Nearly 450,000 New Yorkers risk losing coverage under the state’s Essential Plan after federal funding cuts—part of President Trump’s 2025 budget—squeeze those earning 200–250% of the poverty line out of low-cost insurance. While Governor Kathy Hoch…
A walkout on Long Island Rail Road, America’s busiest passenger line, now feels less like a bluff as Metropolitan Transportation Authority negotiations hit a wall with union leaders; some 260,000 daily commuters may need to reacquaint themselves with traffic come May 16, unless both sides find common ground—proving once again that, in New York, movement is ever a matter for hard bargaining.
More than 16,300 apartments are due to hit New York’s market after being converted from unloved office space, part of a national trend driven by remote work and an office vacancy rate now flirting with 20%. While developers scramble to turn excess desks into affordable beds, regulatory snarls and Manhattan’s legendary construction costs mean moving in will still require patience, not just pluck—New Yorkers, as ever, must hurry up and wait.
As Congress’s “Big Beautiful Bill” trims $187 billion from SNAP over the decade, a bipartisan gaggle in Albany—spurred by Hunger Solutions New York and 800 fellow advocates—urges Governor Hochul and legislative leaders to double WIC funds to $30 million and buoy SNAP outreach with $8.5 million. All this, they argue, is a modest ask in a $263 billion budget—especially when local counties foot the bill, indigestion included.
With New York's budget crunch threatening to push a million residents off healthcare and whittle away SNAP benefits, some would-be Assembly contenders claim sitting Democrats like Erik Dilan and Jenifer Rajkumar have grown overly fond of their donor class—hence their reluctance to raise taxes on the state’s toniest inhabitants. Voters, per a Siena poll, apparently prefer politicians who nibble, not nibble from, the gilded hand.
New York State has agreed to boost Medicaid funding for children’s behavioral health after a lawsuit and a 2024 report showed four in five eligible city kids—nearly 195,000—miss out on vital care, particularly from Brownsville to Buffalo. Providers, mostly stretched-thin nonprofits, hope higher rates will stem chronic staff turnover. With luck, children’s trust and wellbeing may prove more durable than state budgets.
Donald Trump will meet NATO’s secretary general, Mark Rutte, to mull America’s possible exit from the alliance—a conversation sure to quicken pulses from Brussels to Bucharest. Despite Trump’s claim that allies “failed the test” in recent security operations, Pew Research data show 59% of Americans still back NATO membership, though Republican enthusiasm trails far behind. Should we stay or should we go? The debate, like the alliance itself, seems built to rumble on.
Federal prosecutors indicted two men for plotting a homemade bomb attack near Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s Gracie Mansion residence, charging them with conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction. Their alleged aim, as dashcam audio captured, was to “start terror bro” and kill up to 60 people—a plan more grandiose than their bomb-making skills, which, we note, fell considerably short of blockbuster proportions.
As America’s tax season sprints to its April 15 finish, the IRS girds for over 140 million returns—but, as ever, last-minute filers may find haste breeds costly errors, delayed refunds, and the odd penalty. With automated checks flagging even untidy decimals between reported income and the agency’s W-2 or 1099 data, we’re reminded that while procrastination is a national pastime, it rarely pays dividends.
El Diario NY
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