Manhattan
TEACH YOUR TEACHERS WELL
Carl Vogel |
A new set of New York City school standards now has a new program to help teachers prepare students for the tests.
A new set of New York City school standards now has a new program to help teachers prepare students for the tests.
The city will be providing millions more for preventative services for families that might lose their children to foster care, although just how the money will be spent is still a mystery.
Nonprofits from around the city are hustling to get their applications ready for the city’s new foster care system.
Bronx 2000 developed an ambitious project to turn scrap wooden packing and pallets into furniture and jobs. But bad luck and trouble finding outside investors has combined to push the nonprofit into bankruptcy.
Some advice to recent law school grads: Don’t bother sending your resume to the Department of Housing Preservation and Development.
The city is running the legal department of the housing agency with half the lawyers it had three years ago.
State regulations require the city foster care agency to allow parents and children to build a plan to reunite, but few are afforded the chance.
Locals worry that the feds may close a local institution.
Contractors cracked the foundation of a Lower East Side apartment building abutting their worksite, causing the building to be evacuated.
City Hall has all but scrapped job training and education as acceptable trajectories for welfare parents. Other cities and states aren’t nearly so obsessed with the ideology of workfare–and leave lots of room for real opportunity.