NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: NYC’s Crime Stats, Civil Rights Investigations in Jeopardy at NYC Schools and Living with Long COVID
Episode Date: April 3, 2025New York City had the lowest number of shootings during the first quarter of 2025 compared with any other year in the modern era. Plus, Trump’s federal cuts to education will lead to the closure of ...an education department office investigating civil rights violations of students. And finally, research on long COVID is advancing but some patients worry the Trump administration's budget cuts targeting science and medical research could set the effort back
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New York City's crime stats, civil rights investigations in jeopardy at New York City schools,
and living with long COVID.
From WMYC, this is NYC now.
I'm Jene Pierre.
NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch is touting some new crime stats.
She says New York City had the lowest number of shootings during the first quarter of 2025
than any other year in the modern era.
She also says the city had the second lowest number of murders in history for that time period as well.
The news comes as Tish has stepped up quality of life enforcement in the subway system,
arresting people for fair evasion and taking up more than one seat.
And the truth is, this approach allows the NYPD to address the random acts of violence that we're seeing in the subways.
She said major crime fell by 11% in the first three months of the year.
But there has been an increase in incidents of rape, which specifically,
by 21% over the first quarter of 2024.
President Trump's order to close the Federal Education Department
is really being felt in New York City.
WMYC's Jessica Gould reports on the fallout
from the closure of an Education Department office
investigating civil rights violations of students.
The Trump administration is consolidating
many of the department's local civil rights branches,
and it shuttered the one in Lower Manhattan.
That office investigated allegations of discrimination in education on the basis of race, sex, and disability.
High-profile cases included a challenge to the city's dysfunctional school bus system for students with disabilities,
and allegations of exclusionary admissions policies in charter schools.
Trump administration officials say complaints will now be handled through a different office and more efficiently.
But attorneys representing students say they don't even know who to contact about their
pending cases. Hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers are living with long COVID, symptoms that have
stuck around since they've been infected with the virus. More on that after the break. It's been
five years since COVID-19 upended our lives, but hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers still
struggle with symptoms long after they got infected with the virus. Medical experts say research
on long COVID is advancing, but some patients worried the Trump administration's budget cuts,
targeting science and medical research
could set the effort back.
WMYC's Caroline Lewis
spent a day with one long COVID patient
to see what her life is like.
I'm meeting 35-year-old Alicia
at the apartment she shares
with her husband near Prospect Park.
When we moved into this apartment,
we had a lot of excitement
about being near the park
and just like the area.
And unfortunately, with my health,
I don't think I've been to the park yet at all.
So it's been hard.
Alicia says she doesn't want to be sitting around her apartment all day.
But after she got over a case of COVID in late 2020,
she developed chronic fatigue, neuropathy, and other symptoms that wouldn't go away.
Alicia asked me to withhold her last name to protect her privacy.
She's currently on disability benefits and often struggles to leave the house.
She says she's developed some hacks for saving energy
so she can do some of the simple things she enjoyed before.
like making a morning cup of coffee.
I usually use this stool,
which has been just like a lifesaver,
and it's actually really increased my quality of life.
When Alicia does leave the house,
it's often to go to the doctor.
Hi, how are you?
Hello.
Today we're Ubering to her doctor's office in Fort Green.
I sit in the back with her while she reminisces about life before COVID.
Yeah, so these are just photos of my husband and I hiking.
I think this was my birthday, actually,
Before the pandemic, Alicia said she was in the best shape of her life,
sometimes hitting two workout classes on her way home from work
as a marketing manager for a cosmetics company.
This was me hosting a dinner party. I'd love to host.
It's unclear how many people are living with long COVID.
That's when symptoms linger for at least three months
after an initial COVID infection.
But one large CDC study estimated it's about 6% of all adults.
That's half a million people in New York City.
city. About one in five who have the condition say it significantly limits what they can do.
Hello.
Alicia is here to see her primary care physician, Dr. Rebecca Summers.
Mixing up some NAD, which has been a helpful supplement for Alicia.
NAD, short for nicotineamide, adenucleotide, is a co-enzyme that occurs naturally in human cells.
researchers theorize that increasing levels of NAD could improve cellular function and give
long COVID patients more energy. But NAD has not been approved by the FDA. In fact, five years out,
there are still no FDA approved treatments for long COVID. Patients and doctors are left to experiment
with supplements and off-label medications that have been approved for other conditions,
hoping they'll provide some relief. Still, researchers say,
say long COVID is much less of a mystery today than it was five years ago. Dr. Liora Horwitz
is a professor of medicine at NYU Langone. She's conducting a national study of long COVID patients
by tracking their symptoms over time. We know an immense amount now about both the symptoms that
people are getting, the duration that the symptoms last, what happens to people over time, what is
going on in the actual body. Long COVID symptoms vary widely. They can include,
brain fog, dizziness, loss of smell or taste.
One of the most common symptoms is post-exertional malaise.
Which means that you do something kind of minor,
then a day or two later you get exhausted,
sometimes unable to even get out of bed.
Horwood said she's optimistic treatments are on the horizon,
now that some clinical trials are underway.
But some patients worry progress will slow down under President Trump.
Brooklynite Hannah Davis developed symptoms of long COVID in spring 2020
and helped launch the patient-led research collaborative to investigate the phenomenon.
She says she's concerned about the Trump administration's broad cuts to scientific research
and the recent decision to close a federal office dedicated to long COVID.
This is an issue that requires an all federal government response
and has been challenging enough in the past four years where we've had some support.
and to decrease it is unfathomable to understand.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who heads the Department of Health and Human Services,
vowed to prioritize long COVID research at his confirmation hearing in January.
But a spokesperson for the agency has since said that COVID in general is no longer a concern
because the pandemic is over.
Even without approved treatments, many patients do improve over time.
Alicia has learned to pace herself.
to conserve energy, so she can do things like sit with her husband in a cafe.
And she's finding ways to accept what her life looks like now.
Do you want to lie down?
Yeah, do you mind.
Dr. Summers offers Alicia an alternative therapy called somatic experiencing,
a practice that aims to identify and alter how a person physically experiences trauma or stress.
If you think back to last spring.
Yeah. What do you remember about that?
That was, I think, a period of a lot of isolation.
Alicia lies on an exam table under a blanket with her eyes closed.
Dr. Summers sits next to her on a stool.
She gently places one hand on her patient's shoulder and the other on her thigh.
During their session, Summers tries to remind Alicia of all the progress she's made,
even if it seems incremental.
You know, before I used to get, like, so much tightness in my chest.
Alicia says she's reminded of springtime as she thinks about letting go of her anger over long COVID.
Dr. Summers asks her what that looks like.
Oh, it's so corny.
Like, I'm literally seeing, like, butterflies.
Like, like, these typical, like, if I googled, like, spring gift or, I don't know, something.
Like, it's, it just, it makes me feel like,
Like, good things are coming, I hope.
I think. I know.
This spring is going to look different than last spring.
Well, yeah, maybe just even remember it already probably does.
Yeah.
This spring, Alicia has set a new goal for herself to walk at least once to the farmer's market outside Prospect Park, a couple of blocks from her house.
That's WMYC's Caroline Lewis.
Thanks for listening to NYC now.
from WMYC.
I'm Jene Pierre.
We'll be back tomorrow.
