NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: Major Crime Drops but Complaints Reach 10-Year High, MTA Expands Open Gangway Trains, Adams Issues Social Media Policy, and Jersey City’s Food Scene Grows
Episode Date: March 4, 2025Major crime in New York City has dropped for the third consecutive month, but overall complaints to police in 2024 are at a 10-year high. Meanwhile, the MTA is expanding its new “open gangway” tra...ins to the G line, bringing the latest subway upgrades to Brooklyn and Queens. Also, Mayor Eric Adams has issued a new social media policy for city staff after some officials sparked controversy online. Plus, food critic Robert Sietsema shares his take on the booming restaurant scene in Jersey City.
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Welcome to NYC Now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WNYC.
I'm Sean Carlson. Major crime in the city dropped for the third straight month, but overall complaints to police in 2024 hit a 10-year high.
WNIC's Charles Lane reports.
Police data show major crimes like murder, robbery, and assault are down this year, but not all trends are positive.
Or felony, assaults have dipped slightly. Reports of rape have increased.
And despite recent declines, total.
number of complaints remain higher than last year and well above pre-pandemic levels.
Experts say these numbers don't capture the everyday disorder caused by harassment, shoplifting, and drug offenses.
The MTA's newest open gangway trains are coming to the G-line.
It's the latest upgrade to the only subway line that does not enter Manhattan.
WNYC's Ramsey-C-Colife reports.
I'm standing in the middle of an open gangway G-train.
To both my left and right, I can see passengers two.
cars over. These trains don't have doors between the cars. Instead, there's an accordion-style
connector, like on some buses. Liz Longo is a regular rider on the G-line.
The time continuum with a different train look, I like it. It's refreshing to see people all the way
through. It's fun. Around 166,000 riders ride the G every day. Last year, the MT upgraded and
cleaned 10 different stations on the line. Mayor Adams released a social media policy for his mayor-roll
staffers after some city officials caught controversy for their online statements.
WDNYC's Elizabeth Kim reports.
Under the new rules, mayoral aids can post opinions on their personal social media platforms,
as long as they include a disclaimer that makes it clear they're not speaking on behalf of city government.
The policy comes weeks after Jasmine Ray, the director for the mayor's office of sports,
wellness, and recreation, got into hot water.
When she expressed her support for President Trump's executive.
order banning transgender athletes from participating in women's sports. That order is in direct
conflict with city policies. NYPD top brass were also reprimanded earlier this year for social
media posts that targeted journalists and elected officials. Up next, a look at the burgeoning food scene
across the Hudson in Jersey City. That's after the break. We're listening to NYC now.
Food critic Robert Sitsima has been writing about dining in New York City since the 1990s, with two decades at The Village Voice and more than 10 years at Eater, New York.
He recently launched his own newsletter, Robert Sitsima's New York, and we'll start seeing more on Robert's food writing on our news website Gothamist as well.
My colleague David Hurst spoke to Robert about some of the best places to eat in Jersey City.
Robert, welcome back.
Hey, David.
Thanks for having me back in my new guys.
And let's focus on Jersey City to start.
It's just an easy path train right away from New York City, but for some New Yorkers, it sort of flies under the radar, certainly as a dining destination.
And you are here to say it is time to pay attention.
Oh, gosh, yes.
My goodness, there are 300,000 people in there.
It's the second largest city in Jersey.
It has the same area exactly as the island of Manhattan.
And it's much more filled with recent immigrants.
So there's a lot of amazing cuisines there.
And not only do you have the path train, you got the light rail, you got buses.
I took a bus into the Jersey City Heights recently.
It was 65 cents.
Well, can you tell us about a few of the restaurants that you featured on Gothamist?
These are not in ranked order.
You know, there's places on there like Sri Ganesh's Dosa House, which is a place specializing in the vegetarian food of South India,
in particular doses and idlies and things like that, just delicious rolled fermented pancakes around a potato filling.
They're wonderful, they're diet conscious, they're ecologically conscious.
That place has been there for like 25 years if you've never been to Newark Avenue just north of Journal Square.
You know, ride the past train up there, walk three blocks, and you got like the biggest concentration of Indian food stores.
Indian restaurants, even in New York City, you don't have anything quite like it, even Jackson Heights.
Sree Ganesh's Dosa House, and this is right by the Journal Square Path Station.
Yeah, just like two or three blocks north of there.
Well, let's get a sense for the diversity of options in Jersey City. What's next?
McGinley Square is due south by about half a mile from, once again, the Journal Square Path
Station. Very nice walk through some gorgeous architecture, including an Alexandrian Christian
Egyptian church with marvelous, marvelous stained glass windows, past an old chocolate shop that
dates to the 1980s. This place called a little further south of there right at Beginley Square,
which isn't a square, but just a crossroads. It's called Crew, K-R-E-W-E, and it's probably the best
Cajun-C-C-E-L restaurant in New York City or in the sixth borough of Jersey City.
crew is amazing. If you want to go there for a po-boy, you've got a choice of crab cakes,
or the relatively rare roast beef with gravy. It is absolutely fantastic. They have a fried shrimp,
poboi, jambalaya, and the most amazing freshly made bignets, which you get at the end of your
meal. They sprinkle powdered sugar on them. They're piping hot. It's great. It's intimate.
It's right next to a barber shop. You can look through a window and see them cutting.
people's hair. It's just these kind of quirky things make a neighborhood and make a restaurant
exciting. Cajun Creole at Crewe, K-R-E-W-E at McGinley Square in Jersey City. And where should we
finish up today, Robert? God, what a toss-up. I mean, I might say Hamilton Pork, which is a
wonderful Texas-style barbecue, but I'm going to go for U-N, Y-U-A-N. It turns out that there's a lot of Asian
students living in the high rises right along the Hudson River. And they are patronizing a dozen,
a full dozen, new Chinese restaurants that put many of the Chinese restaurants in the city to shame.
They are modern Chinese restaurants, such as you might find in China. Many of them, like Yuan,
have a mixture of Setsuan, Hunan, Shanghai, and northern Chinese food.
So in other words, you're not going to go there for your chicken and broccoli.
You're going to go there for Dan Dan Mian, for Dan noodles.
You're going to go there for kind of northern specialties for big, thick dumplings stuffed with pork and chives, Westlake beef soup from Shanghai.
Everything there is great.
Best food critic Robert Sitsima in conversation with my colleague, David First.
Thanks for listening to Enwerexie.
MyC now from WNMIC. I'm Sean Carlson. We'll see you tomorrow.
