based jails—excluding Staten Island—has swelled to $13.7 billion, a tidy 57% over budget, with all projects lagging. The Brooklyn site should finish first in 2029, but at current pace, Manhattan’s won’t open until 2032—five years past deadline. With inmate numbers already 60% above planned capacity, we suspect optimism, like budgets, may be overstretched.
Governor Kathy Hochul wants to spare most new homes in New York from state-level environmental checks, betting local officials mind the planet just fine. The move aims to unclog a housing logjam, though critics worry over local oversight’s spotty record. In a city where apartments vanish faster than reusable shopping bags, we imagine even the greenest renters might see the logic—if not the scenery.
Albany’s budgeteers have pitched rival plans to tackle hunger after federal SNAP cuts and rule changes left many New Yorkers facing tighter eligibility. The state’s Assembly and Senate each back $75 million apiece for food aid programmes, while Governor Kathy Hochul’s numbers are, in local parlance, a bit more “diet-sized.” Advocates cheer these commitments but note the menu still leaves a few plates worryingly empty.
A new American Heart Association report reminds us that the heart rarely acts alone: kidney disease and diabetes often tiptoe in as silent partners, with nearly 90% of U.S. adults harbouring at least one risk factor for CKM syndrome. As most remain blissfully unaware of looming risks, regular screening seems a sounder bet than waiting for organs to send engraved invitations.
New York is counting the cost of Donald Trump’s tighter border policies, which have dented inbound flows: overseas tourists and would-be immigrants alike are skipping the Big Apple in growing numbers. Experts warn this chill on foot traffic and foreign talent risks crimping the city’s growth prospects—though, on the bright side, subway seats and SoHo sidewalks have never been easier to snag.
Tom Homan, America’s border-policy czar, warned that ICE officers will stay deployed at airports like Washington Dulles as the shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security grinds into its 44th day. While TSA staff flee or go unpaid—460 have resigned, some hubs are missing over half their screeners—ICE now checks IDs and guards exits. President Trump’s emergency pay order may help, but until then, the deporters moonlight as gatekeepers.
El Diario NY
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