The prison system is keeping people locked in their boiling cells and dorms for upwards of 21 hours a day.
The prison system is keeping people locked in their boiling cells and dorms for upwards of 21 hours a day. ·  View in browser
NEWSLETTER

Funding local news is more important than ever, and it will take a village to succeed. Join us in our work to rebuild local journalism as a pillar of democracy in New York.

New York state prisons’ housing units trap summer heat and humidity inside. Photo: Ron Lach/Pexels | Illustration: Leor Stylar
Short-staffed since a strike this winter, the prison system is keeping people locked in their boiling cells and dorms for upwards of 21 hours a day.
By Chris Gelardi

Recent Stories

Rural stations will be hit hard by a bill cancelling $1.1 billion in federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Photo: Stockbyte | Illustration: Leor Stylar
Nearly $50 million will come specifically from public radio and TV stations, including rural ones that rely heavily on federal money.
By Kate Harloe

New York’s public radio and TV stations are facing major blows to their budgets after Congress two weeks ago approved a bill that cancelled over $1 billion in federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, or CPB.

Twenty-seven media organizations in New York, including 18 public radio and TV stations, receive funding from the CPB for line items ranging from broadcasting and transmission to content development and community outreach.

In total, the state’s public media organizations stand to lose at least $57 million in federal funding over two years, according to estimates that CPB funding recipients shared with New York Focus. Nearly $50 million of that will come from the budgets of public radio and TV stations, while roughly $7.6 million will come from the budgets of other types of public media organizations.

Then-Governor Andrew Cuomo repeatedly cited federal data placing New York state 38th or 39th nationally.
By Ferdi Ferhat Özsoy

YES.

New York state significantly undercounted Covid-19 nursing home deaths in 2020 by excluding residents who died in hospitals. This reporting practice made the state’s mortality ranking appear lower than it was.

“I don’t understand how the agency can just say, ‘We decided that this can’t work right now,’ ” said judge Julian Schreibman, of Ulster County. Photo: Wally Gobetz/Flickr | Illustration: New York Focus
The judge suggested he’ll rule that the state is violating its climate law.
By Colin Kinniburgh

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

Feedback? Tips? Pitches? Contact us at: editor@nysfocus.com

Support our work!

Interested in sponsoring these emails? Get in touch! Email editor@nysfocus.com.

This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*

unsubscribe from this list  ·  update subscription preferences

New York Focus · *|HTML:LIST_ADDRESS_HTML|* · USA