Proposed New York City Hotel Regulation Threatens To Push Prices Even Higher
With prices skyrocketing, the city is weighing whether to regulate hotels further by barring them from hiring contracted workers.
With prices skyrocketing, the city is weighing whether to regulate hotels further by barring them from hiring contracted workers.
The city's Rent Guidelines Board approved a nominal 2.75 rent increase for one million rent-stabilized apartments. That's below the year's 3.3 percent inflation rate.
A new film depicts Mother Cabrini, the patron saint of immigrants.
Government school advocates say competition "takes money away" from government schools. That is a lie.
That take on the former president's New York conviction echoes similarly puzzling claims by many people who should know better.
Plus: A single-issue voter asks the editors for some voting advice in the 2024 presidential election.
Welcome to a system in which laws and regulations are weaponized by the powerful against opponents.
Whatever Trump did after the 2016 presidential election, it seems safe to say that it did not retroactively promote his victory.
Plus: The L.P. candidate for president, flooding in Brazil, TikTok influencers going after rich husbands, and more...
In practice, police unions' primary responsibility seems to be shielding officers from accountability and defending their conduct no matter what.
Dexter Taylor is now a "violent felon," even though his hobby was victimless.
Plus: Colorado passes a string of zoning reforms, an upscale Los Angeles grocery store sues to stop new housing, and Democrats urge the White House to get moving on fair housing.
Total spending under Trump nearly doubled. New programs filled Washington with more bureaucrats.
Plus: Airbnb ban has predictable consequences, AI nudify app, the death of swagger, and more...
Vincent Yakaitis is unfortunately not the first such defendant. He will also not be the last.
Having someone take your fast-food order on a virtual call may seem strange, but the benefits speak for themselves.
Plus: Zoning reform in Minnesota stalls, a New York housing "deal" does little for housing supply, and Colorado ends occupancy limits.
Plus: Problems for Saudi Arabia's The Line, Hawaii considers a short-term rental crackdown, and when affordable housing mandates get you less affordable housing.
Plus: Ethan Mollick on AI, Nancy Pelosi's kente cloth, hurricanes may destroy us all, and more...
Thanks to "squatters' rights" laws, evicting a squatter can be so expensive and cumbersome that some people simply walk away from their homes.
Plus: Vanderbilt activists' 911 call, Kevorkianniversary, MAID problems, and more...
Peter Moskos, criminal justice professor and former Baltimore police officer, discusses ways to reform policing and turn failing cities around on the latest Just Asking Questions podcast.
Plus: Illegal immigrants at Whole Foods, AI predicting homelessness, Chinese espionage, and more...
A charming story of love, friendship, and impersonal urban bureaucracy.
Plus: Microaggression discourse, AI espionage, housing policy wins, and more...
Plus: Migrant resettlement, Tom Cotton op-ed scandal, oppressors-in-training, and more...
Plus: Nuclear reactors, space firsts, Fani Willis' love life, Trump sneakers, and more...
The difficulties some cities are experiencing arise because many migrants aren't allowed to work, and because of restrictions on construction of new housing.
The essence of the case, the Manhattan D.A. says, is that Trump "corrupt[ed] a presidential election" by concealing embarrassing information.
Plus: rent control behind financial problems at NYCB, public housing's corruption problem, and New York City's near-zero vacancy rate.
Plus: RFK Jr.'s Super Bowl ad, New York's war on Airbnbs, Biden's TikToks, and more...
The freedom to protest is essential to the American project. It also does not give you carte blanche to violate other laws.
Plus: Chatbots vs. suicidal ideation, Margot Robbie vs. the patriarchy, New York City vs. parents, and more...
"I have encountered many things," one witness told the grand jury, "but nothing that put fear into me like that."
Plus: Workplace wellness programs, obnoxious awards shows, "love gov" update, and more...
Dueling new studies reach opposing conclusions on whether minority voters are well served by ranked choice voting.
Plus: Migrant shelter stabbing, Hollywood doom, Cuban spies, and more...
Plus: Fort Collins tries passing zoning reform for the third time, Coastal California cracks down on Airbnbs, and state lawmakers try to unban rent control.
The United Federation of Teachers argues that the near-5,000 page environmental report on New York's congestion pricing plan isn't thorough enough.
And there's still time left in 2023, the way things are going lately in New York.
Plus: Elon Musk's mom tells off the FCC, A24 tackles civil war, Nate Silver talks F.A. Hayek, and more...