NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: Trump Administration Restores NY’s Counterterrorism Funds, and 5 Things with WNYC’s Brian Lehrer
Episode Date: October 3, 2025President Donald Trump’s administration has reversed $187 million in cuts to counterterrorism and security funding for police departments and programs in New York state. And finally, WNYC’s Brian ...Lehrer joins us to discuss the top stories from his show and the WNYC newsroom.
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The Trump administration restores New York's counterterrorism funds, and five things with WNYC's Brian Lairn.
This is NYC Now.
I'm Jenae Pierre.
New York State and New York City won't be facing major federal cuts to their counterterrorism budgets after all.
President Trump's administration reversed itself Friday, fully restoring the state's share of funding under the Homeland Security Grant Program.
Governor Kathy Hoke will raise the alarm about the cuts early.
earlier this week. She says the feds were planning on cutting the state's share by about 86%.
In a statement, FEMA said it was restoring the full grants to, quote, combat security threats
within the Empire State. New York City is on track for one of its safest traffic years
in history. The Department of Transportation says traffic debts are down 18 percent compared
to this time last year. That includes fewer fatalities among pedestrians, drivers, and cyclists.
The DOT credits its Vision Zero efforts, including more protected bike lanes and redesigned streets across the city.
In Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx, injury rates have dropped sharply after road overhauls that made space for bikes and pedestrians.
It's time now for our monthly segment, Five Things, with WMYC's Brian Lair.
Hey, Brian.
Hey, Jane.
So we're a month away from New York City's mayoral election.
There was a big development since we last spoke, U.N.S.
and I, Mayor Adams is no longer in the race. His name will remain on the ballot, but I'm wondering,
what do you make of this now three-man race between Zoroamam Dhani, Curtis Lewa, and Andrew Cuomo?
Well, the first thing I want to say in thing number one in this episode of Five Things is it
is already election day in the mayoral race. Did you know that? Yes. Yes. Mail and ballots started
arriving at people's homes this week. I saw one. It's real. So there are many New Yorkers who,
can fill in a ballot right now. You don't even need to put a stamp on it. It's prepaid and cast your
vote today. As for Eric Adams, he only had about 10% support in the polls. Many of our listeners
know that. Mamdani leads Cuomo by more than that in most surveys. So there's a mathematical world
in which the mayor dropping out is high drama for him and for us in the media, but completely
irrelevant to the outcome, though I should note that some polls are closer than others and anything can
happen. How it might matter to the race is that the voters who did still support Adams tended to be
older black New Yorkers. We had the Reverend Al Sharpton on the show on Wednesday to discuss how those
voters might be comparing Cuomo and Mamdani now. Remember, Cuomo beat Momdani among black voters in the
primary. Reverend Sharpton said Cuomo was the name they knew, with a record dating back to his father's
time as governor, and Andrew has been on the right side of some issues. Sharpton said, Mom Dani was
unfamiliar. Now, with more campaigning under his belt,
Mamdani is leading over Cuomo among black voters in the polls. We'll see if that holds up.
At the policy level, Reverend Sharpton said one issue many will be looking at is gentrification.
He said one of the wraps that's been put on Mamdani is that his base is in gentrified parts of
the city, right? So now he has to win trust elsewhere on the question, how do we deal with
gentrification. Another issue, Sharpton cited, was access to capital. Comptroller Brad
Lander released a shocking report in 2023 that showed the wealth gap is as large as ever in the
city. The average white household had $276,000 in assets. The average black household, just
19,000. That's a gap of 15 times unacceptable by any standard. Absolutely. Brian, you're also
following that race over the Hudson River, I'm talking about the race for governor of New Jersey.
And that race has taken some interesting turns lately. What are you watching for?
Right. Thing number two on five things today. On the show, we're largely trying to look past the
headlines and focus on the real policy issues in our 30 issues and 30 days election series,
as we do. On Thursday and Friday, for example, we compared the candidates on taxation in New Jersey
and their plans for NJ Transit.
But the headlines intruded because the Trump administration used the federal government shutdown
to announce a pause and funding for the Gateway Tunnel project between Jersey and Manhattan
that had bipartisan support.
That changed the conversation about NJ Transit.
The Trump people say they're investigating the construction process for any DEI in the hiring
or contracting, and the investigation is shut down until they pass a bus.
budget. So now Republican Jack Chittorelli is blaming Democrat Mike Cheryl for voting for the shutdown.
Cheryl accuses Chittarelli of refusing to stand up to Trump. Another issue is the leak of something from
Democrat Mikey Sherrill's time at the Naval Academy. She was denied the privilege of walking at
graduation because she didn't report some other students she may have known had been cheating.
On the one hand in this story is that she was denied the graduation walk.
On the other hand, questions about a possibly illegal leak for political purposes.
And as the story is developing, the leak may have backfired anyway, because ironically, it turned
out the record show she was allowed to graduate, just not to walk in the ceremony,
and the record show she had a spotless Navy career, including a medal for saving someone's life.
Now, voters, of course, will still have to decide if any of this is relevant,
and who's going to have the better housing or property tags,
policies or approach to the Trump administration, but that leaked record story sure has been the buzz.
Hold it right there. We'll have more with WMYC's Brian Lair after the break.
We're back with our monthly segment, Five Things, with WMYC's Brian Lair.
Brian, you mentioned your 30 issues in 30 days segment, and I want to bring that back up
because you learned something that you didn't know previously. What was that?
Yeah, I always learned things from our gags.
But one of them jumped out at me.
This is Thing 3 today from a debate we had on involuntary hospitalization of people with severe
mental illness on the streets or the subways as an issue in the mayoral race.
There's a recent state law that makes involuntary hospitalization easier and people debate
if it's really in the interest of those being removed from public spaces or just because
other people don't like seeing them there, right?
Well, it turned out that both debaters pointed to a little known fact that makes the whole question
miss an important thing. They both said there are more people on the streets whose core problem
is not mental illness, but rather drug addiction. And the state law does not have a provision
for removing them just for that. That raises a whole other debate that our show in the city
should have to find time to have. You did a segment on President Trump's $100,000 work
visas. What's the story there and who does it affect here in New York? Yeah, thing number four.
These are H-1B visas for people from other countries with skills, employers say they can't find
among Americans. And this is a lot of visas. The annual limit of those visas is currently
85,000. So that's 85,000 per year going all the way back to 1990 when the program began,
that stat according to a recent New York Times article. And this is very much a local story. And this is very much a
local story. The published stats say from fiscal 2017 to 2022, for example, the largest number of
H-1B petitioners were based in New York City, 372,000 H-1B visa petition approvals, and that's 15%
of all H-1B visa petition approvals in the country. New Jersey has many thousands as well.
Now, the Trump administration argues that these H-1B recipients displace American workers in many
cases, especially Americans qualified in usually high-paying fields like software engineering and
research. And I'll tell you, Jene, we had no trouble getting calls from Americans who felt
they were passed over in favor of foreign workers who would come and work for less money.
But we heard arguments the other way as well. One is that the tech giants like Amazon and Google
and Apple and META can afford the $100,000 price tag for people they still want to bring in.
many smaller companies can't. That'll concentrate power and profits, even more in the hands of those
giants, and also possibly hurt innovation. I will add to all of that, that it's another Trump policy
likely to wind up in the courts, so we'll see if it stands. Yeah, we'll see what happens.
Let's switch gears here. The owner of the Mets, Steve Cohen. He won one and lost one this week,
But talking about winning one, the Yankees looking good, okay?
They are hype right now after beating the Red Sox in a wildcar series.
In fact, Brian, I think I may be turning into a baseball fan.
Ooh, classic Yankees, Red Sox rivalry, postseason series may have gotten you, Janay.
I love it.
And we'll talk second about why Yankee fans may literally be jazz.
But as thing number five is our sports page today, what a weird week for Steve Cohen, the billionaire hedge fund manager, owner of the Mets.
He splurged on baseball's highest payroll ever.
And wooed Juan Soto away from the Yankees, but the team collapsed down the stretch of the regular season and didn't make the playoffs.
After losing their last game on Sunday, they could have made it if they won, but they didn't even score one run in that game.
Arguably the biggest epic fail in Mets history.
Wow.
That was the Steve Cohen headline Monday morning.
The next day, he was back in the news as one of only four winners in the latest round of bids to build casinos in downstate New York.
His would be right by City Field.
A state panel will choose up to three before the end of the year.
But what a weird week for Steve Cohen.
Epic fail headline on Monday.
Big winner headline on Tuesday.
And of course, we had that classic Yankees Red Sox playoff series in the Bronx.
Great outcome for New York as the Yanks moved.
on to the next round. I especially enjoyed some of the great fielding and awesome base running by their
second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. after they didn't play him in game one, a headline on the New York Times
Sports site, The Athletic, even read how Jazz Chisholm Jr. cleared his head after getting benched
and saved the Yankees season. But a footnote to that series was a New York versus Boston mini
scandal, what I think you call in the newsroom a low stakes debate. Very low stakes. Very low stakes.
Very low stakes, but the Yankees set their ticket sales website to bar anyone from Massachusetts from buying tickets.
What? I guess they didn't want too many people who are not there to root, root for the home team.
Turns out it's not the only time a team has done that kind of thing, but the Red Sox don't do it.
And it got some pretty bad press and online trolling in Boston.
And maybe fair enough.
Usually fans get to pick their favorite team.
This time the team got to pick their favorite fans.
Yeah, yeah, exciting times for the Yankees and for fans and for New York City.
That's WMYC's Brian Lair.
Brian, thanks so much.
Always a pleasure.
Thanks for listening to NYC now from WMYC.
I'm Jenae Pierre.
Have a great weekend.
