POLITICS AS UNUSUAL

In the days before the general election, some candidates are taking unusual steps to make it into the City Council, and to stir things if the voters do send them there.

RECIPIENTS NOT SEEN, HEARD

With a year left until the nation’s welfare law comes up for reauthorization, New York’s welfare commissioners argued for the right to limit spending on poverty-fighting programs at the first round of the feds’ listening tour last week.

THE NEW ECONOMY

From apparel manufacturing to printing to air cargo, many of New York City’s most important industries suffered deep wounds after the World Trade Center attacks, according to a study released last week by the Center for an Urban Future, a Manhattan-based think tank.