New York’s budget talks, already missing their April 1 deadline, have bogged down as Governor Kathy Hochul seeks to loosen climate laws aimed at slashing emissions and directing billions to disadvantaged areas like the Bronx and Brooklyn. Lawmakers …
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority has kicked off a public engagement blitz for its planned Interborough Express light rail, claiming it will trim 21.8 million car miles each year in Brooklyn and Queens and cut emissions along the way. Locals can air hopes or grievances at six borough meetings, though we wonder if the prospect of losing trees will overshadow the agency’s more climate-friendly forecast—for once, a New York project could get greener by subtraction.
Yet another bout of torrential rain submerged Queens and even upland Washington Heights this autumn, underlining the uncomfortable fact that New York’s sewers and city planning remain, shall we say, puddle-prone. Though lawmakers are now touting the Rain Ready New York Act as a flood-fighting fix, the weather appears far more nimble than our permitting process—meaning our galoshes aren’t going back in the closet yet.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is mulling a delay in payments to municipal pension funds as the city stares down a multibillion-dollar deficit, a classic budgetary can-kick familiar to seasoned observers. While this move could free up cash now, it risks compounding headaches later—a reminder that, in municipal finance, today’s solution is often tomorrow’s “unforeseen circumstance.”
The U.S. Department of Justice has recategorised medicinal marijuana from the same legal shelf as heroin to the more forgiving company of Tylenol with codeine, following orders from President Trump to boost medical access and research. This marks a rare nod to data over dogma, but federal illegality persists and litigious critics may yet ensure that, for marijuana, change comes at a somewhat sluggish pace.
A report from the American Lung Association finds that 40 million Latinos in the United States live with dangerous air pollution—over triple the rate for whites—thanks in part to homes clustered near busy roads and industrial zones. Children, especially, draw the short straw: nearly half breathe dirty air daily. We may not solve airborne inequality overnight, but at least the data are now fresh, if not the local atmosphere.
At an Earth Day hearing in Trenton, Senate President Nick Scutari, the Garden State’s top Democrat, wielded an obscure legislative tool to challenge New Jersey’s looming climate rules—the so-called REAL regulations—which would restrict coastal development based on future sea level rise. Developers cheered; regulators braced; Jersey City’s mayor called the affordable housing exemptions cryptic. In a state sinking twice as fast as the seas rise, ambiguity is one local growth industry.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority has begun courting commuter opinions at Jamaica Station, that chronically jostling Queens transit hub, ahead of a $50m state-funded redesign meant to better mesh Long Island Rail Road, subway, and AirTrain connections. More than 200,000 passengers and 1,000 trains cross paths here daily, making feedback both indispensable and—given New York’s opinions—potentially the most ambitious part of the revamp.
New York’s restless dance with developers continues: Zohran Mamdani urged Mayor Eric Adams to scrap a $2 billion pact that would see the city bankroll a vast Hudson Yards expansion, favouring fiscal restraint over the Related Companies' ambitious housing plans. The mayor insists it’s not top of mind—no small irony, given how frequently city money and real estate barons find themselves at the same table.
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