A new municipal report finds that 78% of New York’s Latino population—and 62% of all residents—now earn too little to cover the city’s real cost of living, with basic household expenses leaping from $5,100 in 2020 to $6,400 in 2025. Inflation at 2.7…
Recent reports find New York’s working-class mothers—many Latina and immigrant—now grapple with inflation, stagnant pay, and rents that devour half their wages. Despite filling vital care and hospitality jobs, women like Queens-based nanny Rosy Pagano find themselves perpetually “rounding out” income, reliant on family help to muddle through. We marvel at how the American Dream now requires more overtime hours than actual sleep.
We note that the Trump administration is weighing a temporary pause on America’s 18.3-cent-per-gallon federal gasoline tax, hoping to mollify drivers sore from a 50% price surge since the outbreak of war with Iran. Fuel costs have left nearly half of adults driving less, with one-third curtailing travel plans—though whether Washington’s tax holiday buys more than a brief tank of relief remains anyone’s guess.
After last summer’s Legionnaires’ outbreak in Central Harlem killed seven and hospitalised 92, New York City has doubled its cooling tower inspectors to 54 and will require tower water be tested every 31 days, rather than quarterly—a move City Hall hopes will keep airborne microbes on a tighter leash. As ever in Gotham, no one is promising that outbreaks evaporate entirely, only that the odds improve.
A state audit delivered some hard truths to New York City’s 1,600 public schools, revealing they can’t say exactly which tech tools they use, are slow to report nearly half of data breaches, and often neglect to tell families when student details go astray. Given a recent ransomware outbreak, we expect school officials may soon learn the virtues of an up-to-date inventory system—the hard way.
A cyberattack attributed to ShinyHunters disrupted New York’s schools and Columbia University after breaching Canvas, Instructure’s learning platform, just as exam season loomed, exposing data from about 9,000 educational institutions. Authorities scrambled to contain what was called the largest student-privacy fiasco to date, while classes—and nerves—slowly returned online; presumably, the hackers could now assemble a more accurate alumni directory than the Department of Education itself.
As New York City’s education department rolls out its “NYC Reads” overhaul, middle school teachers find themselves swapping stacks of novels for the mandated EL Education or Wit & Wisdom curricula—meaning kids may read just four to seven whole books a year. Officials trumpet improved literacy rates, but some teachers and parents wistfully recall a time when attention spans were built, not excerpted to death. Progress, it seems, comes by the chapter, not the book.
New York’s Mayor Eric Adams has earmarked a slice of congestion-pricing proceeds for tackling pollution—unless, of course, you’re in Staten Island, which sees little except more exhaust from traffic redirected its way. While City Hall trumpets “environmental justice,” borough residents suspect only Manhattan’s air gets cleaner, demonstrating yet again that not all boroughs are created equal, especially when it comes to breathing room.
The U.S. Postal Service’s chief warned this week that, without swift congressional aid, the venerable mail carrier will run dry by February 2027—a prospect that tends to focus the mind of even the most distracted lawmaker. While the USPS has avoided insolvency before with last-minute fixes, we suspect the romance of handwritten birthday cards may not balance the agency’s notoriously red ink.
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