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Posted by Jeanmarie Evelly

“Heat-related incidents have definitely been on the rise,” said Josiah Haken, CEO of the homeless outreach group City Relief. “The people we serve are often the ones who feel the impact of these changes most, and they can’t escape it.”

City Relief homeless outreach
City Relief volunteers serving food and drink on 28th Street near Ninth Avenue in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood, on Aug. 6, 2025. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

On the corner of 28th Street and 9th Avenue, a line stretches halfway down the block in front of Chelsea Park. People holding empty shopping carts and reusable bags patiently wait under the beaming sun, inching forward every minute as they near their turn to receive a hot meal and a cold cup of lemonade. 

Every Wednesday, the team from City Relief, a mobile outreach program serving people experiencing homelessness across New York City, station their van in front of Chelsea Park to provide nutritional support to a group of individuals who often face uncertainty about where their next meal is coming from. 

City Relief’s CEO, Josiah Haken, wants to help his friends who live on the street stay hydrated and fed since they can’t escape the elements, especially during a summer marked by multiple heat advisories. 

“Today, we’re hosting one of our weekly pop-up events. We’re offering emergency relief to the people that we meet in the street through a meal and some lemonade because people are struggling with dehydration and fatigue,” Haken told City Limits on Aug. 6.

According to the NYC Department of Health’s 2025 Heat-Related Mortality Report, each summer more than 500 New Yorkers die from heat-related conditions. Black New Yorkers are twice as likely to die from heat stress compared to white New Yorkers, and people experiencing homelessness are 200 times more likely to die from extreme heat. 

In response to this summer’s sweltering weather, City Relief launched the LemonAID campaign, an outreach initiative aimed at addressing the heightened vulnerability of people experiencing homelessness during heat waves by offering cold water, fresh lemonade, and hot meals. 

City Relief homeless outreach
City Relief volunteers serving clients at their LemonAID table on 28th Street near 9th Avenue. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

“Over the last few months, it’s been 100 degrees one day, and then 70 degrees the next,” Haken said. He worries how the fluctuating temperatures affect unhoused people, highlighting how their core body temperatures can be negatively impacted by constant ups and downs. “If someone is in the heat and they sweat through the only shirt they own, and then are outside at night when the temperature drops 30 degrees, that’s where it gets really dangerous.” 

Daily temperature variation, or how many degrees the temperature swings within a day, poses a number of health risks because the body struggles to adapt to sudden changes. Studies have found that dramatic weather changes increase hospitalizations for respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. Low-income and minority communities are disproportionately impacted by these temperature swings, and it’s expected that these variations will only get more dramatic over time. 

“Heat-related incidents have definitely been on the rise. The people we serve are often the ones who feel the impact of these changes most, and they can’t escape it,” Haken said. 

While there may be plenty of spaces where unsheltered individuals can seek relief from the heat, he noted how they often aren’t welcomed. “The pervading narrative in our culture is that homeless people are lazy, crazy, scary and drug addicted. If we blame the individual, then that allows us to not feel responsible or obligated to do anything.” 

City Relief homeless outreach
City Relief CEO Josiah Haken outside the organization’s outreach vehicle on Aug. 6 in Manhattan. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

During periods of extreme heat and humidity, NYC Emergency Management activates Code Red, a citywide heat emergency plan that allows homeless residents to access any available shelter. Department of Homeless Services outreach teams follow a Code Red priority list to contact anyone at risk of heat exhaustion to encourage them to accept services and offer transportation to shelters. 

The city also runs around 500 cooling centers during heat waves, though Haken believes they aren’t always reliable, saying it’s common for sites to close for the day because they’re short-staffed. The police also frequently remove people seeking refuge from places like the subway. 

“There’s very few places in the city that are consistent,” Haken said. “One of the things that our friends in the street often rely on is consistency because they don’t have a MetroCard, so they have to really pick their spots.” 

That consistency is an essential part of any initiative dedicated to serving unhoused individuals, he said, and so is educating people on how they can navigate through their struggles.

The City Relief team provides support and resources to anyone who pops by for a cup of lemonade, offering the option to fill out an outreach prescreen sheet where they can specify services they’re interested in. The group offers information on legal aid, drug recovery programs, health services, emergency shelters and more. 

“If you’re a cooling center in New York you’re just a big flat, empty room with a door and air conditioning,” Haken said. “Wouldn’t it be great if we had spaces where they can talk to a caseworker while they’re there to help them navigate?” 

Joseph Warthen is a previously unhoused participant who now fundraises for the nonprofit. 

City Relief homeless outreach
City Relief volunteer and brand ambassador Joseph Warthen, who received support from the organization during his own period of homelessness. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

“Years ago, I ended up homeless for economic reasons, then I met the team at City Relief and they got me involved in a program where I’d get a stipend to clean trash cans out,” he said. “Now they made me their ambassador.” 

As someone who’s experienced the struggles of homelessness first-hand, Warthen understands the impact hot weather can have. “We’ve seen people come in and just drop. I’ve seen people completely pass out because of the heat,” he explained. 

Last month, during one of the hottest days of this summer, he said he was on Park and 28th and walked by a man who was lying in a fetal position. Warthen came back an hour later to find the man in the same place.

“I lightly tapped his foot and said, ‘Hey, are you okay?’ No response. So I tapped a little harder, and then really hard. Nothing. So I called 911, and they told me he was dead. People were just walking by unbothered,” he said. 

Roughly 14 percent, or six of the 49 heat-stress deaths the city recorded between 2014 and 2023, were among those “noted to be experiencing or suspected to be experiencing homelessness,” according to the Health Department’s most recent report.

For Haken, Warthen and the rest of the team at City Relief, the goal is to offer compassion to people who are often met with judgement and condemnation. 

“These are human beings, they’re not choosing to be out here,” added Harken. “If we could get the people who are living 10 floors up to remember the person who’s living on the sidewalk in front of their building as a human being who has intrinsic value, things could change.” 

To reach the reporter behind this story, contact Marianad@citylimits.org. To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

Want to republish this story? Find City Limits’ reprint policy here.

The post Homeless in a Heatwave: Summer Poses Extra Challenges for Unhoused New Yorkers appeared first on City Limits.

Psychobook / Dharma Delight

Aug. 19th, 2025 04:00 pm
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Posted by claudia

PSYCHOBOOK – LOOKS AT ALL KINDS OF RIDICULOUS PSYCH TESTS USED THROUGHOUT THE CENTURIES

Psychobook: Games, Tests, Questionnaires, Histories
by Julian Rothenstein (editor)
Princeton Architectural Press
2016, 192 pages, 8.9 x 12.1 x 0.9 inches (hardcover)

Buy on Amazon

I am not afraid of toads. I do not like to see men in their pajamas. Someone has been trying to get into my car. I think I would like the work of a librarian. I do not always tell the truth.

The above statements are examples of what could appear on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, a “psychometric test” in which psychology patients must answer with only a “yes,” “no,” “true,” “false,” or “cannot say.” There is no place on the test to expand or explain your answers. The results of the exam help determine whether a test-taker is “normal” or “deviant.” This test has been helping to sort out the “crazies” from the “normals” since 1943, and yes, according to Psychobook, it’s still being used by some doctors today!

Psychobook, just released today, is a fun, fascinating, image-heavy book that looks at all kinds of ridiculous psych tests used throughout the centuries (some cancelled long ago, others still quacking along). Read about mental test kits such as: Lowenfeld Mosaic tests (make a design with colorful geometric toy pieces to see how carefree, thoughtful or anxious you are); the Szondi Test (see how your mind works by looking at portraits of men and guessing whether they’re homosexual, a psychopath, a maniac, or some other such type); Pictorial Completion Test (find out if your kid has delinquent tendencies by having them fill in a drawing with objects that are missing from the scene), and dozens more.

Psychobook even offers lots of tests you can take right from the book. Nervously, I took the Rorschach inkblot test (staring at a blob on a page that’s been folded in half so that it becomes symmetrical, and imagining what the image might be). I passed with flying colors, as my reading said I was “highly capable, to put it mildly…you master everything you turn your hand to…” I guess some of these psychotic tests really do work! – Carla Sinclair


DHARMA DELIGHT: A VISIONARY POST POP GUIDE TO BUDDHISM AND ZEN

Dharma Delight: A Visionary Post Pop Guide to Buddhism and Zen
by Rodney Alan Greenblat
Tuttle Publishing
2016, 128 pages, 7.5 x 10 x 0.5 inches (softcover)

Buy on Amazon

Peace of mind can be a hard-won trophy in the best of times. Other times, well, simply being may be the best we can do. Dharma Delight is a visual diary of one man’s journey into Buddhism. Author Greenblat takes the reader through the basic aspects of Buddhism, including its founding, its core tenets, a few of the more prominent teachers (er, Buddhas, not instructors), and a few basic zen practices all accompanied by his own bright, bold paintings and drawings.

The book is somewhat slight, more of a primer than an in-depth examination of any one part of either Buddhism or Greenblat’s relationship to it, but I found this to be the most engaging facet of the book. What I mean is, the book often lays out a single concept or story or koan on one or two pages, letting the reader focus on the idea being presented rather than stuffing loads of concepts and history into a confined space.

By allowing the content so much room to breathe, each painting or set of paintings comes into clear relief. Greenblat squeezes lots of detail and tiny, almost hidden prose messages into each vibrant piece of art; his style is a distinct form of pop art, somewhere between the neon, day-glo of the 1980s and the comic book reproductions of Lichtenstein. Yet, for all the bright color and heady concepts, this book has found a permanent home on my bedside bookshelf. Its light touch and beatific illustrations help me find just enough peace of mind to get to sleep. Which is a small delight for which I am grateful. – Joel Neff


Books That Belong On Paper first appeared on the web as Wink Books and was edited by Carla Sinclair. Sign up here to get the issues a week early in your inbox.

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Certain topics seem off-limits in Zen, like: What’s the goal of meditation? How do I get better at it? What is everyone else experiencing when they sit? I spoke at the New Paltz Zen Center about getting stuck at a plateau in meditation skill, and about Zen communities’ reluctance to discuss peak experiences, progress, and goals. Here’s the video and a written version of the talk.


There’s a lot we don’t talk about in Zen.

In my experience, we hardly ever talk about what our daily zazen is like. What’s it usually like for you? Is it groggy, dull, joyful, peaceful, deep, distracted? How long do you usually go between thoughts? Do you usually hear every sound outside your window, or do you kind of space out most of the time?

We also don’t describe the deepest experiences we’ve ever had. And we hardly talk about progress either: have you gotten better at meditation over the years? In fact, I get the sense a lot of people are allergic to two words I just used: “progress” and “better”!

I haven’t read anywhere that we’re not supposed to talk about this. Not that I remember. But I’ve picked it up from hearing what other people say or don’t say. Maybe I just made an assumption that these topics are off-limits, and never questioned it.

When we first learn to meditate, there’s a lot of talk about the contents of our zazen and how to do it better. Like whenever I’ve taught beginning instruction, I meditate with people for a few minutes and then I ask them, “What happened? What was that like?”

But then that kinda … dies? I don’t ask experienced meditators, “What was that last half-hour like for you?” They don’t ask me either.

Maybe you’re all talking about it in private, in dokusan. Dokusan is like sex, I don’t get to see what other people are doing. Maybe you’re always asking the teachers, “I can’t stop worrying about work. How do I reliably achieve samadhi?” There’s nothing stopping me from asking that in dokusan. I mean, nothing overt. But I don’t. Over my years in Zen I’ve come to hide my curiosity, partly because I’ve heard our community’s silence on certain topics and I’ve become silent about them too.

Lately I’ve been talking with some of my fellow students, and they mostly agree: we hesitate to talk intimately about meditation, and it’s a relief when we occasionally break the silence. Some of the core questions we have about our practice—over time we get the message that we’re not supposed to ask. Our strongest spiritual desires—we’re not supposed to express them. Our greatest accomplishments, we’re not supposed to celebrate them. I often feel this way, and I’m not the only one.

So today is an experiment. I’m going to break some silences and see what happens.


One of the deepest meditations I ever had was in late August 2004. I was 23 years old, it was the last night of my last sesshin at the end of a year living at Yokoji monastery, off the grid high up in the mountains in Southern California. I knew that in a few days this monastic life would end, I would fly to New York City and start a new life of some sort. So, on the final night of sesshin, after everyone else had left the zendo, I stayed. The jikido had blown out the candle—we had to be very careful at Yokoji not to burn the monastery down—and all the lights were off—electricity at night at Yokoji was from a couple of car batteries charged from a solar panel during the day, so we used it very sparingly—except there was a dim yellow light in a sconce on the zendo wall. I was sitting in that pool of dim warm light, with the dark room around me and the dark night outside, and the cacti and the pine trees and mountains around me.

For a little while, I stopped. I barely had any thoughts. I heard every single cricket chirp, without missing one, for minutes upon minutes. There was nothing wrong with the world, and nothing wrong with me. For the first time in years, I wasn’t worrying about myself, wasn’t trying to fix myself. I had no preferences. Normally, I’d be impatient to leave the zendo, go down to sit on the tree stump at the bottom of the hill and smoke a cigarette in the moonlight, then read in bed for a few minutes and do all the little indulgences that would comfort me at the end of the day.

But this night, I had no preference. I could leave the zendo, or I could stay all night listening to the crickets. Everything was ok, I had finally stopped trying to fix my life.

Eventually I did leave the zendo of course, smoked my cigarette in the moonlight, and a few days later I flew to New York City and I’ve never had a period of zazen quite like that again. And I was pretty angry about that for a while. I gave a year of my life to Zen, and the second I leave the monastery, my samadhi is all shot and I can’t get back to that peaceful place anymore. I blamed Zen, and I blamed myself. It was actually pretty reasonable to blame myself—I was smoking pot and getting drunk every night, I was a mess, I wasn’t creating the conditions for a strong Zen practice and I knew it. But I couldn’t help remember that one night and wish I was there again.

So this is the trap of being attached to an experience, and comparing the past and the present, right? Zen texts warn us about this trap all the time. But on the other hand, that comparison told me something about how I was living; it was a signpost. I knew I was capable of that kind of samadhi, and the farther my zazen got from the experience of that night, the more clear it was that something was going wrong with how I was living in general.


At the beginning of that year at the monastery, when I arrived at Yokoji, there was another young guy my age, Wes, who showed up the same day. I was very impressed with all the monastics at Yokoji, of course, I wanted to be just like them and I wanted them to approve of me. But I kind of hated Wes. He was maybe a year younger than me, big and goofy and enthusiastic. Once he came into the monastery kitchen, took a gallon of milk from the fridge and chugged the entire thing in one go, right in front of everybody.

My worst fear was that the legit Zen monks at Yokoji would see me and Wes as the same. I had to distinguish myself in their eyes from this milk-chugger. I had to be better than him, more sophisticated. One day, Wes and I and a few of the monks were hanging out in the kitchen, and Wes said that the day before, he’d been concentrating on Mu, and he had some kind of mind-blowing experience where everything was dark and empty and Mu was everything and he fell into it. I was so jealous. How could big, goofy Wes have achieved this state already, after a few weeks, and not me!

That was more than 20 years ago, and I still remember that moment in the kitchen, listening to Wes, feeling my envy. It got deep into me and grew into something bigger, something that lasted. I think this is one of the reasons we don’t generally talk about our zazen experiences in public. What if other people compare themselves to us? What if they feel jealous, or on the other hand, what if their zazen is better and they feel arrogant?

A subtler danger is that, by describing something aloud, I make it into a thing. I fix that memory, like a sticking a needle through an insect specimen. I took that risk by describing my samadhi to you just now. Now my memory of that final night has been permanently changed by describing it to you. It’s changed and it’s hardened.

And you know what? Life goes on. I get jealous sometimes, or self-satisfied other times, and my practice continues and I get over it. I have nice experiences, and then they end, and I’m disappointed, and I get over that too. Jealousy and comparison and attachment to past experiences, these are just natural human feelings, and I don’t think we have to be so concerned about protecting ourselves from them. The benefits of talking about practice openly might outweigh these risks.


Sometimes I have arguments with Dogen. The arguments are a bit one-sided, because I’m angry and he isn’t, plus he’s been dead for 800 years. He sits there in his black robe. He has a pale round baby face and a little rosebud mouth, like in that one painting I’ve seen of him. He’ll start with some innocuous instruction, like: “Sit stably in samadhi.”

I say: I’ve been trying for half my life and hardly ever achieved stable samadhi. The best sit I ever had was after a year in a monastery, do I have go back to the monastery?

Dogen: There is no reason to leave your own seat at home and take a meaningless trip to the dusty places of other countries. The treasure house will open of itself, and you will be able to use it at will.

Me: I’ve been waiting more than 20 years and the treasure house seems mostly closed. I definitely can’t “use it at will,” I have so little control. Time swiftly passes by and opportunity is lost. I need to change something before I waste any more time.

Dogen: How can we distinguish practice from enlightenment? The Vehicle of Reality is in the Self. Why should we waste our efforts trying to attain it?

Me: At this point I’ve long since given up on “attaining enlightenment.” I’m just trying to be a bit more enlightened from moment to moment, and I’m looking for a meditation practice that supports me better. Surely it’s ok to experiment a bit and see if something works better?

Dogen: Learn to step back, turning the light inwards, illuminating the Self. Doing so, your body and mind will drop off naturally, and Original Self will manifest. If you wish to attain suchness, practice suchness immediately.

Me: This is beautiful. I really mean it, Dogen, I appreciate your beautiful poetic writing. But it’s not very helpful for me. Can you break it down at all?

Dogen: Think of not-thinking. How do you think of not-thinking? Beyond thinking. This is the essential way of zazen. The zazen which I am talking about is not step-by-step meditation. It is simply the dharma gate of peace and comfort. It is the practice-enlightenment of the ultimate Way.

Me: But it doesn’t feel like “the dharma gate of peace and comfort” most of the time. Instead, it’s been a dharma gate of struggle and frustration.

At this point Dogen sits in serene and irritating silence.


I’ve felt quite stuck in my zazen. Some retreats are deep, some are just “whatever,” some I spend in awful anxious obsession. I can’t predict or control it. And my half-hour morning meditation has just been groggy mind-wandering; I wonder if it’s worth it or if it would be better to just sleep in.

I’ve been on this disappointing plateau for many years, and I stopped asking teachers about it at some point. I got embarrassed to admit how stuck I was. I teach meditation to other people, I give dharma talks, I’ve been doing this so long, I’m ashamed to admit how little I still understand about how my mind works and how to guide my own zazen. And also I’d gotten the impression that everything I’ve just said isn’t Zen—I’m not supposed to evaluate my progress, I’m not supposed to want progress, I’m not supposed to want my zazen to be a certain way!

So this June, my partner Keishin and I did a weeklong retreat with a company called Jhourney, which is trying to teach people to reach specific states in meditation. This company was founded a few years ago in San Francisco by some young guys who’d been practicing jhana meditation. The jhanas are levels of meditative absorption, they’re described in a few suttas of the Pali canon, written 2000 years ago. There are eight levels of jhana, give or take. In the Mahāsaccaka Sutta, Buddha says,

I recall once, when my father was working, and I was sitting in the cool shade of a rose-apple tree, then—quite secluded from sensuality, secluded from unskillful mental qualities—I entered and remained in the first jhana: rapture and pleasure born from seclusion, accompanied by directed thought and evaluation. Could that be the path to Awakening? Then following on that memory came the realization: That is the path to Awakening.

In recent years some Western Buddhists have become very interested in bringing the jhanas to the West and learning or rediscovering how to enter these states reliably. And these young San Francisco guys had been studying under some teachers, comparing notes with each other about what sort of meditation techniques worked more or less well to enter the jhana states, and they decided to create a company to teach the jhanas to others. That’s Jhourney.

So, doing this Jhourney retreat was a chance to get out of my zazen rut. Jhourney is fairly scientific. They say a certain percentage of people on their retreats reach the first jhana or the second jhana. They run experiments with different methods for teaching the jhanas, and they measure their retreats’ outcomes and try to optimize the path to the jhanas. That seemed really attractive to me, just a fresh way of doing things. It seemed like the opposite of Zen. Plus, I could walk into a room of strangers and admit how frustrated and stupid I feel, because I didn’t care what they thought of me.

The Jhourney retreat was, indeed, the opposite of Zen. We were handed a 120-page instruction book the first night of retreat. Most of the retreat was unscheduled free time, but we had a lot to do in that time. We had to read most of the instruction book in the first few days. The book told us to try a bunch of experiments on ourselves and write down the results. Like, when I recite a metta mantra, does it produce a feeling somewhere in my body? What’s that like? What about if I visualize a tree of compassion growing from my chest, or if I just smile? How is it different to sit or lie down, to be silent or listen to music, to sit for 45 minutes, or an hour, or more? We tried all these experiments in our meditations, figured out what seemed to work to produce a peaceful, openhearted, effortless feeling. That feeling is the ember that can grow into a roaring fire, and that’s the first jhana. Once we could produce that feeling, we kept refining and experimenting and writing down the results.

We had regular interviews with “coaches,” asking what we tried, how well it worked, and what we were going to try next. One time I meditated with my coach for 20 minutes, narrating my experience moment by moment, while she directed me on how to use my attention and my imagination to steer the meditation.

The retreat was mostly silent. But partway through, the retreat managers split us into groups of four to have dinner together and discuss our experiences with the other participants. We were encouraged to say what we’d experienced, whether it was a jhana or something else, and swap tips about how to go deeper in meditation. I have to admit I was really apprehensive about this—what if someone else has gone much deeper than I have, will I be really jealous and disappointed? What if that person is some meditation noobie who doesn’t deserve to succeed more than me, someone who got to some profound jhana from beginner’s luck? If that happens I’ll feel like a fool. It’ll be Wes in the kitchen all over again. Luckily I had reached Jhana One a couple times before this dinner, and that was on par with the other people, so I felt good about myself. But I noticed how the fear of being jealous was a big deal for me!

Talking in detail about what we’d tried and how it was going, it was helpful. And it brought us together. On sesshin, it’s easy for me to assume that some people have it all figured out. If you’re sitting still and upright, I’m guessing you’ve got zazen figured out. I am also sitting still and upright, and my zazen is a catastrophe, but I assume I’m the only one who’s struggling. But if we talk about it, and I hear that you’re struggling too, I’m not alone anymore.

On the Jhourney retreat, the coaches set up laptops in a separate room, where we could go watch videos of past participants describing the jhanas they reached. I did not go watch the videos, again because of my fear of jealousy. And also because, towards the end of the retreat, I was enjoying meditation so much I didn’t want to spend my free time doing much else.

One of the goals of the Jhourney retreat is to enter a jhana. The jhanas for most people go in a certain order, starting at Jhana One, and indeed the jhana that I entered matched the description of Jhana One. I was following the instructions: I relaxed and I smiled a little bit, I welcomed all feelings and thoughts that arose. Whereas usually in zazen I try to drop my thoughts, and let feelings come and go, with jhana meditation I welcomed each thought and feeling, I invited them to join my meditation. I focused on a feeling in my body, Jhourney calls this an “openhearted feeling,” for me it’s like a bittersweet heartache. It was the bittersweet joy and relief at finally being compassionate with myself.

I sat like this for an hour and a half, occasionally shifting position, but I didn’t want to get up. At some point there was a warm achy swelling feeling in my heart, on the actual left side of my chest. I understood for the first time why all our old phrases for emotions talk about the “heart lifting” or “heart bursting,” for the first time I noticed that these feelings are literally centered in my heart. My whole body tingled, I felt joyful and excited, my heart raced, and I felt like I was being lifted off the floor by the lightness of my joy.

Of course, as soon as this happened, I started to wonder: How do I make this last? This is clearly Jhana One, how do I progress through this to Jhana Two? And I lost it, like a kid who gets so excited the first time they balance on a bike that they fall right off. I entered Jhana One a few times over the retreat, and I found it fascinating and exciting. After so many years, something totally new was happening in my meditation.


So what? So I figured out how to make a nice tingling feeling, big whoop.

Jhourney has a slogan, something like: come for the jhanas and stay for the transformed relationship with your emotions.

Well, now that I’m back home, my zazen is transformed. I’ve gone from sitting half an hour each morning to a full hour. And the hour feels easy. Instead of resisting distracting thoughts, or coldly watching them pass by, I actually embrace them as a welcome addition to the whole messy total. Like, if I catch myself thinking about rock climbing, I just think, “I love rock climbing,” and welcome it in to quietly join the meditation. If I have a Radiohead song stuck in my head, I think, “May Radiohead be happy,” and I welcome Thom Yorke and the band to join the meditation. They usually quiet down after a while. But I’m not trying to make them be quiet, I’m welcoming them in.

Zazen isn’t a battle against my mind anymore, so I enjoy it, and find it much less effortful. I haven’t returned to Jhana One, which is a little disappointing, I was hoping to continue to later jhanas, which sound much more valuable than just tingly excitement. That’s ok, I’ll keep working on it and trying things.

Since jhanas have gotten more attention in the West in the last few years, there’s been a common reaction among Western Buddhists: trying to achieve a jhana state is striving, and it will only reinforce the ego. It’s counterproductive, it’s a symptom of the exact thing Buddha said is the source of suffering: thirst, trishna, the desire for things to be different from how they are.

It’s funny when Zen people have this reaction. It’s funny because jhana in Pali is the same as the Sanskrit word dhyana, which in Chinese is pronounced Chan, which in Japanese is pronounced Zen. We are the jhana school. It’s funny, too, that some Zen people are allergic to saying there are levels of meditation, when our koan curriculum is hundreds of ordered, numbered, pass-fail exams. Is it more dangerous to have meditation goals than koan goals?

The key to entering jhana is, in my experience, to very gently try, and not be too attached to the outcome. It’s like pissing—it’s learning a way of relaxing and letting in the joy, or letting out the piss or whatever.

The zazen instructions I’ve read have said to relax, of course, but the missing part was for me to enjoy letting the mind be as it is. The stereotype is that jhana meditation is about striving for a goal. But it’s paradoxical, like so many things in Buddhism: the more I accept my mind as it is, the more I welcome all my thoughts and emotions as they naturally arise, the less effort I make to change how I feel, the more easily I fall into a jhana.

After the Jhourney retreat I had dokusan, and a VZ teacher told me that the way I’m meditating now, after the retreat, sounds perfectly compatible with Zen. I won’t name the teacher in case they’re listening to me now and changing their mind, concluding that in fact I’ve fallen into heresy and they disown me. But I also think it’s compatible with Zen —I think the content is mostly the same, but the teaching method is totally different, and it’s what I needed to get out of my rut. That’s just upaya, skillful means: the message was better tailored for me.


Right now, I think there’s a middle path. On one side of the path, you can fall into obsessive desire to achieve something in meditation. You can compare yourself with others and get jealous. You can get attached to an experience in the past and disappointed by your experience now. That’s a danger that lots of Zen texts warn us against, and it’s a real danger. But also, I’ve found that I can get jealous and attached and disappointed, and it isn’t fatal. Eventually I get over it.

But what about the danger on the other side of the middle path? What about giving up, deciding that I’m not supposed to want to get better at meditation, that I can’t get better at meditation, that my groggy mind-wandering is the best there is? I’ve fallen down on that side of the path and spent years there, wasting thousands of hours sitting on the cushion with very little benefit. I now think it’s helpful to evaluate my meditation. After a period of zazen, do I feel relaxed, happy, focused? Do I enjoy it, do I look forward to it? Is it getting easier, more enjoyable, over the years? How does the rest of my day go after an hour of zazen in the morning?

There are dangers in asking these questions. I could get so focused on the relative that I forget the absolute—like, thinking that if my zazen doesn’t feel good, it isn’t the manifestation of Buddha mind. I can hear Dogen saying, “You are endowed with the essential functioning of the Buddha Way, why pursue worthless pleasures that are like sparks from a flint?” And that’s a great point, Dogen, we should remember that this mind has always been the Buddha mind, there is nothing to strive for and no one who can attain it. But also, it’s helpful for me to set some goals, and evaluate my progress, and distinguish what works and what doesn’t. It’s like the foot before and the foot behind in walking.

Besides, the old man backs me up! Buddha said in the Kalama Sutta, that we should evaluate various practices and behaviors for ourselves. If they lead to harm and suffering, abandon them; if they lead to welfare and happiness, enter and remain in them. Don’t just follow tradition or a teacher or scripture.


Why did it take me so long to admit my frustration with meditation, and try something new? I take responsibility for this, I’m a perfectionist, and I care what other people think of me. I get embarrassed if I don’t understand something, so I hide it.

I also think that, for someone like me, there are some dangers lurking in Zen specifically. A lot of the old koans look like competitions between monks. They’re one-upping each other, they’re pretentious, they’re quoting sutras and Chinese literature, they’re hitting each other. Nansen killed a cat because no one could answer his question. Gutei cut off his servant’s finger because his servant didn’t understand. And then the commentaries compare them to generals and swordsmen, or tigers and dragons. I like this fierceness, but it can make Zen into a competition where I don’t want to admit my weakness. I think this competitive, even violent streak, has passed from China through Japan and the samurai era all the way to today. Even at the fuzzy cuddly Village Zendo, we have this aspect. So if you’re like me, check yourself: are you stuck in a rut, because you’re afraid to admit when you don’t get it?

When I was embarrassed to talk openly with teachers, at least I had spiritual friends. The Buddha was a big fan of spiritual friendship. In the Kalyāṇamitta Sutta there’s a story where Buddha’s student Ananda says, “I’ve heard that good friends are half of the spiritual life.” Buddha replies, “No, Ananda, no, that’s not true at all. Good friends are the whole of the spiritual life. Someone with good friends can expect to develop and cultivate the noble eightfold path.” In other Pali suttas the Buddha says that monastics and householders all benefit from spiritual friendship, from kalyanamitta, that if a friend has attained a greater understanding on some subject of the dharma, we should engage our friend in discussion to learn what they know.

For me, spiritual friendships with my peers has been essential. With teachers it’s hard for me to really express my doubt and confusion, to say, “I hate this entire book of 100 koans,” “My zazen is a catastrophe,” “I wasted every minute of that sesshin thinking about work,” “I passed that koan by imitating a car horn, but I still don’t understand it.” But with my close friends it’s easy to be real. It’s a relief to admit what a mess my practice is, how I doubt myself and the practice. I find out that most people are going through this kind of thing, at least the ones I talk to, and I’m not alone and there’s nothing wrong with me. And once I’ve calmed down a bit, hope returns. I can imagine ways to change my practice, to improve it.


Let me close with some caveats and clarifications and qualifications about the jhanas, and about Zen silences. I’m not saying everyone should practice jhana meditation. I am saying that if you feel stuck, try something new, maybe try some techniques from other traditions. I’m not claiming that the teachers and ancestors created all these Zen silences deliberately. I think they mostly arise subtly and implicitly in the community. I’m not claiming these silences are absolute: sometimes we break them, different people are bolder or more cautious. I’m not even claiming they’re all worthless and we should break them: We should be cautious talking about our practice with others, we should be mindful of Right Speech. We should be careful talking about goals.

Here’s what I’m saying: Real Zen is freedom. Freedom to break silences, or maintain them, according to circumstances. It’s a human instinct to conform to the group, but Zen is liberation from that conformity, freedom to go with the flow and to go against it.

As for me, I’m going to talk more with my teachers, more with my friends, about how my practice is really going. Intimately, in detail. I won’t pretend anymore, or hide my confusion and my curiosity.

I hope you all talk more openly with your spiritual friends, and trust your own wisdom, especially when it doesn’t seem to conform.

There’s a story about when Buddha was dying, he was talking with his beloved student Ananda, who was probably panicking a bit at the thought of life without his teacher. Ananda asked how the sangha should continue without the Buddha. Buddha said everyone in the sangha must be islands unto themselves, or perhaps lamps unto themselves. The Pali word dipa is the same for island and lamp, so maybe he’s saying we must all be our own light to illuminate the path, or all be our own islands, safe in the flood of samsara.

He said, in the Mahaparinibbana Sutta:

I am frail, Ananda, old, aged, far gone in years. This is my eightieth year, and my life is spent. Even as an old cart, Ananda, is held together with much difficulty, so this body is kept going only with supports.

Therefore, Ananda, be islands unto yourselves, refuges unto yourselves, seeking no external refuge; with the truth as your island, the truth as your refuge, seeking no other refuge.


Photos © A. Jesse Jiryu Davis.

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Posted by Mozilla

144.0a1 / New / Bug 1982974

You can now close a Picture-in-Picture window without pausing the video. Press Shift + Click on the close button or use Shift + Esc to exit while keeping playback uninterrupted.

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Posted by Dawn

A row of adorable, fuzzy baby ducklings sitting on a log in the edge of a body of water.

This is the fourth blog post in a series about open source project governance, so you should consider pausing and reading the other posts about why governance is important, defining governance, and pathways to leadership before reading this one.

Defining your governance / decision-making processes along with pathways to leadership are key to creating an intentional culture for your project that encourages participation and contributions from others. Having a scope, vision, and values (sometimes called a charter) for your project can help people understand what is / is not in scope for your project to encourage people to work on contributions that are most likely to be accepted and avoid wasting time on contributions that aren’t aligned with the project. This also helps to avoid issues and misunderstandings later by helping align the expectations of all community members. By setting expectations and clearly documenting them, you set the stage for creating a healthy and sustainable project over time.

However, just documenting your governance process and setting expectations in writing isn’t enough. You should also be role modeling good behavior and helping others understand what behavior is appropriate within your project. It’s important to remember that tolerating bad behavior unwittingly sets the expectation that this behavior is acceptable in your project, which can drive new contributors away, so addressing concerns promptly before they can get out of control or become a crisis helps set an intentional culture and improve sustainability of your project. A code of conduct is a good starting point for these conversations, but it’s also important to think about how you plan to approach code of conduct issues and how things like remediation and education can be a first step to help people meet the expectations of your projects, instead of taking an enforcement first approach. 

Unfortunately, some projects eventually run into issues that can’t be resolved via remediation or education, and in these cases, it may be necessary to remove someone from your project. Your governance documents should have a provision for involuntarily removing someone from your project, even if that person is in a top leadership position. I watched a project struggle with bad behavior for months while waiting for a steering committee member’s term to end because they didn’t have a process for removing that person. We always hope that we never need to use the process to remove someone, but you’ll be glad that you put it in place now if you ever need it in the future.

Having your ducks in a row with robust governance documentation that incorporates your code of conduct, charter (or similar statement of mission, scope, and values), and includes clear processes for dealing with conflict can help make your project more sustainable over time. 

Resources:

Photo by Mike’s Birds on Flickr

Just one thing: 19 August 2025

Aug. 19th, 2025 06:07 am
[personal profile] jazzyjj posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished!

Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
[syndicated profile] thecityny_feed

Posted by Jonathan Custodio

BronxNet, the community media center, announced on Tuesday that it laid off nine of its 69 staffers on June 18, citing a decline in subscribers and public investment and warning it might have to shut its facility in the East Bronx soon.  

The press release announcing the cuts to the public affairs and education TV station described only as “more than 10% of its workforce,” came hours  after THE CITY inquired about reports of layoffs. According to sources familiar with the situation, the group included producers on the network’s shows along with its marketing department. 

The move threatens an organization that is meant to serve as a public benefit. Congress in the Public Telecommunications Act of 1992 required cable companies to allocate a percentage of their profits toward public access channels. That spurred the creation of networks including BronxNet, the Manhattan News Network and BRIC Arts Media in Brooklyn — all of them depending on cable for much of their revenue. Today in the age of cord-cutting, that’s a perilous proposition.  

These organizations employ on-air talent, camera operators and production staff who work on local TV shows while serving as a training ground and entry point for burgeoning media professionals. BronxNet is one of the only media organizations to host political debates focused on elections in the borough, while also interviewing candidates for elected office. 

BRIC eliminated 16 jobs last February, leading to programming cuts and the resignation of one executive, arts publication Hyperallegic reported. BronxNet said in its release that there have been similar cuts at Manhattan News Network. Neither organization immediately responded to a request for comment. 

While BronxNet receives municipal grants as well as capital support from Bronx Borough President Vanessa Gibson, it is largely funded through a franchise agreement with Altice, the cable giant that inherited that obligation from Cablevision when it bought that company in 2015. 

That agreement ended in July 2020, but Ray Legendre, a spokesperson with the city’s Office of Technology and Innovation, which oversees franchise agreements, said that a holdover provision of that agreement was enacted that continues past its expiration date. 

Legendre did not explain why a new franchise agreement is not in place. 

According to the existing agreement, BronxNet nets $1.40 for every subscriber up to 265,000 subscribers, and gets similar funding through a separate agreement with Verizon, which operates FiOS. BronxNet declined to share subscriber numbers, citing a confidentiality agreement. 

“Optimum has maintained its commitments and obligations under its cable franchise including continued financial support for BronxNet,” Rafaella Mazella, spokesperson for Optimum, owned by Altice, told THE CITY in a written statement. “We remain fully committed and ready to renew our agreement with the City.”

BronxNet, which operates three studios after opening a new one in the South Bronx in 2023, reported a $3 million loss in 2023 financial statements, generating $4.6 million in revenue against $7.6 million in expenses. Its income from cable for that year was $4.2 million, a steady decrease from $4.5 million the year before and $5.1 million in 2021. 

BronxNet also faces the potential closure of one of its public service studio locations, at Mercy University in the East Bronx, according to Monday’s press release. 

As funding has dwindled, BronxNet and similar organizations have looked to state lawmakers for help. But the legislature has yet to advance two separate bills that would pour funds into local media. 

The Community Media Reinvestment Act would help fund local media via a tax on satellite broadcast and streaming services, while the Local Journalism Sustainability Act would achieve a similar goal by providing tax credits to consumers for subscriptions to local news outlets. Both bills have failed to advance past legislative committees. 

Spearheaded by its marquee show, BronxTalk, hosted by Gary Axelbank, who was inducted into the Bronx Walk of Fame earlier this year, BronxNet offers diverse programming with hosts interviewing guests about a variety of issues affecting the borough. 

However, that lineup of programming wasn’t able to keep buck the trend of declining cable subscriptions in favor of streaming services, as one person who was laid off noted. 

“There were always subtle hints that there was no money,” they said. 

Our nonprofit newsroom relies on donations from readers to sustain our local reporting and keep it free for all New Yorkers. Donate to THE CITY today.

The post BronxNet Community TV Cuts 13 Staffers as Cable Cash Dries Up appeared first on THE CITY - NYC News.

gimmighoulcoins: (misc | notes)
[personal profile] gimmighoulcoins posting in [site community profile] dw_community_promo
the banner has the image of a blank notebook and a pencil on a white background, with a bullet point list that reads: Pick a character. Pick a theme set. Write 50 one-sentence fic. The title of the community, 1character, is displayed under the list.

Description: Pick one character as your focus in this fic writing community in the style of [livejournal.com profile] 1sentence, choose from 1 of the 6 theme sets, and make your claim - then, write 50 one-sentence fic inspired by the prompts to share on the comm! This is an ongoing activity, open to writers for all fandoms, as well as original characters. Claims are good for three months, and you can get an extension of one month if needed.
Schedule: Ongoing
Links:
On Dreamwidth: [community profile] 1character

My shop is FULL!

Aug. 19th, 2025 02:54 am
elisem: (Default)
[personal profile] elisem
 Well, OK, it would still let me put up more things. But I have reached my goal of having 300 pieces in the shop for my birthday month sale. Whee!  Here is the shop:

www.etsy.com/shop/LionessElise

300 pieces is a lot. It was a big goal. A very big goal. But I am there.

To celebrate, yes, I did put up one more piece. Its name is a line from a poem of mine.  It can be seen here:

www.etsy.com/listing/4354661133/some-poems-are-strong-enough-to-bear

If you want to do something nice for my birthday, please point people at the sale, yes? It would be a great goodness. Also, there will be more markdowns coming, because you know how I get. <3
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Posted by Vu

Hi everyone, I just got back from a whirlwind summer in Japan and Vietnam, where I—and I didn’t think this would happen again for me—fell in love. With not having to work. Long walks on the beach—without answering emails. Deep conversations late into the night—but not about cashflow issues and revenues projections. It was magical;...
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Posted by Lisa Herzog

Human beings are creatures who can describe their actions at various levels. Elizabeth Anscombe has famously introduced the example of a man who moves his arm, to pump water, to poison the inhabitants of a house, to overthrow a regime, to bring peace.* You can play with this case, or others, to create all kinds of variations: which of these descriptions does a person know of? Which elements could be outsourced to others, who might not know other descriptions? This is the stuff of comedies, tragedies, and detective stories. And arguably, it matters immensely when it comes to the introduction of AI and other digital technologies into our work.

I was reminded of this basic insight from the philosophy of action, about the multiple descriptions under which our actions can fall, when, the other day, I had to do the proofs for a paper. In the past, I had seen proofing as an act of care – a loving gaze that spots the last mistakes and makes the last improvements before a text goes out into the world. Not the most exciting part of academic work – the arguments have been made, after all – but a meaningful closure of the sometimes bumpy road to publication. I’m the generation who always got pdfs; generations before me did it on paper.

Not any more in the new digital era! Now you’re invited to log into a system, where you’re first bombarded by “author queries.” To be sure, some of them are important consistency checks, especially about bibliographical issues. I imagine that there must be people somewhere (India?) who do the checks and insert the queries. But then, there were also the things that seemed purely AI-generated, because no human being would have asked such stupid questions. I was asked to insert things into fields I could not change, and to provide information that was already there. The AI, if it was one, had added stuff that was in contradiction with the referencing system, and even changed the text when it apparently did not recognize words, or thought they were too obscure. And in one particularly strange incident, someone or something had inserted the words “is hard” after a journal title (“Implementing employee interest along the Machine Learning Pipeline”), making me wonder whether this was a poor overworked “ghostworker” who wanted to send me a message. Almost every time I made a change in the bibliography, it ended up not looking what it was supposed to look like, but the predefined, automated form did not give me a chance to correct it. I had to play many rounds of tetris to calm myself down, to get through all the queries, and to actually reread, and correct, the text.

What’s so interesting about this first-world-problem of Western academics, you might ask. Well, for one thing, it seems that commercial publishers are getting more and more involved in using ghost work, but then presumably also use the texts to feed new AIs. This adds to the many arguments for moving away from commercial publishing, but that case is normatively overdetermined anyway – it’s a collective action problem to get there.

But what I here want to focus on is how this use of AI relates to the meaning of work – or rather, undermines it in a rather specific way.

In a strange coincidence, on the same day that I did these proofs I also read about “action identification theory.” This is a psychological theory from the 1980s, which used experiments to understand at what level human beings describe their own actions, explicitly referring to Anscombe and other philosophers of action.** Through various experiments, the researchers explored – and largely confirmed – various theoretical claims, e.g. that people typically have a certain description of their action in mind that they use to guide their behavior, that when higher- and lower-level descriptions are available, they tend towards the higher-level description (and can be influenced into accepting different higher-level descriptions if they only have lower-level descriptions available), and that it is when the description in terms of high levels cannot be maintained that people switch to lower-level descriptions to make sense of what they do.

Applied to proofing: I can think of it in terms of a higher level description (“give the text a last polish”, or even something like “try to contribute to standards of clarity, precision, and elegance in academic writing”), or I can think of it in terms of lower level descriptions (“check that the formatting of the bibliography is consistent,” “replace a word,” etc.). And here is the thing that action identification theory holds (and it’s consistent with my n=1 experience): If I get interrupted in my action while I’m in the higher-level mode, because something doesn’t go as expected, then I’ll switch to lower-level descriptions. One funny experiment the researchers did to confirm this mechanism was to let participants drink coffee either from a normal cup or from “an unwieldly cup weighing approximately 0.5 kg.” People in the second group chose lower-level descriptions for describing what they were doing than those in the first group.

To broaden the focus to AI use more generally, the question is this: does it support us in understanding our actions at a higher level of description – or does it constantly interrupt us (or make mistakes) and thereby bring us back to the unnerving nitty-gritty details that make us forget the higher-level descriptions and make the work far more tedious than it would have to be?

I’m not an expert on AI, but I am pretty sure that it could be programmed in both ways. I can imagine a chatbot for proofing that would remind me that this is an important step in giving the last polish to my article, before it sees the light of the day, and help me in last-minute improvements of inelegant sentences. It could bring out my intrinsic motivation to deliver a good piece of work, and if this AI was run by a not-for-profit academic publisher, I would also not have to worry that it was just cynically trying to do so for some other purpose (e.g. getting good prose that other AI systems can get trained on). What we get at the moment, instead, is Taylorism of the worst form: the tasks broken down into tiniest units, and with patronizing comments about what you are supposed to do next that interrupt the workflow even more. The only redeeming feature is the open comment function, where one can explain if something doesn’t work, in the hope that a real human being takes care of it – but presumably, that’s something that companies would want to abolish in the future, because it’s more expansive than fully automated processes.

Why do companies go for the latter and not the former? You may be tempted to shout “capitalism,” and it’s hard to deny. But then again, why couldn’t one have even profit-oriented companies that try to work with the former mechanism? I guess apart from there being a cartel in the market for academic publishing, it’s simply the mentality of corporations in which micromanagement according is the rule. And it’s the fact that publishers are not interested in their own product per se. For them, an article has to fulfil formal criteria, and something like “beautifully written” is probably simply not part of the criteria. And there may also be all kinds of ulterior motives such as improving their literature databases or, as mentioned above, preparing texts in ways that allow for even fuller automation, or for the training of future AIs.

Proofing systems are only a miniscule part of the overall AI revolution, and if these problems existed only there, we could all learn to live with them, whine a bit, and it wouldn’t really matter. But I worry that these issues are might be typical for AI use on a much broader scale. They might take joy and meaning out of the work of the many individuals whose work is algorithmically managed, not only in a side task that happens once in a while, but in all of their work tasks, day in, day out.

Now, if you think that people only work to make a living, then this is not a problem – and insofar as it allows for productivity increases, it might even, theoretically, provide space for wage increases (whether companies provide those, is another matter…). I’m in the camp of those who think that many people see more in their work than a source of income, and that they should have a right to good, decent, maybe even meaningful work. From that perspective, this new Taylorism is deeply worrying. To be sure, many jobs were soul-crushing already before AI – but it can only get worse, and this Taylorism will probably eat its way into many jobs that were, before AI, still reasonably decent.

Does this make me a Luddite? No, I’m not anti technology. I’m anti technology-that-gets-used-only-for-extraction, in the sense that I want to see human workers put first, over profit motives, and I want them to have a say in how AI gets used in their work. And that includes the question of how the actions people do in their work can be described, and whether they can draw meaning from higher-level descriptions. To be sure, this question goes far beyond AI. But with AI taking over (or “helping us” with) more and more of the things we do, it’s all the more urgent to find better answers to it.

 

 

 

 * G.E.M. Anscombe, 1957, Intention. Oxford: Blackwell.

 ** The seminal article seems to be Robin R. Vallacher and Daniel M. Wegner, “What Do People Think They’re Doing? Action Identification and Human Behavior.” Psychological Review 94(1), 3-15. I tried to find information about replication (or failure thereof) for this theory, but did not come across anything.

[syndicated profile] thecityny_feed

Posted by Greg B. Smith

Far behind in the latest polls, Mayor Eric Adams is once again suing the city Campaign Finance Board (CFB), the agency that keeps denying his requests for millions of dollars of public matching funds due to what it sees as his continuing failure to address its concerns about his questionable campaign fundraising tactics.

The new case, filed Friday in Brooklyn federal court, is the mayor’s second lawsuit against the board since May. The first case was dismissed July 11 by Brooklyn Federal Judge Nicholas Garaufis, who declared the board was justified in denying the campaign’s fund requests over its continued failure to turn over documents the agency has been demanding since last fall regarding dubious donations tied to millions of dollars in public matching funds.

On Friday the new case was initially randomly assigned to Chief Judge Margo Brodie, but by day’s end Monday it was reassigned back to Judge Garaufis.

CFB officials declined to discuss the latest litigation. The board will next vote on matching fund requests in 10 days.

Exhibits attached to the new lawsuit and other court documents make clear that the CFB is aggressively pursuing its investigation of Adams’ 2021 and 2025 mayoral campaigns.

The campaign recently provided the CFB with a list of 31 individuals it claimed to have contacted regarding the board’s ongoing inquiry. Some of those on that list have been recently subpoenaed by the board as part of its investigation, according to sources familiar with the matter.

And last week the board revealed that Erden Arkan, a Brooklyn contractor with ties to the Turkish government who pleaded guilty to raising illegal straw donations for Adams, is cooperating with their investigation and audit of the 2021 and 2025 campaigns. The revelation surfaced as Arkan was sentenced to one-year probation and ordered to pay $18,000 in restitution — the amount of public matching funds triggered by the straw donations he choreographed.

Adams’ reelection campaign has requested more than $4 million in matching funds from the CFB but been repeatedly rebuffed, with the board citing extensive irregularities in his filings.

Both lawsuits against the CFB were filed by Abrams Fensterman, a firm long tied to the Kings County Democratic Committee that once employed Frank Carone, formerly the mayor’s chief of staff and currently serving as senior advisor to Adams’ reelection bid.

The second suit echoed parts of the first, arguing that the Trump Justice Department’s dismissal of Adams’ criminal case in April undercut the CFB’s denial of its request. The board had initially cited federal charges  that the Adams campaign had illegally accepted millions of dollars in matching funds due to illegal “straw” donations.

“Simply put, the CFB’s overbroad application of its own rules makes the agency’s denial of public campaign matching funds to the Adams Campaign completely unlawful and indefensible,” the suit argues.

Judge Garaufis agreed with that part of Adams’ argument, ruling that mere allegations weren’t evidence of campaign finance fraud. But Garaufis nevertheless tossed the suit, embracing the other part of CFB’s defense, agreeing that Adams’ campaigns had failed repeatedly to provide the board investigators with the documentation they demanded.

No Communications from Adams

On Monday Todd Shapiro, Adams’ campaign spokesperson, did not address THE CITY’s question about the second lawsuit winding up before the same judge who shot down the first one. Instead, he insisted that the campaign has again filed suit “to ensure equal treatment under the law.”

“Mayor Adams has complied with all requirements, and there is no legal or factual basis to deny matching funds,” he stated. “Withholding them would violate both the letter and the spirit of the program, which was created to promote fairness and guarantee every New Yorker an equal voice in the democratic process.”

After Judge Garuafis dismissed Adams’ first suit, the campaign’s lawyer, Vito Pitta, provided the CFB with what he described as a “preliminary response” to their questions that consisted of a cache of text messages, almost exclusively between Brianna Suggs, the campaign’s chief fundraiser, and Rana Abassova, a mayoral aide and volunteer to the mayor’s 2021 campaign. In prior correspondence, Pitta had claimed no such communications could be found.

That “preliminary response” did not include any communications directly to or from Adams. Instead Pitta stated the mayor has in his possession evidence collected by the Manhattan federal prosecutors who brought the indictment against him, but claimed he is barred from releasing them under a protective order that remains in effect — even after the case against Adams was dismissed.

The indictment references several instances in which Adams is directly communicating with Suggs and Abbasova about specific fundraisers.

It also documents the mayor’s direct communications with Tolib Mansurov, a Brooklyn contractor with ties to the Uzbekistan government who has admitted participating in a straw donor scheme that raised $10,000 for Adams’ 2021 campaign. Mohammed Bahi, a mayoral aide who helped orchestrate those donations, pleaded guilty to conspiracy last week. 

The campaign’s response also did not include communications requested by CFB from several other Adams’ campaign volunteers and mayoral aides, including his former liaison to the Asian community, Winnie Greco. In April, the board made a long list of demands related to fundraisers the CFB was investigating.

The campaign listed 31 individuals they’d contacted about the requested information, but claimed only “some” of those contacted had provided documents, others said they had no responsive records, still others did not respond to the campaign’s request. One declined to provide materials “on advice of counsel.”

“The Campaign’s response to the CFB’s requests is therefore incomplete,” Joseph Gallagher, the CFB’s general counsel wrote in his Aug. 7 response to the campaign. That response was part of a 16-page explanation for the board’s decision the previous day denying the campaign’s latest request for a public match.

The mayor’s battle to obtain a crucial cache of public matching funds comes as his campaign struggles to gain traction. In one poll released last month, Adams managed to poll below the Republican candidate, Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa, 9% to Sliwa’s 18%. Both are below frontrunner and Democratic nominee Zohran Mamadani (39%) and former Gov. Andrew Cuomo (21%), with 13% undecided.

Our nonprofit newsroom relies on donations from readers to sustain our local reporting and keep it free for all New Yorkers. Donate to THE CITY today.

The post Eric Adams Tries Yet Again to Score Public Matching Funds appeared first on THE CITY - NYC News.

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Posted by Jeanmarie Evelly

“New York City is investing billions in workforce development, yet continues to overlook three of its most powerful, scalable, and community-rooted workforce engines.”

adult literacy classes
An adult education class at the St. Agnes branch of the New York Public Library in January 2020. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)
Opinion

New York City is investing billions in workforce development, yet continues to overlook three of its most powerful, scalable, and community-rooted workforce engines: the arts, public libraries, and the Summer Youth Employment Program (SYEP).

Each of these systems already trains, supports, and connects tens of thousands of New Yorkers to opportunity, often more equitably and effectively than traditional pipelines. But all remain structurally excluded from policy frameworks, underfunded in city budgets, and siloed from one another.

To build an inclusive, future-ready workforce system, New York must stop treating these pillars as ancillary and instead embed them as core infrastructure.

The arts as economic infrastructure

The arts are rarely treated as a serious industry, even though they generate over $10.5 billion in economic output and support more than 72,000 jobs each year across performance, design, education, and media. These jobs build transferable skills in communication, project management, and digital production, feeding sectors from tourism to technology.

And yet the institutions that train and sustain this talent, like community arts groups, public schools, and nonprofit cultural hubs, remain chronically underfunded and excluded from workforce strategies.

This exclusion is inefficient. Arts organizations are often the first employers for young creatives and anchor institutions in local economies. But they face late payments, unstable contracts, and a lack of multi-year funding that undermines job quality and limits growth. Recent federal cuts to the National Endowment for the Arts and Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) have deepened the crisis, forcing programs to shut down and jobs to disappear. Every dollar lost in the arts weakens not just cultural jobs but also adjacent sectors like hospitality, education, and media.

The Workforce Development Agenda for New York offers a policy path forward: integrate the arts into education, economic mobility, and sector strategies. That means recognizing teaching artists as part of the youth workforce ecosystem, placing young people in SYEP jobs within the arts tied to credentials, and including cultural organizations in digital equity and infrastructure planning.

The arts already contribute to workforce development, it’s time for policy to catch up.

Libraries: public access points to economic opportunity

Public libraries are the most accessible, trusted, and cost-effective workforce entry points in New York City. They offer free internet, resume help, digital skills training, job search tools, and credentialing, without eligibility requirements, stigma, or gatekeeping. For many New Yorkers, libraries are the only doorway into the labor market.

Yet libraries are still misclassified as cultural luxuries. Budget cuts have slashed hours, delayed repairs, and reduced staff, even as demand for their workforce services rises. The loss of federal IMLS funds threatens to eliminate programs that support adult literacy, job training, and digital equity, services that directly advance the city’s economic development goals.

Libraries fill in the systemic gaps. They act as navigators in a fragmented workforce system, helping residents access services across agencies, nonprofits, and programs. The Workforce Development Agenda calls for expanding decentralized Economic Mobility Hubs. Libraries are already doing this work. But without recognition in funding formulas or workforce plans, their impact is capped.

Designating libraries as workforce infrastructure would unlock powerful new outcomes. With modest investment, they could integrate into data systems that track credentialing, job placement, and wage growth. They can also serve as anchors for underrepresented adult job seekers, providing wraparound services in spaces people trust. Libraries are essential, and the city must treat them that way.

Reimagining SYEP as a career pathway

Each year, the Summer Youth Employment Program invests over $240 million to serve more than 90,000 young people—the largest publicly funded youth employment initiative in the country. SYEP is politically resilient, wildly popular, and proven to deliver short-term gains. A 2022 U.S. Department of Labor study found youth selected through SYEP’s lottery earned three times more than peers during the program and were 54 percentage points more likely to be employed that summer.

But by five and nine years later, the benefits vanished. Why? Because SYEP is designed as a summer-only experience, not a structured career pathway. Participants enter, work, and exit—without continued support, credentialing, or connections to longer-term employment.

This approach contradicts the city’s stated goals of building pathways to high-quality, sustainable jobs. The Workforce Development Agenda emphasizes structured choice, longitudinal data, and integration with high-demand sectors. SYEP should be a launchpad, not an island. We must evolve it into a year-round pathway with fall mentorship, winter upskilling, and spring transition support tied to education, apprenticeships, or unsubsidized work. It should align with other youth initiatives like CUNY Reconnect and Career Ready NYC and track long-term outcomes like wage growth, retention, and advancement, not just participation.

In a city where over a quarter of young adults are underemployed or disconnected, we cannot afford a workforce strategy that stops in August. Summer jobs are the beginning, not the end, of career development.

A connected vision for economic mobility

What ties these three systems—arts, libraries, and SYEP—together is not just their scale, but their unique position at the intersection of community, equity, and workforce access. Each reaches people that traditional systems don’t. Each builds real-world skills that are transferable across industries. And each is underleveraged by current policy and funding mechanisms.

We need a more coordinated, data-informed, and equity-centered system. That requires treating the arts as a real industry, libraries as essential infrastructure, and SYEP as a structured pipeline.

These are foundational pillars of a 21st-century workforce strategy. New York City already has the talent, the tools, and the networks. Now it needs the political will and the policy framework to bring them together.

Gregory J. Morris is CEO of the New York City Employment and Training Coalition (NYCETC), the nation’s largest city-based workforce development coalition, representing over 220 organizations.

The post Opinion: Why Arts, Libraries, and Summer Youth Employment Must Be Central to NYC’s Workforce Strategy appeared first on City Limits.

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[personal profile] zwei_hexen
Tally:
Welcome post
Days 1-10 )

Day 11: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] callmesandyk, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] glinda, [profile] goddes47, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] yasaman,[personal profile] ysilme

Day 12: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] callmesandyk, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] glinda, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] yasaman, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 13: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] callmesandyk, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] glinda, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] yasaman, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 14: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] glinda, [profile] goddes47, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] yasaman, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 15: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] callmesandyk, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] glinda, [profile] goddes47, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] yasaman, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 16: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] glinda, [profile] goddes47, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] yasaman, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 17: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] glinda, [profile] goddes47, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 18: [personal profile] china_shop

Let us know if we missed you or if you didn't check in for a while, so we can add you. Of course joining the fun is possible at any point.

~ ~ ~

[personal profile] ysilme here: Rewrote the first draft for a 3SF fill and posted it; about 200 words.

[personal profile] sylvanwitch here: I got stuck-in on more prep work today and on mandatory cybersecurity training, which was assigned today, but I just edited another chapter of The Priest and the Outlaw to count as my words for today.
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Posted by Daniel Parra

Los gobernadores de todo el país ya han comenzado a autorizar el uso de la Guardia Nacional de sus estados para apoyar los esfuerzos federales de control en inmigración.

Guardia Nacional
Soldados estadounidenses de la Guardia Nacional del Distrito de Columbia en Washington, D.C., el 16 de agosto de 2025. (Fotografía del Ejército de los Estados Unidos realizada por el sargento Aaron Troutman).

Desde que era candidato a la presidencia, Donald Trump ha dicho que utilizaría a la Guardia Nacional como parte de los esfuerzos para deportar a millones de migrantes en todo el país.

Además de usar a la Guardia Nacional, que es una fuerza militar de los estados que se integra a la reserva militar, el presidente Trump también ha desplegado al ejército, para hacer cumplir políticas migratorias en la frontera.


En su segundo mandato, el presidente Trump ha desplegado la Guardia Nacional en la frontera sur y recientemente, ordenó el envío de tropas a la capital, Washington D.C., alegando que era necesario para “restablecer el orden público”.

Además de la capital, en las últimas semanas salió a la luz un memorándum al que tuvo acceso el periódico The New York Times, en el que los funcionarios del Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas (ICE por sus siglas en inglés) informaban que la Guardia Nacional sería enviada para ayudar en el “procesamiento de extranjeros”, es decir, ayudaría a los agentes de ICE con tareas administrativas y de oficina, gestión de casos y transporte.

La Guardia Nacional se desplegará en 20 estados como Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Nebraska, Nevada, Carolina del Sur, Texas, Utah, Virginia, entre otros estados.

El Pentágono informó a The Intercept que estas tropas trabajarán bajo el Título 32, lo que significa que estarán controladas por el estado y no por el gobierno federal, a diferencia de lo que ocurre en Los Ángeles y en la frontera sur.

Los gobernadores de todo el país ya han comenzado a autorizar el uso de la Guardia Nacional de sus estados para apoyar los esfuerzos federales de control de la inmigración. 

En Nevada, por ejemplo, el gobernador republicano Joe Lombardo, ha dado un paso que ningún líder de Nevada había dado antes: activar la Guardia Nacional del estado para apoyar las operaciones de ICE.

En Nevada hay alrededor de 200.000 personas indocumentadas, y el estado no cuenta con políticas santuario, sin embargo, en agosto, el gobierno federal lo tildó de “estado santuario”.

Un portavoz de la Guardia Nacional de Nevada dijo al medio The Nevada Independient que la solicitud es para apoyo administrativo, logístico y de oficina, no para tareas policiales, con unos 35 guardias, menos del 1 por ciento del total de la Guardia Nacional del estado, apoyando la solicitud.

Así que para hablar de cómo se está llevando a cabo el despliegue de la Guardia Nacional en Nevada, invitamos a Isabella Aldrete, quien es reportera para The Nevada Independient donde cubre política y cómo ésta afecta a los latinos. 

Más detalles en nuestra conversación a continuación.

Ciudad Sin Límites, el proyecto en español de City Limits, y El Diario de Nueva York se han unido para crear el pódcast “El Diario Sin Límites” para hablar sobre latinos y política. Para no perderse ningún episodio de nuestro pódcast “El Diario Sin Límites” síguenos en Spotify, Soundcloud, Apple Pódcast y Stitcher. Todos los episodios están allí. ¡Suscríbete!

The post PODCAST: ¿Dónde el presidente Trump ha desplegado la Guardia Nacional para hacer tareas de inmigración? appeared first on City Limits.

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Posted by Shifra Dayak, NOTUS

Kathy Hochul seated speaking at panel with her hands out. She is wearing a bright blue blazer, white blouse and silver chain.

This story was produced as part of a partnership between THE CITY and NOTUS, a publication from the nonprofit, nonpartisan Allbritton Journalism Institute.


Several blue states are considering wealth taxes to close the budget holes worsened by President Donald Trump’s sweeping budget law. New York is not among them.

As Democratic legislators and governors in Minnesota and Washington back legislation that would lead to higher taxes on wealthy residents and capital gains in response to federal cuts to Medicaid and SNAP, Gov. Kathy Hochul says she is sticking to her promise to not raise taxes on wealthy New Yorkers.

Her decision highlights a major political dilemma for blue-state governors who will be facing major budget shortfalls due to Trump’s signature legislative item.

“In New York state alone, in the Bronx, in one county in New York City, the estimate is that over 60% of the population is dependent on Medicaid for medical services,” said Hank Sheinkopf, a Democratic strategist based in New York. “So if you cut, where does that get picked up? … There’ll be tremendous political consequences for elected officials who can’t fulfill those cuts.”

Fiscal experts have predicted the bill’s cuts to Medicaid coverage and other federal welfare programs could cost the state as much as $12 billion over the next two fiscal years, and even more after that.

Tax experts at The Brookings Institution’s nonpartisan Tax Policy Center suggested that one path forward for New York to increase that revenue would be an increase of 0.6 percentage points each on both personal income tax and the state’s sales tax.

Under that type of increase in New York, “a household with a median income of $80,000 would have to pay almost $400 more in yearly state income taxes and higher sales taxes on most goods,” the Tax Policy Center experts wrote in May, before the final budget law was passed.

Hochul is facing some opposition within her own party for her position against wealth taxes.

“I have been pretty consistently banging the drum for years, and I’ll get another drum and start drumming even harder that we need to raise taxes on the wealthy in the state of New York now,” state Sen. Gustavo Rivera, who represents a district in the Bronx — an area that is slated to be especially hard-hit by Medicaid and SNAP cuts — told NOTUS.

“I certainly understand that the cuts from the feds are so severe that we are not going to be able to make up everything,” he continued, adding that the state “can try to minimize the hits that are going to come” by shoring up tax revenue.

But it’s not the route Hochul is gaming out for New York. Instead, she told reporters on Thursday that state Budget Director Blake G. Washington is “scouring all of our agencies and finding how to deal with the $750 million shortfall created by the Trump administration,” but did not mention tax increases as an option.

And last week, Hochul told reporters that she wants to avoid tax hikes because “a lot of people leave our state because of the taxes,” adding that migration out of New York would leave the state without “the resources to be able to fund the generous safety net programs that I believe in.”

Hochul received expanded authority from state lawmakers to handle midyear state budget cuts in response to the federal budget law, positioning her as the main face of the state’s budgetary policy.

The political consequences could come from both sides of the aisle.

Some Republican legislators are applauding Hochul’s decision to avoid tax hikes. But other members of the GOP could shift the blame for dwindling social services to Hochul because she’s the figure who doles out federal cash to New Yorkers, making her an easy target for lawmakers looking to shift the blame from the Trump administration and Republican members of Congress, Sheinkopf said.

Democrats are also lining up to pressure the governor.

She’s already been criticized by some Democratic state legislators for her plan to move ahead with sending New Yorkers inflation rebate checks. Legislators have argued that she should cancel those payments and use the funds to fill federal funding gaps instead.

A group of progressives — including Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado, who is seeking to unseat Hochul in the Democratic primary next year — rallied last week to push for a special legislative session so state lawmakers can address federal cuts now rather than waiting until January. Among their demands was a call for Hochul to raise taxes.

However, with leaders in the Legislature writing off a special session, the chance of tax increases is slim.

Instead, state agencies are evaluating the impacts of federal cuts on their individual budgets, a process that will wrap up by early September before state leaders convene to decide next steps, according to the governor’s office.

New York has also amassed record-high levels of budget reserves under Hochul, which could aid state leaders’ attempts to close budget gaps.

“As the Governor has made clear, no state can backfill the devastating cuts coming out of Washington,” Hochul spokesperson Emma Wallner said in a statement to NOTUS. “While Republicans strip away funding and hike costs, Governor Hochul is focused on putting money back in New Yorkers’ pockets and fighting for a more affordable state.”

Though she’s doubled down on her approach, Hochul herself has acknowledged the political risks.

The governor said during a state Financial Control Board meeting last week that the process of making up federal cuts will include “tough choices” and added that the state cannot promise the same level of funding to large areas like New York City going forward.

Meanwhile, progressives are promising that they’ll continue to speak out against Hochul’s approach.

“We should not explore cuts first,” Rivera said. “I think I’m in the right in this case. I think it’s not only the right thing to do, but the politically smart thing to do, and I will continue to make that case both publicly and privately.”

Our nonprofit newsroom relies on donations from readers to sustain our local reporting and keep it free for all New Yorkers. Donate to THE CITY today.

The post Tax Hikes or Funding Cuts? Kathy Hochul Is in the Middle of a Trump-Created Dilemma. appeared first on THE CITY - NYC News.

[syndicated profile] thecityny_feed

Posted by Jose Martinez

A decades-delayed commitment to extend the subway into East Harlem took a significant step forward Monday when the MTA board approved a $1.9 billion contract for the next phase of construction on the Second Avenue Subway.

Gov. Kathy Hochul appeared alongside MTA officials at a meeting of the transit agency’s board to tout the “transformational” plan to bring the Q line to 125th Street — more than 80 years after the elevated line that ran above Second Avenue went out of service.

“This is long overdue,” Hochul said. “I don’t know if there’s too many people in this room [who were] alive when they first started talking about this.”

The first phase of the Second Avenue Subway opened in 2017 with three new Upper East Side stations. The next phase will bring Q-line stations to 106, 116th and 125th streets. The construction will involve boring a new tunnel north from 116th Street and make use of an existing underground segment at 110th Street that has been mothballed for half a century.

Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks during an MTA board meeting in Harlem about expanding the Second Avenue Subway line to East 125th Street.
Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks during an MTA board meeting in Harlem about expanding the Second Avenue Subway line to East 125th Street, Aug. 18, 2025. Credit: Alex Krales/THE CITY

The three East Harlem stations are expected to serve 110,000 commuters. That’s on top of the 200,000 already served by Q stations at 63rd, 72nd, 86th and 96th streets, whose riders previously relied heavily on buses or on the local and express subway lines beneath Lexington Avenue, which are the busiest in the city.

At bus stops along Second Avenue in East Harlem, riders said they were hopeful that the long-promised subway line will eventually allow them to shift underground or avoid long walks to the 4, 5 and 6 line stations a few blocks away on Lexington Avenue.

“If a station is nearby, I can easily access the subway,” said Yakeline Espinoza, 21, who was waiting for a southbound M15 with her 10-month-old son at Second Avenue and East 116th Street stop. “It would make a big difference because we want to go places, but we have to walk so far to the other stations or take a bus.”

Jesse Mangual, 28, said having new stations with elevators along Second Avenue would be a boon for older East Harlem residents who rely on the subway.

“It’s good for the older people who can’t walk four blocks over to Lexington Avenue,” he said. “So it’s good for the neighborhood, it’s a positive.”

Long Time Coming

The Second Avenue Subway was initially proposed in 1929.

“For the people of East Harlem, the time of promises is over,” Hochul said. “We are moving down the tracks as quickly as we possibly can.”

The MTA awarded the first of four contracts on what is expected to be a $7.7 billion northern expansion of the Q line in January 2024, for the relocation of underground utilities in advance of construction on a new 106th Street stop.

A portion of the pricey expansion project will be paid for with funds generated through congestion pricing, the Manhattan vehicle-tolling plan that launched in January south of 60th Street and which the Trump administration has repeatedly tried to terminate.

“Send our friends in Washington a message — it is working,” Hochul said of the vehicle tolls. “And we know that traffic is down and business is up and people are happy. I’m really happy that we stuck with it.”

Janno Lieber, MTA chairperson and chief executive, credited Hochul for getting on board with congestion pricing and also for championing another mass transit expansion project, the proposed Interborough Express line connecting Brooklyn and Queens.

“You have put us in a position where the MTA is about to embark on some of the most ambitious change-making investments in all of our history and in New York’s history,” Lieber said. “Nothing could be more representative than this [Second Avenue] project.”

The MTA released renderings showing the planned 125th Street terminal for the Second Avenue Subway.
The MTA released renderings showing the planned 125th Street terminal for the Second Avenue Subway, Aug. 18, 2025. Credit: Alex Krales/THE CITY

The impact on commuters from the stretch of the line that opened in 2017 was felt from the day it opened, officials said.

“It changed people’s lives who get to use that and don’t have to hoof it all the way to [Lexington Avenue],” Lieber said. “It also spread out the crowding issue on the Lex line, which is a huge capacity improvement for our system.”

Time and Money

The newest contract is being awarded to Connect Plus Partners, a joint venture between contracting firms Halmar International and FCC Construction. MTA officials said the contracting structure is designed to save money and to avoid some of the problems that plagued the first phase of the line, where multiple contractors worked on the same station.

“They ran into each other again and again and again and it created delay after delay, and cost after cost,” Lieber said. “That’s been eliminated.”

Early work on building the new tunnel to 125th Street will begin later this year, the MTA said, with heavy construction coming starting early next year and 750-ton boring machines expected to begin pushing north in 2027. Officials said the MTA will save an estimated $100 million by reducing costs on tunnel construction and employing smaller work crews.

“It is complex and it’s going to take some time and some money,” Hochul said, pledging that big transportation projects will ultimately be a “hallmark of success” for her administration.

MTA officials said that a “handful of properties” along the route must still be obtained for the subway extension, but noted that the process has been much smoother than during the initial stretch of the Second Avenue line.

“Property acquisition was frequently a cause of schedule delay,” Lieber said. “And we are way, way ahead of where that project was in terms of acquisition.”

Our nonprofit newsroom relies on donations from readers to sustain our local reporting and keep it free for all New Yorkers. Donate to THE CITY today.

The post Q Train Expansion Into Harlem Gets a Green Light, Thanks in Part to Congestion Pricing appeared first on THE CITY - NYC News.

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