NYC schools face $1.8B in cuts affecting 1.1M students. See which neighborhoods suffer deepest cuts and what Mayor Adams' budget crisis means for your family.
As City Hall doubles down on sustainability goals, residents in underserved communities demand accountability on who actually benefits from climate initiatives.
As the authority prepares for next phase of Grand Central expansion, transit officials and infrastructure experts weigh in on what's next for the decade-old project.
City agencies and environmental groups are banking on hard metrics to prove that ambitious climate goals aren't just aspirational—they're measurable, achievable, and already underway.
As global cities grapple with violent incidents and safety concerns, New York's emergency infrastructure and policing strategy reveal both strengths and challenges compared to international peers.
As average rents in the neighborhood climb past $2,400 for a one-bedroom, longtime residents and community advocates speak out about displacement and loss of identity.
As the city tackles its most ambitious transport overhaul in decades, the data reveals how billions of dollars are reshaping commutes across the five boroughs.
Community members share their struggles and resilience as the recent earthquake back home forces difficult decisions about remittances and family reunification.
As gentrification accelerates across Queens and Brooklyn, administrators and housing advocates warn of a homelessness crisis unless immediate policy intervention occurs.
With state legislature decisions looming and federal education funding uncertain under the new administration, city school leaders must navigate a maze of budget cuts, hiring freezes, and curriculum shifts that could reshape classrooms from the Bronx to Brooklyn.
As emergency call volumes surge across the five boroughs, residents in outer neighborhoods face dangerous delays—and city officials are running out of answers.
As the city races to meet ambitious climate targets, officials face critical choices on congestion pricing, building emissions, and waterfront resilience.
From Jackson Heights to the South Bronx, community leaders warn that without coordinated local investment, rapid population shifts could strain schools, housing, and social services that entire neighborhoods depend on.
A combination of zoning restrictions, stalled development projects, and competing political pressures has left the city facing a shortage of over 500,000 affordable units.