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Tag: mayor zohran mamdani

  • Editorial | Why involuntary hospitalization is a last, necessary resort for NYC – amNewYork

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    An FDNY ambulance on Parkside Avenue in Brooklyn.

    File photo by Ben Brachfeld

    By most accounts, Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s response to the first major winter storm of his tenure at City Hall was a good one. Aside from annoying snow pileups at bus stops, City Hall was prepared and ensured the basics were met: the roads were plowed and salted, and the temporary shift to remote learning for public schools on Monday went with few hiccups.

    But amid the cold snap that gripped the city before and after Sunday’s winter storm, 10 New Yorkers died amid the elements. That happened even as the mayor enacted the city’s “Code Blue,” sending outreach experts across the city to counsel those living on the streets and connect them to shelter.

    In an emergency like this cold spell, the city cannot allow anyone to perish on the streets from hypothermia and related exposure conditions. It shows the necessity of policies such as involuntary hospitalization to commit those who are no longer able to realize they are a danger to themselves and others — namely those struggling with mental illness.

    The deaths occurred even as the city had connected 500 homeless New Yorkers into transitional housing since Jan. 19, according to Mamdani. Of those, 70 people were brought indoors during outreach efforts immediately before and during the winter storm.

    On Tuesday, Mamdani acknowledged that the city needed to do more to prevent further unnecessary deaths from exposure and enhanced the Code Blue response. More social workers and homeless outreach experts are hitting the streets, and the city has opened up more warming shelters and warming buses at key locations — all in an effort to get everyone out of the cold and save lives.

    No New Yorker should have to live on the street, or feel compelled to do so. The biggest challenge for the Mamdani administration amid this brutal cold spell — which is expected to go on through at least early next week — is not so much the resources being provided, but rather convincing street homeless to accept the help offered to them.

    For years, many street homeless people we have spoken to in our reporting on other matters have expressed great mistrust about the city’s shelter system; they believe it is unsafe and does more harm than good. That stigma has been ingrained for years and it won’t be broken overnight.

    Mamdani has been a critic of involuntary hospitalization in the past, but during this winter crisis, he has not ruled out its use as a “last resort” to save the lives of New Yorkers. 

    That is the right approach, but Mamdani should also apply that standard to everyday life in New York, not just during extreme weather. This must be the approach also for tackling those who suffer from severe mental illness and can no longer recognize their need for treatment.

    Involuntary hospitalization should not be seen as punishment, but rather as a last-ditch effort to protect New Yorkers and give those afflicted the opportunity to heal and recover. In short, it can help save numerous lives and restore hope that no one in New York will ever be left out in the cold — both literally and figuratively.

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    amNewYork

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  • Congestion Pricing: Hochul celebrates Manhattan toll program’s ‘extraordinary’ results on its one-year anniversary – amNewYork

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    Gov. Kathy Hochul, along with MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber and Mayor Zohran Mamdani, celebrate the one-year anniversary of congestion pricing in Manhattan. Monday, Jan. 5, 2026.

    Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

    On the one-year anniversary of congestion pricing on Monday, Gov. Kathy Hochul declared that the program has yielded “extraordinary” results in reduced traffic and increased economic activity, “beyond what we could have expected.”

    The governor, during a Monday afternoon news conference in Manhattan, stood alongside MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber and Mayor Zohran Mamdani. She lauded congestion pricing as a success in reducing car traffic, cutting air pollution, promoting the local economy, and generating vital funding for public transit.

    “We changed how people in this great city and the region live, how they breathe, how they act, and now the results are in,” Hochul said of the program’s impact.

    Van passes congestion pricing gantry in Manhattan
    A van passes under a congestion pricing gantry in Manhattan on Jan. 5, 2026.Photo by Dean Moses

    Hochul also noted that the once-fervent opposition to congestion pricing, when it was first launched one year ago, has seemingly “calmed down.”

    “People like getting across the bridges faster, they like coming to the city with more time on their hands, they’re happy not to sit in traffic,” Hochul said. “So to those individuals who are driving in, their quality of life has improved as well, and I’m really proud of that, and I hope they understand what this program did for them.”

    The governor touted the state’s and MTA’s success in winning most of the nearly a dozen lawsuits that opponents brought in hopes of halting congestion pricing over the past few years.=

    “For those of you who are keeping score, I’ve got more than 10 lawsuits. We have a pretty good record. Every time it’s gone before a judge, the judge says, ‘no, no, the state is right,’” Hochul said. 

    Hochul said she believes the state will have the same result with its lawsuit seeking to block President Trump’s administration’s efforts to end the program. The Manhattan federal judge in the case, Lewis Liman, will hear oral arguments later this month.

    Mayor Zohran Mamdani joined Gov. Kathy Hochul and MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber to celebrate one year of congestion pricing. Monday, Jan. 5, 2025.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

    Mamdani, who won the mayoralty on ambitious proposals like making city buses free, said congestion pricing is proof of the “change that can come when government dares to do big things.”

    “This is a program that has been successful, no matter how you measure it,” he said.

    Congestion pricing charges drivers entering Manhattan below 60th Street a $9 base toll during peak hours. The tolls vary based on vehicle size and the time of day drivers enter the zone, known as the Central Business District (CBD).

    The governor ticked off the program’s positive impacts on congestion and safety: reducing the number of vehicles enterring the CBD by 11% — equating to 27 million fewer vehicles; allowing those enterring and exiting the zone during rush hour to move an average 23% faster over crossings; boosting bus speeds in the CBD by 2.3%; and reducing crashes in the area by 7%.

    She also pointed to a 22% drop in air pollution within the CBD; a 6.3% rise in economic activity in the zone; and Broadway having its best season in history — bringing in $1.9 billion in ticket sales.

    MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber takes a victory lap on congestion pricing on the program’s one-year anniversary. Monday, Jan. 5, 2026.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

    Furthermore, the state’s and MTA’s projections indicate the program will raise $550 in net revenues for its first year. They will then begin bonding those dollars out to bring in $15 billion to fund major capital improvements to the system over the next several years.

    “It’s going to bring us more benefits, more than just less congested streets,” Lieber said of congestion pricing. “It’s the new train cars that you’re making possible. The new signals. The more ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) elevators.”

    The MTA has already approved contracts for signal modernization on the A/C line in Brooklyn and Queens and to install elevators at five stations utilizing congestion pricing revenue late last year.

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    Ethan Stark-Miller

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  • Five-alarm tears through Bronx deli and building: FDNY

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    Firefighters battled a five alarm fire at 1365 Finlay Ave. in West Bronx on Monday, Jan. 5, 2025.

    Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

    A five-alarm fire tore through a Bronx deli, ripping through five floors above, early Monday morning, FDNY officials and Mayor Zohran Mamdani said.

    The fire department said the inferno erupted at 1365 Findlay Ave. in Claremont Village, just before 3:30 a.m. on Jan. 5.

    After receiving a call about the blaze at around 3:18 a.m., firefighters arrived to find heavy fire emanating from the street-level deli. It quickly spread to the second floor, prompting Battalion 17 to call for a second alarm, officials said.

    firefighters prepare hoses to fight a fire at night
    Firefighters battled a five-alarm fire at 1365 Finlay Ave. in West Bronx on Monday, Jan. 5, 2025.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

    In a flash, the fire spread to the third and subsequent floors; about 270 firefighters and paramedics were at the scene. 

    Firefighters left the building and made an exterior attack. They then returned to fight the blaze, using multiple hoses to extinguish the main body of the fire. 

    The devastating fire left one FDNY member and a civilian with minor injuries; EMS brought them to an area hospital for evaluation. Dozens of people were displaced.

    “Thanks to the over 250 first responders who rushed to the scene, the building was evacuated without loss of life,” Mamdani said on X (formerly Twitter). “I am grateful to FDNY and all our first responders for their quick response that saved lives and for supporting displaced residents.”

    The fire marked the first multiple-alarm fire in NYC for 2026. It came just weeks after another five-alarm blaze in the Bronx that left one person with minor injuries on Dec. 18.

    People looking at the effects of a devastating fire.
    A group gathers to look at the aftermath of the devastating fire.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

    Kimberly Gonzalez-Ferreira, a resident of the building, was left with shock and sadness.

    “This is an absolutely tragic way to start the new year with everyone looking up at new goals in life,” she said. 

    Billy Gomez, another resident, had just moved to NYC when the fire struck.

    “I was looking forward to a fresh start in the new year. I just moved here from Rhode Island,” he said. “Now I have nothing.”

    The fire was brought under control at around 7:12 a.m. The cause of the blaze is unknown; fire marshals will continue to investigate. 

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    By Lloyd Mitchell and Barbara Russo-Lennon

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  • Zohran Mamdani’s inauguration: New mayor vows not to soften democratic socialist agenda for governing NYC – amNewYork

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    Mayor Zohran Mamdani opened his administration Thursday with an explicit pledge to govern the nation’s largest city as a democratic socialist, saying he would not soften his politics as he ushered in the “new era.”

    “I was elected as a democratic socialist, and I will govern as a democratic socialist,” Mamdani said in his inaugural address on New Year’s Day before a crowd of thousands gathered at City Hall and at a block party down the Canyon of Heroes.

    The declaration, made on the steps of City Hall, set the tone for a speech that framed his mayoralty as a test of whether a left-wing government can deliver for working people while confronting corporate power and economic inequality.

    “No longer will City Hall hesitate to use its power to improve New Yorkers’ lives,” he said, arguing that decades of deference to the private sector had eroded trust in government.

    He rejected advice to lower expectations at the outset of his term. “The only expectation I seek to reset is that of small expectations,” Mamdani said. “Beginning today, we will govern expansively and audaciously.”

    Mamdani publicly commits to his campaign promises as mayor

    NYC’s new first couple: Mayor Zohran Mamdani (r.) with First Lady Rama Duwaji.Photo by Dean Moses
    Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

    Throughout the address, Mamdani returned to the question of who the city’s government serves. “Who does New York belong to?” he asked, answering later: “New York belongs to all who live in it, together.”

    He outlined priorities that he said reflect that commitment, including universal child care funded by taxing the wealthiest residents, freezing rents for tenants in rent-stabilized apartments, and making city buses “fast and free.” He said those policies were about expanding freedom in a city where, he argued, opportunity has too often depended on income.

    “For too long in our city, freedom has belonged only to those who can afford to buy it,” Mamdani said.

    The new mayor acknowledged skepticism from New Yorkers who opposed him, saying his administration would serve the entire city. “If you are a New Yorker, I am your mayor,” he said, adding that only action would change minds.

    Mamdani framed the moment as one being closely watched beyond New York. “They want to know if the left can govern,” he said. “They want to know if it is right to hope again.”

    He urged supporters to remain engaged beyond the election, saying governing would require sustained public pressure and participation. “City Hall will not be able to deliver on our own,” Mamdani said.

    As he concluded, Mamdani cast the start of his term as the beginning of a longer struggle rather than a victory lap.

    “The work continues,” he said. “The work endures. The work, my friends, has only just begun.”

    ‘Radical agenda’

    Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who administered the oath of office, praised Mamdani’s election as a watershed moment for grassroots politics and working people, calling it “the biggest political upset in modern American history.”

    Sanders thanked New Yorkers for what he described as a volunteer-driven campaign that challenged entrenched political and economic power.

    “You took on the Democratic establishment, the Republican establishment, the President of the United States, and some enormously wealthy oligarchs,” Sanders said. “And you defeated them.”

    Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders swears in Mayor Zohran Mamdani.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell
    Mayor Zohran Mamdani is sworn in by Vermont Senator Bernie SandersPhoto by Dean Moses

    He framed the victory as a response to growing disillusionment with democracy in the United States and beyond. “At a moment when people in America — in fact, throughout the world — are losing faith in democracy,” Sanders said, Mamdani’s election showed that “when working people stand together, when we don’t let them divide us up, there is nothing we cannot accomplish.”

    Sanders acknowledged that governing would be more difficult than campaigning, telling the crowd that while winning the election was hard, “governing a city of 8 million people with all of its complexities” would be harder still.

    He urged supporters to remain engaged, saying that “grassroots democracy and people participating in the day-to-day struggles of this city will lead to good governance.”

    Addressing criticism of Mamdani’s agenda, Sanders rejected claims that the policies were radical. Making housing affordable, providing free, high-quality child care, offering free public transportation, and ensuring access to affordable food, he said, were “not radical,” but “the right and decent thing to do.”

    Sanders also called for higher taxes on the wealthy and large corporations, saying it was unacceptable that billionaires and major companies pay little in taxes while millions live paycheck to paycheck. “That has got to end,” he said.

    Mayor for all

    U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez opened the inauguration ceremony Thursday, framing the event as a collective moment for the city’s residents and calling for greater civic participation in the years ahead.

    She described the ceremony as an inauguration for all New Yorkers, saying the city had chosen “historic, ambitious leadership in response to unprecedented times.”
    “New York, we have chosen courage over fear,” she said. “We have chosen prosperity for the many over spoils for the few.”

    Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-CortezPhoto by Dean Moses

    Ocasio-Cortez highlighted policy goals she said New Yorkers had embraced, including “the ambitious pursuit of universal child care, affordable rents and housing and clean and dignified public transit for all,” while rejecting “the distractions of bigotry and the barbarism of extreme income inequality.”

    Calling the moment “an inauguration for all of us,” she urged residents to reengage in civic and community life, saying, “A city for all will require all of us to fill our streets, our schools, our houses of faith, our PTAs, and our block associations.”

    She noted several historic firsts for the incoming mayor, saying he “will be the first Muslim mayor of our great city,” “our first immigrant mayor in over a century,” and “the youngest mayor of New York City in generations.”

    “But most importantly,” she said, “Zohran will be a mayor for all of us.”

    Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

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    Adam Daly

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