New York City’s Council is mulling a $30-an-hour minimum wage—some $62,000 a year—sparking both uplift and uproar on cue. With one million on the lowest rung and CEO Tom Grech warning that small firms “can’t stand” the plan, we await the mayor’s sta…
Wall Street opened in a funk as the Dow Jones shed nearly 300 points and oil prices sailed past $100 a barrel, thanks to renewed Middle East tensions. Persistent inflation, sticky-high Federal Reserve interest rates, and expensive energy continue to bruise Americans’ budgets while dashing hope for early rate cuts. For households and investors alike, cautious belt-tightening is back in fashion—a look that, sadly, never quite seems to go out of style.
Despite New York City’s lavish social welfare outlays and the nation’s heftiest taxes, a Robin Hood–Columbia University report finds city poverty at 26%, twice the U.S. average and up by 200,000 since 2022—even as inflation cools. With 450,000 children poor and a declining population offset by incoming migrants, we see that solving poverty might cost rather more than spending ever implied.
A new bill from Representative Don Beyer proposes cutting federal income tax for American workers earning less than $80,500, with those under $46,000 paying nothing at all and potential annual savings reaching $2,800. The scheme funds itself by raising taxes on those raking in over $1 million, a group historically adept at dodging fiscal rainstorms while the rest of us check for loose change under the sofa.
New York’s Housing Access Voucher Program, aimed at bolstering shelter for the city’s homeless and rent-burdened, received a modest $50 million pilot in the latest state budget—enough for perhaps 1,100 vouchers. With over 190,000 annual eviction cases and 111,000 New Yorkers in shelters, calls mount for Governor Hochul to raise funding to $250 million. In Albany, money talks even when your landlord won’t.
A new Hispanic Federation report details how U.S. Latino families, squeezed by average national jumps of 2.7% in consumer prices and over 7% in electricity, fare even worse in places like El Paso, where energy bills soared 23%. With median Latino incomes trailing whites by $20,000, we’re told eligibility tweaks may compound misery by counting energy aid as “income”—a novel way of turning relief into a liability.
New York parents are learning that high test scores rarely come cheap: districts with prized public schools command steep housing prices, while private and parochial alternatives bleed wallets drier still. Competition for discounted places at charter schools is fierce, with lotteries deciding many children’s fates. We find that navigating these choices takes more strategy—and stamina—than the New York Marathon, though perhaps with fewer photo opportunities.
New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority has invited bids for 1,140 sleek R262 subway cars to replace rolling stock from the Reagan era, a lavish first helping in what could become the agency’s largest fleet overhaul—more than 2,300 cars if all options are exercised. Passengers, however, must curb their enthusiasm until at least 2030, showing that in the city that never sleeps, patience is still required for public transit upgrades.
More than 1,500 families in New York City now linger on waitlists for childcare aid, as over a third of the state’s counties—serving half its population—have closed new enrollments or paused renewals for the Child Care Assistance Program. Despite a quintupling of funds to $1.1 billion and eligibility expansions under Governor Kathy Hochul, demand has sprinted well past supply—clearly, in New York, babysitting the budget isn’t so easy.
El Diario NY
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