NYC NOW - November 26, 2024: Evening Roundup

Episode Date: November 26, 2024

Half of last year’s calls to the MTA’s blue help boxes were pranks, according to the Inspector General. Meanwhile, Governor Kathy Hochul has signed “Melanie’s Law,” expanding restraining ord...ers to include friends, family, and roommates in domestic violence cases. Plus, with Thanksgiving approaching, WNYC’s Ryan Kailath highlights quieter spots to visit in the city this weekend. And finally, President-elect Donald Trump gained support in traditionally Democratic areas, including parts of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Queens district. WNYC’s Brigid Bergin has more.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to NYC Now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WMYC. I'm Jene Pierre. A new report finds half of all calls made on the MTA's blue help box in subway stations were prank calls. The report from the MTA's Inspector General examined calls last year over a six-month period. It found 1,200 emergency calls weren't answered at all. And one-fourth of calls about things like someone on the tracks or an injured person were not answered within 15 seconds, the nationwide 911 standard. The office recommends the MTA adds cameras and institute a $50 fine for prank calls.
Starting point is 00:00:41 The MTA says the agency is looking at the IG's recommendation. If you're in the city this weekend and you're looking for some less crowded places to hang out, WMYC's Ryan Kyloth has some suggestions for you. If you're like me and love a hotel lobby bar with a fireplace, the ones at the Marlton Hotel and Greenwich Village are Barrow. hotel downtown, feel especially like a mountain cabin. The New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx has a themed light show for The Nightmare Before Christmas. It's an hour-long walk through the grounds with projections and sculptures from the Tim Burton Classic. And another personal favorite
Starting point is 00:01:19 is to skip Black Friday and go thrifting instead. There are 10 housing work stores around the city, and with parts of town emptied out for the holiday, they're more relaxed than usual. Governor Kathy Hokel is expanding protections available to domestic violence victims and their families. The governor signed into law new legislation that makes a wider group of people eligible for protection by restraining orders in domestic violence cases. Melanie's law is named after 29-year-old Melanie Chianis, who was murdered by her mother's ex-boyfriend two years ago. At the signing, Hockel thanked Melanie's mother. And if it wasn't for the relentless advocacy of her mother, her story was, would have been buried a year and a half ago when we lost her. But her mother, Cheryl, said no.
Starting point is 00:02:07 Now, my daughter deserved more. The system failed, my little girl. Under the previous law, orders of protection only covered children under age 18. The new law makes eligible all family members as well as friends and roommates. Up next, a traditionally Democratic district in Queens surprised many by showing significant Republican support in the recent election. What's behind the shift? That story after the break. This is NYC now. Few political figures draw as much attention as Republican President elect Donald Trump and Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Starting point is 00:02:54 Both won their most recent elections. Ocasio-Cortez by a wider margin in her district than Trump nationally. Yet Trump gained ground in traditionally democratic areas, including parts of Ocasio-Cortez's district. My colleague Tiffany Hansen spoke with WMYC's Bridget Bergen, who visited neighborhoods in Queens where voters supported both parties. All right. So first of all, tell us where you went and why did you pick that spot? Just to put this in context, we're talking about the 14th congressional district. And I went specifically to the Queens part of the district.
Starting point is 00:03:26 The district itself includes parts of Queens and the Bronx. Election districts are the smallest geographic units the Board of Election uses to assign voters. There are about 400 of them in the entire 14th congressional district. And thanks to some analysis, voter turnout by Steve Romuluski over at the CUNY Mapping Center, the Center for Urban Research at the CUNY Graduate Center, we were actually able to identify the 13 election districts that were won by both Ocasio-Cortez and Trump. And since I wanted to find those split-ticket voters, that's where I went. And so basically, I was in two areas around East Elmhurst and North Corona. All right. So got it.
Starting point is 00:04:03 What did people who voted for Ocasio-Cortez and Trump say to you? A lot of very interesting perspectives. One of the first people who really wanted to talk to me was Anna Marte. She's 65, owns her small two-story home in North Corona. She's a retired hairdresser who used to work on Manhattan's East Side, and she has four adult children. Who did you vote for if you want to talk about it? Oh, what's wrong? And what made you vote for him?
Starting point is 00:04:33 Because, I don't know. My daughter, they say, oh, it's very good because not very good. But the one that we have now, it's like, it was not that good. For Marte, she had really big concerns about migrants in her community and public safety. As she said, there was actually a temporary encampment on her street corner until some building scaffolding had been taken down. It was there for a couple of years, actually. She also said, you know, at one point during the summer, people who she didn't know began sleeping in her backyard. And she's installed security cameras.
Starting point is 00:05:11 And so she voted for Trump at the urging of her kids, but she split her vote. Do you remember voting for Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez? Mm-hmm. Yeah. And why did you vote for her? Because we need somebody like, like new. Maybe they do something. We need change.
Starting point is 00:05:33 So you hear that same voter looking for change pick two different candidates to produce it. You mentioned the migrant issue there, a concern for that voter specifically. I'm wondering if you heard other issues sort of bubble to the top as you spoke with other voters in the district. Yeah, you know, I spoke to several voters who didn't want to give me their names. And overall, I heard a lot of really resentment from some longer term immigrants that saw the support given to some of the current migrants. as receiving handouts. This was the way 76-year-old Primitivo Collado said it to me. When we came to this country, we came to work. I came in 60-year at this country. I started work.
Starting point is 00:06:17 And others I talked to, you know, just expressed a general feeling of insecurity. Here's Benito Cortez. He's 79. Everything is back here, you know. After 7 o'clock, you're going to go out. You know, they mug you. You know, it's terrible. Now, I asked him, Tiffany, if he personally,
Starting point is 00:06:33 had been the victim of a violent crime, and he had not been, but he said he knew people who had and generally just felt unsafe. Got it. All right. So crime, as we know from the election, right, crime and the migrant issue, both top concerns for voters. We heard that here. Some of the voters you spoke with were one-time immigrants themselves. Did they feel bothered at all by comments the former president and president-elect has made in the past about immigrants? You know, those voters who I spoke to who supported Trump, you know, really seemed to have filtered it out. But I spoke to one Harris voter in the district who was struggling with that very issue. Kareem Abdullah is 47 originally from West Africa.
Starting point is 00:07:15 He described having that exact kind of conversation with friends and neighbors who supported Trump. He said often, you know, in a conversation with another person of color, he would push them to explain how they could support Trump, given his rhetoric. When you ask them, they're like, no, I don't care. I don't care. And then some people have problems with my growing. I'm like, but you're children of immigrants. Why help him with migrants?
Starting point is 00:07:36 And they just don't. They don't have answer. Now, I will note at the same time that, you know, he struggled those conversations. Abdullah said he's actually not that worried about a second Trump term. He's just looking for ways to get through it. People who know Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez know that she's very active on social media. Absolutely. Right.
Starting point is 00:07:58 She did go on to Instagram after the election to, talk about what happened, basically. She's not the only Democrat that's trying to figure that out. That's right. You know, there's a lot of analysis out there from Democrats about why they underperformed. A lot of it's top down. But there are also some elected officials here in the city that are trying to take some lessons from this most recent election. Assembly member Zoran Mandani went to two spots in the Bronx and Queens where he actually just held up a sign and asked voters to tell him what was on their minds and put together a video that, you know, shared. some of the perspectives he learned from these voters in an interview with him afterwards.
Starting point is 00:08:36 He told me he plans to take that kind of feedback and make sure it informs his platform because he is also a candidate for mayor next year. Instead of telling people what he thinks they should port, he wants to be responding to their actual concerns. And here's a little bit of what he said. You cannot go to someone that is struggling to afford the price of eggs and tell them, this is an incredible economy. And we have record levels of, you know, low levels of unemployment because those statistics
Starting point is 00:09:01 have not translated into all that much for so many of these Norfolk's lives. You know, so going forward, we may see these officials talking less and listening more in the election season ahead. That's WNYC's Bridget Bergen in conversation with my colleague Tiffany Hanson. Thanks for listening to NYC now from WMYC. Catch us every weekday, three times a day. I'm Jene Pierre. We'll be back tomorrow.

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