With just 61 days under his belt, Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral bid for universal child care enjoys $1.2 billion in state backing—yet City Hall’s gears creak around permitting, workforce, and voucher reforms. The City Council’s inaugural Early Childhood …
After much courtroom wrangling and a brief reprieve, new Trump-era requirements mean some 123,000 New Yorkers, including the elderly and recently homeless, must prove they're working or volunteering to keep SNAP food aid. City officials, scrambling with nonprofits to ease the transition, fret that compliance might be harder than finding a decent bagel uptown—especially for seniors dusting off old résumés.
American strikes on Iran, which killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and over 780 others, drew swift condemnation from Democratic representatives such as Grace Meng and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who accused Donald Trump of “dragging” the U.S. into an unwanted war. As Iran responded with missile barrages against Israel and U.S. interests, the State Department urged Americans to exit the region—though, with airports shuttered, the exit looks more theoretical than practical.
Three months into his tenure, New York’s Mayor Zohran Mamdani has backed away from a campaign promise to expand CityFHEPS rental vouchers, citing a daunting $1.2 billion price tag as city coffers wheeze. With councilmembers and advocates insisting on full implementation of 2023’s laws, compromise ideas abound—albeit quietly. We await March’s legal deadline to see if lofty pledges will be steamrolled by arithmetic, as so often happens downtown.
New York’s mayor, Zohran Mamdani, has picked neighborhoods in Upper Manhattan, the Bronx, Southeast Queens, and parts of Brooklyn for an inaugural free childcare program for 2-year-olds—regardless of parental income or immigration status—just in time for September drop-offs. Governor Kathy Hochul has pledged $498 million to kick things off, but with staff underpaid and details fuzzy, we suspect the city’s real juggling act is just beginning.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul has sounded the alarm over ballooning household costs—from a much-publicized $2,300 to a less terrifying $864—for meeting the state’s 2019 climate law, after a NYSERDA memo landed with a thud among business groups and environmentalists alike. With decarbonisation mandates proving tougher than anticipated, we suspect a bout of creative arithmetic will precede any legislative rewrite—numbers, after all, are more flexible than boilers.
A federal judge in Manhattan dismissed Donald Trump’s legal bid to block New York’s congestion pricing scheme, which plans to charge most drivers entering lower Manhattan. Governor Kathy Hochul crowed that the ruling vindicates a “once-in-a-lifetime success story” for urban transit. Whether the city will flow freer or just costlier remains to be seen—but New Yorkers will soon pay to find out.
New York City will offer free child care for 2-year-olds this autumn in selected neighborhoods across Manhattan, the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens, Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Governor Kathy Hochul said Tuesday, citing a $73 million initial state push. If incremental funding holds, the “2-K” initiative could expand to 12,000 slots by 2027—outpacing current capacity and, with luck, perhaps even the napping habits of its future attendees.
Federal rules tightening work requirements for New York’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program took effect on March 1st, prompting Attorney General Letitia James to remind thousands potentially affected—namely adults aged 18-64 without young dependents—to mind their paperwork and seek help if exemptions apply. Food still costs a pretty penny, so we expect locals will become expert navigators of forms, loopholes, and the fine print.
El Diario NY
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