New York City Mayor Eric Adams said his meeting with President-elect Donald Trump on Friday included discussions of bringing manufacturing jobs back to the city and the
The mayor will reveal his goal of adding 100,000 homes in the borough over the next decade at his State of the City address.
Dubbed “The Manhattan Plan,” Hizzoner’s ambitious housing proposal would be the equivalent of creating a brand new Upper West Side, which stretches from 59th to 96th streets, or
In his state of the city address, Mayor Eric Adams announced the Manhattan Plan. Here’s what we know about the 100,000 units it could create:
Dubbed “The Manhattan Plan,” it’s “an initiative to review and refresh zoning across the whole of Manhattan, unlock potential housing sites for development from Inwood to the Financial District,” according to a release shared exclusively with Playbook ahead of the speech. ( You can read more about the idea from POLITICO’s Janaki Chadha here.)
The New York City mayor, who is under federal indictment, has spoken warmly about President-elect Donald J. Trump in recent weeks and has said he is open to receiving a pardon from him.
The shocking new claims — made with no further explanation — came Monday in a late-night filing in which prosecutors in the Southern District of New York say their “ongoing
NEW YORK — New York City Mayor Eric Adams proposed a dramatic increase in housing in Manhattan, services for homeless people sleeping on subways and a program to ensure children are not born in city shelters during his third State of the City address Thursday — a speech delivered at the most perilous point in his career.
New York Mayor Eric Adams said Monday he doesn’t “focus on polls” in response to a new survey that found former Gov. Andrew Cuomo holding a 20-plus point lead over Adams — even though the former governor hasn’t even entered the mayoral race.
A challenger to Mayor Eric Adams rolling out an ethics plan as he formally announces Thursday — a clear play for voters frustrated by the indicted incumbent’s scandals. Top of former City Comptroller Scott Stringer’s list: a proposed ban on political donations from anybody doing business with the city and a one-year waiting period for lobbyists getting city jobs.