NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: Legionnaires' Disease Cluster in Harlem Leaves One Dead, Some NYC Weed Dispensaries Might Have to Pack Up and Move, Push for a Bronx Casino, and Boozy Subway Ads on Trains

Episode Date: July 31, 2025

A New Yorker has died amid a Legionnaires’ outbreak in Central Harlem, with more than 20 people sickened. Meanwhile, New York’s cannabis regulators are forcing over 100 dispensaries to move or shu...t down. Plus, Mayor Adams vetoes the City Council’s casino ban in the Bronx, and the MTA considers lifting its ban on alcohol ads across subways and buses.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Harlem Legionnaires cluster leaves one dead. Weed dispensaries might have to move, push for Bronx Casino, and Boosy Subway ads on trains. From WNMIC, this is NYC now. I'm Sean Carlson. Before we dive in, a quick note about the weather. We're expecting strong storms to push through our region Thursday night through Friday morning. The National Weather Service has issued a flood watch for all of New York City. So please take care out there for the latest updates. Head over to our website, Gothamist.
Starting point is 00:00:31 Okay, now on to other news. A New Yorker has died due to Legionaire's disease tied to an outbreak of cases in central Harlem. That's according to the city's health department, which is investigating a cluster of infections in the neighborhood. Health officials say more than 20 people have become ill with Legionnaires since July 25th. They've sampled cooling towers in the area and ordered building owners to remediate any affected by the outbreak. Legionnaire's disease is a type of pneumonia caused by bacteria that grows in water, often in plumbing, and cooling systems. officials are urging central Harlem residents to watch out for flu-like symptoms and seek treatment if they get sick. New York State's legal marijuana industry is reeling from a sudden reversal by the state's cannabis regulators.
Starting point is 00:01:13 WNIC's John Campbell reports more than 100 dispensaries have been told they may have to move or close. By law, dispensaries can't be within 500 feet of schools in New York. The State Office of Cannabis Management used to measure that from the entrance to a school building. But this week, regulators say they screwed up. By law, they should have been measuring from the property line. The new interpretation affects at least 108 licensed dispensaries. The vast majority are in New York City, including 40 in Manhattan alone. We have a map of the affected dispensaries on our news site, Gothamist. Mayor Adams is trying to revive an effort to bring a casino to the Bronx by vetoing the city council's vote against it. WNYC's Arun Venigapal has more.
Starting point is 00:02:07 The bid by the gaming company Bally's was effectively dead earlier this month when the city council voted to reject its land use application. But the mayor said the council's move wasn't fair and that the casino would bring thousands of jobs to the Bronx. In response, Mara Davis, a spokesperson for the city council, released a statement criticizing the mayor and noting that Adams had issued his first and only land use veto not for housing, but for a casino alibi.
Starting point is 00:02:35 applicant. Ballies says the $4 billion project would bring 15,000 union construction jobs and 4,000 permanent union jobs to the Bronx at an average wage of $96,000. Up next, ads for alcoholic beverages might be returning to MTA subways and buses. That's after the break. Ads for boozy beverages could soon start popping up on New York City subways and buses after being banned for years. The MTA's board voted last month to ease its restrictions on alcohol ads in hopes of securing advertising money, but some critics are protesting the move. Caroline Lewis covers health care for WNYC and Gothamist. She spoke with my colleague Michael Hill about what's allowed under the new MTA rules and why some people oppose them. Caroline, take us back to when the ban on alcohol ads was first put in place
Starting point is 00:03:35 and how did that come about? So the MTA board first voted to ban alcohol ads back in 2017, citing public health concerns, and it took effect in 2018. And at the time, this type of ban wasn't totally unprecedented. You know, the MTA had already banned tobacco ads back in the 90s. But the decision wasn't just made overnight either. People I spoke to who were part of the effort to get the MTA to ban alcohol ads said there was a years-long grassroots effort around this issue that brought together faith and community groups, young people,
Starting point is 00:04:13 public health advocates, people from around the city. They made the case to the board that alcohol ads fuel underage drinking and also that advertisers were specifically targeting certain communities of color. So they made this an equity issue as well. And what are the new rules that are in place now around alcohol ads? What's changed? So MCA officials say they're not lifting the ban on alcohol ads, but just creating some common sense exceptions. And they also say they're putting in place guardrails to prevent kids from seeing the ads. But I did review the policy changes, and they make it pretty clear that ads for alcohol are now allowed in a variety of formats throughout the system. So under the new policy, the MTA allows alcohol ads on billboards, as long as they're not visible
Starting point is 00:05:01 within 500 feet of a school, playground, or house of worship. It also allows the sort of the big wraparound ads that are sometimes on shuttle trains between Times Square and Grand Central. And it allows ads on the digital displays that are scattered throughout the system. But the MTA policy does say that alcohol ads aren't allowed on digital displays during certain morning and afternoon hours on weekdays when kids are usually commuting to and from school. What's the MTA's rationale for this change? Well, for one thing, MTA officials say the digital displays make it easier to control exposure to alcohol ads. So they say with this new technology, the ads can be randomized so they don't target any one particular neighborhood.
Starting point is 00:05:48 And officials also say the changes were the result of some comparison research they did on other American cities. So they cited Chicago in particular, which eased its own alcohol ban, sorry, ban on alcohol ads several years ago. But I think, of course, the central argument is that the MTA is missing out on revenue by rejecting ads that contain alcoholic beverages. In some cases, they say that includes ads for restaurants and sports venues. One MTA board member pointed out that people are seeing alcohol ads as soon as they get off the subway in some cases. So the MTA might as well be getting some of that money. And they said it could bring in an additional $7 to $10 million a year if they do allow these. these ads, though, of course, that's in a system with a budget of about $20 billion.
Starting point is 00:06:37 On the other hand, you have everyone who pushed for the MCA to ban these ads in the first place. How are they responding? They're really taken aback. There were a few members of the public who did testify at MTA meetings about this issue ahead of the board vote last month. But advocates I spoke to said that the vote to loosen the rules happened much faster and with much less public input than the vote. to put the ban in place originally.
Starting point is 00:07:05 And some people don't buy the argument that the MTA can really prevent young people from seeing alcohol ads just by limiting the digital displays to certain times of day. You know, they're making the case that young people are traveling through the transit system at all hours. And some advocates who were part of the original coalition
Starting point is 00:07:25 to fight for a ban on alcohol ads say they're really re-energized and are now organizing again to get it fully reinstated. What does the research say about the link between alcohol ads and underage drinking? So there's actually a pretty strong body of evidence suggesting that exposure to alcohol ads contributes to underage drinking. And for people of any age, alcohol consumption is associated with a wide range of health risks. So, you know, the surgeon general just put out a warning earlier this year linking alcohol with several kinds of cancer. Public health advocates I spoke to also said they consider this sort of a pivotal moment because youth drinking is down overall for a variety of reasons. And they're worried about losing that progress.
Starting point is 00:08:12 But I think part of the question at hand is how much responsibility the MTA has in the public health sphere and how it balances that with its revenue needs. You know, Caroline, you said no ads or billboards within 500 feet of schools and houses of worship. But within 500 feet of schools, school children still have to walk to and from school, so they'll see these billboards. Yeah, I think that's part of it. I think, you know, it's interesting to me that when I reached out to say, like, to the MTA, oh, you know, I, what's your comment on sort of lifting this ban on alcohol ads? They were adamant that the ban is still in place. But the reality is like these ads, you know, if they're present throughout the system, people will be able to see them.
Starting point is 00:08:57 You know, certainly advocates made the case that like children, you know, are not going to be limited to traveling during certain hours or in certain locations with their families. If they have to go to after school activities, you know, some kids might have, you know, jobs that they're working or, you know, they might be traveling with their families. One advocate referred to the subway, not just as the school bus for some kids, but as like the family car. So I think, you know, the fact is that when people are traveling on the transit system, you know, that is a lot of exposure for a lot of people. And certainly MTA officials said they have to consider their role as a public agency. That's WNIC's Caroline Lewis in conversation with my colleague, Michael Hill.
Starting point is 00:09:40 Thanks for listening to NYC now from WNMIC. I'm Sean Carlson. We'll be back tomorrow.

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