Aging water infrastructure is costing customers.
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NEWSLETTER

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Workers walk inside of a New York City water tunnel. Photo: NYC Water / Flickr
Most utilities barely track how much water they lose to leaks, but one thing is clear: Aging infrastructure is costing customers.
By Colin Kinniburgh

Rain finally returned to New York City last week, breaking a nearly two-month dry spell.

But the downstate area is still in drought. The reservoirs that supply the city’s drinking water remain under 60 percent full as of Tuesday, compared to the usual 80 percent or more. This fall is on track to be the second- or third-driest in the city since the National Weather Service began collecting records in the late 1860s. The state’s head of emergency management has warned that, unless New York City continues to get heavy rain every few weeks, the region could fall into a “drought emergency,” which would trigger mandatory restrictions on water use.

Recent Stories
 
 
The Jennings Creek wildfire burned over 5,000 acres across New York and New Jersey and took 14 days to contain. Photos: Chris Johnson; dmytrogilitukha via Canva. | Illustration: Leor Stylar
New York could see more frequent and destructive blazes, but the state doesn’t have enough forest rangers and firefighters to respond to the growing threat.
By Nathan Porceng

As the risk of fires in New York has grown over the years, one thing hasn’t changed: the number of park rangers and volunteer firefighters responsible for preventing them and putting them out. Former and current leaders of the state’s rangers union, part of the Police Benevolent Association of New York State, have expressed fears that blazes could get even bigger and have lobbied state leaders to prioritize wildfire management and better support the rangers.

 
Michael Jenkins, a Wall Street mogul, has directly given tens of thousands to Bronx-based candidates for congress, state legislature and city council since 2020. Photo via Flickr, Wagner T. Cassimiro + NY Focus illustration
The whole thing is just — weird.
By Sam Mellins

A Wall Street mogul with unclear motives is gearing up to spend nearly a million dollars boosting candidates for New York City Council next year.

Michael Jenkins, a founder of the major financial firm Jane Street, is a reclusive figure who has made several attempts in the past to influence New York City elections, primarily in the Bronx. This year, he has dumped $950,000 into a political action committee that has so far only announced its intention to support one nonprofit executive-turned City Council candidate.

The individuals running the PAC appear to have skirted campaign finance laws in their previous political efforts, and they avoided New York Focus’s questions about their political motives. It’s not clear why Jenkins, who did not respond to a request for comment, and according to the address listed on most of his donations lives in Manhattan, has poured his personal funds into low-profile elections in the Bronx.

 
Property records show the Turken Foundation bought 3057 Coney Island Avenue in October 2014. Photo: Will Bredderman | Illustration: New York Focus
One Brighton Beach property connects political donations, Medicaid scams, and a Turkish charity
By Will Bredderman

The unfolding international scandal around Mayor Eric Adams has fixed New York City’s attention on his odd ties to various Turkish government proxies.

But overlooked have been the equally strange ties one of those groups, a charity incorporated by the son of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has to medical fraudsters in Brooklyn — the borough that catapulted Adams into power.

So far, public attention on the Turken Foundation has focused on the nonprofit’s 21-floor headquarters in Midtown, which Adams helped break ground for in 2018 as Brooklyn borough president, and on the donations some of its leaders made to his campaigns.

But well before it secured a foothold in Manhattan for its glamorous home base, Turken acquired a dingy one-story doctor’s office in the remote reaches of Brooklyn. In doing so, the organization entangled itself in a network of insurance-related criminal schemes endemic to both the building and the surrounding neighborhood: what New York magazine once labeled “the Brighton Beach swindle.”

 

Copyright © New York Focus 2024, All rights reserved.
Staying Focused is compiled and written by Alex Arriaga
Contact Alex at alex@nysfocus.com

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