In America’s 2026 rendition of wallet-thinning theatre, the cost of living continues to outpace wage growth, as confirmed by Bureau of Labor Statistics and Reserve Federal reports. Rents and grocery bills in the likes of New York climb steadily high…
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority pledged to keep the $7 billion Second Avenue Subway extension chugging along, voting on a crucial contract even as it sues Washington over a withheld $60 million. Work in East Harlem—digging sixty-foot trenches and moving enough earth for a respectably sized pyramid—may start this year, assuming federal purse strings loosen and local businesses don’t mind a little subterranean shakeup.
Roughly 950 full-time but non-tenure-track professors at New York University exchanged lecture notes for picket signs, demanding better pay and job security as they launched a strike this week; the administration, unmoved, assured students their classes would go on as usual, if slightly lighter on scholarly debate and perhaps heavier on substitute enthusiasm.
With worries about Social Security’s future tugging at American nerves, experts now calculate that fully replacing the average 2026 benefit—$2,071 a month—could mean amassing $621,000 to $828,000 in personal savings, depending on how cautiously one withdraws funds. Of course, unlike Washington’s perpetual payment promises, private accounts offer no such guarantees—except, perhaps, certainty about growing old, taxes and, increasingly, sticker shock for healthcare.
After talks stalled, New York University’s full-time, unionized faculty—under the UAW flag—have begun an “unfair labor practice” strike, demanding higher pay, more job security, and saner workloads. NYU claims to have contingency plans, so lectures shuffle on, albeit with a rotating cast of subs and administrators. We are left to wonder which will yield first: faculty stamina or university “comprehensive packages.”
Vincent Thoms, 51, died in NYPD custody after allegedly stealing incense from a CVS in Manhattan—the second recent fatality linked to the retail chain in New York, after an employee stabbing. With at least nine people dying under police supervision in the city last year, shoplifters and shopkeepers alike might wonder whether New York’s aisles are dangerous, or just the checkout lines of fate.
After a year of largely nocturnal negotiations, New York University’s contract faculty downed tools at 11 a.m. Monday, trading lecture halls for picket lines festooned with noisemakers. Talks had nudged closer on pay and job security, but the university’s latest offer failed to placate the 850 instructors—leaving students to brush up on the fine print of their syllabi, just in case Strikes 101 is now in session.
Salz Management, which runs Dunkin Donuts and Taco Bell outlets in Manhattan and Queens, will pay over $1.5 million to 760 workers plus penalties after a two-year city probe found it routinely violated New York’s Fair Workweek Law—think arbitrary shift swaps and those dreaded “clopening” shifts. Theory, a luxury clothier, also coughed up $277,000 for similar infractions. Apparently, some timetables are less set in stone than others.
Nearly 1,000 contract faculty at New York University, represented by CFU-UAW, walked off the job demanding better pay and job security, citing the need for full participation in university governance—a request as old as academia itself. NYU insists it already offers the nation’s highest minimum salaries for their kind. Classes limp on with substitutes, proof that even university strikes must now come with contingency planning baked in.
El Diario NY
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