NYC NOW - November 26, 2024: Midday News
Episode Date: November 26, 2024Some local policy advocates are warning that proposed changes to SNAP, the federal program that helps nearly two million New York City residents afford groceries, could limit its effectiveness. Meanwh...ile, a Vietnam veteran wrongfully imprisoned for nearly eight years for a rape he didn’t commit is suing Westchester County and the town of Greenburgh. WNYC’s Samantha Max reports. Plus, New York City sanitation officials say weekly compost pickup is now available citywide, with landlords required to provide bins for food scraps. But how many residents are actually using them? WNYC’s Liam Quigley has more.
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Welcome to NYC Now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WMYC.
It's Tuesday, November 26th.
Here's the midday news.
I'm Jemé Pierre.
Some local policy advocates are sounding the alarm over potential cuts to a federal program that helps nearly two million New Yorkers afford groceries.
Federal lawmakers are currently negotiating over possible changes.
to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, authorized through the Farm Bill.
One proposal would limit SNAP's growth over time, meaning the subsidies might not go as far.
Bronx resident Emily Santa Steven says she already has to stretch the $300 in federal subsidies she gets each month for herself,
her husband, and her six-month-old son.
It's hard to get, you know, things that aren't processed and boxed and actually make, like, healthy food throughout the month.
Congress could opt to extend the current form bill and put off making any updates until next year.
A Vietnam veteran who spent almost eight years in prison for a rape he didn't commit is suing Westchester County and the town of Greenberg.
Here's WMYC's Samantha Max.
Leonard Mack was convicted of raping a teen in 1975 while she walked home from school in Greenberg.
It took him almost five decades to clear his name.
I'm going to fight this until I prove my innocence.
I don't care how long it's tape.
As long as I have breath in my body,
I'm going to fight this because I knew I didn't do it.
Mack was exonerated last year after DNA testing
confirmed his innocence and identified the true perpetrator.
He says he's suing because he doesn't want anyone else
to be wrongfully convicted like he was.
Westchester County and Greenberg officials did not respond to a request for comment.
Stay close.
There's more after the break.
Here on WNYC, I'm Tiffany Hanson.
New York City sanitation officials say nearly every resident in the city can now have their compost
picked up for free every week.
Landlords are required to set up a bin in each building for food scraps, but how many
building residents are actually composting?
Joining us is WNYC's Parks and Sanitation Reporter Liam Quigley, who has taken a look at the data.
So let's just start with a quick primer before we dig into the data here on the city's composting program.
Everybody's supposed to be composting right now.
That's been true since October.
That means setting out organics separately from regular trash, any food scraps, all compostable waste that is getting picked up the same day that recycling goes out.
The sanitation department has been doing a lot of these initiatives since Mayor Adams took office.
That includes a temporary rollout in Queens.
then that was brought back along with Brooklyn,
and as of last month, that rolled out to the whole city.
So this is the first citywide curbside compost collection program.
As they've been expanding this,
they've also cut funding for community composting programs,
like you might see at the farmer's market.
They said, since we have this citywide rollout,
those aren't really necessary.
But what we learned, like, looking at the data,
is that right now,
only a pretty small fraction of New Yorkers are actually composting at the curb.
Well, you say everyone is supposed to have access to composting,
and if it is only a fraction, do we know how many, exactly,
how many New Yorkers are composting?
We're lucky to have really great data from the sanitation department.
They study the trash pretty intensely.
So from looking at what they collected last month,
that was over 3,000 tons of composting.
That sounds like a lot, but based on their own figures, that number should be something like over 70,000 tons.
I talked to Samantha McBride.
She's an expert on this kind of stuff.
She worked at the sanitation department.
She studied composting super closely in the city.
And she was kind of emphasizing to me that people need time to figure this stuff out.
I would say at the very least, the buildings that are going to get enforced upon need to have far more support and attention from.
sanitation before that hammer of government is brought down.
So she's kind of telling me explaining how education to reach people, especially in bigger
buildings, it's going to take a lot of work.
Like one and two family homes, the landlord lives there.
It's their own home.
They get the bin.
They set out for compost.
But larger buildings, they have to figure out where to put these bins.
I mean, this could be a big challenge for a lot of buildings.
What's being done to get the numbers up then?
Are people getting fines?
Is it a carrot stick kind of situation?
Right now, carrot in the form of outreach, a lot of education, sanitation department knows that's going to be a big part of this.
But they have people who, they look through your trash every day anyway to see if people are recycling.
That's how fines get issued for failure to recycle.
So for composting right now, there's warnings, there's education.
But in April, the fines come in and they start at 50 bucks and they go up from there.
And looking at this data, a lot of buildings are going to get hit with.
fines. Well, what have you been hearing from superintendents on this?
One super is like getting people to recycle is like pulling teeth. Like he spends a lot of time in the
basement going through people's trash to getting compliance with the recycling rules that have
existed since 1989, a long time. He's like getting people to compost in this building,
you're more likely to fly to the moon. But it's a lot of work. So a lot of supers are frustrated.
And they kind of, they kind of get caught in between the policy and the reality of what we
want for the city's trash. Has the Department of Sanitation acknowledged that challenge? And what are they
saying specifically? They totally acknowledge that it's going to be a long process. Sanitation officials
told me it took 20 years to get up to a 50% recycling rate, which is roughly where we're at now.
On the West Coast, they have a lot of these composting programs. But this is new for a lot of New Yorkers.
So the Sanitation Department is saying, you know, they want to educate people about composting
first before April when the fines can start hitting the doors of buildings in New York City.
I mean, my building doesn't have a bin. The official line on that is I'm supposed to call
311 to flag that for the department. Sounds like it's a challenge for a lot of New Yorkers.
Liam, thanks for your time. Thank you.
Liam Quigley covers sanitation for WNYC. You can read his reporting right now at our news site, Gothamist.
and friends get ready to gather for the holidays, WMYC's Community Partnerships Desk is inviting locals
to share the stories behind their favorite foods.
My name is Angelica Vargas. Everybody calls me Angie.
I'm from Monterey, Mexico. It's the northern part of Mexico.
And I currently live in New Jersey.
I have two kids. I'm very proud of my two babies.
Angelina, she's six years old.
and my son Alexander, he's nine.
They're also great cooks just like mom and grandma and great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great parents.
I love food, and I feel like food brings the family together.
But one of my, like, favorite things is like flour tortillas.
It's kind of very difficult to make tortillas in a way because it sounds like, oh, it's flour tortillas.
It's so simple.
But no, you have to really practice.
a lot to make them perfect.
My mom learned to make them with my great-grandmother
and with my grandmother.
And then she teach me.
My mom passed away last year, and we miss her tortillas so much.
Like my kids, they're like, mom, we love your tortillas,
but there's nothing like grandmas.
My most beautiful memories of my mom cooking.
It was in my grandparents' ranch in Montever's ranch
in Monterey.
It's between the mountains
and then the river
passing by next to the house.
There was the outdoor kitchen.
It's like a grill.
I see a picture in my head,
in my eyes, in my brain
of my mom rolling tortillas
in the table
and then put them in the comal
in the fire,
you know, hearing the fire,
seeing the beautiful fire,
putting the tortillas there.
And then,
they start bubbling and then you flip them.
And then you don't have to flip them that much,
but then they bubble like big.
Well, they say that when your tortillas bubbles,
you can get married.
Like, you're ready to be married
because now you know how to make tortillas.
That's a Mexican thing.
At the end of the day, it's enjoying food
and family time together,
like talking and laughing and just those smiles
make it worth it.
Angelica Vargas lives in Garfield, New Jersey.
She's a cooking instructor with the League of Kitchens.
Thanks for listening.
This is NYC now from WMYC.
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