After a five-year analysis ranking New York’s tap water a bleak 18th dirtiest in America, Erin Brockovich is calling for stiffer penalties on utilities letting lead, arsenic, and “forever chemicals” seep unchecked into pipes. Authorities, she wryly …
Mayor Zohran Mamdani, after vowing to expand New York’s rental assistance, is now channeling his inner Eric Adams by appealing a court order to do just that, citing eye-watering price tags that could reach $4.7 billion by 2030. With a $5 billion budget deficit forcing cuts and tax hikes, Mamdani’s about-face presumably leaves housing advocates—and campaign promises—out in the cold, but at least the lawyers are staying busy.
Americans’ credit-card debt has reached a record, with 111 million adults now carrying a balance—up 17% in five years—according to The Century Foundation and Protect Borrowers. Rising gas prices, nudging $4 a gallon in the wake of Iran’s flare-up, haven’t helped, nor has the 23.7% average interest rate. One in four has skipped meals to cope; some even tap retirement funds—a feast for lenders, if not for borrowers.
A hefty chorus of New York’s unions now cheers a bill in Albany to reroute health insurance taxes away from local government coffers and onto private employers, as City Hall frets over a $1.5 billion budget hole. Backers pitch this as a painless fix for municipal balance sheets, though we suspect employers may require more convincing before picking up the tab—voluntarily or otherwise.
As SNAP shifts to digital recertification in 2026, millions of US recipients—particularly those over 60—face a tangle of new hurdles, from stricter work requirements to fiddly online portals. Miss a deadline and benefits can vanish overnight, though reinstatement can take up to 30 days. It seems the hurdle for needy Americans may soon be less about eligibility, and more about remembering a password.
Thwarted by the clock, Mayor Mamdani’s administration is appealing a court order to expand New York’s $1.25 billion CityFHEPS housing-voucher program after talks with the City Council and advocates fizzled; the standoff, rooted in a looming $6 billion deficit and last year’s reforms, leaves tens of thousands of would-be recipients—and campaign promises—dangling until budget season unlatches new possibilities or further austerity antics.
New York City Schools Chancellor Kamar Samuels lobbied lawmakers in Albany this week for a four-year extension of mayoral control over the enormous public school system, plus leeway on a class-size reduction law he deems challenging and costly. Despite support from Governor Kathy Hochul, both legislative chambers have resisted, suggesting even the city that never sleeps might need to hit the snooze button on sweeping reforms.
More than 75 business, religious, and community organizations have thrown their weight behind the bipartisan Dignity Act, which aims to regularize millions of undocumented immigrants—no small ask in Washington. The American Business Immigration Coalition says a “Dignity Tour” will rove from Pennsylvania to Texas to court Congressional support for work permits and deportation protections. In a town hooked on deadlock, even a modest patch touts itself as tailoring progress.
Facing a $5.4 billion deficit headache, New York’s Budget Director Sherif Soliman told the City Council that efforts like slimming down office space and cancelling Slack subscriptions will scrape together just $245 million—hardly the fiscal miracle Mayor Mamdani’s team promised. With state aid uncertain and both raising property taxes and dipping into reserves off the menu, we’re left waiting to see whose belt gets tightened next—other than the city’s chat apps.
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