Iranian-backed hackers have again probed America’s critical infrastructure, according to an April 7th alert from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, targeting internet-linked controllers in small utilities like Aliquippa, Pennsylva…
As the public comment period closed, more than 8,000 responses—many sharply negative—welcomed the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s proposal to limit public housing to citizens, delighting nobody but perhaps lovers of bureaucratic paperwork. Migrant advocacy groups, from LatinoJustice PRLDEF in New York to Boston’s legal aid, warn the move will push thousands of mixed-status families toward eviction, while the nation’s housing woes stubbornly refuse to be legislated away.
New York City Council Speaker Julie Menin says a new Advisory Group on Housing Affordability will hunt for rules worth scrapping so that some 3,000 undersized vacant lots—her “Goldilocks zone”—might sprout up to 35,000 much-needed homes. The task force, combining advocates, trade unions and developers, now faces the Sisyphean pleasure of streamlining bureaucracy while keeping both safety codes and local tempers intact.
Anticipating a million fans and a summer of round-the-clock football, Port Authority chief Kathryn Garcia has asked New Yorkers to adopt remote work during the 2026 FIFA World Cup, as New Jersey Transit blocks commuters from Penn Station on match days. With $150 train fares, overcrowded bars, and restrooms in peril, we may find that the real off-pitch contest is simply getting to Midtown.
Faced with a $5.4bn deficit, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is floating the notion of delaying or reducing pension fund payments, an accounting sleight of hand that City Hall hopes might ease present pain at the expense of future wallets. Critics, from the Citizens Budget Commission to union heads, warn that shifting pension obligations beyond 2032 may solve little—unless one believes tomorrow's taxpayers will finally catch a break.
New York’s lethal winter, claiming at least 29 lives—several of them homeless—reminds us that climate change does not always announce itself with a heatwave. The city’s effort to reroute 311 calls about unsheltered residents to overburdened 911 crews, amid snowstorms and Arctic blasts, offered little more than a Band-Aid on frostbite; policymakers evidently hope that, with enough paperwork, frost itself might be made bureaucratic.
After months on ice, construction crews have begun extending Madison Avenue's double bus lanes from 42nd to 23rd Street, promising reprieve for the 92,000 hardy souls who crawl along at 4.5 mph—less than half the citywide bus average. City officials tout speedier commutes and fewer cars clogging Midtown; we await the day when the phrase “New York minute” doesn’t refer to standing still in traffic.
New York’s new Brooklyn jail, the first slated to replace Rikers Island, reached its “topping out” at 295 feet this week, but, like a track star tripped by construction delays, won’t open until 2029—two years after the legal deadline to close the infamous complex. With other borough jails lagging further behind and City Hall resigning itself to legal recalibration, Rikers’ long goodbye looks stubbornly longer yet.
In New York, timely access to affordable dentistry remains a vanishingly rare treat, but intrepid toothache sufferers may still find relief at public hospitals, NYC Health + Hospitals clinics, NYC Care, or dental schools—providers offering cheaper, sometimes income-based or free care, especially for uninsured immigrants and low-income families. Delaying treatment, we’re advised, is the true wallet-buster; procrastinators risk swapping a filling for a full-blown fiscal extraction.
El Diario NY
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