With contract talks between five unions and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority down to the wire, New York’s Long Island Railroad—which ferries 300,000 souls daily—faces a shutdown as soon as May 16. Both sides have agreed to modest retroactiv…
New York’s Rent Guidelines Board floated a possible freeze on rents for one million stabilised households, approving a preliminary range of 0–2% hikes for one-year leases and 0–4% for two-year terms. Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who cheerleads the freeze, faces legal side-eye over influence on the board—though he may find that victory, like cheap Manhattan studios, remains strictly theoretical until the final June vote.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul declared a $268 billion state budget “done” after 37 days’ delay, touting climate tweaks, car insurance reform, and protections for immigrants. Yet Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie promptly insisted “there’s no deal,” suggesting legislative buy-in remains an endangered species. Lawmakers, still unpaid amid the impasse, may soon wish for budgets focused on numbers rather than legislative wish lists—or at least a speedier calculator.
New York’s Rent Guidelines Board has given rent-weary tenants a glimmer of hope, voting preliminarily for a possible freeze on regulated rents—a prospect not seen since the city last flirted with zeroes in 2020. While landlords fret and tenants eye their calculators, Albany’s budget talks continue to lurch along, proving once again that in the city that never sleeps, uncertainty keeps the lights on.
The New York City Rent Guidelines Board, reshaped by Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s tenant-friendly appointees, will cast its much-anticipated preliminary vote on rent hikes for nearly a million regulated apartments in Long Island City. While Mamdani once trumpeted a rent freeze as a campaign cornerstone, he has since muted his rhetoric, although landlords suspect City Hall’s newfound “Office of Mass Engagement” is more stick than carrot—if democracy comes knocking, best check the peephole first.
Governor Kathy Hochul unveiled a $268 billion framework for New York’s long-overdue state budget, touting measures on police cooperation, climate mandates, and tip taxes as wins for affordability—just don’t ask for the fine print. Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie swiftly dampened hopes, noting nearly 50 issues remain unsettled and even the final tally is in flux. Consensus, it seems, is having a hard time making it to Albany in time for spring.
The Rent Guidelines Board in New York has floated a proposal with a zero-percent increase for stabilized leases—the first rent freeze suggestion since Bill de Blasio’s era—handing Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani partial vindication for his campaign. Now, tenants and landlords prepare their battle stations for the city’s annual rite of wrangling over decimals; no one, after all, expects summer in Gotham to be drama-free.
After a month’s delay, Governor Kathy Hochul claims a $268 billion “agreement” on New York State’s 2027 budget, offering tax rebates, some help for migrants, and a tepid new levy on owners of multiple mansions—though not quite enough to thrill anyone. Crucial healthcare support didn’t make the cut, Albany’s haggling lingers, and for all the upbeat talk, we’ll believe in harmony when the paperwork is signed.
Developers in New York City have filed permits for over 150 residential buildings with precisely 99 apartments since 2022, artfully exploiting a quirk in city tax laws that lets them dodge higher construction wages and requirements for affordable housing. City officials and union leaders grumble that this legal sleight-of-hand undermines efforts to ease the city’s housing crunch—though builders seem content to split hairs, and apartment blocks, for now.
THE CITY – NYC News
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