The controversial shelter at 47 Hall St. in Brooklyn’s Clinton Hill neighborhood, which housed roughly 3,350 single male migrants at the peak of the crisis, is among the handful of taxpayer-funded sites expected to close in June, according to city officials.
Former New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer's plan is a clear play to voters who are tired of allegations of corruption against the Adams administration.
New York City officials continued to shell out tens of millions of dollars for illegal migrants fighting off deportation orders
An analysis of a year’s worth of complaints lodged with 311, the Big Apple’s non-emergency line, reveals that in 2024, the thing New Yorkers hated the most was noise. Since being launched in 2003, fed-up city residents have relied on the service to file grievances regarding high costs, overcrowding, and rodents running in the streets and subways.
Former Desert Sun arts and entertainment reporter Bruce Fessier walked back in time to Bob Dylan's Greenwich Village on a recent trip to New York.
I found New York City to be full of life, but too expensive. Meanwhile, London wasn't as gloomy as I thought, and it was surprisingly more affordable.
Step into the streets of the Big Apple with Skate City: New York, the latest chapter in the Skate City series, now available on Apple Arcade. This skateboarding adventure lets you glide through the bustling avenues and quiet corners of New York City, all while perfecting an array of super cool tricks and stunts.
Violent subterranean assaults are casting a pall over the city. Dirtier, less wealthy, less safe, the Big Apple sometimes seems like Gotham City.
New York City truck drivers will have to pay between $14.40 and $21.60 to enter a congestion zone at peak hours.
Zachary Lombardi, an elementary school arts teacher at PS 29 in Castleton Corners, was chosen as a New York City winner in the prestigious Big Apple Awards program for the 2024-2025 school year. Lombardi was named the Community School District 31 Award Recipient. District 31 encompasses the entirety of Staten Island public schools.
The Big Apple could be looking at 1 to 3 inches of snow, but the southern part of the Garden State could be facing 5 to 8 inches.