All Articles
Lawmakers Call for Investigation Into Women’s Prison, Citing New York Focus Article

Two women have died by suicide and a third from cancer at Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, the reporting found.

Rebecca McCray   ·   March 10, 2026
Thousands of 4-Year-Olds Couldn’t Apply to Universal Pre-K Last School Year

Dozens of school districts have opted out of the state’s program. Will the governor’s proposed funding boost be enough to help school districts close the gaps?

Melissa Manno   ·   March 9, 2026
Mamdani’s New Albany Asks: Smaller Corporate Tax Hike, Fees on Pricey Home Sales

The mayor narrowed his big business tax proposal in the hopes of making it easier to pass.

Nick Garber   ·   March 6, 2026
Third Death in Four Weeks Rocks Bedford Hills Women’s Prison

This week’s death, which incarcerated people and advocates described as a suicide, comes at a time of turmoil in the facility.

Rebecca McCray   ·   March 5, 2026
New Legislation Would Advance ‘Virtual Power Plants’ in New York

A bill introduced by Assemblymember Anna Kelles aims to harness home batteries, electric vehicles, and other clean tech to meet reliability needs.

Colin Kinniburgh   ·   March 4, 2026
An illustration shows figures walking along next to a barbed wire fence, a large pile of paperwork, a person in a green prison uniform lying down with a book on top of them, a guard holding a baton stick and a woman in a red suit waving her hand while standing at a podium.
It’s Dangerous to Feel This Desperate: How to Ease the Chaos in New York’s Prisons

When the governor doesn’t commute sentences, and the legislature won’t act, the carrot-and-stick system of rehabilitation disintegrates.

John J. Lennon   ·   March 3, 2026
Mamdani’s Small Business Czar Wants Economic Justice for Workers

As Small Business Services commissioner, Kenny Minaya will be charged with slashing fees and helping street vendors.

Nick Garber   ·   March 2, 2026
Eric Adams's failed attempt to fix New York City's broken property tax system shows why it won’t be easy for Mamdani to do so either.
Mamdani Wants to Fix Property Taxes. Eric Adams’s Failure Is a Warning Sign.

As Zohran Mamdani prepares to unveil property tax reforms, he must weigh a plan he inherited from his predecessor.

Nick Garber   ·   March 2, 2026
How to Push Utilities Toward a Cheaper, Cleaner Future: A Q&A With Jigar Shah

The energy expert discusses his vision for a more flexible grid — and what’s standing in the way.

Colin Kinniburgh and Jack Carroll   ·   February 28, 2026
Is a Solution to New York’s Food Stamp Theft Finally on the Horizon?

New Yorkers could see new benefit cards in 2027 as officials pledge to prioritize a long-awaited upgrade.

Jie Jenny Zou   ·   February 27, 2026
‘I Was Just Desperate to Find a Lawyer’: Three Journeys Through New York’s Asylum Maze

It’s almost impossible to win an asylum case without an attorney. Finding one is a tall order.

Liv Veazey   ·   February 26, 2026
Why a NIMBY Councilmember Said Yes to Affordable Housing

The threat of a new appeals board pushed Vickie Paladino to approve a new development.

Nick Garber   ·   February 24, 2026
Top Horse Racing Investigator Resigns After New York Focus Investigation

The investigator was initially placed on leave after New York Focus revealed that state gaming regulators ignored evidence of a massive horse doping ring.

Sam Mellins   ·   February 20, 2026
State Prison Officials Said an Employee Accused of Sexual Assault Didn’t Exist. We Found Him.

The state rescinded its request to dismiss a sexual abuse lawsuit after a judge became aware of New York Focus’s findings.

Chris Gelardi   ·   February 20, 2026
How a More Flexible Grid Could Save New York Billions

Officials have long eyed “virtual power plants,” which coordinate energy use across thousands of homes, but the state has lagged in adopting them.

Jack Carroll and Colin Kinniburgh   ·   February 18, 2026
Photo collage of a desk with a notepad and voice recorder in a newsroom.
Hochul Seeks to Reverse Funding Increase for Prison Oversight Body

Last year, after prison guards were caught beating an incarcerated man to death, Governor Hochul allocated millions to a prison oversight body. This year, she doesn’t want to renew the grant.

Chris Gelardi   ·   February 17, 2026
Mayor Zohran Mamdani testifies at the 2026 Joint Legislative Budget Hearing in Albany.
Mamdani’s Albany Agenda Narrows as Tax Fight Crowds Out Other Issues

The mayor campaigned on more than a dozen state-level policy demands, but some are taking a backseat.

Nick Garber   ·   February 12, 2026
Red states and blue states superimposed over housing.
New York Could Lose Seats in Congress Because It Won’t Build Housing

As housing construction booms in red states, blue states are falling behind. That will likely boost Republicans in federal politics.

Sam Mellins   ·   February 12, 2026
New York City Had a Chance to Ease Its Staffing Crisis. It Quietly Gave Up.

Civil service exams can slow down government hiring by months or even years. New York City is one of the only areas of the state that hasn’t opted into a program to bypass the process.

Nick Garber   ·   February 11, 2026
ICE Collaboration and Prisons in Crisis: Four Questions for State Law Enforcement

A hearing Thursday gives lawmakers an opportunity to grill police and prison leaders.

Chris Gelardi   ·   February 11, 2026
Photo of the bank of the Amawalk Reservoir
A Real Estate Battle Tests the State’s New Superfund Powers

New York environmental regulators have deemed a developer liable for an $18 million Westchester cleanup — but they haven’t yet made the company pay.

David McKay Wilson   ·   February 10, 2026
Three Questions About Medicaid for New York Officials

State officials have so far dodged questions about the future of New York’s largest health plan. A hearing on Tuesday could provide some insight.

Jie Jenny Zou   ·   February 9, 2026
Does Mamdani’s Claim that Albany is Shafting New York City Hold Up?

The mayor’s Tin Cup Day speech hinges on a bold claim about the city’s relationship with the state.

Nick Garber   ·   February 9, 2026
How New York’s Court System Intertwines With Party Politics

A foreclosure case in Brooklyn highlights ties between the courts and political party clubhouses.

Chris Bragg   ·   February 6, 2026
For Sale: Brooklyn Five-Bedroom. Price: $100

New York Focus identified more than a thousand cases where a disputed interest formula increased a home’s bidding price at auction, allowing a bank to obtain it for a pittance.

Chris Bragg   ·   February 5, 2026
Five Questions for New York’s Social Service Agencies

Will this week’s budget hearing provide insight into the state’s plan to salvage its safety net?

Jie Jenny Zou, Melissa Manno and Chris Gelardi   ·   February 4, 2026
New York Lawmakers Want to Put Pipeline Spending on the Map

New York utilities spend $1 billion a year replacing old gas pipes. New legislation would force them to reveal where that money is being spent.

Colin Kinniburgh   ·   February 4, 2026
‘I’m a Human Rights Violator’: Staff at Youth Prison Recount Lockdowns, Turmoil, 24-Hour Shifts

A yearslong staffing crisis at state-run facilities has taken its toll on incarcerated kids and the workers who watch over them.

Chris Gelardi   ·   February 4, 2026
Photo of uber lit up in windshield
Uber Pours $3M Into New Election Spending Group Poised to Back Hochul

The move came weeks after Hochul proposed measures to lower the cost of auto insurance.

Chris Bragg   ·   February 3, 2026
Landlord That Won Big in Cuomo’s Penn Station Plan Makes a Comeback Under Trump

Vornado Realty Trust has a stake in Halmar’s proposal to rebuild the Manhattan rail hub.

Nick Garber   ·   February 2, 2026
Hochul Proposed Banning ICE Collaboration Contracts. Here’s What You Need to Know.

The bill would dissolve contracts that allow federal immigration authorities to use county jails, but would leave more informal collaboration with local law enforcement untouched.

Liv Veazey   ·   January 31, 2026
Hochul Could Try to Change New York’s Emissions Math Again. Here’s Why It Matters.

State officials have voiced renewed interest in changing how New York counts its greenhouse gas emissions.

Colin Kinniburgh   ·   January 30, 2026
An adult and child wearing winter coats walk across a motel parking lot with three cars parked in it. The child is smiling and turns back to look at the adult, who is facing away from the camera.
New York Homeless Families Placed in Hotels Weren’t Guaranteed Social Services. New Regulations Could Change That.

The proposal follows a New York Focus and ProPublica investigation that found counties had placed thousands of adults and children in often-dilapidated hotels as the main response to homelessness.

Spencer Norris   ·   January 28, 2026
Five Questions for New York’s Education Leaders

The state’s top education officials head to the hot seat Thursday for a lengthy budget hearing. Here are some questions we’d put on the table.

Melissa Manno   ·   January 28, 2026
Loose Rules Let State Police Hand Out Lax Penalties for Serious Misconduct

New York State troopers used the badge to settle personal scores and elicit favors. Still, they remained on the job, an investigation found.

Sammy Sussman   ·   January 28, 2026
Three Questions for New York’s Climate and Energy Leaders

Lawmakers will be grilling top state energy and environmental officials Wednesday in a marathon budget hearing. Here are some of the questions we’d ask.

Colin Kinniburgh   ·   January 27, 2026
The Catch-22 Keeping New Yorkers Stuck in Prison

Nine months after the prison guard strike, incarcerated people are being denied early release after not completing programming that they don’t have access to.

Rebecca McCray and Emma Rosenberg   ·   January 26, 2026
Meet Our Newest Reporters and Editors

We’re expanding our coverage of education, immigration, and politics.

New York Focus   ·   January 24, 2026
Police Department Retrains Officers on Immigration Enforcement Policies After New York Focus Investigation

Some officials and residents in Cheektowaga want a broader overhaul of their cops’ interactions with immigration agents.

Isabelle Taft   ·   January 23, 2026
Times Square at night
Broadway Bigwigs Donated Heavily to Hochul Before Proposed Tax Credit Expansion

The governor’s campaign got an influx of donations from theater producers as its trade group lobbied her office to “enhance” the credit.

Nick Garber and Chris Bragg   ·   January 22, 2026
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