The Trump administration says it will stake $8 billion to revive New York’s Penn Station, U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy told Congress, in what he called a “generational” overhaul of the aging rail hub. Amtrak has tapped Penn Transformatio…
Mayor Zohran Mamdani has unveiled a plan to rezone stretches of Brooklyn south of Prospect Park for taller housing, hoping to leverage the future Interborough Express (IBX) light rail and existing subway lines. City planners want thousands of new homes near McDonald and Coney Island avenues, banking on “transit-oriented development” to tackle New York’s chronic housing crunch—if, that is, consensus survives the inevitable city planning marathon.
A day after Sean P. Duffy, America’s transport chief, dangled $8 billion of federal largesse, New York’s tetchy transit stalwart, Penn Station, took a step toward dignity as a developer was named to resuscitate its subterranean malaise. Having outlived several redesign promises, the station may finally shed its “concrete afterthought” reputation—although, as locals will attest, grand plans and grim commutes make awkward bedfellows.
Amtrak, with White House backing, has tapped Penn Transformation Partners—a team including Vornado and Halmar—to give Penn Station a much-needed facelift without ousting Madison Square Garden. The redesign, which nods at long-lamented Beaux-Arts grandeur, promises airy halls, a new glass entrance, and expanded rail capacity, all for an initial $200 million. We’ll reserve excitement until the station rivals an airport’s gift shop.
Amtrak and federal officials have tapped Halmar and Skanska, jointly called Penn Transformation Partners, to steer Penn Station’s latest $8 billion overhaul, promising a swankier Eighth Avenue entrance, wider concourses, and a dash of neo-classical flair—though Madison Square Garden stays rooted while the Hulu Theater faces demolition. Details are thin and finances foggy, but apparently, we’re on track for progress—albeit arrival time to be determined.
After a five-day shutdown, the Long Island Rail Road—America’s busiest commuter line—resumed service on May 19, leaving 300,000 New Yorkers to nurse coffee and contemplate congestion just a little longer. Negotiators, egged on by Governor Kathy Hochul, hammered out a compromise promising affordable fares and happier conductors—though perhaps not shorter travel times in Queens anytime soon.
In hopes of reinventing the American lunch tray, Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Ilhan Omar are championing a universal free school meals bill that would give every public-school student—regardless of income—four square (and free) meals a day, while erasing the $6,000-per-district average school meal debt and tossing some business to local farms. Congress might chew on the idea, but when it comes to federal consensus, food fights are routine.
After weeks of suspense worthy of Broadway, New York’s lawmakers have begun voting on a $268.5 billion budget—the priciest in state history—having padded it with union-friendly pension perks and a smattering of last-minute policy boons for politicians like Zohran Mamdani. The process, marked by delayed figures and private haggling, confirms Albany’s knack for passing the baton at the last moment, if not exactly for pinching pennies.
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A salary of $60,000 in the land of $5,000 shoebox studios—otherwise known as New York City—now falls noticeably short of MIT’s 2026 “living wage” estimate of $80,000 for a single adult. Resourceful strivers dodge Manhattan, decamping to the Bronx or eastern Queens, where cheaper rent and longer commutes wrestle for dominance in monthly budgets—proving, once again, that in Gotham, even thrift demands premium effort.
El Diario NY
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