Mayor Zohran Mamdani has declared New York City will expand free child care to 2,000 two-year-olds this September, aiming to reach 12,000 by 2027—a prospect making some parents ponder a sibling-sized addition to their households. While families pay …
Republican leaders in the US House are mulling plans to slash up to $200 billion from health programs like Medicaid to fund military efforts in Iran and bolster immigration authorities, according to reports from outlets including Axios. Tougher work requirements and stricter eligibility checks could push up to 10 million Americans off Medicaid and imperil hundreds of hospitals, but combating “fraud, waste and abuse” seems to have caught—if not cured—their legislative imagination.
The latest analysis from the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston suggests that American households with credit card balances are feeling the squeeze, as high interest rates chip away at their monthly budgets and trim overall spending. As rising inflation and mounting debt nudge wallets shut, many now find themselves paying more for yesterday’s purchases than they dare spend on tomorrow’s—an economic virtuous circle, if one happens to be a credit-card company.
With the national average for petrol cresting $4 a gallon—the highest mark since 2022—thanks to fresh Middle East unrest, American wallets are feeling lighter, particularly in pricey outposts like California and Hawaii. Analysts say households, especially Hispanic ones, could see monthly costs balloon by $150 or more, as fuel hikes ripple into food and basics. For now, summer road trips may be less joyride, more sticker shock.
After weathering January blizzards, 15,000 New York State Nurses Association members walked out at hospitals like Mount Sinai West, demanding safer staffing and real protections against workplace violence—shedding light on a system content to patch shortages with pricey temp workers. The resulting contracts enshrine enforceable safeguards, including the city’s first AI guardrails for clinical care: a win for patients and nurses, if not for hospital bean counters.
Donald Trump’s tightened border policies have left New York City short two crucial ingredients: international tourists—whose numbers fell sharply since 2016—and new immigrants, both vital for local growth. Experts fret about lost commerce and smaller tax hauls, though some prefer emptier sidewalks. As City Hall eyes ways to restore its cosmopolitan buzz, we’re reminded that Manhattan’s magic relies on being more welcome mat than moat.
Despite City Hall’s vow to shutter notorious Rikers Island by 2027, construction of four new borough-based jails lags well behind, with Brooklyn’s $3 billion site now targeting a 2029 finish and Manhattan’s trailing by five years. Costs have ballooned 57% to $13.7 billion, and the new capacity falls 2,500 beds short—proof that in New York, timelines and budgets break out faster than inmates ever could.
New York’s lawmakers have blown past the budget deadline for the seventh year running, forcing Governor Kathy Hochul and her Democratic allies into another week of eleventh-hour horse-trading on sticky issues like immigration, insurance, and—of course—taxes. A $260 billion budget is on the line, but Albany’s attachment to tradition almost rivals Italy’s when it comes to punctuality, albeit with less espresso and more budget extenders.
A proposal floated in Washington last week would cap maximum Social Security benefits, aiming to limit the payout retirees can collect if enacted later this year. Backers hope the measure will shore up the program’s finances, though the details remain lost in the legislative fog. For now, we can count our chickens, but neither eggs nor lobbyists are known for their patience.
silive.com
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