courts
City’s Courts Seen Lacking in Interpreters
Daniel Parra |
There appears to be no accurate record of how many people per month or per year require the services of an interpreter to exercise their right to access to justice.
City Limits specializes in in-depth coverage. To see major investigative series, click here.
There appears to be no accurate record of how many people per month or per year require the services of an interpreter to exercise their right to access to justice.
Classes for certain college majors, the move to remove learning has been especially jarring, as science labs and acting workshops don’t translate so easily to Zoom.
Robert Lind, 73, is serving a 50-years-to-life sentence for a shooting in 1983.
Cleaning is now being done in earnest, residents say, but delays in basic maintenance have been the norm for years.
Undocumented migrant farm workers are facing evictions as farms in upstate New York encounter financial losses, according to farm worker advocacy groups.
The award-winning home struggled to keep its workforce equipped, to separate the staff dealing with infected and non-infected people, and to understand what the state’s official death toll has to do with reality.
After three deaths at a hotel in Manhattan earlier this month, New York City promises increased resources for its program providing isolation hotels.
There’s been less discussion of how underlying conditions and longstanding inequalities actually translated into deaths, or about other factors that might help to explain the racial disparities characterizing COVID-19’s impact.
City Limits contacted the medical examiners or coroners in all 26 New York counties were DOCCS has facilities. Most who responded said they were not investigating any prison deaths.
First came the fever, then dark urine and diarrhea, then a cough ‘that wanted to tear my throat up.’ And then his roommate got sick, too.