Community Service Society of New York
HOW TIMES CHANGE
K. Wright |
After steady improvement in jobholding rates during the late 1990s, unemployment among single moms has exploded in 2003.
After steady improvement in jobholding rates during the late 1990s, unemployment among single moms has exploded in 2003.
About ten percent of federally-subsidized housing built in New York City since the 1960s has since disappeared into the private market.
Big corporations are running low on cash for charities, so they’re donating something that may be more valuable in the long run–their employees.
After years of negotiating to get their homes fixed up, hundreds of residents of a Bed-Stuy public housing complex are finally going to see some major improvements.
What will Bloomberg’s ambitious housing plan mean for New York’s poor? For community development groups? For your neighborhood? The lowdown, in five parts.
With Medcaid a newly hot topic, a slew of reports examining New York’s health coverage turned up this week.
The economy is tanking citywide, but it’s a deeper fall for some than others.
City Hall Hopes for Housing
Mayor Bloomberg’s new housing plan calls for investing more than $1 billion in new homes, but his proposal is about more than just cash.
Many parents who’ve recently left welfare for a new job are not getting the subsidized day care they’re eligible for, and the city recently made it even harder for some to get it.