Although Donald Trump’s war in Iran has upended oil markets, toppled a Supreme Leader, and cost Americans over $11 billion in under two weeks, the President has reserved only a fraction of his 220 recent Truth Social posts for the topic. He prefers …
New York City plans to extend free child care to all 2-year-olds this autumn, promising relief for beleaguered parents and a logistical jigsaw for the Mamdani administration. The offer currently ends at 2:30 p.m.—well before most workdays—leaving working families to ponder afternoon arrangements. If City Hall finds funding to stretch those hours, we suspect the applause might last longer than nap time.
After years of commuter hand-wringing, NJ Transit is steering trains onto the new $2.3bn Portal North Bridge over the Hackensack River, promising to swap unpredictable waits and the odd hammer-wielding repair for swifter travel—90 mph instead of 60. The upgrade, vital for 200,000 daily passengers, only applies eastbound for now; the real feast, we’re told, awaits with the Gateway tunnel, assuming funding survives Washington’s menu shuffles.
A federal judge, Richard Hertling, dismissed one lawsuit around the embattled $16 billion Gateway Tunnel project beneath the Hudson, saying New York and New Jersey already forced Uncle Sam to unfreeze $205 million in funding. But with the Department of Transportation still eyeing a clawback—and more court tussles waiting in Manhattan—the only thing rushing faster than trains between the states may be the lawyers.
New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s $127 billion budget has drawn polite applause for realism in estimating costs, but less for his hopes that Wall Street’s bull run, city reserves, and a property tax hike will plug deficits. The city’s Comptroller and its Independent Budget Office both warn against spending windfalls before they’ve materialised—an old New York habit, but one that even Moody’s has started frowning at.
In February, the U.S. jobless rate climbed to 7.7% for Black workers—doubling the white rate and up sharply from last year—according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. While average pay is rising faster than inflation, a New Yorker needs to work 18 extra days a year to cover rent, which rather spoils any dreams of leisurely weekends.
Moody’s has revised New York City’s credit outlook from “stable” to “negative,” citing looming multibillion-dollar deficits and chronic budget headaches—unsettling news for Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who insists the move is premature and pins his hopes on fiscal salvation from Albany. State leaders are mulling tax hikes while Governor Hochul demurs, leaving Wall Street’s confidence as fragile as a morning bagel after subway turbulence.
This week, U.S. health officials noted measles cases had edged up, reversing three decades of relative rarity: since 1993, most years saw only a few hundred infections. With vaccine scepticism having its day in the sun, epidemiologists warn this may be the harbinger of further preventable outbreaks—though we suspect even pandemics will have trouble competing with American reluctance to roll up a sleeve.
A group of New York legislators, led by State Senator Julia Salazar, have proposed the End Toxic Home Flipping Act, aiming to tax corporations and investors who buy and resell houses within two years, especially in neighborhoods like Harlem, Bed-Stuy, and East New York. Advocates claim the measure will curb displacement, though we suspect speculators may simply find cleverer detours around the city’s latest toll booth.
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