Manhattan’s median rent scaled a record $5,000 in February, with vacancy barely brushing 2% and listings down 26% year-on-year, according to The Corcoran Group. Critics say Mayor Mamdani’s proposed rent freeze, along with well-meaning state laws lik…
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Fresh data from the Department of Housing and Urban Development suggest that the typical American renter should earn at least three times their rent—over $9,000 monthly in New York—to dodge the dreaded “cost-burdened” label. With many families now spending more than half their income on housing, particularly in cities that never sleep, it appears the rent really is too damn high, at least for now.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul now seeks to delay the state’s aggressive 2019 climate targets, pledging pragmatism over green ambition after finding voters less keen when bills arrive. Hochul wants lawmakers to push major emissions rules off till 2030, change how progress is measured, and hold firm on distant 2050 goals—prompting lawsuits from Earthjustice and barbed remarks from environmentalists. Political weather, it seems, shifts faster than climate.
New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority will replace a remarkable 36% of its ageing subway fleet—some veterans clocking 50 years—with up to 2,390 new carriages, as part of a $68bn capital programme endorsed by Governor Kathy Hochul. First deliveries, set for lines 1, 3, and 6, may arrive by early 2030, promising modern gadgets and “open-gangway” designs—though straphangers may yet prefer punctuality over panoramic corridors.
We note that Fitch and Kroll, two notable bond-rating outfits, joined Moody’s in warning New York City that Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s $127 billion budget—lavishly funded with $2.6 billion scraped from reserves—could soon erode its credit rating. While ratings themselves remain intact for now, the agencies’ pointed “negative outlook” suggests Gotham’s rainy day fund may soon be more drizzle than downpour.
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post
New York Governor Kathy Hochul now urges a ten-year delay to the state’s ambitious climate mandates, citing projections that the current deadlines would hand households a $4,000 increase in utility and gasoline costs by 2030. Her proposal would also soften emissions calculations, to environmentalists’ dismay and Republicans’ schadenfreude. Having tucked the issue into budget talks, she faces both left-wing outrage and the perennial risk of Albany missing its fiscal bedtime.
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post
Governor Kathy Hochul, having mused in public for weeks, finally detailed her proposals to dilute parts of New York’s ambitious 2019 climate law, notably by shifting methane accounting from a 20-year to a 100-year timeline—an artful way to make numbers look friendlier. Lawmakers fret over “changing science,” but for now, only deadlines, not the ultimate 2050 emissions goal, are up for grabs; climate politics, it seems, loves a moving target.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul unveiled a plan to soften the state’s ambitious climate targets, proposing delays to overdue emissions rules, loosening caps, and shifting how emissions are counted—all pitched as relief for stressed wallets rather than the atmosphere. With the White House less than keen on renewables and the state lagging on its 2019 pledges, we suspect the climate will just have to wait its turn.
In yet another turn on New York’s Sisyphean quest for better transit, the MTA is pressing ahead with a $1.1 billion contract for the Second Avenue subway’s East 106th Street station, despite the Trump administration’s freeze on federal funds and a resulting lawsuit. The authority will seek board approval now, hoping courts (and not further cost overruns) dictate whether the Q train finally connects with East Harlem by 2032.
Gothamist
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