NYC quietly changes COVID risk assessment tools
/As COVID-19 cases begin to again see a rise in New York City, the city’s health department has quietly changed the way it presents data on the virus to the public.
Read MoreAs COVID-19 cases begin to again see a rise in New York City, the city’s health department has quietly changed the way it presents data on the virus to the public.
Read MoreGovernor Kathy Hochul said changes to the clemency process were coming – half a year later, few have come to pass.
Read MoreIt’s Bobby Bonilla Day – the one day a year it feels good to celebrate the historic ineptitude and frequent follies of the New York Mets.
Read MoreA new exhibition headed to the Jamaica Center for the Arts and Learning explores internal identity and invites patrons to do the same.
Read MoreA waterfront clean-up nearly a decade in the making is almost complete.
Read MoreProgressive candidates showed strong early results in open races in Queens, most Assembly incumbents cruised to victory and an upset in the race for a spot on the bench in Queens Civil Court. Check out how Tuesday’s primary played out.
Read MoreGlenn Hirsch, the Briarwood man accused of shooting a delivery driver in Forest Hills to death in April, was released on bail by a Queens Criminal Court judge on Monday.
Read MoreThe auction for the last of a generation of subway cars has buyers ready to play ball.
Read MoreBeloved District 30 Superintendent Philip Composto has officially been reappointed to his position, following community outcry over earlier announcements that he had been removed from the running.
Read MoreQueens voters tell the Eagle their thoughts on the first of two primary elections to be held in New York this year.
Read MoreA Staten Island judge ruled Monday that a recently passed New York City law to expand the franchise by hundreds of thousands of people is unconstitutional.
Read More“For the first time in American history, our daughters will have fewer rights than their mothers.”
Read MoreAttorneys representing incarcerated clients on Rikers Island argued in court that the Department of Correction has been potentially fudging its data to show that it’s in compliance with its mandate to offer medical care to people in custody.
Read MoreState Senate or Assembly? That is the question. Albert Baldeo, a Queens man previously jailed for campaign related improprieties a decade ago, says both.
Read MoreFollowing the deaths of three detainees in less than a week, Mayor Eric Adams made a trip to Rikers Island on Wednesday to tout the Department of Correction’s clamp down on illegal weapons and to defend the agency's officers who have come under fire in the past year for missing work in large numbers.
Read MoreHome / Law / Crime / Politics / Communities / Voices / All Stories / Who We Are / Terms and Conditions