It's Tuesday in New York City, where the Long Island Rail Road strike is over.
Still, regular train service remains suspended this morning because there wasn't enough time to get crews in position. Officials have urged commuters to work from home again if possible.
Gov. Kathy Hochul said last night the MTA reached a “fair deal” with the striking unions, adding that the agreement would not require additional fare hikes or tax increases.
Mamdani said yesterday that the first city-owned grocery store will open next year in the Hunts Point section of the Bronx inside the Peninsula, an affordable housing and mixed-use development.
Mamdani is adding more free 3-K seats this fall, doubling his initial commitment, for a total of 2,000 new slots.
Officials said a 41-year-old woman died in custody on Rikers Island yesterday, becoming at least the third person to die in the city jail system this year.
Public defenders are arguing that Samantha Randazzo, the Brooklyn woman who gave birth in a courthouse last Friday while awaiting arraignment on a low-level drug charge, was failed on multiple fronts by the criminal justice system.
Plans to rehabilitate a stretch of the Cross-Bronx Expressway are on hold after years of pushback from Bronx residents who say the project would worsen pollution and endanger residents’ health by widening roadways.
A gun, a silencer and a notebook police found when they arrested Luigi Mangione at a McDonald’s can be presented as evidence to a jury — but a cellphone, a loaded magazine and a passport cannot — a state judge in Manhattan ruled yesterday.
The Metropolitan Opera is in a tough spot after Saudi Arabia reneged on a deal to hand the institution $200 million, citing financial difficulties due to the Iran war.
William Daniels, the 99-year-old actor who played Mr. Feeny on "Boy Meets World," was an "open marriage" guy.
Democrats have only held a North Country congressional seat for five years since the Civil War, but the party believes dairy farmer Blake Gendebien has a shot.
Nonprofit organizations would get first opportunity to buy certain distressed buildings coming onto the market in New York City under reintroduced City Council legislation proponents hope will help preserve the city’s affordable housing stock.
"Most of the individuals who were exposed to this virus — whether they were passengers on that cruise ship or were otherwise exposed — were identified and are being monitored. So for the general individual living in New York, whether it's the city or the state, the potential for exposure is extremely low."