The Northeast Supply Enhancement pipeline had been rejected by environmental regulators three times but was revived this spring after talks between Hochul and Trump.
The Northeast Supply Enhancement pipeline had been rejected by environmental regulators three times but was revived this spring after talks between Hochul and Trump. ·  View in browser
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NESE is set to be New York’s first new gas pipeline in at least a decade, and by far the state’s largest expansion of fossil fuel infrastructure since passing its flagship climate law. Photo: Courtesy of Governor Kathy Hochul | Illustration: New York Focus
The Northeast Supply Enhancement pipeline had been rejected by environmental regulators three times but was revived this spring after talks between Hochul and Trump.
By Colin Kinniburgh

New York environmental regulators on Friday approved a major Trump-backed underwater gas pipeline in a U-turn for state energy policy.

The state Department of Environmental Conservation issued crucial water permits for the Northeast Supply Enhancement project, which it had rejected three times in the past.

At the same time, the DEC announced that the even larger Constitution pipeline, slated to cross New York into New England, would not move ahead. Both pipelines were priorities for President Donald Trump, who railed against Governor Kathy Hochul on social media earlier this week for moving too slowly on the projects.

Hochul said she stood by the DEC’s decisions.

“We need to govern in reality,” she said in a statement Friday. “We are facing war against clean energy from Washington Republicans, including our New York delegation, which is why we have adopted an all-of-the-above approach that includes a continued commitment to renewables and nuclear power to ensure grid reliability and affordability.”

Zohran Mamdani made history, romping to a decisive victory over former Governor Andrew Cuomo in New York City’s mayoral election. In January, he will become New York’s first Muslim mayor, first immigrant mayor in 50 years, and youngest mayor in a century.

His election has captured attention far beyond New York City. We want to hear from our readers across the state. What do you want to know about the incoming mayor?

Recent Stories

Members of the Opioid Settlement Fund Advisory Board say the state Office of Addiction Services and Supports, which administers the settlement funds, has been slow to respond to data requests. Logo: OASAS; Check: Billion Photos | Illustration: Leor Stylar
The board overseeing opioid lawsuit settlements is raising the alarm that New York could use the funds, which are meant to expand substance abuse initiatives, to backfill federal cuts.
By Jie Jenny Zou

The board advising New York on how to spend huge sums from opioid lawsuit settlements pressed Governor Kathy Hochul for greater transparency and faster action in its annual report released this week.

The state has received over $500 million from settlements reached with drug manufacturers for their role in the opioid crisis and is set to receive much more, including from a record $7.4 billion deal announced in January. The settlement funds consist of a complex mix of different pots of money, large portions of which the Opioid Settlement Fund Advisory Board oversees under state law.

But board members say the state Office of Addiction Services and Supports, which administers the funds, has been slow to respond to repeated requests for basic data, like how much of the money has made it to providers. Members have also been frustrated with the state’s routine rejection of their recommendations with little explanation.

“We don’t get any clear answers from the state,” said Ashley Livingston, a board member who has requested spending data since the body’s founding. “We’ve been asking for the same thing since June of 2022.”

Voters elected Democratic mayors — three of whom were backed by the Working Families Party — in several of the state’s largest cities and flipped two county legislatures blue. Photos: Campaigns of Dorcey Applyrs, Sharon Owens, and Sean Ryan; City of Rochester | Graphic: New York Focus | Illustration: Leor Stylar
Working Families Party–backed candidates flipped county legislatures, won big-city mayoralties, and secured an Assembly seat in Elise Stefanik’s backyard.
By Colin Kinniburgh and Isabelle Taft
Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s climate approach is a sharp contrast to that of other New York politicians, like Governor Kathy Hochul, who’ve framed green goals as clashing with cost-of-living issues. Photos: Zohran Mamdani/Facebook; nyc.gov | Illustration: New York Focus
The mayor-elect’s approach reflects a view that is going mainstream: To succeed, climate policies may need to lose the label.
By Colin Kinniburgh

Zohran Mamdani barely campaigned on climate.

The New York City mayor-elect’s overwhelming focus has been on affordability, from an early ad declaring that “the cost of living is the real crisis” to his victory speech before a jubilant crowd in Brooklyn on Tuesday night. That focus didn’t stop him from winning a first-of-its-kind endorsement from a prominent climate group, the youth-led Sunrise Movement, in late April, long before he had the backing of progressive icons like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders.

The national group had never endorsed a mayoral candidate before, but poured its energy into the Mamdani campaign. By the time the Democratic primary arrived in June, Sunrise said its local volunteers had knocked on more than 20,000 doors in support of the candidate. They continued into the fall, and ended up knocking on about 40,000 doors, said Denae Ávila-Dickson, the group’s communications and political manager.

“I will fight him every step of the way,” Mamdani said of Trump’s ICE deployments. Background photo: Chris Gelardi; Foreground photos: NATO/Flickr; Bingjiefu He/Wikimedia Commons | Illustration: New York Focus
State officials and local activists may be more influential, but the mayor still has a role to play.
By Isabelle Taft

If President Donald Trump makes good on his threats, Zohran Mamdani may become the first New York City mayor forced to navigate an uninvited federal deployment of the National Guard. Last month, Trump insinuated that he’d send troops to “clean up” the country’s biggest city if Mamdani won the election, as he did decisively Tuesday night. Trump administration officials have also threatened to ramp up immigration enforcement raids in the city.

On the campaign trail, Mamdani, whose campaign did not respond to questions for this article, argued that he was the candidate who would staunchly defend the five boroughs from federal law enforcement. In his victory speech on Tuesday night, he welcomed a confrontation with the president.

“Donald Trump, since I know you’re watching, I have four words for you: Turn the volume up,” he said. “New York will remain a city built by immigrants, powered by immigrants. And as of tonight, led by an immigrant. So hear me, President Trump, when I say this. To get to any of us, you will have to get through all of us.”

The rhetoric matched his vow during the last mayoral debate to fight Trump “every step of the way” on immigration raids by federal law enforcement. Mamdani has also praised litigation that has limited the deployment of National Guard troops in other cities and touted a “coalition” between himself, Governor Kathy Hochul, and Attorney General Letitia James “that would be on the front lines of fighting Donald Trump.”

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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