The rollout follows years of reporting by New York Focus on delays and missed deadlines.
Reporting from New York Focus last year found that the project would save drivers six minutes max, at a cost of $1.3 billion.
The first significant pay increase in years could strengthen the office responsible for reviewing major legislation.
Thousands of New Yorkers have new health insurance from the company Leading Edge Administrators. One Massachusetts retiree’s battle with the company highlights the risks they face.
A PPL vice president admitted pre-contract talks between the company and New York’s health department, after denying it under oath last month.
New York lawmakers are giving more money to the Bronx Community Foundation, which has failed to spend it in the past.
Workers are currently forced to pay for insurance that many don’t want.
The company in charge said they would explore other insurance options.
With a hearing on New York’s troubled home care program set for Thursday, here are five questions we’d like answered.
Fraud and falsehoods often don’t stop debt collectors from pursuing their targets for years.
Offering hard-to-use benefits instead of cash could help two state-funded companies dodge a 2011 law meant to boost care workers’ pay.
He was slated to be the guest of honor at an event featuring a Hindu nationalist activist who has called for violence and boycotts against Muslims.
Mamdani’s plans for universal child care, fare-free transit, and affordable housing rely on Albany getting on board.
As Attorney General, Andrew Cuomo put fraudulent debt collection firms on notice. He may have strengthened their hand.
The little-known company recently won a huge taxpayer-funded contract. It has a record of not paying doctors and leaving patients on the hook for the bills.
A company with a history of lawsuits and unpaid claims is now managing health insurance for thousands of New Yorkers on the taxpayers’ dime.
Collectors claim they serve people who don’t exist, yet regulators rarely bar repeat offenders from the industry.
The final budget excludes a loophole that would have exempted corporate giants like Spotify and Amazon, after New York Focus reported on the carveout in February.
The Modim Foundation is tied to a health insurer that will begin providing coverage to thousands of New York’s home health aides in May. It refuses to disclose where its gifts go, in a violation of tax law.
Health insurer Leading Edge once tried to cancel a coma patient’s insurance and, in another case, retracted approval for surgery after the bill arrived.