A new poll commissioned by No Kid Hungry New York finds 67% of city residents, and nearly three-quarters of families with children, have lately chosen between paying rent or eating decently—hardly the urban lifestyle we were promised. Food costs hav…
New York’s new mayor, Zohran Mamdani, has briskly backpedalled on a key pledge, opting to pursue a legal appeal against City Council laws expanding CityFHEPS rental vouchers—a pivot from prior vows to drop the suit. The administration cites ballooning costs, about $10 billion over five years, and an impasse with council and advocates; affordable housing in the Big Apple, it seems, remains more mirage than miracle.
Braving its coldest winter in decades, New York City found itself shivering not just from the weather but from a 25% surge in National Grid’s average winter gas bills, up to $290 monthly, while Con Edison’s electricity charges climbed by 37% over five years. Wholesale price spikes, modest incomes, and looming new rate hikes suggest that for many, warmth is becoming a well-earned luxury—woolens, alas, not included.
Thousands in New York face possible eviction after learning that funding for Emergency Housing Vouchers—launched in 2021 for COVID-era renters—will run dry by year’s end, with no regular Section 8 support to replace it. City officials say they’re searching for a fix, but with 6,000 local households soon at risk, we await a housing miracle—or perhaps just a workable Plan B.
New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority has announced its largest subway upgrade since the 1980s: an order for 2,390 R262 train cars, to be phased in from 2030 via international bidding. Alongside nods to open-gangway designs and CCTV, we’re promised fewer breakdowns—each car should cruise 200,000 miles between repairs, a neat advance on the current 89,000. In theory, the daily grind may soon involve less grinding.
Federal tweaks to Medicaid and Medicare threaten to sweep an estimated one million New Yorkers—many of them Asian-American immigrants—out of coverage, leaving independent practices like CAIPA, which serves half a million, bracing for a $135 million hit by 2027. Albany must now decide whether to shore up the city’s strained safety net or risk watching health disparities balloon, with only the emergency room left to mop up.
A sprawling alliance of unions has thrown its weight behind a health insurance tax reform bill in Albany, positioning it as a balm for New York City’s $1.5 billion budget woes. The bill’s sleight of hand would move tax obligations from cash-strapped municipalities onto private employers—thus promising Gotham hundreds of millions in relief, and perhaps giving corporate wallets some unaccustomed cardio.
New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority aims to award the third contract for the $7 billion Second Avenue Subway extension to East Harlem this week, even as its lawsuit against the federal government over a withheld $60 million reimbursement heads to court. While digging 60-foot-deep trenches under Second Avenue is nobody’s idea of light work, officials vow to keep traffic—and optimism—moving, pending Washington’s mood swings.
The National Transportation Safety Board pinpointed a lack of a transponder on a Port Authority fire truck and minimal tower staffing—just two controllers—as critical failures in Sunday’s fatal runway collision at LaGuardia, which left two pilots dead and six people still hospitalized. While aviation is famously layered with safeguards, it seems too many of them chose the same night for a well-timed holiday.
Gothamist
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