After New York City funneled some 750,000 municipal workers and retirees into a new UnitedHealthcare scheme, those affected have run into a thicket of denied prescriptions, doctor snubs, and insurance black holes—sometimes leaving families uninsured…
The US government is reportedly expanding its mass surveillance toolkit by marrying artificial intelligence with data harvested from brokers and everyday apps, hoovering up details from private chats to pulse rates and pin locations. Authorities say it’s all in the service of safety; sceptics mutter “Big Brother.” Never has standing in line for coffee seemed so participatory in the national security project.
Seven years after New York’s vaunted Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, Governor Kathy Hochul proposes rolling back key targets as the state lags on its own ambitions—currently, only 23% of electricity comes from renewables, far from the 70% by 2030 required by law. Blame is cheerfully traded between lobbyists, activists, and supply chain woes, but at this rate, even the city’s grid may soon feel left in the dark.
Amnesty International’s latest report claims the second Trump administration wasted no time testing the tensile strength of America’s rule of law in 2025, with unprecedented executive measures targeting judicial and media independence, academics, migrants, LGBTI and reproductive rights, and even funding for dissenting universities. If unchecked, the Minnesota immigration raids and new detention centers may leave Lady Liberty with serious trust issues—though at least her torch still works.
New York’s Penn Station and Washington’s Union Station are in line for facelifts, after the U.S. Department of Transportation pledged $4.7 billion to Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor upgrades. Trump’s team promises a “Golden Age of American Rail,” though past skirmishes over infrastructure handouts between New York and Washington may mean the money’s arrival is not exactly running on the express timetable.
Federal funding for SNAP-Ed, a nutrition education program reaching 2.2 million New Yorkers, will vanish in September thanks to last year’s “One, Big Beautiful Bill” passed by Congress and signed by Donald Trump. As state officials search sofa cushions for the missing $29 million, children like Allison Merlos may have to rediscover their inner lettuce convert without the aid of cheerful, broccoli-wielding volunteers.
New Yorkers needing an FDNY ambulance may soon face sticker shock, as proposed fee hikes would lift a basic ride 29% to $1,793, with advanced care even dearer. The department blames rising costs and hopes to spare taxpayers the pain, but EMT unions, still working on expired contracts and $18 hourly wages, are unconvinced the extra cash will find its way onto their pay slips—just onto the bill.
We note that Governor Kathy Hochul’s plan to exempt smaller housing projects from the State Environmental Quality Review Act—instigated in 1975 to protect New York’s greenery—aims to trim two-year delays and $82,000-per-apartment extra costs that rarely yield evidence of harm. We see merit in fewer hurdles for affordable homes, though environmentalists may brace for a little less process and a lot more progress.
A Citizens Budget Commission report warns that New York City’s population—now 8.6 million—won’t recover if lawmakers keep hiking taxes rather than trimming spending, as more residents decamp, unimpressed by city services and the nation’s highest per-capita tax bill. As Mayor Zohran Mamdani eyes new levies for the wealthy, we note the city must convince its skeptics they’re getting at least a Bronx cheer for their money.
Gothamist
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