Lower East Side
Working From Home
Amanda Bruscino |
Lillian Wald project residents the City Housing Authority won’t respond to their job applications.
Lillian Wald project residents the City Housing Authority won’t respond to their job applications.
Deregulation of the electric industry has unleashed a flood of proposals for new power plants. It also makes the job of fighting them that much easier for a coalition of neighborhood groups out to stop them.
A new coalition of concerned neighborhood groups has formed to ensure that electricity deregulation doesn’t mean a power plants will be seeded all over the city.
As vacant lots disappear from the Bronx, nonprofit developers find themselves squabbling over the space they have left.
For more than 50 years, Lower East Side community activist Franz Lehman fought for social justice–and he died in the line of duty.
A rundown of the leading candidates to head the city’s housing department–and other job jumping.
Anarchist bookstore collective Blackout Books faces its own blackout, victim of a chic Lower East Side.
On the Lower East Side, a landlord threatens to give up government subsidies and the restrictions that go with them. Is it a real threat or a ploy to get more money? Maybe both.
A book review of Selling the Lower East Side: Culture, Real Estate, and Resistance, by Christopher Mele, University of Minnesota Press, $19.95, 361 pages.
Apartment building owners are dropping out of federal subsidy programs faster than you can say “market rents.”