Around 450,000 New Yorkers will lose access to the state’s Essential Plan for low-cost health insurance in July, as post-HR1 federal rules squeeze those just above the poverty line. Though the state wrangled a partial waiver and legislators like Amy…
With a Long Island Rail Road strike still possible come Saturday, the MTA and five unions remain at loggerheads over a fourth-year pay raise—workers want 5%, management counters with 3% plus some sweetener. Both sides agree this isn’t rocket science, but 300,000 daily commuters may disagree when the agency’s “just work from home” solution collides with buses running more on hope than horsepower.
The Long Island Rail Road faces its first potential strike since the 1990s as union leaders and the MTA remain locked in pay negotiations before Saturday’s deadline; nearly 300,000 daily commuters from Long Island and New York City might soon swap packed trains for tortuous shuttle-bus odysseys. Governor Kathy Hochul, striving to balance wage fairness and public spending, hopes crisis-averting compromise proves more reliable than timetables.
As the clock ticks toward Saturday’s deadline, the MTA and five unions representing 3,500 Long Island Rail Road workers are still haggling in Nassau County over the fine print of a four-year, retroactive contract—mainly a fourth-year pay bump, with 0.5% separating the sides. Governor Kathy Hochul favors compromise, but commuters fear gridlock if talks derail; shuttle buses and remote work await as fallback, promising few creature comforts.
Having portrayed a budget gap of historic scale, Mayor Zohran Mamdani emerged this week with a $125 billion spending plan that, we’re told, closes a $12 billion shortfall without tax hikes, service cuts, or draining reserve funds—a fiscal magic trick that Deputy Mayor Dean Fuleihan dutifully explained on television. If these sums add up, New York may yet dodge the financial hangover it’s been bracing for.
New Yorkers with their eyes on homeownership can expect to squirrel away savings for roughly 20 years to amass a typical down payment, a Zillow analysis shows—more than double the national slog. With median home prices nudging $760,000 and rent accounting for much of the monthly budget, many might wonder if they’re saving for a brownstone or simply rehearsing patience as a contact sport.
The MTA’s labor talks with five Long Island Rail Road unions, representing 3,500 workers, totter toward a Saturday strike deadline, though the agency’s lawyer claims a last-minute deal is “no reason” away. The key sticking point: whether this year’s pay rise should be a recurring 5%, as unions demand, or a one-off. Contingency shuttle buses await; optimism, less so. At least nobody’s threatening to strike the shuttle drivers.
With a Saturday deadline looming, Long Island Rail Road workers threaten to strike, potentially derailing commutes for thousands into New York City. The standoff has inspired state lawmakers to target “super speeders” on the roads—though we assume no one relishes a turbo-charged crawl on the Long Island Expressway. Negotiations continue, yet transit resilience remains New Yorkers’ favorite—and perhaps only—morning exercise.
U.S. grocery bills are again testing wallets, with April’s food-at-home prices up 0.7%—the sharpest monthly jump in nearly four years—amid a broader 0.5% inflation climb, says the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Energy costs, spurred by Iranian turmoil, shoulder much of the blame, while eggs provide the lone sunny spot, falling 1.7%. Families squeezing budgets might even consider breakfast for dinner—repeatedly.
El Diario NY
Sign up for the top stories in your inbox each morning.