State of the city speeches follow a formula. The mayor tells a couple jokes, recounts his successes over the past year and runs down a laundry list of the new stuff he wants to do. Mayor de Blasio on Tuesday threw out the laundry list to instead focus on a handful of big priorities.
Dealing with schools, policing and health only briefly and largely in the rear-view mirror, the mayor focused squarely on housing and development in his address to a friendly crowd at Baruch College.
Saying the city was “going to make sure that all kinds of housing are built,” the mayor said his administration would target the development of 160,000 market-rate units, creating thousands of temporary construction jobs and, he said, 20,000 permanent jobs. He also:
The mayor also said he’d create a new citywide ferry service—with rides priced the same as the rest of the transit system—by 2017 to link the Rockaways and other far-flung areas to the heart of the city and establish 20 new bus rapid transit routes in the next four years to cut commute times by 15 percent to 25 percent for 400,000 New Yorkers.
Reactions are still coming in.