NYC NOW - Midday News: Beware of Congestion Pricing Scams, Gov. Hochul Targets Hedge Funds in Housing Market, and Mayor Adams Highlights Mental Health in State of the City Address

Episode Date: January 10, 2025

With congestion pricing underway in Manhattan, drivers are being warned about potential tolling scams. Meanwhile, Governor Kathy Hochul says she’s targeting hedge funds that bid on single-family hom...es. Plus, Mayor Eric Adams highlighted mental health and homelessness during his annual State of the City address at the Apollo Theater in Harlem. WNYC’s Brigid Bergin breaks it down.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Welcome to NYC now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WMYC. It's Friday, January 10th. Here's the midday news from Michael Hill. With congestion pricing underway in Manhattan, drivers should be on the lookout for tolling scams. WNMC's Sean Carlson has more. New York State isn't issuing any late fees or fines for the congestion relief zone for the first 60 days of the program. And officials say you should always be suspicious of any surprise message saying you owe payment for any toll. Scammers could be looking for personal information that the real tolling system would never ask for, like your Social Security number.
Starting point is 00:00:46 For example, if you get a text from NY toll services, do not respond. That is definitely fake. If you really do owe a toll, you can pay it directly at the website, Tollsby-Mail, NY.com. And we have more advice for you on the Tolls. Let's go to our news site, Gothamist. New York Governor Kathy Hokel says she's targeting hedge funds to keep single-family homes more accessible to everyday New Yorkers. The governor says she plans to introduce legislation this year that would impose a 75-day waiting period before large investment firms can bid on homes hitting the market. The proposal would also limit tax benefits for firms buying single-family homes.
Starting point is 00:01:31 It's a move aimed at discouraging investors from snapping up properties and shrinking the housing supply for individuals and families. Lawmakers and other states have proposed similar measures as concerns grow over the effects of large-scale property investments on local housing markets. 37 and partly sunny now, mostly sunny today and right there, 37 in custody. Chance of snow tonight, chance of snow on Saturday. Monday and Monday, sunshine in high of 40. Stay tuned for more news after the break. New Yorkers regularly interact with people living in the street with serious mental illness. Mayor Adams put those experiences front and center at his annual state of the city address.
Starting point is 00:02:32 He delivered his remarks at the world famous Apollo Theater in Harlem. WN.C's Bridget Bergen was there and joins us now to explain it all. So, Bridget, let's start there. Mayor Adams says he wants to put a lot of money into helping homeless people, but that's not all. Why is there such a priority for him, and what exactly is he proposing? Well, Michael, it's a priority because he makes this issue really personal. He talks about growing up on the brink of homelessness, but as we know, he's also facing real challenges. There's been that spate of high-profile crimes on the subway.
Starting point is 00:03:04 People have been stabbed. A woman was burned to death. And even though some crime stats are down, he's acknowledged that people, and particularly families need to feel safer here. So he's proposing a $650 million investment that he said would tackle these questions. How can we help people on our subways? How can we help people with serious mental illness?
Starting point is 00:03:28 And how can we keep families out of shelters? So that money would fund one new supportive housing facility, 900 new State Haven shelter beds, and create a pilot program that he said would help connect expecting parents entering the shelter system with permanent housing. Now, there weren't many details on when and how those initiatives would take place, but the mayor is also looking for state lawmakers to make a change that would make it easier to forcibly hospitalized someone with mental illness.
Starting point is 00:03:59 And that's something Governor Hockel said this week that she will also be pushing for in Albany. And we know that Assembly Speaker Carl Hasey is offering some pushback on that, offering to come up with some other ideas, or least fishing for them. How likely is this, the governor's plan and the mayor's plan, how likely is this to happen? Are there any other obstacles? Well, you named one right there, the state legislature. You know, as John Campbell noted earlier this week, this is not a new idea in Albany. You know, there have been versions of this legislation that have been introduced before,
Starting point is 00:04:31 but have come up against opposition. And, you know, that could be from state lawmakers, but also from homeless advocates and civil liberties groups. So next week, Hocola will have another chance to make a case for it in her state of the state address, but obviously it's something state legislators will be considering. Bridget, what else did the mayor propose in this Apollo speech? So he was building on his city of yes, housing rezoning plan. He talked about building another 100,000 units of housing in Manhattan over the next decade, a so-called Manhattan plan. He also proposed some smaller-scale initiatives, opening more schoolyards to the public and increasing park maintenance, more financial
Starting point is 00:05:11 literacy, education in schools, and expansion of some current programs related to water safety and swim classes, a fatherhood initiative. And he talked about some programs that have already been announced, like a student debt relief plan for 100,000 city workers. I want to hear how Adams's colleagues in government are responding. But before we get there, I want to vibe check something with you, Bridget. The mayor's state of the city comes as he is up for real. election, as we know, and dealing with both primary challengers and a federal indictment where he's accused of taking bribes. The mayor, of course, has denied that he did anything wrong, but tell me, Bridget, did either of these things cast a pall over what is normally a pretty celebrated event?
Starting point is 00:05:52 So I wouldn't say they cast a Paul Adams. Did make a few comments that nodded towards some of the competitors he may be facing in the race, several of whom have taken positions to his left on issues like policing in particular. And he contrasted that with how his administration has taken a different tact. He said when others wanted to defund the police, his administration defended them. He also touted his push back in Washington over the arrival of migrants and asylum seekers. But this was his only comment about his legal challenges. There was some who said, step down.
Starting point is 00:06:27 I said, no, I'm going to step up. I'm going to step up. So really more a defiant as opposed to downcast. tone there. Okay, so as we were saying, how are others in government, perhaps Adams' opponents, how are they responding to his ideas? Well, there were at least two of Adams' primary challengers at the speech eager to critique what they thought it lacked, city controller Brad Lander, Assembly member Zora and Mamadani. But I also reached out to the Working Families Party, which is seeking to influence the Democratic primary through its endorsement process. Adams
Starting point is 00:07:00 will not be getting their support. And I spoke with the co-director Anna Maria Archela. And she said, for her, there was a real dissonance in this speech between all that Adams says he is accomplished and what she hears New Yorkers say they're really dealing with in terms of safe, affordable housing, reliable public services like early childhood education and libraries, both of which were cut and then restored in the last budget. Archela says she is looking for candidates for mayor to address all of that and issues out of Washington. And that also speak to the fact that New York City has the largest city in this country
Starting point is 00:07:36 needs a leader willing to protect New Yorkers from the abuses and the attacks of a Trump administration, of which he said absolutely nothing. Now, of course, Michael, given Adams' precarious legal situation and his attempts to curry favor with the incoming president, it is not a huge surprise that the mayor made little mention of him, but his reluctance to engage and make clear how the city may respond to policies out of Washington could be a liability for Adams
Starting point is 00:08:05 in a Democratic primary. Bridger, what did the mayor say about the zoning proposal he's dubbed city of yes? You know, it was very much a victory lap with a lot of praise for his deputy mayor, Maria Torres-Springer. You know, this is a plan that will make it easier for the city to build more housing, and they can zone more housing even in low-density areas, has the potential to just transform some even suburban parts of the city in Queens and Staten Island. So, of course, not everyone is thrilled about it, but the mayor wants to keep up that building. And as I mentioned, he's got that new housing plan for Manhattan high on the list.
Starting point is 00:08:39 That is WNMIC's senior politics reporter, Bridget Bergen, on the mayor's state of the city address. Thanks for listening. This is NYC now from WMYC. Check us out for updates every weekday, three times a day, for the latest news headlines and occasional deep times. And subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. We'll be back this evening.

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