Thursday, April 16, 2026

USPS Warns of 2027 Cash Crunch, Eyes Fewer Delivery Days and Higher Stamp Prices

The United States Postal Service is waving red flags over its finances, projecting it could run dry by 2027 unless Congress intervenes or users swallow steeper stamp prices—potentially $1 apiece. Plans floated by CEO David Steiner include axing Saturday delivery and shuttering small-town post offices. After years of red ink and fierce competition from private titans, we await to see if the mail can still go through when the money doesn’t.

USPS Warns of 2027 Cash Crunch, Eyes Fewer Delivery Days and Higher Stamp Prices
El Diario NY

NYCHA Rushes to Rehouse 5,000 as Emergency Vouchers Expire Before Promised Decade

With New York City’s pandemic-era Emergency Housing Vouchers about to expire, over 5,000 low-income households have until May 1st to apply for public housing or other subsidies, according to the city housing authority. Given 182,000 names already on the waitlist and an awkward shortage of vacant units, the odds are longer than a Manhattan rent receipt—though optimism, like affordable apartments, somehow persists.

NYCHA Rushes to Rehouse 5,000 as Emergency Vouchers Expire Before Promised Decade
Gothamist

Brooklyn-Bound NESE Gas Pipeline Breaks Ground as Hochul, Trump, and Feds Switch Course

With construction finally beginning this fall, the $1 billion Northeast Supply Enhancement pipeline, backed by Williams and blessed at a Brooklyn event by officials including Doug Burgum and Chris Wright, promises to send Pennsylvania gas under New Jersey and the New York City harbor to over 2 million area homes. Given recent reversals in both federal and New York policy, sometimes the path to greener energy is paved with well-insulated pipes.

Brooklyn-Bound NESE Gas Pipeline Breaks Ground as Hochul, Trump, and Feds Switch Course
NYC Headlines | Spectrum News NY1

Albany Floats New Taxes on Wealthy to Fund Child Care and Keep Workers Here

Gabriella Romero, a New York Assembly member, argues that taxing the state’s wealthiest could raise $32 billion per year, funding universal child care, affordable housing, and social programs threatened by federal cuts. Critics warn millionaires might flee, but recent Fiscal Policy Institute figures suggest the truly mobile party are overtaxed workers. We love a robust debate on “fair share”—but the rent, as ever, remains less negotiable.

Albany Floats New Taxes on Wealthy to Fund Child Care and Keep Workers Here
City & State New York - All Content

Mamdani Weighs CityFHEPS Expansion as Thousands Face Eviction and Soaring Costs

As New York mulls expanding CityFHEPS—its $1.2 billion housing voucher program—the city council and Mayor Zohran Mamdani are at loggerheads over costs, with estimates for broadening access to the at-risk swelling to $4.7 billion by 2030. While over 65,000 households already benefit, many like Ciro Sollazzi and Kevin Cuffy fall through the cracks, proving that eligibility lines, like rent receipts, seem to multiply overnight.

Mamdani Weighs CityFHEPS Expansion as Thousands Face Eviction and Soaring Costs
Gothamist

State Bill Would Legalize Plug-In Solar Panels for Renters, With Con Edison On Board

A bill wending through Albany would let New Yorkers install plug-and-play solar panels on balconies and windows, upending rules that once reserved such sun-catching for professional rooftop arrays. Backers like State Senator Liz Krueger claim these $300 gadgets could cut apartment electricity use by as much as a quarter; Con Edison is on board, Germans are already at it, and—should it pass—we may finally have a bright spot in city living.

State Bill Would Legalize Plug-In Solar Panels for Renters, With Con Edison On Board
Gothamist

Park Avenue Doormen and Supers Vote to Strike as Contract Talks Stumble

Thousands of New York City doormen, porters, and supers, represented by 32BJ SEIU, have voted to strike when their contract expires April 20, threatening high-rise residents’ champagne lifestyles with DIY rubbish runs and parcel chaos. While the union seeks wage hikes and full health coverage, the Realty Advisory Board argues rising costs and rent freezes squeeze the industry—a rare instance of Park Avenue’s fortunes resting on mop buckets and trash bags.

Park Avenue Doormen and Supers Vote to Strike as Contract Talks Stumble
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post

As SNAP Theft Hits $14.5 Million, Queens Seniors Wait for Chip Card Protections

After $14.5 million in SNAP benefits vanished from New York City accounts in the first half of 2025, owing to enterprising skimming scams preying mainly on vulnerable seniors, Governor Kathy Hochul vowed to replace insecure EBT cards with chip-based versions—a fix that cut such theft by 83% in California. Relief, though, will be slow: replacement will take up to 18 months, spoiling dinner plans for many in the meantime.

As SNAP Theft Hits $14.5 Million, Queens Seniors Wait for Chip Card Protections
QNS

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