NYC NOW - Midday News: Burglar Targets NYC Businesses, NJ Towns Commit to Affordable Housing, NYPD Looking for Purse Snatchers on UES, and Mayoral Candidates Push Childcare Access
Episode Date: February 4, 2025The NYPD says a burglar has been breaking into nail salons and restaurants across the city, stealing cash, nail supplies, and frying pots. Meanwhile, housing advocates say three-quarters of New Jerse...y’s 564 municipalities met a recent deadline to commit to building affordable housing in their communities. Also, police are looking for a group of five people responsible for stealing purses from women on the Upper East Side. Plus, after Mayor Adams vowed to make NYC the best place to raise a family, the city is shutting down five early childcare centers. Now, his challengers in the upcoming mayoral primary are seizing on the issue. WNYC’s Brigid Bergin has more.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to NYC now.
Your source for local news in and around New York City from WNYC.
It's Tuesday, February 4th.
Here's the midday news for Michael Hill.
The NYPD says a burglar has been hitting nail salons and restaurants across the city,
stealing cash, nail supplies, and frying pots.
Police say it's happened 10 times at night, early morning the last two months,
with the burglar breaking the lock on the business's front door
and making off with several hundreds of dollars in goods.
No arrest has been reported in the break-ins just yet.
Housing advocates say three quarters of New Jersey's 564 towns and cities
met a January 31st deadline to commit to build affordable housing in their communities.
New Jersey plans to build 84,000 low-priced homes over the next decade.
Fair share housing center director Adam Gordon says,
it's a big difference from the last time the state said affordable housing requirements.
He says only slightly more than half the towns back then took part in the process.
I mean, I'm pleasantly surprised, but I didn't really think we'd see it an increase of this magnitude.
On average, the state is requiring each town to build 150 new affordable homes by 2035, though some must build much more than that.
Police are looking for a group of five people trying to steal purses from women on the Upper East Side.
The NYPD says all three incidents happened on even.
last month between 2nd and 3rd avenues and east 70th Street and 78th Street.
Police say they stole a handbag with money and credit cards from a 32-year-old woman,
but police say two other women got hurt thwarting the thieves from stealing from them.
45 and partly sunny now.
Mostly sunny today.
Mid-40s will notice the temperature dropping to the upper 30s by late afternoon.
It'll be gusty too.
Stay close. There's more after the break.
When Mayor Adams unveiled his 2025 priorities at his state of the city address last month,
he said he wanted to make the city the best place to raise a family.
But not long after, WNYC and Gothamist reported the city was shutting down five early child care centers.
Now candidates running against Adams are offering up their own plans to expand access to child care,
seizing on the issue as a potential vulnerability in the upcoming mayoral primary.
Joining us now to talk about it is WNYC's senior politics reporter Bridget Bergen.
Bridget, tell us how this issue is a potential vulnerability for the mayor.
Yeah, Michael, I mean, this is an issue that is literally driving people out of New York City.
Analysis by the left-leaning fiscal policy institute found the city was leading the nation
in population loss in the three years since the COVID-19 pandemic.
families with children under six are leaving at a 40% higher rate than others.
And this is an affordability issue that cuts across income levels.
One of the parents I spoke with for the story with Stephanie Park, mom of two.
Her story is one that I think a lot of families can probably relate to.
She lives in Brooklyn.
Her oldest did not initially get a spot in the city's 3K program last year.
And between child care for that daughter and an infant daughter at a relatively
inexpensive local brownstone daycare, this is what they were going to be paying.
We were looking at paying $59,000 for the year for child care for two kids, which is insane.
That is money that could be going towards a deposit on our apartment. It's money that my household
could be using to pay down student loans to be saving in our kids' 529 accounts.
Now, this happened to park while she was on maternity leave, getting ready to return to a job
in financial services. Her husband also works in FinTech, and that kind of a cost was out of
reach for them, and she said that she assumes that that that's a kind of cost that would be
probably out of reach for a lot of parents. This drove her to volunteer with a group called New Yorkers
United for Child Care. They've been really fighting to protect those early childhood education
seats that were part of last year and seemingly this year's budget dance, and they're really
pushing lawmakers to think about universal child care in a program called To Care.
that would be available to the city's two-year-olds.
So where do proposals like to have fit with mayoral candidates?
What are they proposing?
Yeah, you know, there is definitely growing support
among the Democrats challenging Mayor Adams
for new ways to provide families with expanded child care options.
State Senator Jessica Ramos has been a supporter of universal child care
and talks about how she was part of the DeBlasio administration
when early childhood education was a key priority.
I was there when we did universal pre-K.
I know the intra-agency effort that goes into actually carrying out the execution of a system that works for parents, for children, and for early childhood educators.
And she wants to see those current seats protected and really the program expanded to reach kids, you know, going backwards.
Two-year-olds would be next.
Assembly member Zoran Mandani also.
supports a universal child care plan for kids six weeks to five years old. And he wants it to be a
benefit available to all New Yorkers. You know, that would really mean scaling up current investments by
billions. And he estimates it would be at least five billion in city funds along with state and
federal investments. But supporters of expanded child care investment point to the return for the
city's economy if we were to do that. That's a lot of money. Do any of the candidates have different
approaches to this? Absolutely. Former Comptroller Scott Stringer released a child care plan that would
cap any of a family's investment to new more than 7% of their income. And for lower income families,
it would be free. But he is much more cautious around the word universal when talking about child care.
You know, universal is a great word until you have to pay for it. So any legislator who has a proposal
for universal child care and who could bring home the bacon, then we'll certainly.
expand the program. Now, Stringer has also proposed longer school days and after-school programs
that would be available to all. But again, his proposal includes a new way to fund these activities
that he's called the New York City Tricare Child Care Fund, which is modeled after a similar
program in Michigan. The fund would include city, state, and federal investments, employer investments,
and then payments from families as the final component and the families that could afford it.
And of course, those employers would be incentivized to participate through tax breaks.
And then there's state senator Zelnor Mirey, who is focused on providing universal after-school programming to all students across the city.
He has really talked about how essential it was for him growing up, and he really wants to make it a priority for all families going forward.
And at the same time, he's also fighting for some of those early child care seats that the city has proposed slashing.
Bridget, you've reported on the upcoming closures of five child care centers.
How does the fight for those sites fit into this debate?
Well, one of those sites that's losing its lease, Friends of Crown Heights, is in Mire's district,
and he joined a large protest outside another facility, Neuestris-Ninos in Williamsburg,
just over a week ago.
There are two other sites in Brooklyn, another in Queens.
In all of these cases, Michael, the city said it was not renewing the lease it holds for the space
that these organizations used to run their early childhood programs,
which effectively eliminates their programs next year.
The city has said, you know, the enrollment is down in these programs,
but city controller Brad Lander held a press conference to protest these sudden closures
and frame the impact like this.
Let's be clear, closing those five centers,
cutting this money from universal pre-K, from 3K,
and from special education early childhood services,
would mean that something north of 10,000 families,
who have child care this year would not have it next year.
Now, Michael, I also reported that three of these centers are actually owed millions of dollars from the city and back payments.
But a glimmer of good news right after that story ran about a week ago Friday,
the city paid one of those sites, Neustra Sniños, about $130,000 of what they were owed.
But nothing has changed yet in terms of making those sites available to families next year.
So how is the mayor responding to all of this?
Well, the mayor spent most of last week, hold up in Gracie Mansion, as we know.
But when he emerged on Thursday in a speech, he said he had reduced the cost of child care from $55 a week to $5 a week.
But just to be clear, that is a reference to low-income families who qualify for child care subsidies,
which is a very small number compared to the total number of families that need child care.
And advocates even say those subsidies are cumbersome.
not, they're not reaching everyone who needs it.
So, you know, we are in the midst of budget season, again, at the city and state level.
Opponents are quick to point out that the mayor's preliminary budget does include cuts for early childhood education seats on top of those five centers I've mentioned.
So you can expect this issue to remain one where Adams is targeted by his challengers.
Richard, you can certainly see how this issue will likely drive some votes, even in the mayoral primary.
WNIC's Bridget Bergen.
You can read more of Bridget's reporting on this issue that's on our website, Gauthentus.
Bridget, thank you very much for this.
Thank you.
Thanks for listening.
This is NYC now from WMYC.
Be sure to catch us every weekday, three times a day, for your top news headlines and occasional deep dives.
And subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
See you this evening.
