A federal judge rebuffed Donald Trump’s efforts to block New York’s $9 Manhattan congestion charge, ruling the Department of Transportation could not arbitrarily overrule federally approved state law. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority argued…
New York’s 123,000 recipients of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits—including homeless people, seniors, and veterans—now face new federal work requirements, courtesy of a Trump administration push that brushed aside years of local exemptions. City officials, scrambling with nonprofits to avoid a surge in food insecurity, promise outreach and exemptions galore, lest Manhattan’s breadlines upstage its brunch queues come June.
Judge Lewis Liman—himself a Trump appointee—ruled that the former president lacks authority to ax New York’s congestion pricing, leaving Manhattan’s car toll intact and the MTA in the driver’s seat. The Biden administration’s 2024 agreement lets only the city nix the scheme, which has cut traffic and pollution. Trump’s bluster met a 149-page speed bump; for now, the cameras—and the tolls—keep rolling.
The US Department of Justice plans to sue Governor Kathy Hochul’s administration over the $11 billion overhaul of New York’s Medicaid homecare scheme, after emails suggested state officials and Public Partnerships LLC cozied up before awarding it a lucrative contract. 1199SEIU, the influential health union, backs the revamp, though everyone else appears entitled to a second opinion, if not a subpoena.
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post
New York City will debut its “2-K” program this autumn, offering 2,000 free child care spots for two-year-olds in select areas from Washington Heights to Brownsville, with Governor Kathy Hochul pledging $73 million in year one and $425 million for statewide expansion by 2027. Everyone, regardless of address or paperwork, may ultimately join the sandbox—assuming the city masters the art of scaling nap times.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Governor Kathy Hochul have announced New York City will debut free childcare for two-year-olds—2,000 seats across five school districts this autumn, targeting areas with scant affordable options. Backed by $73 million in state funding, the scheme aims for citywide coverage by 2027. Staten Island, predictably miffed at being left out initially, has been promised a spot on next year’s guest list.
Governor Kathy Hochul, eyeing New York’s sluggish climate progress, brandished a memo warning households could face $2,300 in extra annual costs by 2031 under current green mandates—a figure disputed by environmentalists, who accused officials of sleight of hand with numbers and omitting key data. We await the next round of squabbles over who foots the bill for a climate plan, still rather more aspirational than operational.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani, once a champion of broad rental voucher expansion in New York, now eyes a narrower—and cheaper—path, citing a $1.2 billion budget hole just as negotiations with the City Council heat up. Supporters demand full follow-through on campaign pledges, while compromise proposals swirl behind closed doors. We await March 25, when Mamdani must choose: deliver, delay, or, perhaps, deftly redefine “affordable.”
Federal work requirements for New York’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) recipients came into force on March 1st, prompting Attorney General Letitia James to warn that thousands risk losing benefits unless they log 80 hours of qualifying activity or secure an exemption. The rules target able-bodied adults aged 18 to 64, but sorting voluntary work from red tape may prove more nourishing than the groceries themselves.
El Diario NY
Sign up for the top stories in your inbox each morning.