City Hall
BUILDINGS BLUNDER AT SITE OF MASSIVE QUEENS BLAZE
Sajan P. Kuriakos |
Records show that extensive work was being done without permits at 153-01 Northern Boulevard, where a massive fire erupted several weeks ago.
Records show that extensive work was being done without permits at 153-01 Northern Boulevard, where a massive fire erupted several weeks ago.
Struggling for cash, Brooklyn’s blue-collar progressive says goodbye to his bid to become mayor in 2001–and New York City veterans mourn the decision.
Alarmed tenants, housing lawyers and City Councilmembers slogged through the rain to a housing agency hearing Tuesday morning to express dismay at proposed rule changes that could allow the city to move tenants anywhere in the city while work is being done on their apartments.
A well-orchestrated attack on upstart City Councilman Walter McCaffrey proves the Queens Democratic machine is alive and well.
Pithy welfare advocate Liz Krueger throws her hat in the ring against long-term Republican State Senator Roy Goodman on Manhattan’s East Side. The GOP’s Senate majority may lie in the balance.
The mayor’s new budget is actually kind to housing, and the City Council might add even more for code enforcement.
Gay and lesbian St. Pat’s parade protesters discover that these days, civil disobedience is viewed a bit more harshly by New York City’s authorities.
Nonprofits who do work for the city often have to wait months to get paid. A City Council hearing this morning might change that.
Could this week bring the third Legal Services strike in a decade? These public interest lawyers have been without a contract since June–and the union’s leadership says it’s looking close.