Some say elections workers aren’t familiar enough with the devices to help the disabled mark their ballots. But others are pleased to have finally had a chance to vote privately.
In the final installment of our series, a look at the challenges facing workers at the businesses the Bloomberg administration has decided don’t belong there anymore.
In Gerritsen Beach and Sheepshead Bay, the storm’s impact can still be seen in houses, apartments, storefronts and the people attempting to rebuild.
Rich and poor, red or blue, New Yorkers broadly agree on what the next mayor should emphasize and are generally willing to pay more taxes to support those programs, the survey says.
A guide to the soundbites we’re likely to hear, the backstories we need to know and the snacks, drinks and music we’ll require to get through the third de Blasio-Lhota faceoff.
Perhaps no project embodied the Bloomberg administration’s development style better than Willets Point. Will Joe Lhota or Bill de Blasio change that approach?
Ari Hoffnung ran a feisty race in 2005, then considered running in ’09 and ’13 but decided to sit both seasons out. He’s not sure whether he’ll use the money on a future campaign.
A year ago, filmmaker Karla Ann Cote met John and Veronica Petersen amid the ruins of the their home on the south shore of Staten Island. A year later, she went back to see what life is like a year after Sandy.
The New York Post follows up on a story we ran last year about the lucrative world of school food contracting.
At an event celebrating local businesses, there were signs of recovery and a reminders of fragility a year after the superstorm inundated the neighborhood, flooding stores and darkening public housing.