City educators and officials must decide whether to expand hybrid models or return fully in-person as budget constraints and enrollment shifts reshape public education across the five boroughs.
As crime patterns shift across the five boroughs, community leaders warn that response times and resource allocation could make or break public confidence in 2026.
As earthquake aftershocks ripple through Venezuela, residents of Queens' largest immigrant hub voice urgent concerns about family separation and shrinking resources.
As the MTA struggles with aging subway systems and congestion pricing delays, peer cities worldwide are leapfrogging New York with bolder transit investments and faster execution.
As City Council prepares to vote on a contentious development proposal, longtime residents and business owners face a summer of decisions that could reshape the waterfront community for decades.
Grand Central's new transit hub opens to limited service this week, while delays plague three outer-borough projects ahead of the peak summer travel period.
From Sandy's devastation to today's aggressive emissions targets, the city's sustainability push didn't emerge from idealism alone—it came from years of costly disasters and community pressure.
As the fiscal year closes, newly released municipal datasets reveal the scale of structural challenges facing the de Blasio administration's successors.
With federal deportation policies shifting and local resources stretched thin, immigrant support organizations must decide whether to challenge policy in court or seek pragmatic accommodations.
Decades of budget constraints, staffing shortages, and evolving urban challenges have left first responders navigating a crisis that didn't happen overnight.
As the Department of Education grapples with a $10 billion capital backlog, families in outer boroughs face years-long delays in classroom repairs while Manhattan schools get faster attention.
New York's most contentious urban planning battle this summer centers on a proposal that could unlock thousands of units in Midtown West—but not without fierce pushback from local residents.
As rescue efforts continue in Caracas, local mutual aid networks mobilize to support families here while grappling with communication blackouts and uncertain fates of loved ones back home.