Average rents in New York City have breached the $4,000 mark—particularly in Manhattan—while vacancy hovers at a meagre 1.4%, according to Associated Press. Local authorities, including Mayor Zohran Mamdani, now scramble for tenant protections as ma…
Donald Trump warned Tehran that, unless Iran reopens the Strait of Hormuz—recently blocked by its forces—he’ll order attacks on power plants and bridges as soon as Tuesday, promising “hell” and a two-for-one infrastructure day on the Persian calendar. His threats followed news that U.S. forces pulled off a daring rescue of a downed airman in Iran’s mountains. Diplomacy, it seems, is taking a brief holiday.
Governor Kathy Hochul is weighing a plan to let New York public employees hired since 2012 retire at 55—a move the AFL-CIO, speaking for 2.5 million workers, naturally supports, but which could cost taxpayers a cool $1.5 billion. State legislators have been largely sidelined, and local governments fret over the bill. Retirement, it seems, may arrive early—unless fiscal caution misses the party.
Prosecutors in Suffolk County, New York, have charged Phillip González with running a large-scale drug operation after seizing about seven kilograms of controlled substances—chiefly fentanil, some of it laced with the horse tranquilliser xylazine—from his East Patchogue residence. Authorities claim the stash could have killed millions, a business model not noted for customer retention, though the legal standing of “Tranq” in New York may yet keep lawyers busy.
Donald Trump has given Iran 48 hours to strike a deal or face American attacks on its power plants, threatening “all hell” should the clock run out. The US president’s ultimatum, tossed out on Truth Social, demands Tehran reopen the Strait of Hormuz, chokepoint for one-fifth of global oil. For now, America’s plans remain as opaque as the strait’s waters, but deadlines do keep getting extensions.
As New York’s federal graft probe lurches onward, we note that Adrienne Adams, Governor Hochul’s running mate and former City Council Speaker, steered $435,000 in public funds toward BHRAGS Home Care—a Brooklyn nonprofit now mired in corruption charges. No charges have touched Adams, but with the city having handed BHRAGS $185 million for migrant shelters, the city’s red flag supply seems perilously low.
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post
As the IRS girds for America’s 2026 tax season, it warns that failing to declare all income—yes, even that paltry payment from a side hustle—can trigger penalties up to 20% of tax owed. Digital platforms and banks now routinely report payments, leaving little room for creative forgetting; gig workers and freelancers in particular may find that Uncle Sam’s memory outpaces their own, albeit with fewer pleasant surprises.
Uber and its adversaries in the New York State Trial Lawyers Association are locked in a contest over auto insurance costs, each accusing the other of making wallets lighter. The ride-hailing giant has splashed out millions at Albany in hopes of capping legal payouts and, by extension, premiums, while the lawyers fret about justice going out with the bathwater—because who could bear affordable insurance without litigation?
Steve Fulop of the Partnership for the City of New York warns that firms—including fixtures like Apollo Global Management—are weighing moves to sunbelt states over Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s talk of steep tax hikes, pitched to close a $5.4 billion budget gap. While Mamdani’s drumbeat promises relief through taxes, the business crowd threatens to vote with its feet—proving that capital, unlike city loyalty, remains stubbornly mobile.
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post
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