Manhattan’s median rent has broken yet another record, hitting $5,000 in February according to The Corcoran Group, with a vacancy rate stuck stubbornly at 2% and inventory scraping four-year lows. Well-intentioned laws like the FARE Act and Housing …
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post
From March 1st, the Small Business Administration stopped offering its core 7(a) and 504 loans to “green card” holders—a move causing palpitations among New York’s predominantly immigrant small-business owners, who make up roughly half the sector. Local bodegas and restaurants now eye private lenders, while municipal trade groups scramble to sway Governor Kathy Hochul and friends; for now, entrepreneurial “streets of gold” seem a touch bronze.
New York governor Kathy Hochul outlined proposals to relax the state’s ambitious 2019 climate law, citing cost concerns and a less-than-warm White House. She urged lawmakers to delay emissions regulations until 2030’s end, revise carbon limits, and change counting methods, arguing that affordability trumps deadlines. Lawmakers may balk at loosening green targets, but compromise often generates more heat than light in Albany.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul has proposed delaying enforcement of the state’s sweeping climate law until 2030, citing fears that current rules might encourage steep rises in electricity prices—a hard sell for her budget-weary constituents. The plan, debated in Albany this week, leaves activists fuming but lawmakers hedging; we might soon discover just how flexible a “binding” climate commitment can be when utility bills get politicians’ attention.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority will seek board approval for a $1.1 billion contract to extend the Q train deeper into East Harlem—undaunted by Donald Trump’s order pausing federal funding and the agency’s ongoing lawsuit to unlock nearly $60 million in withheld payments. With $3.4 billion pledged under Joe Biden now in limbo, the MTA presses on, presumably confident that legal wrangling moves faster than New York construction crews.
New York’s latest lifeline comes by way of a 339-mile power cable from Hydro-Québec, aiming to help the city meet its ambitious carbon-cutting targets and dodge looming electricity shortfalls. City leaders reckon Canadian hydropower is greener and steadier than betting on intermittent sun or wind—though whether New Yorkers will notice any difference once the lights stay on (and the bills arrive) is another matter entirely.
With fewer than 20 large data centers today, New York sits at the edge of a digital gold rush, prompting lawmakers to ponder how to keep rising demand from scorching wallets and grid capacity alike. The state’s electricity demand could jump 70% by 2030, NYISO warns, thanks in part to AI and crypto’s energy-chugging appetite—a boom some worry may leave ratepayers less than electrified.
KBRA joined Moody’s and S&P in shifting New York City’s financial outlook to negative, spotlighting a $7.3 billion deficit and Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s less-than-bulletproof budget. City officials insist $5 billion in possible state funding will paper over the cracks, though state budget talks are running fashionably late. We await fiscal discipline—and perhaps a cameo by Houdini—before calling these warnings overdramatic.
Donald Trump has threatened to deploy ICE agents to oversee airport security if Democrats continue blocking funding for the Transportation Security Administration, whose unpaid staff have sparked long queues from Atlanta to JFK. The Senate has thrice rejected DHS funding amid a partial shutdown and a spat over Trump’s immigration crackdowns, especially in Minnesota. Record ICE funding remains untouched—should agents need a change of scenery, they won’t lack for resources or headlines.
El Diario NY
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