Roughly 123,000 New Yorkers are now subject to new SNAP work rules, courtesy of last year’s cumbersomely named One Big Beautiful Bill. Adults deemed “able-bodied” must clock 80 hours a month of work or similar activity—or risk hunger, if not the dol…
From March 1st, thousands of healthy New Yorkers without dependents will need to clock at least 80 hours monthly of work, job training, or community service to keep their SNAP food assistance—a familiar federal requirement dusted off after pandemic-era waivers expired. Those falling short will see benefits cut after three months, though we suspect public appetite for navigating the bureaucracy may far outlast the groceries themselves.
Patients insured by Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield have found themselves out in the cold after a contract standoff with Mount Sinai forced their doctors out-of-network in January—only for both parties to trade blame and leave patients to pay dearly or doctor-shop. In America’s spirited market for healthcare, it seems patients are invited to the negotiating table mainly as the hors d’oeuvres.
After a joint American-Israeli strike killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in Tehran on February 28th, a cascade of violence has gripped the region, with six U.S. troops killed so far. Donald Trump, never shy of hyperbole, rated the crisis a “15 out of 10”—an enthusiastic scoring that suggests his scale, like the conflict itself, may soon require recalibration.
Seeking to stem a costly wave of food aid theft, U.S. lawmakers—including New York’s Dan Goldman and Mike Lawler—unveiled a bill requiring that all EBT cards sporting SNAP benefits receive modern chip technology within five years, a move the USDA must bankroll. With $14 million pilfered in New York alone last year and $555 million nationally at risk, we suspect old-school stripes have outlived their generous usefulness.
Andrew Lynch, chief of QueensLink, is championing an M train extension on a long-defunct railway between Queens Boulevard and the Rockaways, with the promise of parks and paths alongside. The corridor’s been in limbo for six decades, but if built, we are assured, New Yorkers will soon take this north-south connector—and a little green space—for granted, as only true locals could.
As West Texas Intermediate oil prices topped $90 per barrel on March 7th—nudging toward $100—thanks to mounting tension with Iran, American drivers may soon see grimmer numbers at the pump. Global energy markets, sensitive as ever to Middle Eastern volatility (the region supplies a third of world oil), are already feeling the heat, but who knew diplomatic breakdowns could fill government fuel-tax coffers so briskly?
With the MetLife Stadium hosting eight matches—including the final—of the 2026 World Cup, New York and New Jersey expect an onslaught of fans, noise, and opportunity. Local Latino businesses, from eateries to event organizers, may find their tills ringing merrily. We await to see if football fever can spice up the regional economy or merely give hospitality workers sore feet and hoarse voices with a side of empanadas.
Developers have set their sights on demolishing Brooklyn’s quirky “Smurf Village”—formally Fulton Park Houses, a 1980s low-rise complex at Fulton Street and Utica Avenue—in favour of ten seventeen-storey towers promising both market and “affordable” housing. Locals, long weathering Bed Stuy’s gentrification, fret about vanishing character and unclear details; politicians promise consultations, but for now, the original village remains more blue than ever.
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