Gifford Miller
LIVING WAGES
K. Wright |
The Council passed what advocates are calling the country’s most sweeping living wage bill—even after Gifford Miller diluted it in hopes of avoiding a veto.
The Council passed what advocates are calling the country’s most sweeping living wage bill—even after Gifford Miller diluted it in hopes of avoiding a veto.
In its effort to rebuild parts of the subway system, the city’s transit authority is using wood forested from rare African jungles, and, environmentalists charge, buying the wood from a company with possible links to al Qaeda.
The new Council is busy with a bevy of activist legislation–but how long will it last?
Take dismal public schools. Add prosperous parents. Shake up. Is a new recipe for revitalizing the city’s education system being written in Riverdale, Park Slope and the Upper East Side?
The Bloomberg administration has vowed to block a City Council effort to have education count towards the city’s work requirements for welfare.
New York tries to turn rooftops into top-notch energy machines.
Opponents to living wage laws claim that raising pay hurts not just businesses but workers, too. Too bad the data says they’re wrong.
The City Council may have grabbed headlines with their push against predatory lending, but the real action is in Albany, where Joe Bruno and the Republicans have announced they’re backing a Senate bill. Will they end homeowner rip-offs, or just get points for pretending to?
A day after Mayor Bloomberg, in his State of the City address, reminded City Council members to make severe cuts to their budgets, a few handfuls of those Council members suggested he pick deeper pockets–in Albany and Washington.
New electeds want a new order, but business as usual could do them in.