New York City|News|
Adams And Largest Municipal Union Reach Tentative Agreement, With 15.25% Raises Through 2026
The deal will include a trial run for remote work and flexible hours, pandemic-era arrangements eagerly sought by the union.

THE CITY is an independent, nonprofit news organization dedicated to hard-hitting reporting that serves the people of New York.
The deal will include a trial run for remote work and flexible hours, pandemic-era arrangements eagerly sought by the union.

A new UCLA study finds ride-hail companies have been claiming bigger sales ever since drivers began receiving minimum wage guarantees.
The fast-food chain will debut a temporary rest area for delivery workers, the same week the community board rejected a plan from the city.
Gov. Kathy Hochul seeks to link pay to inflation for automatic future increases, starting at $16.39.
Following a $29 million state loan to help fund the rehabilitation of two Mitchell-Lama rental buildings, living conditions remain dire.
A majority of City Council members plus the public advocate say they want to get rid of so-called punitive segregation.
A state Supreme Court judge warned that further delays would only rack up the project’s price tag.
Following reporting from THE CITY, fired workers are now getting back pay following the sudden loss of their jobs.
CECs are volunteer boards that contribute to decisions made around school district zoning, education material, school buildings and more.
“We’ve had members that have suffered heat-related injuries,” Perrone said. “It’s the time to fix it — and these companies can do it.”
The scheme which allegedly involved ID card check-ins when employees weren’t actually at the jail.
That’s not supposed to happen in a sanctuary city. Next week City Council takes up measures to strengthen that status.
A landlord filed 54 Housing Court cases last week demanding months and even years of unpaid rent.
The directive shocked leaders of five overnight facilities that have let youth in crisis lie down on city-sanctioned cots since 2018.
A report from Civilian Complaint Review Board sums up the consequences of 321 investigations, many for improper use of force.
State legislature housing committee chairs Linda Rosenthal and Brian Kavanagh say they’re ready to embrace the governor’s pro-growth agenda.
Death-defying walks between the subway cars could become a thing of the past.
The task force revisited only two of the first 53 locations it raided. Both were selling pot again.
Queens residents speak, but the state will have the final word on what goes up on 55 acres of a campus that’s been underused for decades.
The plan to transform Rikers into a green energy hub has missed two key deadlines. City Council members question the mayor’s commitment.