The latest articles from WNYC News
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A show that samples WNYC’s best podcasts, curated to fit all your travel needs.
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The latest articles from WNYC 9/11 Specials
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We spoke with the stars, writers and directors of Tony nominated Broadway productions! Check out our favorite conversations as the June 10th awards ceremony approaches!
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Major news events throughout the world continue to be largely ignored until they reach tragic proportions. Underreported, a weekly feature on The Leonard Lopate Show, tackles these issues and gives an in-depth look into stories that are often relegated to the back pages.
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Mourners will gather in Inwood on Friday to remember the victims of a fatal roof collapse at a nightclub in the Dominican Republic. Congressmember Adriano Espaillat will be among them. He represents Washington Heights and other parts of northern Manhattan and the Bronx in Congress. Both neighborhoods have huge populations with Dominican roots, and …
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A jam-packed On The Way roundup of New York City transit news features breaking news on a deadly tourist helicopter crash in the Hudson River, the latest on congestion pricing, and the politics behind subway safety amid the mayoral campaign.
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April is National Poetry Month. This past week on WNYC Morning Edition, we've asked for your poems on the theme of "history" inspired by historical happenings, real or imagined. Amy Penwell is a school library media specialist at Riverton School in New Jersey. Her third grade students recently participated in an online poetry workshop with Kate Mes…
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It's the Politics Brief from WNYC. This week, Elizabeth Kim and Jon Campbell break down the latest out of New York City and Albany -- as rapid changes to tariff rates make economic outlooks unpredictable, and the federal government pulls more funding from the city.
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New York City officials are trying out a novel way to move longtime residents of homeless shelters into new permanent housing — by guaranteeing most of their rent.
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The New York region is in the midst of a historic housing crisis. Now, a new report says the region’s housing shortage could be made even worse due to the potential loss of up to 80-thousand homes over the next 15 years due to flooding. The study is called “Averting Crisis: Zoning to Create Resilient Homes for All,” and it comes from the Regional P…
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A Brooklyn school backed by Jay-Z said students could graduate debt-free. Now they're buried in it.
LIU-Brooklyn told scholarship students at its new Roc Nation School they could graduate "without debt." But now, many say they're struggling to pay thousands of dollars in unexpected fees.
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In one of the oldest railroad stories, folk legend John Henry races against a machine hammering holes for the construction of a railroad tunnel, only to die from exhaustion after just barely beating the machine. In the modern version of this tale, Google’s artificial intelligence algorithm could go up against the experienced ear of an MTA track mai…
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Video and DVD stores are a thing of the past. Nearly all of them went out of businesses after the rise of Netflix and other streaming services. But two people are trying to bring the retro business model back to New York City. They’re opening a store in Williamsburg called Night Owl Video next Friday that will be selling everything from VHS to 4k U…
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April is National Poetry Month and we have been putting listener poems on the air. The theme for the first week of April was "memoir," and for the second week was "history." Now, after several weeks of reflection, we're taking a look towards the future. Our new theme is "science fiction.” Take us to a different time, a different universe, or maybe …
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New York City's subway system has a new map. On this week's On The Way roundup of transit news, the team gives a rundown of interesting details in the new design.
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New York’s City Council says the city has more money to spend next year than the amount Mayor Adams laid out in his 2026 executive budget proposal. Council leadership is offering up a $117-billion dollar proposal of their own for the city’s next fiscal year, which starts in July. Justin Brannan is the chair of the city councils budget committee. He…
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Its been a whirlwind 24 hours for New York City mayor Eric Adams. He saw the criminal case hanging over his head dismissed, and he announced to the world that he's running for re-election as an independent. WNYC's Jon Campbell joined Michael Hill to discuss what happens next, and how the crowded field for mayor is responding.…
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How a small change to a New Jersey state law could make affordable childcare available to more families
As childcare becomes increasingly expensive, a study from the Rutgers Center for Women and Work, a member of the First 1,000 Days Policy Coalition, shows that changing the income requirement for childcare subsidies would help tens of thousands of working parents. Debra Lancaster, the center's Executive Director and Becky Logue-Conroy, a research an…
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With his criminal case in the rearview mirror, Mayor Eric Adams is pivoting to his re-election campaign. He will run as an independent, eschewing a crowded Democratic primary. WNYC's Brittany Kriegstein has been speaking to voters in areas that supported Adams four years ago. She joined WNYC's Michael Hill to discuss what they're saying, and the hi…
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Korissa Matta had two months to move out of her old apartment in the East Village in spring 2022. She wanted to use her local Buy Nothing group to give away her old stuff. But over the course of the summer, she was removed from the group twice for not responding quickly enough to an admin confirming that she still lived in the area. Matta said the …
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Adams says he's running for mayor as an independent in the general election. In a video posted to social media, he says that the city needs independent leadership. His decision comes a day after a federal judge yesterday dismissed his corruption case for good. Dr. Christina Greer is a professor of political science at Fordham University in the Bron…
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Today marks World Autism Day, an internationally recognized day to raise awareness of autism. Newark Airport recently opened a second “sensory room” in the airport’s Terminal A. It’s a calming room for neurodivergent travelers and travelers on the autism spectrum. The vice chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Jeff Lynford and g…
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Five years after the pandemic first struck New York and the nation, Alisha is one of potentially hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers — researchers are unclear exactly how many there are — who are still slowed down by long COVID. Their condition is defined by symptoms that come on after an acute COVID infection and last for at least three months, a…
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New York City officials and anti-hunger groups are bracing for deep cuts by Republicans in Congress to the federal food stamp program that feeds more residents than ever before: 1.8 million people across the city, including more than half a million children. City officials estimate even conservative reductions to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistan…
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"We have a way to prevent this." A bill in Albany would require speed limiters for serial speeders
A deadly traffic crash on Brooklyn's Ocean Parkway is renewing calls to crack down on serial speeders. The NYPD says the driver in the Midwood crash had a suspended license, made an illegal turn and killed a woman and her two young daughters. A website that tracks moving violations shows she already had been ticketed for multiple moving violations,…
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Starting today, New York City is increasing penalties for illegal dumping in city parks in an effort to keep them cleaner. City officials are also planning to install security cameras around the Bronx parks to monitor any illegal dumping. City parks commissioner Sue Donoghue talked more about the new rules with WNYC's Sean Carlson.…
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March is Women's History Month and to celebrate it, we've been profiling several local musicians and their journey through the music industry. Today, we hear from Carys Dixon, a 23- year-old, multi-instrumental engineer and producer from the Bronx. The following transcript has been lightly edited for clarity. I would consider myself under hip hop t…
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With Hochul's 'bell to bell' phone ban on track to become law, students visiting the state Capitol in Albany voiced mixed opinions about the proposal. The governor's plan would separate kids from their phones for the whole school day. Kids said they were open to it -- but worried about what could happen during an emergency.…
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