Health and Environment
Medicaid Alert
Matt Pacenza |
In a week full of dire predictions for the city’s financial future, one elected official added another to the stack: Medicaid costs will rise exponentially overt he next few years.
In a week full of dire predictions for the city’s financial future, one elected official added another to the stack: Medicaid costs will rise exponentially overt he next few years.
Facing higher fees for in-home day care services, the city has told day care providers to cut back on their youngest, and most expensive, clients, a change which could push thousands of toddlers out of care.
The battle over welfare reform is about everything from marriage incentives to workfare–everything, that is, except for the paltry benefits people on welfare actually get.
Residents of a massive federal housing project in Mott Haven will finally have a new landlord–themselves–after winning federal approval for what’s likely the biggest tenant takeover of a housing project ever in the United States.
Another chapter in the history of racial discrimination in Wiliamsburg’s public housing developments opens as the city agrees to offer black and Hispanic applicants a better shot at apartments.
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.
In an unexpected move, a nonprofit recently sold 35 buildings that had been slated for rehab and, in some cases, tenant management, putting a roadblock in the way of an ambitious federal and city plan to undo the damage done by a mortgage scandal.
A community organization sells its debt-ridden housing to private developers.
Young men hope to be champions. Nonprofits dream of creating an urban Nirvana. In the gritty Bed-Stuy Boxing Center, a different kind of skirmish is playing out.
Opponents of stricter work requirements for people on public assistance lost their biggest hope in Washington a couple of weeks ago when Senator Hillary Clinton endorsed a bill that, like President Bush’s proposal, calls for longer work weeks for welfare recipients.