Voters complained of not being informed that their voting site had changed. But the BOE says at least a few of the confused voters were told well in advance.
The lessons of New York City’s water supply system are instructive as the city addresses the equally profound challenge of adapting to climate change.
Is there a better way to prepare for the de Blasio administration than to download our new City Limits app? Why, yes! You could get a friend to do it too!
Advocates for low-wage workers say the state isn’t doing enough to hunt down scofflaw employers.
A walkway at Jerome Slope needs repair, but—under a system that park advocates hope to change—the Parks Department must find an elected official to fund the fix.
Deadlier than HIV, the disease can appear years after infection, and testing and treatment are complicated. The city’s Action Plan draws praise, but advocates want more resources applied.
The mayor-elect has warned that systemic change will be hard, and he’s right. But that doesn’t mean there aren’t simple ways he can make life better for the 50,000 people in homeless shelters.
One in three voters who cast a ballot in the mayoral race didn’t weigh in on the ballot questions. In some cases, poll workers may have failed to remind voters to flip their ballots.
Bill de Blasio’s promise of progress has raised expectations. In Brownsville on Election Day, voters’ hopes ranged from a vague desire for change to specific, ambitious goals.
Over the next two weeks, on the web and around the city, citizens will get a chance to weigh in on how the city should change under the coming administration.