New York City’s City Council will consider a bill from Sandra Nurse to raise the minimum wage to $30 an hour by 2030, nearly doubling the current $17 rate and outpacing all other U.S. cities—albeit gradually, and not without consternation from busin…
Nonprofit legal providers in New York City, such as Legal Services NYC and TakeRoot Justice, say unpaid city contracts now total tens of millions—over 20% of their annual budgets—forcing them to subsist on costly credit and curtail vital tenant and immigrant advocacy. As the city’s bureaucracy dawdles, we gain another compelling lesson in how delayed payments can evict good intentions right out of the ledger.
Faced with child care costs that can surpass $20,000 per year—more than some college tuition—New York parents are juggling work with few good options, while providers and underpaid workers teeter on the brink. Assemblywoman Jessica González-Rojas advocates universal child care, funded like schools through broader taxation, arguing economic logic trumps hand-wringing; if children really are our future, perhaps wallets should follow rhetoric, not just sentiment.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s push to let New York seize the most neglected apartment buildings from landlords—no prizes for guessing who finds this controversial—gained traction as Councilmember Pierina Sanchez revived a “third-party transfer” scheme. The Safer Homes Act vows sharper targeting of chronic offenders, but the Council speaker’s go-slow approach means tenants enduring squalor may need to keep the buckets handy for now.
Two Pennsylvanians, Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayum, face federal charges after allegedly lobbing explosives at an anti-Muslim protest near New York’s Gracie Mansion, claiming inspiration from ISIS and ambitions beyond the Boston Marathon bombing. Authorities found triacetone triperoxide—ISIS’s “Mother of Satan”—in their devices. No injuries, much worry: the city remains on edge, and the accused, barely adults, may have aimed for infamy but landed themselves squarely in court.
The Trump administration, wasting no time in its second term, froze or revoked over $1.5 billion in research and aid funding at institutions like Johns Hopkins, Brown, and Princeton, and peppered colleges nationwide with weekly admonishments to shutter diversity programs or face the music. University administrators professed shock—despite Vice-President J.D. Vance’s 2021 “Universities Are the Enemy” rallying cry—which, in retrospect, may have been a syllabus warning.
Federal prosecutors charged Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi, teenagers from Pennsylvania, with terrorism after they allegedly hurled homemade explosives—including TATP-laden jars packed with shrapnel—into a crowd outside Gracie Mansion, where far-right influencer Jake Lang was leading an anti-Muslim protest. The pair reportedly voiced support for ISIS after arrest, reminding us that New York’s reputation for loquacious street theatre sadly extends to criminal complaints.
New York’s lawmakers, ably herded by Mayor Zohran Mamdani and the State Assembly and Senate, are pushing Governor Kathy Hochul to squeeze a few more tax dollars from the city’s well-lined coffers. While officials tout higher taxes as the panacea for chronic budget headaches, we suspect the true mark of fiscal innovation will be making the existing billions stretch a touch further next time.
New York’s largest health care workers’ union, 1199SEIU, is mustering lawmakers to axe private insurers from the state’s $20bn Medicaid home care system, arguing that doing so would save $3.5bn in annual administrative costs. The state would pay providers directly under the proposed Home Care Savings and Reinvestment Act—a move that insurers warn could leave 285,000 elderly and disabled New Yorkers navigating unfamiliar territory. More cooks, fewer kitchen profits.
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