New York City’s council will soon debate a bill set to nearly double the minimum wage to $30 an hour by 2030, muscling ahead of places like Seattle and Denver, Councilmember Sandra Nurse assured us. Business groups sound warnings of mass closures, w…
New York lawmakers’ latest budget proposals offer more money for Medicaid providers but stay mum on looming insurance losses, watchdogs warn. As Governor Hochul’s maneuver to save 1.2 million Essential Plan recipients leaves some 470,000 higher-income enrollees dangling, legislators—caught between shrinking federal aid and stubborn arithmetic—appear to hope Washington will blink first. Insurance, it seems, remains optional for New York’s less fortunate.
A recent MIT Living Wage Calculator update suggests a New York–Newark–Jersey City family will need an eyebrow-raising income just to cover essentials in 2026, thanks mostly to rent. Over half of city tenants spill more than 30% of pay on housing, and a subway pass alone runs $132 monthly. We suspect “affordable living” here requires either serious stock options or a fondness for creative budgeting.
New York’s state Assembly and Senate—brushing off Governor Kathy Hochul’s resistance—have unveiled plans to bail out Mayor Zohran Mamdani with over $5 billion, largely by taxing the wealthy and corporations. The mayor calls it essential, lest property taxes rise, while lawmakers argue it’s his duty to bang the fiscal drum. Of course, the city’s ever-expanding budget holes seem the only truly bipartisan constant.
Democratic lawmakers in Albany are backing much of Mayor Mamdani’s tax-the-rich blueprint, proposing higher income and corporate taxes to paper over New York City’s $5.4 billion deficit—at least if Governor Hochul, with her allergy to tax hikes, can somehow be charmed. Rebates for ratepayers and trial runs of free buses sweeten the deal, but the state’s budgetary opera is notorious for its unscripted finales.
The Trump administration has yet to greenlight a single new rail project under the Capital Investment Grant program, keeping subways and monorails on the sidelines and pushing U.S. public transit spending to a 15-year low, per the Urban Institute. Despite Washington’s ostensible infrastructure ambitions, state and local rail funding has more than halved since 2021—progress apparently moves faster when it stays on the road.
New York’s legendary lease hikes—now with the median gross rent growing 21% faster than incomes since 2006—are elbowing out small businesses like Juan Dela Cruz’s 77 Ave D Deli, while storefront vacancy hovers at 11.4%. City legislators, ever the optimists, have dusted off proposals for commercial rent control, though previous efforts collapsed under real estate’s unblinking gaze. Resilience may be eternal, but bodegas could prove less so.
Governor Kathy Hochul has put New York’s ambitious 2019 climate law—lauded for mandating a 40% emissions cut by 2030—on a collision course with her 2026 affordability campaign, urging lawmakers to water down targets she now deems cataclysmically expensive. Negotiations are underway, with Democrats bristling and Republicans dubbing current policy the “Hochul tax”; apparently, saving the planet remains far less affordable than good old rebate checks.
New York’s state legislature, undeterred by electoral jitters, has endorsed a raft of tax hikes on wealthy residents and corporations—delivering a $5 billion fiscal shot in the arm supported by the city’s mayor, Zohran Mamdani, but not by Governor Kathy Hochul, who favours largesse over levies. Negotiations now begin, as lawmakers haggle for dollars and perhaps a touch of political immortality before the March 31 budget deadline.
El Diario NY
Sign up for the top stories in your inbox each morning.