New York’s Emergency Housing Voucher scheme, a post-pandemic federal lifeline for over 5,200 city residents (and 70,000 nationally), is running dry—funds will end by 2026, four years early, as surging rents outpace congressional math. Recipients are…
Undeterred by a March rebuff from U.S. District Judge Lewis Liman, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has again set federal sights on New York’s congestion pricing—a $9 toll below 60th Street that’s trimmed traffic and filled MTA coffers for rail upgrades. The Trump administration appealed to the Second Circuit, though details remain scant; perhaps “gridlock” isn’t just a Manhattan curse, but also a favored legal strategy.
Undeterred by President Trump’s newfound enthusiasm for blocking federal transit funds, the MTA is plotting how to finance its $5.5 billion Interborough Express light rail—linking Sunset Park and Jackson Heights—without Uncle Sam’s help. While 200,000 riders and 17 subway connections once meant guaranteed support, New York now eyes state coffers instead, proving that even in infrastructure, Santa rarely delivers when Congress is feeling Grinchy.
The Urban Institute tells us a Hispanic family of four will need at least $102,700 a year to live without debt in the US by 2026, while median household income hovers around $70,950—a shortfall of some $30,000 that makes thrift and credit acrobatics the norm. We may not all make it to comfort in Manhattan, but the cost of living enjoys a brisk head start.
As Governor Kathy Hochul seeks to delay New York’s 2019 Climate Law—which channels billions from polluters into weatherizing buildings and cutting energy bills—communities from the Bronx to Red Hook risk losing up to $21 billion in promised investment, mostly earmarked for Black and Latino neighborhoods. Legislators wonder if keeping utility companies in clover is really the most innovative energy policy on offer.
A new analysis from the Pratt Center for Community Development finds that some 10,000 New York City homes—mainly in Black neighborhoods of Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island—were “flipped” between 2021 and 2025, spurring higher prices and squeezing affordability. Realtors argue regulation discourages investment, but with Jamaica, Queens, flipping at 30%, we suspect even fixer-uppers are getting above-average facelifts these days.
Purdue Pharma, infamous for marketing OxyContin with creative abandon, has shut its doors after a final $7.4 billion settlement with New York and other states. The Sacklers bow out, trading lawsuits for a sturdy financial parting gift, while successor Knoa Pharma—a public benefit corporation, mercifully Sackler-free—will funnel future opioid profits to addiction prevention. Some critics grumble that the curtain falls too gently on a saga of epidemic proportions.
New York’s legislators, eyeing a familiar golden goose, are prodding Governor Kathy Hochul to wring more from the city’s top earners, touting fresh levies as a balm for budget woes. The proposals—ranging from income-tax bumps to mansion surcharges—aim to extract extra billions, though we note that every pitch risks spooking a crowd that, historically, knows how to catch the next train to Florida.
We note with less surprise than weariness that US households are spending 4.3% more in 2026, chiefly thanks to gasoline prices—now above $4 a gallon after Middle East jitters—that rose 16.5% in March alone, per Bank of America Institute. Higher costs hit Hispanic workers hardest; real wage growth for low earners limps at 1%. As ever, discretionary spending becomes a luxury, not a choice.
El Diario NY
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