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Tag: New York City

  • Nurses strike in NYC looms as major hospitals, union fail to reach deal before midnight deadline

    The potential for a major nurses strike in New York City is growing by the minute, after major hospitals and the New York State Nurses Association failed to negotiate a deal before Sunday’s midnight deadline.

    As a result, nearly 15,000 nurses could walk off the job Monday at Montefiore Medical Center, Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai Morningside, Mount Sinai West and NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center, unless something happens during the overnight hours and an agreement is reached.

    The union said Sunday at a news conference that a strike would begin Monday at 6 a.m. at Mount Sinai and 7 a.m. at other facilities without a new contract.

    Mayor Zohran Mamdani acknowledged the potential strike Sunday evening, posting a message on social media that reads, in part, “We are prepared for any and all scenarios, including a strike … No New Yorker should have to fear losing access to health care — and no nurse should be asked to accept less pay, fewer benefits or less dignity for doing lifesaving work.”

    Key issues for the union

    Leaders for NYSNA have said key sticking points in contract negotiations with Montefiore, Mount Sinai and NewYork-Presbyterian involve wage increases, health benefits, protection from workplace violence, and safe staffing and patient safety.

    “Instead of guaranteeing health care for nurses, these wealthy hospitals are pushing to cut health benefits for nurses who put their own health on the line to care for New Yorkers,” Nancy Hagans, president of NYSNA, said on Saturday. 

    In a joint statement, the hospitals called the potential strike “reckless” and asked union leadership to reconsider. 

    “NYSNA leadership has chosen to abandon patients in their time of need, but Montefiore Medical Center, Mount Sinai, and NewYork-Presbyterian will not. Their decision to walk out on our patients can only be described as reckless,” the hospitals said.

    A strike could last weeks, hospital says

    Montefiore said it was preparing for what could be a multi-week strike, while Mount Sinai and NewYork-Presbyterian said they’re ready to safely care for patients if a strike occurs.

    “Patients should not delay going to the hospital if they need care, while we are on strike,” Hagans said.

    “NYSNA leadership’s reckless and irresponsible demands totaling $3.6 billion, including a nearly 40% wage increase, clearly put patients at risk; we are resolute in devoting whatever resources are necessary to safe and seamless care for our community,” Joe Solmonese, Montefiore’s senior VP of strategic communications, said in a statement last week.

    Some hospitals in the area have already reached a deal with NYSNA, including all of Northwell Health facilities in Nassau County, while others pulled back their strike notices.

    “Northwell Health is pleased to have reached tentative agreements with NYSNA … at Huntington, Plainview and Syosset hospitals. From the start of negotiations, our goal has been to reach a fair contract that supports our valued nurses and upholds the high standard of care our patients and community trust,” a statement from Northwell said. 

    Hochul signs executive order

    In a video posted Friday on social media, Gov. Kathy Hochul encouraged both sides to remain at the bargaining table and strike a deal. The governor also signed an executive order for the Department of Health to ensure hospital contingency plans in the event of a strike. She later released the following statement: 

    “My team and I have been in regular communication with both NYSNA and hospital leadership for weeks, and that work has led to real progress. Eleven hospital systems have either reached agreements or agreed not to proceed with strikes at this time,” Hochul said.

    “While negotiations will continue, we expect strikes to begin tomorrow at three hospital systems in Manhattan and the Bronx. If strikes move forward, the Department of Health will have staff on site at all affected hospitals beginning tomorrow morning and for the duration of the strike to ensure patient safety and continuity of care.

    “My top priority is protecting patients and ensuring they can access the care they need. At the same time, we must reach an agreement that recognizes the essential work nurses do every day on the front lines of our healthcare system.

    “This weekend, I signed a two-week Executive Order allowing hospital systems to access resources to maintain patient care.

    “I continue to urge both sides to remain at the table and reach an agreement as soon as possible.”

    Public supportive of nurses’ demands — to a point

    Some New Yorkers who spoke to CBS News New York said they are are supportive, but others worry about what a work stoppage would mean for patients.

    “A strike is a last resort. So when it comes down to decisions to strike, that’s a big deal and the public should be paying attention to that and realizing that we depend on health care workers,” said Kaidee Akullo, who was visiting New York City from Philadelphia.

    “I would say I support their decision to fight for what they deserve, but not at the cost of lives,” an Upper West Side resident said.

    “I hope they settle the contract because they deserve it. They’re hard workers,” one person said.

    “We shouldn’t have the strike. It’s in the interest of everyone,” Harminder Bhatia said.

    “The nurses have every right to strike, and they should be striking because they’re overworked and underpaid,” a woman added.

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  • These hospitals still face nurses strike threat Monday morning

    With less than 48 hours before nurses are set to walk off the job at some New York City hospitals, their union says agreements have been reached at more facilities. But the strike threat remains at four hospitals.

    Negotiations at Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai Morningside and West, Montefiore, and NewYork-Presbyterian are continuing through the weekend, according to the New York State Nurses Association.

    “From day one, nurses have been ready to bargain,” NYSNA President Nancy Hagans said Saturday.  The hospitals that still haven’t reached an agreement “have chosen to throw away hundreds of millions of dollars fighting against their own frontline nurses.”

    The union says key sticking points include what it says are threats to cut healthcare benefits for frontline nurses, an attempt to roll back safe staffing standards that nurses won after striking at two major hospitals three years ago, and what they call a refusal to agree to protections from workplace violence.

    But a Montefiore official responds by accusing the union’s leadership of making “reckless and irresponsible demands totaling $3.6 billion, including a nearly 40% wage increase.” The hospital also claims NYSNA is “taking issue with our reasonable measures like rolling out panic buttons for frontline staff in the Emergency Department.”

    “So far, the NYS Nurses Association hasn’t moved off from its unrealistic demand of nearly 30% wage increases over three years and refuses to respond to our economic and staffing proposals,” said a NewYork-Presbyterian spokesperson.

    After originally threatening a 10-day walkout at hospitals in the city and on Long Island, the union says more walkouts were averted Friday. Nurses at The Brooklyn Hospital Center and Wyckoff Heights Medical Center reached full tentative agreements. NYSNA says Bronxcare nurses also rescinded their strike notice based on agreements reached on nurse staffing, health care and wages.

    The three Long Island hospitals that faced a strike threat have also struck deals, according to the union. “Northwell/ Plainview Hospital, Syosset and Huntington nurses signed tentative agreements on new contracts yesterday that protect safe patient care,” it said in a statement Saturday.

    The strike would begin at some of the remaining hospitals at 6:00 AM Monday.

    Ethan Harp

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  • Mamdani calls Hamas “terrorist organization” after protest chant backlash

    New York City Democratic Mayor Zohran Mamdani reacted to pro-Hamas chants bellowed at a Thursday night protest in Queens, saying in part the following day that demonstrations in support of “a terrorist organization have no place in our city.”

    Newsweek reached out to the mayor’s office via email on Friday night for comment.

    Why It Matters

    A protest outside a Queens synagogue drew national attention after pro-Palestinian demonstrators chanted in support of Hamas and pro-Israel counter-demonstrators responded with slurs and threats, The New York Times reports. The clash, which occurred in the Kew Gardens Hills neighborhood—home to a significant Orthodox Jewish community—prompted widespread condemnation.

    The rhetoric at the protest has reignited debate over rising antisemitism, public safety and the responsibility of political leaders to condemn hate speech.

    What To Know

    The demonstration unfolded Thursday night during an event promoting American real estate investment in Jerusalem. Pro-Palestinian protesters chanted in support of Hamas, saying, “Say it loud, say it clear, we support Hamas here,” while counterprotesters shouted racial and homophobic slurs, per the Times.

    When asked by reporters about the protest chants on Friday, Mamdani said, “the rhetoric and displays that we saw” at the protest “are wrong and have no place in our city,” the Times reports.

    “My team is in close touch with the N.Y.P.D. [New York City Police Department] regarding last night’s protest and counterprotest,” Mamdani added in a statement to the news outlet. “We will continue to ensure New Yorkers’ safety entering and exiting houses of worship as well as the constitutional right to protest.”

    The publication says the statement was sent “hours after he made similar remarks at an event shortly after noon.”

    Taking to X on Friday evening, Mamdani reiterated his condemnation of the pro-Hamas outcry, saying, “As I said earlier today, chants in support of a terrorist organization have no place in our city. We will continue to ensure New Yorkers’ safety entering and exiting houses of worship as well as the constitutional right to protest.”

    Mamdani also faced some backlash on social media for the timing of his remarks.

    New York State Democratic Assemblymember Sam Berger said on X Friday morning, “Still waiting on condemnation of support for Hamas at a protest in a Jewish neighborhood from @NYCMayor

    X account Israel War Room also said on Friday morning, “Terror supporters in NYC explicitly chanted their allegiance to Hamas, the genocidal, anti-American terror group. Leaders must universally condemn this disgusting support for terrorists who want to annihilate Jews worldwide. We await your condemnation, Mayor Mamdani @NYCMayor.”

    Adam Carlson, founding partner of Zenith Research polling, said on X Friday: “I am a vocal & passionate support [sic] of Mamdani’s But I’ve waited patiently all day for him to forcefully condemn Hamas — watching dozens of other city & state electeds do so — and am still waiting This is not only hurtful to me, but it’s bad politics & distracts from his agenda”

    What People Are Saying

    Democratic New York Governor Kathy Hochul, on X Friday morning: “Hamas is a terrorist organization that calls for the genocide of Jews. No matter your political beliefs, this type of rhetoric is disgusting, it’s dangerous, and it has no place in New York.”

    New York Attorney General Letitia James, on X Friday: “Hamas is a terrorist organization. We do not support terrorists. Period.”

    Senate Democratic Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York, on X Friday: “Let’s be clear: Hamas is a terrorist organization committed to the destruction of Jews while imposing its brutal rule on Palestinians. Chanting support for Hamas is antisemitic and unacceptable. This hate must have no place in NYC, in the U.S. or around the world, and must be loudly condemned.”

    X account StopAntisemitism, on Friday: “NYC Mayor Mamdani’s office granted Hamas supporters a permit to riot extremely close to a Jewish Day School last night. Listen as they scream ‘we support Hamas’ and ‘Long Live October 7th’. Ready to leave NYC? DM us to be connected to a robust database of realtors all over the U.S.”

    What Happens Next

    As public debate continues over the boundaries between political protest and prohibited hate speech, officials indicated a commitment to ensuring New York remains a safe and inclusive city for all residents and communities.

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  • Kristi Noem’s “New York Welcome”: A View From Inside the World Trade Center

    Kristi the protestor, who asked to be identified only by her first name—spelled, to her displeasure, the same way as Noem’s—heeded a call from her church after the Minnesota shooting. On Thursday morning, she headed to Federal Plaza in lower Manhattan, outside an ICE field office, where Noem’s press conference was initially scheduled. When the location was moved, she joined the throng of a few hundred protestors marching the 15 minutes south to the World Trade Center, where Vanity Fair’s offices overlooked a crowd swelling in opposition to Noem and a heightened security presence accompanying it.

    “I’m actually here to pray for her horrible, rotten soul,” Kristi said, “and show my solidarity with Minneapolis.”

    Emily Dentinger.

    As the face of ICE’s operations, Secretary Noem figured prominently into a vivid array of signs on display: along with a drawing of a red MAGA hat refashioned to read, “You’re in a cult,” and calls for “justice for Renee Nicole Good,” a woman was demanding “HAG 4 HAGUE.” The sun was shining on this unseasonably warm winter day outside the building, and a protest monitor from the American Civil Liberties Union kept a steady eye on the large crowd of police officers on hand. As marchers circled the building, passing by the reflecting pools placed on the footprint of the Twin Towers, a masked Port Authority counterterrorism officer stood in the shadow of Santiago Calatrava’s winged Oculus structure, holding a bundle of plastic zip ties hooked to a carabiner.

    In an interview with The New York Times in the hours after the shooting on Wednesday, Donald Trump insisted that Good “behaved horribly” and “ran [the ICE officer] over.” But when he reviewed footage from the incident with the paper’s reporters, he sounded less confident. “Well,” Trump said. “I—the way I look at it…”

    “It’s a terrible scene,” he said as the video ended. “I think it’s horrible to watch. No, I hate to see it.”

    Image may contain Erik Kratz Walter Jones Officer Person Police Officer Adult Car Transportation Vehicle and Urban

    Dan Adler.

    Dan Adler

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  • Lorde, Stray Kids, & More: Here Are The Artists Headlining Gov Ball 2026

    And just like that, festival season is slowly inching its way upon us. Per usual, New York City’s The Governors Ball Music Festival (aka Gov Ball) is one of the first festivals in the United States to announce its lineup, right behind Coachella. This year’s Gov Ball will take place in sunny June, from the 5th to the 7th in Flushing Meadows Corona Park – learn more about tickets and getting to the festival here. Now, we want to know the lineup.

    Here’s who is headlining The Governors Ball 2026:

    Image Source: Courtesy of Grandstand Media

    Lorde

    When we saw Gov Ball teasing the lineup on their Instagram page, we knew Lorde would be a part of it. She had an incredible 2025 with the release of her new album, Virgin, as well as a sold-out arena tour across the United States. One thing is for certain: Lorde’s fans know how to have a good time, especially in a festival setting. Hearing ‘David’ with thousands of people is going to heal us.

    Lorde Governor Ball
    Image Source: Courtesy of Chuff Media

    Baby Keem

    The decision to announce Baby Keem as a headliner was a bit of a surprise for us, but we’re totally here for it. Baby Keem has so many hits—from ‘family ties’ to ‘HONEST’—that we already know his set is going to be one of the highlights of the weekend. Did you know that Baby Keem is Kendrick Lamar‘s cousin? Maybe we will get a special appearance from our favorite rapper…

    Stray Kids

    Yes, we’re all freaking out over here. Stray Kids might just be the most exciting name on the headliner list this year. Nothing compares to a live Stray Kids performance, and this one in NYC is going to be their best yet. We can see it now—the lights, the outfits, the choreography, and of course, the vocals. If you see us pushing our way to the barricade…no, you didn’t.

    Stray Kids Governors Ball
    Image Source: JYP Entertainment

    Kali Uchis

    Saturday’s headliners are showing off with the addition of Kali Uchis. Kali is one of those artists who never fails to surprise us, so we have high expectations for her set at Gov Ball this year. We’re hoping for some special guests (Tyler, The Creator or Omar Apollo) as well as a gorgeous set design and angelic vibes all the way. We’re most looking forward to hearing ‘fue mejor’ live. What about you?

    JENNIE

    O.M.G JENNIE is headlining Gov Ball! This is a major moment for us in the hive, and we know you all are freaking out as much as we are. We simply can’t wait until June for this performance—we need to see JENNIE perform on stage now! Sunday morning, we’re sprinting full speed to the barricade to secure the best spot possible. It’s going to be a total ‘Shut Down’ in NYC.

    Jennie Gov Ball
    Image Source: Courtesy of V Magazine

    A$AP Rocky

    There is no way we are missing this headlining set! A$AP Rocky is one artist we have yet to see live, and now the time has come. All month, we’ve been vibing to ‘Trunks,’ which is 100% making the setlist. We’re also hoping to hear ‘Sundress’ and ‘Fu**** Problems.’ He’ll be headlining alongside JENNIE on Sunday, which means we have to fit both of their performances in. Sunday is going to be the best night ever!

    Get your tickets to see Lorde, Baby Keem, Stray Kids, Kali Uchis, JENNIE, and A$AP Rocky here!

    Will you be getting tickets to this year’s Gov Ball? Which of the headliners are you planning to see? Tell us all your thoughts about this year’s lineup in the comments down below or on FacebookTwitter, and Instagram!

    Want more music? We got you!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE GOVERNORS BALL:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | WEBSITE

    Alana

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  • At Chin Up Bar, Gin Is the Star of the Show

    Chin Up Bar is a new gin-focused cocktail spot on the Lower East Side. Photo Memory NYC

    Specialization is hot in New York’s crowded bar scene. Want an Italian aperitivo? Or Japanese-style cocktails? You’ve got options in spades. Spirits themselves, too, prove rich enough to warrant entire bars dedicated to their varying expressions, especially whiskey and agave spirits like tequila and mezcal. There’s one spirit, however, that two bar industry veterans believe deserves another devoted destination, especially now: gin. 

    Brian Gummert and Blake Walker have joined forces to open the gin-focused Chin Up Bar at 171 Chrystie Street in New York City’s Lower East Side. The partnership makes sense: Gummert owns Lower East Side cocktail bar Subject; Walker bartended there, as well as at Nitecap and Amor y Amargo, the latter of which is one of New York’s prized specialty spots concentrating on amaro. 

    “Brian and I both love gin, and there’s been an explosion of exciting gins in the past 10 to 15 years,” Walker tells Observer. Classic London dry styles from well-established distilleries have long been popular in Europe and back bar staples in the United States. But more recently, American craft distilleries, like Tenmile Distillery in upstate New York, have been leaning more into the spirit. Gins are also popping up in regions not previously associated with the spirit, where endemic fruits and botanicals give it a fresh spin—South Africa’s Bayab Gin with local pineapple and palm sap, for example, or Vietnam’s Sông Cái Distillery with heirloom pomelo, jungle pepper, black cardamom and green turmeric.

    The thrill of discovery fueled the proliferation of whiskey and agave bars over the last two decades, Walker adds. Craft whiskey options exploded in New York, followed by an increased availability of quality tequila and mezcal, and suddenly bar-goers had entire categories to explore at dedicated destinations. Now, he says, gin “is ripe for that.” 

    Gin’s own craft boom has resulted in myriad different flavor profiles for such exploration. Walker and Gummert curated a back bar just shy of 100 gin bottles ahead of the December 2025 opening, which Walker says could likely double in the next few months and continue to grow from there. In addition to heavy hitters in the London dry vein, Chin Up Bar’s shelves represent the aforementioned options from upstate New York, Vietnam and South Africa, as well as those from Japan, India, Kenya, Mexico, Australia and more. 

    Bolstered by this kind of selection, Chin Up Bar speaks to gin lovers above all else. But Walker and Gummert are willing to bet that even those who believe they don’t like gin just haven’t found the gin for them yet. 

    “A lot of people avoid gin due to unfortunate experiences early in their drinking careers,” Walker says. “They had bad gin, or they still have the perception it’s old-fashioned or stodgy. I think that’s diminishing and a lot of those attitudes have really sloughed off, but there’s still a little bit of persistence there.” For Walker and Gummert, the perception that gin is all pine tree and booze burn may be what has prevented the spirit from having its own dedicated menus in the past.

    A Gibson. Photo Memory NYC

    To showcase gin’s versatility and vast breadth of regional expressions, Walker and Gummert have shaped a menu balancing classic gin cocktails with more novel creations.

    The classics help demonstrate the impact different gins can have on familiar, popular flavor profiles—Martin Miller’s Westbourne Strength gin is perfect in a martini with a refined balance of juniper, citrus, spice and clean smoothness. Roku Japanese gin has peppery spice and herbaceous green tea notes that sing in a dirty martini, and Neversink New York gin possesses a hint of sweetness that brings out the same in the Gibson’s leek vermouth and sherry vinegar while tempering the drink’s acidity and brine. Then, there are the more adventurous Chin Up Bar originals.

    Rendezvous in Chennai. Photo Memory NYC

    Floral, citrusy and spicy, Dorothy Parker New York gin pulls together the Rendezvous in Chennai. With Madras curry, coconut, apricot, ginger and lime, the slightly creamy, velvety cocktail explodes with bright, tropical flavors before the savory curry, with its subtle heat, blossoms and lingers in the drink’s finish. Elsewhere on the menu, the Australian Four Pillars yuzu gin plays with guava and sunflower seed orgeat, while the Mexican Condesa prickly pear gin anchors thyme, kiwi, honey and sparkling wine.

    Walker and Gummert aren’t afraid to venture beyond traditional gin cocktails and inventions crafted specifically around gin. Aquavit, essentially a Scandinavian gin riff featuring caraway instead of juniper, punches up the traditionally more rounded, sweeter old-fashioned with spice, while apple brandy, Granny Smith apples, wasabi and red shiso broaden its flavor horizons with a bright crispness, earthiness and heat. Gin even found its way into a coquito Walker was pouring before Christmas. The rich, coconutty Puerto Rican holiday punch is made with rum, but Walker splits its base with gin. The result is a more complex coquito with punchier spices and subtle botanicals keeping the drink safely distant from cloying territory. 

    The aquavit old-fashioned. Photo Memory NYC

    There’s plenty to learn about gin at Chin Up Bar, but it’s up to guests how much information they want served up with their drinks. Walker and Gummert prioritize staff education, so information on various gins comes across more naturally in dialogues with guests rather than requiring rehearsed spiels. They also plan to have classic gin botanicals on hand for people to smell on their own, and they allow guests to liberally sample with one-ounce pours of anything on the back bar.

    “It’s important for us to leave the doors wide open to educational experiences and talk about things in a knowledgeable way without forcing it on anyone,” Walker explains. “They can just come in and have a delicious drink without that if they want.”

    Chin Up Bar’s seafood-forward menu has been intentionally developed to pair well with gin. Even in the minuscule world of gin-focused bars, this level of detail is rare; gin isn’t framed in a pairing context the same way as wine, beer, or even whiskey. 

    The seafood-forward menu, with dishes like smoked mussels escabeche, was designed to pair well with gin. Photo Memory NYC

    There’s the option to simply feast on shrimp cocktail with your martini, but you can also order dishes recommended based on your specific drink. For example, Walker suggested smoked mussels escabeche and a tuna dish with red shiso leaf and dehydrated beets to pair with the Rendezvous in Chennai and aquavit old-fashioned. The red shiso leaf in both the tuna and the old-fashioned matched well, and the mussels’ smoky character highlighted the Rendezvous’s savory curry note. (It’s worth mentioning that the satisfyingly toothsome, densely flavor-packed beets on that tuna dish deserve their own award.) A selection of oysters may not be as carefully curated to cocktails’ flavors, but similarly to the shrimp cocktail, they feel like a low-stakes, classic nosh for a cocktail bar.

    It’s a unique space. Photo Memory NYC

    All of this gin celebration takes place in a refreshingly singular space. You won’t find Art Deco “bathtub gin” nods here, nor the de rigueur martini bar plush red banquettes. The space itself feels sculptural, with cave-like white stucco walls inspired by the Gilder Center at the American Museum of Natural History. High vaulted ceilings with sky murals by Ori Carino wink at the ceilings of Grand Central Station, while touches of greenery pay homage to Sara D. Roosevelt Park near the bar. All together, the interior looks other-worldly—it’s giving a chicer, more restrained Mos Eisley Cantina—but every element weaves in some New York reference.

    Envisioning Chin Up Bar’s space, Gummert recalls serving drinks elsewhere during the pandemic and thinking how excited people would be to be in a new space. 

    Every element of the interior weaves in a piece of New York. Photo Memory NYC

    “People were stuck in nostalgia for a while, but now seem to be wanting something fresh,” he says. The bar is in a new building, so he and Walker got to design the layout from scratch. “Patterns emerged little by little, inspired by New York public spaces, cathedrals, subway stations…it was time to see something new and interesting in New York.”

    Walker and Gummert would love Chin Up to become a destination cocktail bar, but Walker notes that “it’s locals, it’s regulars that keep you open and sustained for a long time. Our focus has been creating an experience to make people want to come back over and over.” Gin enthusiasts will already be locked in to a concept like this, but between the reliably well-made classics, interesting originals, and strong food menu, there’s more than enough for every other kind of imbiber to appreciate.

    At Chin Up Bar, Gin Is the Star of the Show

    Courtney Iseman

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  • Is your state raising its minimum wage in 2026? Here’s the list.

    Almost two dozen states are raising their minimum wage in 2026, providing American workers a pay bump at a time when many are struggling to cover basic necessities.

    In total, 88 jurisdictions — including 22 states and 66 cities and counties — are slated to increase their minimum wages at some point in 2026, according to a recent report from the National Employment Law Project (NELP), an advocacy organization for workers. 

    The wage floor will reach or exceed $15.00 per hour, double the amount of the federal minimum wage, in most of those locations.

    The bulk of the wage boosts took effect starting Jan. 1, 2026. For instance, the minimum rose to $17.00 at the start of this year in New York City, Long Island and Westchester County.

    Despite repeated attempts to raise the federal minimum wage, the national baseline hourly rate has remained at $7.25 since 2009. In the meantime, many states and municipalities have boosted their wage floors through a patchwork of ballot measures and legislation. These changes are often framed as a way to combat inflation, which has cooled since 2022 but remains a pain point for many Americans. 

    Read on to see how the minimum wage where you live stacks up against other states across the U.S., based on NELP’s report.

    States with a new minimum wage, effective Jan. 1, 2026

    • Arizona: $15.15
    • California: $16.90
    • Colorado: $15.16 
    • Connecticut: $16.94
    • Hawaii: $16
    • Maine: $15.10 
    • Michigan: $13.73
    • Minnesota: $11.41 
    • Missouri: $15 
    • Montana: $10.85
    • Nebraska: $15
    • New Jersey: $15.92 
    • New York: $17.00 for New York City, Long Island and Westchester; $16.00 for the rest of the state
    • Ohio: $11 
    • Rhode Island: $16 
    • South Dakota: $11.85 
    • Vermont: $14.42
    • Virginia: $12.77
    • Washington State: $17.13

    States with minimum wage increases expected later in 2026

    • Alaska: $14
    • Florida: $15
    • Oregon: Between $14.05 to $16.30, depending on location

    States not raising wages

    The following states’ minimum wage is above $7.25, but won’t increase in 2026.

    • Arkansas: $11
    • Delaware: $15
    • Illinois: $15
    • Maryland: $15
    • Massachusetts: $15
    • Nevada: $12
    • New Mexico: $12
    • West Virginia: $8.75

    The remaining states have a minimum wage of $7.25. Georgia and Wyoming both have a minimum wage of $5.15, which is superseded by the federal minimum wage.

    • Alabama
    • Georgia
    • Idaho
    • Indiana
    • Iowa
    • Kansas
    • Kentucky
    • Louisiana
    • Mississippi
    • New Hampshire
    • North Carolina
    • North Dakota
    • Oklahoma
    • Pennsylvania
    • South Carolina
    • Tennessee
    • Texas
    • Utah
    • Wisconsin
    • Wyoming

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  • How Did Astoria Become So Socialist?

    Earlier in the day, I’d also met with Shawna Morlock, who had been one of the very first volunteers on Ocasio-Cortez’s primary campaign. Morlock, who was a hair stylist, had moved to Astoria a few years earlier with her husband, a restaurant manager, because it was “a place you could afford on two blue-collar salaries.” She had never worked on a political campaign. On her first-ever canvassing shift, near Astoria Park, she met Ocasio-Cortez, who, in a role-play, pretended to be a voter, and had Morlock practice pitching her. (“I was so awkward and terrible, but she was so kind,” Morlock said.) Morlock joined the D.S.A. and eventually became a full-time staffer to Gonzalez, the state senator.

    “I don’t think I joined D.S.A. thinking, I am a socialist,” Morlock told me. “I joined it because they believe the same thing I believe in.” The year after Ocasio-Cortez won, Morlock campaigned for Cabán, who was running for Queens District Attorney. (Cabán lost the Democratic nomination by just fifty-five votes, and was later elected to the City Council.) One day, Morlock recalled, “I was picking up my literature to knock doors, and one volunteer was, like, ‘Thank you, comrade.’ ” I was, like, ‘O.K.? Comrade . . . I guess.’ ” As Morlock puts it, it took a few campaigns to “dis-McCarthyize” her mind. “After organizing for a couple of years, I’m, like, I’m socialist.”

    Astoria can feel a bit like an island. It’s nice, a little isolated, and has good seafood. Is there something about it as a place that has made it more amenable to socialist politics? “Astoria is very accessible,” Nicolaou, the Greek left-wing organizer, told me. “People are accessible to each other.” “It’s walkable, it’s beautiful, it’s a good place to run political campaigns,” Lange told me. There is an argument that Astoria is the perfect place for one of the D.S.A.’s signature New York tactics—the canvass. “I’ve knocked all of Astoria, basically,” Morlock told me. When she rings a doorbell, people actually come to talk to her. “I’m coming back to the same people, over and over, cycle to cycle, who remember me,” she said.

    In 1932, Morris Hillquit, a founder of the Socialist Party of America, coined the term “sewer socialism” to describe a kind of socialism that focusses on everyday municipal problems. Nicolaou said that a lot of the neighborhood’s older residents were impressed by young D.S.A. members who went grocery shopping for vulnerable people at the start of the pandemic. Karolidis told me a story about Mamdani, when he was a state assemblyman, supporting seniors at an affordable-housing complex near Ditmars. “Now there are dozens of older Greek seniors in this complex who love Zohran because he helped them out,” he said. The City Council office of Cabán, he added, has a reputation for being very responsive. “It’s the little things over and over,” Morlock said. Some people are “probably not familiar with D.S.A. and what it means to be a socialist,” Karolidis said, “but they see our candidates and are, like, ‘Oh, yes, I had a good experience—I like these people.’ ”

    Astoria’s local outpost of the D.S.A., the Queens branch, is also known for being results-focussed and cohesive, multiple people told me. (“There’s nobody who is, like, ‘Oh, man, this candidate doesn’t know this Marxist theory,’ ” Lange said.) Years of winning elections have reinforced that approach, and helped members bond outside politics. The New York City chapter of D.S.A. has a run club and a thriving parents’ group called Comrades with Kids. (Diana Moreno, who was recently endorsed by Mamdani to take over his State Assembly seat, is a loyal member of the parents’ group chat.) In Astoria, normie Democrats wind up getting converted. Morlock told me about a friend of hers from the neighborhood. “When we first met, I remember her being, like, ‘Oh, I love Kamala Harris or Cory Booker,’ ” she said. Now that friend sends Morlock communist memes. “Really, really hard-core anti-capitalist things,” Morlock said. Why did that happen? “This mom—she is struggling to afford the things that used to be easy,” Morlock said. “Our kids are seen as an afterthought. Our elected leaders don’t give a shit. Everybody’s fucking pissed!” Lignou, one of the longtime Astoria residents, told me, “Astoria attracted many people because it was very humane. You can save and raise a family. Then everything became very expensive. It was a very good example of what capitalism does.”

    On a recent evening, I pushed open the door of the Syllogos Kreton Minos, a community club for the Cretan diaspora in northern Astoria, to attend a Greek music night, run by Nicolaou. I was looking forward to quizzing long-term Astoria residents about the recent leftward turn. “The Greek left loves this kind of music,” Nicolaou had told me, referring to a genre called rebetiko, which she described as a Greek version of the blues. Inside, there were a few Christmas decorations, and some older Cretan men played endless rounds of cards in the corner. I was early, so I started eating a large plate of pork kleftiko, a dish of meat and red and green peppers, braised with oregano and olive oil. Slowly, the musicians set up and the tables around me started filling. Akrivos, the Athenian from a political family, was picking at a plate of fried whiting, and I was handed a shot glass of grappa mixed with honey by Barbara Lambrakis, a seventy-five-year-old woman who has lived in Astoria since she was thirteen. Lambrakis was very excited to tell me that she owned an apartment building near where Mamdani lived. “Even though I do own rent-stabilized apartments, I support him, believe it or not,” she said.

    I was sitting next to Maria Lymberopoulos, a seventy-five-year-old woman who has lived in Astoria for fifty years. Lymberopoulos told me she thinks of herself more as a liberal, but since 2019 she had consistently voted for D.S.A. candidates. She’s not interested in the “socialist” label. (Mamdani, she said, reminded her of a young Barack Obama.) “I believe in the social issues we have—everything is expensive. They’re concerned about the things the average person needs.” There wasn’t much difference between her idea of liberalism and Astoria’s idea of socialism, she said. “Maybe, when you get older, your mind opens up more,” she told me. “And you’re ready to accept what your grandson or the young neighbor is doing.”

    Naaman Zhou

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  • Health coverage at risk as expanded ACA subsidies lapse nationwide

    NEW YORK CITY, New York: Millions of Americans are beginning 2026 facing sharply higher health insurance bills after enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies expired, locking in premium increases that could force some households to drop coverage altogether.

    The tax credits, first introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic and later extended by Democrats, had lowered insurance costs for most people who buy coverage on the Affordable Care Act marketplaces. Their expiration comes after months of political deadlock in Washington, despite warnings from both parties that the issue could carry significant electoral consequences.

    Democrats pushed unsuccessfully to extend the subsidies, even triggering a 43-day government shutdown over the issue. Some moderate Republicans urged action, while President Donald Trump floated — then abandoned — a potential compromise after opposition from conservative allies. With no agreement reached before the deadline, the credits expired at the start of the new year.

    A House vote expected later in January could reopen the debate, but there is no guarantee that lawmakers will succeed in restoring the subsidies.

    The lapse affects millions of Americans who do not receive health insurance through an employer and are ineligible for Medicaid or Medicare — including self-employed workers, small business owners, farmers, and ranchers. The timing also coincides with a midterm election year in which affordability, particularly healthcare costs, ranks among voters’ top concerns.

    “It really bothers me that the middle class has moved from a squeeze to a full suffocation, and they continue just to pile on and leave it up to us,” said Katelin Provost, a 37-year-old single mother whose premiums are set to soar. “I’m incredibly disappointed that there hasn’t been more action.”

    Costs Jump Sharply for Many Households

    The expanded subsidies, introduced in 2021, allowed some lower-income enrollees to obtain coverage with no monthly premium, capped costs for higher earners at 8.5 percent of income, and broadened eligibility for middle-class households. Democrats later extended the program through the end of 2025.

    With those credits gone, the impact is substantial. On average, more than 20 million subsidized Affordable Care Act enrollees are seeing premium increases of 114 percent in 2026, according to an analysis by KFF.

    The higher premiums come amid broader increases in U.S. healthcare costs, which are also pushing up deductibles and other out-of-pocket expenses.

    Some enrollees are absorbing the added burden. Stan Clawson, a 49-year-old freelance filmmaker and adjunct professor in Salt Lake City, said his monthly premium will rise from just under US$350 to nearly $500. Clawson, who lives with paralysis from a spinal cord injury, said the increase is painful but unavoidable.

    Others face far steeper hikes. The Provost said her premium is jumping from $85 a month to nearly $750.

    Enrollment Fallout Still Uncertain

    Health policy experts warn that higher premiums could lead many people — particularly younger and healthier enrollees — to abandon coverage, raising costs further for those who remain insured.

    An analysis by the Urban Institute and the Commonwealth Fund last September projected that about 4.8 million Americans could lose coverage in 2026 due to the expiration of subsidies.

    However, enrollment effects remain uncertain, as the deadline to select or change plans runs through Jan. 15 in most states.

    Provost said she is hoping Congress revives the subsidies early this year. If not, she plans to drop her own coverage and keep insurance only for her four-year-old daughter.

    Political Stalemate Continues

    In December, the Senate rejected competing partisan proposals — a Democratic plan to extend the subsidies for three years and a Republican alternative centered on health savings accounts. In the House, four centrist Republicans joined Democrats to push for a vote on a three-year extension, though prospects for passage remain unclear.

    For many Americans, the impasse feels detached from everyday realities.

    “Both Republicans and Democrats have been saying for years, oh, we need to fix it. Then do it,” said Chad Bruns, a 58-year-old Affordable Care Act enrollee in Wisconsin. “They need to get to the root cause, and no political party ever does that.”

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  • Today in Chicago History: Fox’s WFLD-Ch. 32 begins broadcasting

    Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Jan. 4, according to the Tribune’s archives.

    Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.

    Front page flashback: Jan. 5, 2017

    Six reputed leaders of the Hobos street gang were convicted of racketeering conspiracy charges on Jan. 4, 2017. A federal jury found the gang carried out a total of eight murders over the course of a decade. (Chicago Tribune)

    Reputed leader Gregory “Bowlegs” Chester of the Hobos, a Chicago super gang, and alleged lieutenants Paris Poe, Arnold Council, Gabriel Bush, Derrick Vaughn and William Ford were convicted on racketeering conspiracy charges.

    Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

    • High temperature: 64 degrees (1997)
    • Low temperature: Minus 14 degrees (1884)
    • Precipitation: 1.2 inches (1993)
    • Snowfall: 5.6 inches (2004)
    Before the Chicago Bears played in the NFL's fourth All-Star game on Jan. 4, 1942, head coach George Halas told his team: "It looks like this is your real test. This is the worst gridiron you've had to play on and it's up to you to show your greatness, in spite of the conditions." Despite the muddy playing field, the Bears scored five touchdowns on their way to a 35-24 victory. (Chicago Tribune)
    Before the Chicago Bears played in the NFL’s fourth All-Star game on Jan. 4, 1942, head coach George Halas told his team: “It looks like this is your real test. This is the worst gridiron you’ve had to play on and it’s up to you to show your greatness, in spite of the conditions.” Despite the muddy playing field, the Bears scored five touchdowns on their way to a 35-24 victory. (Chicago Tribune)

    1942: The Chicago Bears — who won the 1941 championship — defeated a team of NFL All-Stars 35-24 on a “dreary, chilly afternoon” at the Polo Grounds in New York City. It was the Bears’ 19th victory in 20 games. The game raised more than $51,000 (or more than $1 million in today’s dollars) for the Naval Relief Society.

    Newsman Mike Flannery of WFLD-TV (Ch. 32) at the FOX studio newsroom in Chicago on June 19, 2023. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)
    Journalist Mike Flannery of WFLD-Ch. 32 at Chicago’s Fox studio newsroom on June 19, 2023. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

    1966: Field Enterprises, then publisher of the Chicago Sun-Times and the Chicago Daily News, launched WFLD-Ch. 32.

    “We plan to be a station of selectivity,” said station director Sterling C. “Red” Quinlan. “We’ll be big in sports. We intend to show Chicagoans how the city works, how it is actually governed, what goes on behind the scenes. We mean to keep an eye on the town and jump into civic issues. We are not locked into anything and we’ll give all sorts of things a try.”

    Chicago Bears Coach Neill Armstrong, the 11th man to direct the team in the club's 58-year history, huddles the players during his first practice on April 28, 1978. (Walter Kale/Chicago Tribune)
    Chicago Bears Coach Neill Armstrong, the 11th man to direct the team in the club’s 58-year history, huddles with the players during his first practice on April 28, 1978. (Walter Kale/Chicago Tribune)

    1982: Chicago Bears coach Neill Armstrong was fired after a 6-10 record during the 1981 season.

    https://www.chicagotribune.com/2024/12/02/chicago-bears-head-coaches-history/

    Armstrong, who previously coached Edmonton in the Canadian Football League, made just one playoff appearance as Bears coach.

    Who topped Halas’ list for the team’s next head coach? Mike Ditka.

    Michael Jordan: Top moments and stats in the life and career of the Chicago Bulls and NBA legend

    2002: Washington Wizards forward Michael Jordan became the fourth player in NBA history to score 30,000 career points when he hit a free throw in the second quarter of an 89-83 win against his old team — the Chicago Bulls. Jordan joined Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Karl Malone and Wilt Chamberlain.

    Ryne Sandberg, clutching his Hall of Fame plaque, waves to the Cooperstown, New York, crowd on July 31, 2005. (Phil Velasquez/Chicago Tribune)
    Ryne Sandberg, clutching his Hall of Fame plaque, waves to the Cooperstown, New York, crowd on July 31, 2005. (Phil Velasquez/Chicago Tribune)

    2005: Chicago Cubs second baseman Ryne Sandberg was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

    Sandberg was inducted on July 31, 2005, and delivered a stirring speech that criticized the products of the steroid era.

    “When did it become OK for someone to hit home runs and forget how to play the rest of the game?” he asked.

    Vintage Chicago Tribune: Remembering Ryne Sandberg, the Chicago Cubs Hall of Famer

    Sandberg spoke about playing the game “right because that’s what you’re supposed to do” and said if his election into the Hall validates anything it’s that “learning how to bunt, hit-and-run and turning two is more important than knowing where to find the little red light (on) the dugout camera.”

    Want more vintage Chicago?

    Subscribe to the free Vintage Chicago Tribune newsletter, join our Chicagoland history Facebook group and follow us on Instagram for more from Chicago’s past.

    Have an idea for Vintage Chicago Tribune? Share it with Kori Rumore and Marianne Mather at krumore@chicagotribune.com and mmather@chicagotribune.com

    Kori Rumore

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  • Happy New Year! A series of transit fare hikes take effect this weekend

    The MTA’s series of fare hikes takes effect this weekend.

    Yes, that means Monday’s commute will be extra rough. Plus, a system-wide rollout rarely happens flawlessly.

    Sweeping fare hikes take effect Sunday, affecting New York City Transit’s subways and buses, the Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North.

    The MTA Board approved the plan with an 11-0 vote and two abstentions in September 2025, though most changes were set to take effect in January to align with the system-wide rollout of the tap-and-ride technology.

    A funeral was held for the MetroCard as the piece of swipeable plastic retires in favor of a tap-and-go system. NBC New York’s Gaby Acevedo reports on the end of an era for the city’s subway.

    Here are the details on the fare and policy changes:

    Subways, buses and Access-A-Ride

    The base fare for subways, local buses, and Access-A-Ride increases 10 cents, from $2.90 to $3. The reduced fare goes from $1.45 to $1.50, and the express bus base fare increases from $7 to $7.25.

    A number of policy updates and enhancements are also rolling out:

    • OMNY seven-day fare-capping becomes permanent. The 7-day rolling fare cap, which allows customers to pay for 12 rides in a 7-day period and automatically ride free for the rest of the week with no pre-payment required, becomes permanent. At the adjusted and approved base fare, no customer will pay more than $35 for subway and local bus rides in a week; reduced-fare customers will pay no more than $17.50 in a week. The prepaid MetroCard 7-Day, 30-Day, and Express Bus Plus unlimited passes will retire and be replaced with the automatic fare cap for all riders.
    • Fare-capping extended to express bus network. Express bus customers will pay no more than $67 a week for unlimited express bus, local bus, and subway rides in any 7-day period.
    • Tap-and-ride will be required for fare payment on subway, local and express bus. The last day to buy or refill a MetroCard was Dec. 31, 2025. Beginning later in 2026, coins won’t be accepted on buses but will be at card vending machines in subway stations and at one of the 2,700 local businesses that sell OMNY cards.
    • OMNY charge and trip history available on OMNY. info. Customers are now able to track their trips and associated charges on OMNY.info. The page shows tap-and-ride customers their fare progress to unlimited rides. By mid-2026, the MTA app will include all self-service tools available on OMNY.info.
    • Promotional $1 OMNY card fee ends by mid-2026. The fee for a new OMNY card will be $2 when the MTA no longer accepts MetroCard for fare payments. This is still lower than the original $5 fee. OMNY cards are more durable and last for up to 5 years, more than twice as long as the MetroCard.

    For years, a Queens man enjoyed paying half-price on New York City’s mass transit system as part of a reduced fare program. So why did his discount suddenly go away? Better Get Baquero investigates.  

    Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North

    For the commuter railroads, an average increase of up to 4.5% applies to monthlies, weeklies, and one-way peak tickets (excluding City Tickets). There will be no increase to Metro-North’s Port Jervis and Pascack Valley lines.

    Monthly ticket fares will not exceed $500.

    To view the full Metro-North fare table, see here. To view the full LIRR fare table approved today, see here.

    There are also a bunch of ticket policy changes:

    • Universal reduced-fare ticket valid for travel at all times. There will be a universal reduced-fare ticket for seniors, people with disabilities, and people on Medicare that will be valid 24/7, including on morning peak trips.
    • More affordable trips for families. The eligibility age for a Family Fare ticket goes from 11 to 17. Children aged 5-17 will ride for $1 when accompanied by a fare-paying adult, including during the morning rush.
    • One-way tickets are valid until 4 a.m. the next day. All one-way tickets, both paper and mobile, will expire at 4 a.m. the day after purchase. Current one-way tickets are valid for 60 days. Customers still need to activate tickets before boarding.
    • New unlimited Day Pass. A Day Pass is available to purchase for unlimited daily travel, replacing the round-trip ticket and will be valid until 4 a.m. the next day. On weekdays, the Day Pass will cost 10% less than two one-way peak tickets; on weekends, it would cost the same as two one-way off-peak tickets.
    • “Pay-as-you-go” mobile discount replaces 10-trip ticket. A new “pay-as-you-go” discount will be available for mobile customers. After 10 peak or off-peak trips in 14 days, mobile customers get an 11th peak or off-peak one-way trip for free in the same 14-day period. The prior 10-trip was discontinued, and the new fare product does not require customers to pre-pay upfront to receive a discount.
    • Onboard surcharges for late mobile ticket purchases and activations. Customers who repeatedly purchase or activate mobile tickets on board are subject to an onboard surcharge after an escalating series of warnings. This change is aimed at expediting fare collection by encouraging customers to have their tickets activated and ready for inspection.

    Pei-Sze Cheng reporting on LIRR, Metro North fare increase takes effect January 4.

    Bridge and tunnel tolls

    One-way passenger-vehicle toll rates increase between 20 cents to 60 cents at all bridge and tunnel facilities. This includes E-ZPass and Tolls by Mail.

    The existing toll discount programs for Queens, Bronx, and Staten Island drivers remain in effect.

    Learn more about fare and toll changes here.

    NBC New York Staff

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  • Will Zohran Mamdani defund New York City police?

    In the February/March 2026 issue of Reason, we explore Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s policy goals and what they mean for New York City. Click here to read the other entries.

    Central to Zohran Mamdani’s 2020 campaign for New York State Assembly was a pitch to radically constrain law enforcement. “Queer liberation means defund the police,” he posted two days after securing his seat representing Astoria, an apt coda to that election season.

    It was November 2020, just months after the George Floyd protests began—a time when calls to defund the police were more common. Such a plan was arguably always a tougher sell in a mayoral campaign where candidates have to court a more politically diverse electorate than the one in western Queens, a district that overlaps with that of the socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.).

    Which helps explain why Mamdani pivoted fairly dramatically on criminal justice in his run to be mayor of America’s most populous city. “I am not defunding the police,” he said on the campaign trail. “I am not running to defund the police.” One way he has tried to show he is serious about that promise: asking Jessica Tisch, who was an ally of Mayor Eric Adams, to stay on as New York City police commissioner.

    That type of law enforcement partnership would have been difficult to imagine with the Mamdani who made his political debut just over five years ago. What might their differences mean for New York City?

    On one hand, not much. A great deal has been made, for example, of Mamdani and Tisch diverging considerably on New York’s state bail law, which bars judges from contemplating a defendant’s dangerousness when making decisions about bond. It is the only state with that ban. While Tisch’s skepticism of that policy has merit—nearby New Jersey successfully eliminated cash bail in 2017 but did so in favor of a risk-based system—neither she nor Mamdani has the power to alter the legislation.

    The same goes for their disagreements on New York’s Raise the Age law, which diverted most 16- and 17-year-old alleged offenders out of adult court. Mamdani likes the law; Tisch is against it. That debate is important, but it ultimately rests with state legislators.

    Other differences are more consequential, or at least have potential to be. Currently, the city’s Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB) can recommend disciplinary action after investigating allegations of misconduct at the New York Police Department (NYPD). The final say, however, belongs to the commissioner—something Mamdani campaigned on revoking.

    The dispute over where that power should reside reached a fever pitch this summer, right in the heat of the New York mayoral campaign, when Tisch rejected a CCRB finding that an officer should be fired in connection with a fatal 2019 shooting. In that case, Lt. Jonathan Rivera inserted himself into a vehicle as a suspect, Allan Feliz, attempted to drive away from a traffic stop. When the car sped forward, Rivera shot Feliz in the chest.

    At trial, a judge did not buy Rivera’s testimony that he feared Feliz was poised to run over his colleague, Officer Edward Barrett. Tisch instead cited a report from New York Attorney General Letitia James, who wrote that Rivera had “a reasonable perception—or at least not an obviously unreasonable one” that deadly force was justified. (James declined to prosecute Rivera in criminal court.)

    Whatever you think of Tisch’s decision, her record on law enforcement misconduct may surprise those whose impression was formed solely by the headlines about Rivera. “Not only has Tisch signaled a greater willingness to discipline officers more frequently” than her predecessors, reported Gothamist last year, but “she’s also imposing tougher penalties.” And despite Mamdani’s campaign emphasis on depriving the commissioner of veto power over officer discipline, he praised Tisch’s efforts to “root out corruption” as something that united the two.

    They are decidedly not united on how many NYPD officers there should be and, in some sense, on what they should be doing. Tisch expressed support for Adams’ plan to add 5,000 officers to the force, which has decreased in recent years, whereas Mamdani wants to keep the current head count.

    Perhaps more notable are their differing enforcement priorities. A hallmark of Tisch’s tenure has been her focus on low-level offenses—including open drug use, prostitution, and fare evasion—to crack down on public disorder. “When neighborhoods are plagued by issues such as aggressive panhandling, unruly street vending, public urination, abandoned vehicles, it gives the impression of an unsafe community,” she said in January 2025. The NYPD has credited that strategy, often referred to as broken windows policing, with the city’s recent crime decline.

    Mamdani also prefers a prevention-oriented approach, but it bears no resemblance to Tisch’s. He has said that police officers should be free to target major crimes. To accomplish that, he campaigned on creating a Department of Community Safety, with a budget over $1 billion, that would seek to address poverty and inequality; it would also divert lower-level calls to mental health specialists and social workers. While focusing police resources on serious offenses is an appealing idea, it’s worth noting that New York City already has a hefty social safety net.

    Which ideological vision for the NYPD will win out will become clearer with time. Shortly after announcing Tisch would stay on, Mamdani unveiled his public safety transition team. Among others, it includes Alex Vitale, a sociologist who has argued we should abolish police.

    This article originally appeared in print under the headline “Will Mamdani Defund the Police?.”

    Billy Binion

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  • ‘Wolf Moon’: 2026’s first full moon will also be a supermoon

    The first full moon of 2026 rises this weekend and it just so happens to be one of only three supermoons this year.


    What You Need To Know

    • The ‘Wolf Moon’ rises this weekend
    • It will one of only three supermoons this year
    • Saturday evening will be the best time to see it across the U.S.


    January’s full moon, called the ‘Wolf Moon’, will brighten the night sky throughout this weekend. It technically will peak at 5:03 a.m. ET Saturday morning, but the best time to see it will be after it rises above the horizon that evening. 

    The ‘Wolf Moon’ also happens to be a supermoon this year. This occurs when the moon is closer to earth (parigee) so it appears larger and brighter than normal. You’ll have to wait until November to see the next supermoon.

    Visibility looks good across the Central U.S. Saturday evening, but clouds could be an issue on the opposite coasts.

    Potential cloud coverage Saturday evening across the U.S. (weathermodels.com)

     

     

    According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, the full moon gets its name due to it being a time you can hear the call of wolves. Though we know that happens year-round, the vocal calls of wolves can be haunting during the winter months.

    Other names given by various Native American tribes include Cold Moon (Cree), Center Moon (Assiniboin), and Freeze Up Moon (Algonquin).

    The next full moon will be the Full Snow Moon which will occur on Sunday, February 1st.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Ian Cassette

    Source link

  • ‘Wolf Moon’: 2026’s first full moon will also be a supermoon

    The first full moon of 2026 rises this weekend and it just so happens to be one of only three supermoons this year.


    What You Need To Know

    • The ‘Wolf Moon’ rises this weekend
    • It will one of only three supermoons this year
    • Saturday evening will be the best time to see it across the U.S.


    January’s full moon, called the ‘Wolf Moon’, will brighten the night sky throughout this weekend. It technically will peak at 5:03 a.m. ET Saturday morning, but the best time to see it will be after it rises above the horizon that evening. 

    The ‘Wolf Moon’ also happens to be a supermoon this year. This occurs when the moon is closer to earth (parigee) so it appears larger and brighter than normal. You’ll have to wait until November to see the next supermoon.

    Visibility looks good across the Central U.S. Saturday evening, but clouds could be an issue on the opposite coasts.

    Potential cloud coverage Saturday evening across the U.S. (weathermodels.com)

     

     

    According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, the full moon gets its name due to it being a time you can hear the call of wolves. Though we know that happens year-round, the vocal calls of wolves can be haunting during the winter months.

    Other names given by various Native American tribes include Cold Moon (Cree), Center Moon (Assiniboin), and Freeze Up Moon (Algonquin).

    The next full moon will be the Full Snow Moon which will occur on Sunday, February 1st.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Ian Cassette

    Source link

  • ‘Wolf Moon’: 2026’s first full moon will also be a supermoon

    The first full moon of 2026 rises this weekend and it just so happens to be one of only three supermoons this year.


    What You Need To Know

    • The ‘Wolf Moon’ rises this weekend
    • It will one of only three supermoons this year
    • Saturday evening will be the best time to see it across the U.S.


    January’s full moon, called the ‘Wolf Moon’, will brighten the night sky throughout this weekend. It technically will peak at 5:03 a.m. ET Saturday morning, but the best time to see it will be after it rises above the horizon that evening. 

    The ‘Wolf Moon’ also happens to be a supermoon this year. This occurs when the moon is closer to earth (parigee) so it appears larger and brighter than normal. You’ll have to wait until November to see the next supermoon.

    Visibility looks good across the Central U.S. Saturday evening, but clouds could be an issue on the opposite coasts.

    Potential cloud coverage Saturday evening across the U.S. (weathermodels.com)

     

     

    According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, the full moon gets its name due to it being a time you can hear the call of wolves. Though we know that happens year-round, the vocal calls of wolves can be haunting during the winter months.

    Other names given by various Native American tribes include Cold Moon (Cree), Center Moon (Assiniboin), and Freeze Up Moon (Algonquin).

    The next full moon will be the Full Snow Moon which will occur on Sunday, February 1st.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Ian Cassette

    Source link

  • ‘Wolf Moon’: 2026’s first full moon will also be a supermoon

    The first full moon of 2026 rises this weekend and it just so happens to be one of only three supermoons this year.


    What You Need To Know

    • The ‘Wolf Moon’ rises this weekend
    • It will one of only three supermoons this year
    • Saturday evening will be the best time to see it across the U.S.


    January’s full moon, called the ‘Wolf Moon’, will brighten the night sky throughout this weekend. It technically will peak at 5:03 a.m. ET Saturday morning, but the best time to see it will be after it rises above the horizon that evening. 

    The ‘Wolf Moon’ also happens to be a supermoon this year. This occurs when the moon is closer to earth (parigee) so it appears larger and brighter than normal. You’ll have to wait until November to see the next supermoon.

    Visibility looks good across the Central U.S. Saturday evening, but clouds could be an issue on the opposite coasts.

    Potential cloud coverage Saturday evening across the U.S. (weathermodels.com)

     

     

    According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, the full moon gets its name due to it being a time you can hear the call of wolves. Though we know that happens year-round, the vocal calls of wolves can be haunting during the winter months.

    Other names given by various Native American tribes include Cold Moon (Cree), Center Moon (Assiniboin), and Freeze Up Moon (Algonquin).

    The next full moon will be the Full Snow Moon which will occur on Sunday, February 1st.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Ian Cassette

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  • Hours after taking office, NYC Mayor Mamdani targets landlords, moves to intervene in private bankruptcy case

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    Sworn in at midnight and again hours later publicly, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani used his first day in office Thursday to hit the ground running with new executive orders targeting city landlords and housing development. And he said the city will take what he called “precedent-setting action” to intervene in a private landlord bankruptcy case he said was tied to 93 buildings.

    “Today is the start of a new era for New York City,” Mamdani said. “It is inauguration day. It is also the day that the rent is due.”

    Speaking at a Brooklyn apartment building, Mamdani framed the moves as an early test of whether city government will directly confront landlords over housing conditions and step into court cases that could determine whether tenants remain in their homes.

    Mamdani said New Yorkers who attended his inauguration were returning to apartments where, he said, “bad landlords do not make repairs,” rents rise and residents deal with issues like cockroaches and a lack of heat.

    ZOHRAN MAMDANI WILL BE FIRST MAYOR TO BE SWORN IN ON QURAN DURING NEW YORK CITY INAUGURATION

    New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani announces his first executive orders Thursday. (Fox News/Pool)

    The mayor said the new administration “will not wait to deliver action” and “will stand up on behalf of the tenants of this city.”

    Mamdani announced three housing-related executive orders, starting with the revival of the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants, which he said will focus on resolving complaints and holding landlords accountable for hazardous conditions.

    “We will make sure that 311 violations are resolved,” Mamdani said, adding that the administration will hold “slumlords” accountable for “hazardous and dangerous threats” to tenant well-being.

    MAMDANI TAPS CONTROVERSIAL LAWYER WHO DEFENDED AL QAEDA TERRORIST FOR TOP ROLE: ‘POWERFUL ADVOCATE’

    NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani delivers his inauguration address, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026, outside City Hall.

    New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani delivers his inaugural address Thursday outside City Hall. (Fox News/Pool)

    Mamdani said the second executive order creates a LIFT task force, or a land-inventory effort designed to leverage city-owned land and accelerate housing development. He said the task force will review city-owned properties and identify sites suitable for housing development no later than July 1.

    The third executive order creates a SPEED task force, which Mamdani said stands for Streamlining Procedures to Expedite Equitable Development. He said the task force will work to remove permitting barriers that slow housing construction. 

    Both task forces will be overseen by Deputy Mayor for Housing and Planning Lila Joseph, he said.

    “These are sweeping measures, but it is just the beginning of a comprehensive effort to champion the cause of tenants,” Mamdani said.

    FLASHBACK: INSIDE THE POLITICAL MOVEMENT THAT PUT A SOCIALIST IN CHARGE OF NEW YORK CITY

    New York City Mayoral Candidate Zohran Mamdani and New York City Mayor Eric Adams

    Zohran Mamdani attends the annual 9/11 Commemoration Ceremony Sept. 11, 2025, in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    Earlier in the day, Mamdani signed executive order No. 1, which revoked all prior mayoral executive orders under former Mayor Eric Adams issued on or after Sept. 26, 2024, unless they were specifically reissued by Mamdani’s administration.

    Mamdani signed a second executive order setting the structure of his administration, including five deputy mayors and their oversight responsibilities.

    The mayor made the announcement at 85 Clarkson Ave., a rent-stabilized building he said is owned by Pinnacle Realty, which he described as a “notorious landlord.” 

    Mamdani said tenants in the building have dealt with issues, including roaches and a lack of heat.

    Mamdani said the building is one of 93 properties connect to the same landlord, and the portfolio is in bankruptcy proceedings.

    MAMDANI PICKS EDUCATOR WHO WORKED TO DISMANTLE GIFTED & TALENTED PROGRAM AS NYC SCHOOLS CHANCELLOR

    Zohran Mamdani

    New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani raises his right hand during his swearing-in ceremony at Old City Hall Station early Thursday. (Amir Hamja/The New York Times/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    The mayor said the buildings will be auctioned to a different landlord he claimed ranks No. 6 on New York City’s worst landlord list, adding the buildings collectively have more than 5,000 open hazardous violations and 14,000 complaints.

    “This is an untenable situation,” Mamdani said. “So, today we are announcing that we will be taking action in the bankruptcy case and stepping in to represent the interests of the city and the interests of the tenants.”

    Mamdani said he directed his nominee for corporation counsel, Steve Banks, to take what he called “precedent-setting action” in the case.

    “We are a creditor and interested party,” Mamdani said, adding that the city is owed money and will fight for “safe and habitable homes” while working to “mitigate the significant risk of displacement” that tenants face.

    A tenant speaker at the event described unsafe conditions in Pinnacle buildings and said a section of hardwood floor in the speaker’s mother’s apartment had remained unrepaired for seven years.

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    “When they filed for bankruptcy this spring, Pinnacle gambled on making our housing less affordable and our lives more miserable,” the speaker said.

    The mayor said the moves mark the start of a more aggressive use of executive power on housing issues, beginning on his first day in office.

    Mamdani’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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  • NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani celebrates inauguration with public swearing-in ceremony, block party

     

    Mamdani will live in Gracie Mansion

    There was speculation about whether Mamdani would live in Gracie Mansion after he told reporters he was undecided about his future residence.

    Mamdani eventually confirmed he and his wife would leave their apartment in Astoria and move into the official residence of New York City’s mayor. 

    “This decision came down to our family’s safety and the importance of dedicating all of my focus on enacting the affordability agenda New Yorkers voted for,” Mamdani said in a statement on Dec. 8

    The exterior of Gracie Mansion in New York City. 

    Seth Wenig / AP


    Gracie Mansion was built in 1799 and has housed the city’s mayors since the 1940s. It’s located on East End Avenue and 88th Street in Manhattan’s Yorkville neighborhood, overlooking the East River. 

     

    Inauguration ceremony rundown

    Some 4,000 ticketed guests will attend the City Hall inauguration ceremonies. Thousands more will be able to take in the festivities at the block party. 

    How to watch: Stream live coverage on CBS News New York at noon and 1 p.m.  

    Inauguration ceremony: Starts at 1 p.m. on the steps of New York City Hall.

    Here’s a rundown of the ceremony:

    • Presentation of colors and national anthem performed by Javier Muñoz
    • Welcoming address by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
    • Invocation by Imam Khalid Latif
    • Musical performance by Mandy Patinkin and the P.S. 22 Chorus of Staten Island
    • Comptroller Mark Levine is sworn in
    • Poetry reading by Cornelius Eady
    • Public Advocate Jumaane Williams is sworn in
    • Musical performance by Lucy Dacus
    • Mayor Zohran Mamdani is sworn in by Sen. Bernie Sanders and delivers his inaugural address
    • Musical performance by Babbulicious

     

    Mamdani sworn in during private ceremony

    Mamdani was sworn in as mayor of New York City in a private midnight ceremony that was layered in symbolism. 

    Mamdani took his oath on a Quran rather than a Bible at the Old City Hall subway station, setting the tone for a historic new chapter in New York City leadership.

    “This is truly the honor and the privilege of a lifetime,” Mamdani said as he officially became the 112th mayor. 

    Mamdani said he chose to be sworn in on the historic Quran to honor the deep roots of Muslim communities in the city. 

    The oath was administered by New York Attorney General Letitia James at the long-closed Old City Hall station, one of New York’s original 28 subway stops, a relic of the city’s earliest ambitions for public transit.

    Zohran Mamdani Sworn In As New York City's 112th Mayor

    Zohran Mamdani is sworn in as New York City’s 112th mayor by New York Attorney General Letitia James, left, alongside his wife Rama Duwaji, right, in the former City Hall subway station on Jan. 1, 2026.

    Amir Hamja-Pool / Getty Images / Amir Hamja for The New York Times


    “A testament to the importance of public transit, to the vitality, the health, and the legacy of our city,” Mamdani said.

    Using the moment to underscore his transportation agenda, he also announced Michael Flynn as his Department of Transportation commissioner.

    “Someone who’s experienced, who is fluent in the landscape as it is, and who is ambitious and imaginative towards the landscape as it could be. And I can think of no better person than the man alongside me,” Mamdani said.

     

    The Mamdani administration

    Here’s a list of key officials Mamdani has appointed to help run New York City:

     

    Inauguration block party

    Mamdani announced the “Inauguration of a New Era” block party in the Canyon of Heroes, the stretch of Broadway in Lower Manhattan that’s famous for ticker-tape parades. 

    Mamdani’s team anticipates tens of thousands of people will be able to attend the festivities on Broadway, from Liberty Street to Murray Street. 

    bisram-5p-pkg-mamdani-a-wcbsg6j4-hi-res-still.jpg

    CBS News New York


    The block party is accompanying the inauguration ceremony, with music, performances and interfaith elements, according to the mayor’s team.

    Mamdani said security will be tight at City Hall Plaza and along the block party route throughout the inauguration.  

     

    How Mamdani won

    Zohran Mamdani won the 2025 New York City mayor’s race with just over 50% of the vote in the November general election. He defeated former Gov. Andrew Cuomo — who won about 41% of the vote as an independent — and Republican Curtis Sliwa. 

    Mamdani’s campaign centered around the cost of living energized a coalition of young and progressive voters, even with some critics questioning his experience and raising concerns about his views on Israel, which Cuomo’s campaign zeroed in on.

    Mamdani’s affordability agenda, including a rent freeze and universal child care, first propelled him to victory in the Democratic primary, when he soundly defeated Cuomo for the party’s nomination.

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  • What Zohran Mamdani and Michael Bloomberg Have in Common

    Such visions play a role in any administration, but there’s also the work of actual city governance. When Mamdani and Bloomberg met in September, for a conversation that the longtime Bloomberg aide Howard Wolfson called “definitely cordial,” they reportedly spoke about hiring and retaining talent. Mamdani, like Bloomberg before him, arrives at City Hall relatively unencumbered by the tangle of obligations and relationships that accumulate over a long career in public service. Like Bloomberg, he is poised to hire with commitments beyond political favor-trading. “Mike was talent, talent, talent,” Bradley Tusk, who served in Bloomberg’s administration and managed his 2009 campaign, told me. “The thing he did best by far was convince a lot of talented people to come work in city government.” Mamdani’s appointment to his transition team of the former Federal Trade Commission head Lina Khan, a bugbear of business élites, suggests a flair for attracting eye-catching national figures (even if what role such a figure might play in his actual administration remains undetermined). In late November, Mamdani’s team reported that more than seventy thousand people had submitted online applications for jobs in his administration; his first deputy mayor, Dean Fuleihan, has expressed interest in improving the city’s civil-service hiring process.

    Bloomberg had a reputation for endowing appointees with remarkable independence: when Elizabeth Kolbert profiled the then mayor for this magazine, in 2002, one commissioner told her that Bloomberg’s instructions upon giving him the office amounted to “It’s your agency—don’t screw it up.” It isn’t impossible to imagine that Mamdani’s clear need for expertise, and his campaign-trail discipline in discussing only a select handful of policy proposals, might lead him to empower his own administrators with meaningful autonomy. What will it actually take to make those city buses fast and free? And what’s the plan for schools? “Someone described Zohran to me as a socialist technocrat,” Tusk recalled, adding that, when it came to city government, he didn’t see much difference between a capitalist technocrat and a socialist one. “If he’s a technocrat like Mike was, he’ll be a good mayor.” Of course, not all Bloomberg associates agree. “The key to Mike’s success as mayor was world-class management,” Wolfson told me. “He knew how to attract and retain talent and how to meet a bottom line because he had been doing those things for years. I’m not sure what the appropriate comparison would be here.”

    The 2025 mayoral race was, among other things, a battle between money and attention. Cuomo received $28.4 million from Super PACs in the general election—“the most money ever spent to support a single candidate in New York City by Super PACs,” as the good-government group Citizens Union wrote in a report last month. “In fact,” they added, “the only comparison we can make is to Michael Bloomberg’s self-financed, dollar-busting mayoral campaigns in the 2000s.” Money has been Bloomberg’s defining feature for as long as he’s been in public life: money made him mayor, money shaped his mayoralty, and money continues to announce his political will. But, if Bloomberg commands capital, Mamdani—with his eleven million Instagram followers and reliable virality—commands attention, a variety of capital whose political potency Donald Trump has proven in the course of the past decade. And, in this mayoral election, attention came out the undisputed winner.

    In the wake of Mamdani’s success, it has sometimes seemed as though the only lesson that would be learned is that more candidates should get better at making short-form videos. But this undersells Mamdani’s achievement, and the qualities of his that enabled it—including a capacity for connection that feels far more natural and less sweaty than what often passes for personal appeal among politicians. The Bloomberg model of intimate engagement with the city was counting pieces of trash outside the window of his chauffeured car. So far, Mamdani has cultivated a more hands-on ideal of participation, both for himself and for his supporters. Attention, after all, is not strictly a matter of passive digital consumption; it can also be deployed actively. The experience of volunteering for Mamdani attracted young New Yorkers in search of connection, one of whom told the Times, “The people I go to dinner with, the folks I go to concerts with—my day to day is organized around Mamdani.”

    Molly Fischer

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  • Zohran Mamdani takes oath of office in abandoned NYC subway station, becoming city’s 112th mayor

    Zohran Mamdani officially took the oath of office as the clock struck midnight on New Year’s Eve, becoming the 112th mayor of New York City.

    In a private ceremony at the abandoned Old City Hall subway station, Mamdani was sworn in by New York Attorney General Letitia James.

    The 34-year-old Democratic socialist, who served in the 36th Assembly District representing the Queens neighborhood of Astoria, is now the city’s first Muslim mayor and its first of South Asian descent.

    “This is truly the honor and the privilege of a lifetime,” Mamdani said in a brief speech.   

    New York Attorney General Letitia James, left, administers the oath of office to New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, as his wife Rama Duwaji looks on, just after midnight on Jan. 1, 2026.

    Yuki Iwamura / AP


    Mamdani called old subway station a “testament to the importance of public transit to the vitality, the health and the legacy of our city.” He then announced the appointment of Mike Flynn as his new Department of Transportation commissioner.

    Public oath to be taken Thursday afternoon

    Mamdani will publicly take the oath of office, administered by U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, on Thursday at 1 p.m. at City Hall. CBS News New York will stream the ceremony live.

    The new mayor’s public swearing-in will accompany a block party celebration in Lower Manhattan that runs from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Anyone planning to attend must RSVP online.

    Dubbed the “Inauguration of a New Era,” it will take place in the famed “Canyon of Heroes,” from Liberty Street to Murray Street — a historical stretch along Broadway. The route is famous for ticker-tape parades that have honored athletes, astronauts, politicians and New York heroes.

    The celebration will include music, performances and interfaith elements, Mamdani’s transition team said.

    Mamdani’s inauguration is expected to draw media attention from across the country and around the world.

    “I think there is really going to be a lot of energy. I think many of us who have had a chance to cover Mamdani and to photograph him have really seen the charisma up close, and I think he has really been able to like create these connections to so many different New Yorkers,” photographer Amanda Briggs said.

    In preparation for the transfer of power, Mamdani appointed five new high-ranking members of his administration over the last two days, including a new city schools chancellor, Kamar Samuels.

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