Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Latinas en Nueva York Sienten Más Duro el Golpe del Aumento Alimentario, Muestra Encuesta

A new survey from No Kid Hungry New York found that two-thirds of New Yorkers faced a choice last year between putting food on the table or paying essentials like rent or utilities, with 84% of Latino families with children making similar sacrifices. Pricey groceries have fueled debt and buy-now-pay-later schemes, but we suspect Wall Street’s appetite for inflation hedges is rather more robust than Harlem’s for packaged ramen.

Latinas en Nueva York Sienten Más Duro el Golpe del Aumento Alimentario, Muestra Encuesta
El Diario NY

NYC Eyes $30 Minimum Wage by 2030, Outpacing Other US Cities

New York City may soon claim the loftiest minimum wage in the land, with lawmakers floating a $30 hourly base by 2030—a sum that inspired cheers from unions and raised eyebrows downtown. If the plan survives the tender ministrations of Albany and the inflation gods, we may discover just what price the city puts on a sandwich artist’s time and a latte pourer’s wit.

NYC Eyes $30 Minimum Wage by 2030, Outpacing Other US Cities
silive.com

City Council Floats $30 Minimum Wage by 2030, Tying Raises to Inflation

New York City Council is mulling a bill to tie its minimum wage—currently $17 an hour—to inflation, with plans to bump it up to $30 by 2030 for large firms (smaller ones trailing by a dollar). Councilmember Sandy Nurse, in step with unions, calls this the “$30 for Our City Campaign”; we wonder if Gotham’s small business owners are quite as enthused by the prospect of index-linked paydays.

City Council Floats $30 Minimum Wage by 2030, Tying Raises to Inflation
NYC Headlines | Spectrum News NY1

NYC Council Floats $30 Minimum Wage by 2030 as Costs Outpace Paychecks

Aiming to keep pace with the spiraling costs of life in New York, several City Council Members—led by Sandy Nurse—have floated a bill to hike the minimum wage to $30 per hour by 2030, more than double the current $17. Noting that rivals like Denver already pay nearly $20, advocates argue that “the math ain’t mathing” for over a million workers. Pity the poor abacus pressed into this calculus.

NYC Council Floats $30 Minimum Wage by 2030 as Costs Outpace Paychecks
amNewYork

City Owes Legal Nonprofits Millions as Contract Payment Delays Mount, Cases Stall

Nonprofits providing legal aid in New York City, such as Legal Services NYC and TakeRoot Justice, are owed millions—about 20% of their annual budgets—due to chronic contract payment delays by City Hall. Forced to shoulder loans and hefty interest, these groups have had to forgo hundreds of cases for vulnerable tenants and immigrants. We await City Hall’s next trick: perhaps, timely cheques rather than hollow pledges.

City Owes Legal Nonprofits Millions as Contract Payment Delays Mount, Cases Stall
City Limits

Council Pushes $30 Minimum Wage by 2030, Brooklyn Backs a Bolder Paycheck

New York City councilmember Sandy Nurse has floated a bill aiming to boost the city’s minimum wage to a hefty $30 per hour by 2030, winning nods from union brass and assorted council colleagues. Proponents frame this as economic salvation in a punishing metropolis, while sceptics note that doubling pay may outpace data—and perhaps the patience of small business owners with fragile calculators.

Council Pushes $30 Minimum Wage by 2030, Brooklyn Backs a Bolder Paycheck
Brooklyn Eagle

Albany Floats $5 Billion Lifeline for City Budget as Hochul Demurs

New York’s state Legislature is keen to toss Mayor Zohran Mamdani a multi-billion-dollar lifeline, plugging the city’s $5.4bn hole via higher taxes on top earners and big firms—though Governor Kathy Hochul, spurning new levies, is not singing from the same songsheet. Democrats exude confidence while Republicans bristle, but fiscal harmony may hit some discordant notes before City Hall hears the cash register ring.

Albany Floats $5 Billion Lifeline for City Budget as Hochul Demurs
NYC Headlines | Spectrum News NY1

Albany Lawmakers Back Mamdani Tax-Hike Plan on Wealthy, Hochul Hesitates as Budget Deadline Looms

New York’s legislature, to the quiet delight of Mayor Zohran Mamdani but not Governor Kathy Hochul, has rallied around plans to hike taxes on the city’s richest residents and corporations, targeting over $5 billion in new revenue. The proposals—ranging from crypto mining levies to corporate tax hikes—now face tough negotiation with Hochul, whose election-year generosity has yet to stop Albany’s appetite for another golden goose.

Albany Lawmakers Back Mamdani Tax-Hike Plan on Wealthy, Hochul Hesitates as Budget Deadline Looms
El Diario NY

Sign up for the top stories in your inbox each morning.