Manhattan
TENANTS FINALLY GET CHANCE TO REVIVE RUNDOWN HOMES
Matt Pacenza |
After years of negotiating to get their homes fixed up, hundreds of residents of a Bed-Stuy public housing complex are finally going to see some major improvements.
After years of negotiating to get their homes fixed up, hundreds of residents of a Bed-Stuy public housing complex are finally going to see some major improvements.
The U.S. Attorney has begun its own investigation into possible inappropriate expenditures made by directors of a nonprofit housing organization for people with AIDS, as the state attorney general’s office beefs up its own probe.
Bloomberg gave the Council the veto everyone expected last week when he rejected its basic ed welfare bill.
New York State spent $10,922 per pupil on elementary and secondary school education in 2001.
On April 1st, low-income immigrants will slowly begin regaining the access to food stamps.
Disabled welfare recipients aren’t making it into work, and advocates say TANF rules are the problem.
New York could save more than $164 million a year with the Assembly’s version of drug sentencing reform.
A VA policy change has slashed the number of homeless vet shelter programs getting federal funds–unless they’re faith-based.
More than 100 Pakistanis from the New York-New Jersey area were deported en masse last week.