September 11th (9/11)
NO RELIEF
K. Wright |
Chinatown’s businesses and workers get little help from 9/11 donors.
Chinatown’s businesses and workers get little help from 9/11 donors.
Korean Americans vote in record numbers; Filipinos don’t see the point.
Post-9/11 small business assistance is targeting companies with fewer than ten employees.
Once your garbage cans hit the curb, where does your trash really go? In the November issue of City Limits, on newsstands now, Keith Kloor follows his daily refuse down the “garbage interstate” from Brooklyn, through the politics and propaganda behind the city’s garbage wars, to its final resting place in Pennsylvania.
Speaker Gifford Miller sees a Paris-style public market in Lower Manhattan.
After nearly two years without a contract, teachers and support staff at hundreds of city-funded day care centers say they are poised to strike if City Hall doesn’t move soon, leaving thousands of low-income working parents wondering who will care for their kids.
Third party transfer was supposed to be the city’s next big housing program, but the most recent round announced last week is much smaller than expected.
While the City Council calls for building a massive public market on the old Trade Center site, a similar project has been proposed for Hunts Point, where the area’s best shopping is wholesale, and therefore off limits to local residents
The Civic Alliance completed its first big effort to make a mark on downtown redevelopment last week, getting nearly 5,000 New Yorkers in a room to brainstorm. With that over, the group says its work is only just beginning.
In its effort to rebuild parts of the subway system, the city’s transit authority is using wood forested from rare African jungles, and, environmentalists charge, buying the wood from a company with possible links to al Qaeda.