Democratic lawmakers are urging Governor Kathy Hochul to plug a $393m gap and save New York’s “Essential Plan,” a state-subsidized health insurance for 450,000 low-income residents, after federal cuts tied to Trump-era deals take effect in July. Whi…
After a three-day strike that halted the Long Island Rail Road—the nation’s busiest commuter artery—trains resumed shuttling between Long Island and New York City on May 19. The mysterious deal resolving a marathon wage dispute between the MTA and five unions followed federal mediation and years of deadlock, though fare-hike-averse managers might eye the bottom line as nervously as commuters eyed replacement buses.
New York City braces for an early two-day spell of extreme heat—temperatures “real-feeling” their way toward the upper 90s—prompting authorities to activate cooling centers and a Code Red warning for the homeless. With air quality alerts and thunderstorms poised to follow Wednesday’s scorcher, we marvel at nature’s timing: a city built for hustle is now ordered to pause, hydrate, and await friendlier forecasts.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani is floating a plan to rezone swathes south of Brooklyn’s Prospect Park—think autobody shops and modest homes—for taller buildings and thousands of new flats, in anticipation of the Interborough Express rail link. Local officials are largely on board, hopeful that extra roofs will cool New York City’s red-hot rents, though—this being Brooklyn—persuading everyone may require more than just a neighborhood survey.
Willets Point Commons, the splashy first phase of New York’s biggest affordable housing effort in decades, welcomed its initial residents this week, as officials broke ground on 220 units for low-income seniors. Envisioned as part of the city’s partnership with Queens Development Group and NYCFC’s adjacent soccer stadium, the full project promises 2,500 units, schools, and green space—proof, perhaps, that even in Queens, long shots occasionally find the net.
The abrupt closure of Spirit Airlines on May 3rd has left U.S. summer travelers pining for its bargain fares, with Kayak data showing average domestic flights now $70—24%—higher than last year. Families, especially Hispanic ones who once relied on Spirit to Florida or Texas, face paying hundreds more for the same trips, while rivals like Frontier scramble to fill the gap—or perhaps just their pockets.
New York’s Mayor Mamdani has pledged over $200 million through 2030 for bus lanes, bike routes, and spruced-up public spaces, providing the Department of Transportation with its fattest wallet yet—plus up to 158 new hires focused on making city travel safer and swifter. Previous grand promises fizzled, so we’ll be watching closely to see if these lanes outpace Manhattan’s midtown traffic at rush hour.
Kathy Hochul, once an upstate enforcer of immigration rules, is shepherding New York toward sanctuary statehood, spurred by federal crackdowns in Donald Trump's second term and new deals in Albany’s budget. This shift, echoed gingerly by New Jersey and Maryland, bolsters local limits on ICE but still leaves advocates cold—a reminder that reform, like New York bagels, rarely pleases every palate at once.
A new map from the National Council on Aging and Urban Institute suggests that over 9 million Americans aged 65-plus are missing out on $58 billion in federal benefits—from SNAP to Medicare Savings—largely due to ignorance or misconceptions. We note this bureaucratic invisibility leaves seniors juggling rent and medicine while policymakers ponder why their assistance doesn’t quite land where needed, much like dropped change beneath the national sofa.
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