New York Today: Learning From Hurricane Sandy
By ANNIE CORREAL
Wednesday: The second anniversary of a storm, a cloudy day, and painting the marathon’s finish line.
After decades of decay, a new Corn Exchange is rising on Park Avenue and 125th Street at a cost of $14 million.
Executives of the piano company Steinway & Sons are close to signing a 15-year lease for 40,000 square feet of space at 1133 Avenue of the Americas.
When The Times asked readers affected by Hurricane Sandy to report how they were doing two years later, many wrote of the primacy of their loved ones.
Wednesday: The second anniversary of a storm, a cloudy day, and painting the marathon’s finish line.
William Clemons, the top uniformed officer, along with two high-ranking colleagues, will be leaving as the Correction Department faces intensifying criticism over brutality at the jail.
Some employees at the New York medical center say they are feeling snubbed, a result of working at the place handling the city’s first Ebola case.
The Cuomo administration has issued a set of guidelines that go beyond federal recommendations but seek to allow individuals to spend their isolation in a location of their choice.
Doubts and anxiety persist for neighbors in the 5-year-old boy’s building, with some suspicious that the test results are not accurate.
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy affirmed a case-by-case approach to quarantines, but it has not quelled opposition.
The father of Ikeoluwa Opayemi, a third grader from Milford, Conn., said that his daughter has been unfairly barred from school amid fears she may have been exposed to the Ebola virus while in Africa.
The candidates tussled over who would have greater influence in the House of Representatives: a member of the Democratic minority or a congressman facing a 20-count federal indictment.
Elise M. Stefanik is vying for the open 21st Congressional District against a Democrat, Aaron Woolf, and a Green Party candidate, Matt Funiciello.
Sales of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s memoir fell by more than 43 percent to 535 copies in its second week on shelves.
Three senators and the acting National Transportation Safety Board chairman responded to the findings of the probable causes of five accidents, including a fatal derailment.
Jay Walder, the former head of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, will run the company that operates New York City’s bike-share system, with plans for improvements.
The proposed building project foundered on issues including a package of tax breaks to the bank that was publicly scoffed at by Mayor Bill de Blasio.
The captain of the Southwest Airlines jet that hit a runway at La Guardia Airport in July 2013 may have been making major adjustments to the controls too close to the ground, the National Transportation Safety Board said.
A report by the John Jay College of Criminal Justice found that as crime in New York City reached historically low levels, the number of arrests for misdemeanor crimes skyrocketed.
The beetles, which have been moving northward as a result of warmer winters, were found in three places in Suffolk County in late September.
A group of New York politicians is lobbying Comcast to provide the free broadband as a condition for its proposed $45 billion merger with Time Warner Cable.
The state’s Court of Appeals found that a prosecutors’ script urging defendants to, for example, divulge their alibis contradicted the later notification that they could remain silent.
The police in Farmingdale were investigating the deaths of a woman outside a home and a man struck by a train to determine whether they were connected.
The promotions include that of Philip Banks III, the chief of department, who will become the new first deputy commissioner, the second-highest-ranking position.
Fixing long-neglected little parks in New York is nice, but it fails to address far larger problems.
“The Death of Klinghoffer” at the Metropolitan Opera is selling well, despite protests that greeted its opening.
Bob Kennedy, 44, a two-time Olympian on the track, has again entered the New York City Marathon, with a twist on the usual trajectory of a runner.
Rather than aiming for a big fix, like giant storm gates, flood-proofing solutions being tried out in New York are more widespread and humbler, like stone revetments and solar-powered streetlights.
The creators of a new crop of treadmill classes are betting that running in place can be the next huge exercise trend, enticing people willing to pay $34 or more for a single class.
A robust election result for the Working Families Party is threatened by the Women’s Equality Party, which is part of a branding effort on the part of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo to appeal to female voters.
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