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A rift grew among birth advocates as progressive legislators asked them to compromise with the governor – or risk a veto.

Lee Harris  ·  January 20, 2022

Putting more police officers and metal detectors in schools won’t solve the crisis of youth gun violence. We need to invest in community-based programs to address the root causes of the violence.

Freddy Medina  ·  January 24, 2022

Hochul proposed raising the cap on Medicaid spending, which Cuomo created, and boosting reimbursement rates, which Cuomo cut.

Sam Mellins  ·  January 21, 2022

But if he loses his appeal and Gov. Kathy Hochul declines to grant him clemency, he will likely be sent back to prison.

Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg  ·  January 25, 2022

Adrienne Harris was approved to lead New York’s Department of Financial Services by a wide margin, as a progressive push to block her nomination sputtered.

Sam Mellins  ·  January 25, 2022

The law leaves key decisions to an agency with a history of dragging its feet on implementing water quality legislation.

Peter Mantius  ·  January 27, 2022

The city’s Department of Housing Preservation & Development continues to work with construction companies that have been found liable for wage theft.

Molly Boigon  ·  January 31, 2022

During the first eight weeks of omicron, only one jail system administered enough tests to screen every incarcerated person even once, a New York Focus analysis found. Most didn’t come close to that rate.

Chris Gelardi  ·  February 2, 2022

The shooting occurred in the program’s pilot area, but even there, police still respond to four out of every five crisis calls - more than twice as many as the city had initially projected.

Garrison Lovely  ·  February 4, 2022

“By April 1, it will be out or modified. It will not be this program,” one legislator predicted.

Colin Kinniburgh  ·  February 7, 2022

Governor Kathy Hochul says she will finally fill vacancies on the state’s parole board, opening the potential to shift from presumptive detention.

Nick Pinto  ·  February 8, 2022

A 2019 reform following corruption scandals was supposed to cap political donations and unveil the people behind companies giving cash. Records show it hasn’t.

Sam Mellins  ·  February 9, 2022

Defendants given desk appearance tickets may not be assigned a public defender until 20 days after their arrest. That means crucial evidence in cases involving possible jail time could go missing.

Max Rivlin-Nadler  ·  February 14, 2022

The state health department has delayed implementing a landmark staffing law, as nurses say they’re overwhelmed and hospitals point to a workforce shortage.

Maxwell Parrott  ·  February 15, 2022

ConEd customers have seen their electricity bills double or even triple over the past month, and the company just reported over a billion dollars in annual income. Activists say a publicly-owned utility would deliver more affordable power.

Andy Hirschfeld  ·  February 17, 2022

Orange County DA David Hoovler has repeatedly spoken at Republican Party political events — in apparent violation of the ethics rules of the prosecutors’ association he led.

Rory Fleming  ·  February 18, 2022

Many have described the New York City mayor’s “blueprint” to address gun crime as occupying a novel middle ground. But it mostly copies the policies of his predecessor and relies heavily on tough-on-crime tactics.

Chris Gelardi  ·  February 24, 2022

In the first year of the pandemic, four out of five appointments at state-licensed clinics were held virtually—allowing providers to tackle long-standing barriers.

Ethan Geringer-Sameth  ·  February 23, 2022

Banned for a century, contract labor could return to New York’s prisons.

Lauren Gill  ·  February 23, 2022

Since taking office last July, enforcement counsel Michael Johnson has not taken action against any campaigns that failed to file required campaign finance reports.

Sam Mellins  ·  February 25, 2022
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