New York’s Legislature gamely launched a $50 million Housing Access Voucher Program pilot, aiming to plug the gap for some of the 111,000 city residents in shelters and thousands more facing eviction—a modest lifeline, considering 634,000 scrambled …
New York’s bus system finds itself under the microscope again, as Transport Workers Union Local 100 alleges that the Metropolitan Transportation Authority sent at least 23 buses onto city streets despite critical mechanical defects—most worryingly, brakes worn to the bone. The MTA insists its vehicles are safe, but with chronic mechanic shortages and a queue of delayed repairs, we wonder if stopping power is the new express route.
With Iranian drones turning the Strait of Hormuz into a knot of nervous shipping lanes and U.S. officials like Chris Wright vowing ever-greater “energy dominance,” we find ourselves witnessing cheap, nimble tech outfoxing monolithic militaries—and, perhaps, traditional oil powers. As President Trump downplays soaring gas prices as a windfall for “us,” we suspect the definition of “us” is, as ever, open to creative accounting.
Americans find themselves squeezed in March 2026 as the national average for gasoline tops $3.80 per gallon—higher in California and New York—while the Federal Reserve holds interest rates at a punchy 3.5-3.75% to tame inflation still hovering above target. Credit becomes dearer, especially pinching households with scant savings; evidently, when it rains economic policy, it pours—especially on those without umbrellas.
New York City’s Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani has floated a 2% income tax hike on residents earning over $1 million and higher corporate taxes, seeking roughly $3 billion to plug a $5.4 billion budget gap. If Albany demurs, a 9.5% property tax increase on median earners could follow—black and brown homeowners included. History may applaud innovation, but, as ever, wallets rarely do.
Crash victims in New York have sharply criticised Governor Kathy Hochul’s push to limit compensation for those injured by drivers, arguing that new rules, backed by Uber and groups like Citizens for Affordable Rates, would cut support for real victims under the pretext of fighting insurance fraud—an apparently rare crime. Hochul aims to curb litigation; for most, dodging danger in Manhattan remains far harder than dodging lawsuits.
Erin Dalton has begun her tenure as New York City’s social services commissioner, vowing to tackle rising homelessness, looming benefit cuts, and a daunting $7 billion budget gap. Appointed by Mayor Eric Adams after a nationwide search, Dalton brings data-heavy midwestern credentials to Gotham’s social labyrinth—though we suspect even her spreadsheets may blanch at the city’s endless appetite for big, chewy problems.
Donald Trump, eager to halt the pain at American petrol pumps after his military foray into Iran rattled oil markets, announced a suite of measures to tamp down spiking gasoline prices. While the White House hopes these market interventions might steady nerves and wallets alike, we suspect the laws of supply and demand still remain inconveniently immune to presidential bravado.
New York’s Attorney General Letitia James and state Democrats aim their legislative sights at “surveillance pricing”—the artful use of personal data and algorithms by firms to tailor prices for groceries, medicine and diapers. State Senate Deputy Majority Leader Mike Gianaris is championing the bills, hoping to shield shoppers in Astoria, Elmhurst and beyond from digital price tags that seem to know us a little too well.
NYC Headlines | Spectrum News NY1
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