Month: February 2026

  • Mayor Mamdani Announces Key Appointments to Three City Agencies and Offices, Including Chief Technology Officer

    Mayor Mamdani Announces Key Appointments to Three City Agencies and Offices, Including Chief Technology Officer

    myc news Mamdani women humor

    Mayor Zohran Mamdani today announced three new appointments to lead critical agencies and offices across city government. Mayor Mamdani appointed Lisa Gelobter as New York City’s Chief Technology Officer and Commissioner of the Office of Technology and Innovation; Nisha Agarwal as Commissioner of the Mayor’s Office for People With Disabilities; and Lisa Scott-McKenzie as Commissioner of the New York City Department for the Aging.

    About Lisa Gelobter

    A recognized leader in social impact and digital equity, Lisa Gelobter will serve as New York City’s Chief Technology Officer (CTO) and Commissioner of the Office of Technology and Innovation (OTI).

    Commissioner Gelobter brings decades of experience at the intersection of technology, public service, and social impact. Most recently, Commissioner Gelobter founded tEQuitable, which helps organizations identify and address systemic workplace culture issues and uses technology to make workplaces more equitable. 
    Commissioner Gelobter served in the Obama Administration as Chief Digital Service Officer at the U.S. Department of Education, where she focused on improving access to government services and boosting outcomes, particularly for vulnerable populations. 
    Commissioner Gelobter also worked as Interim Chief Digital Officer at BET Networks, dedicated to entertaining, engaging, and empowering the Black community. 
    She has been recognized by Inc. Magazine as one of the 100 Women Building America’s Most Innovative and Ambitious Businesses and named to Fast Company’s list of Most Creative People. 
    Commissioner Gelobter is one of the first 40 Black women to have raised more than $1 million in venture capital funding and helped pioneer several foundational Internet technologies, including Shockwave, Hulu, and the ascent of online video.

    As CTO and head of OTI, Commissioner Gelobter will oversee the city’s technology infrastructure, cyber security efforts, and data management initiatives. She will focus on using technology to expand access to vital city services and advancing digital equity across New York City.

    “I’m deeply honored to be appointed by Mayor Mamdani at a moment when technology is reshaping nearly every aspect of civic life. Technology impacts how people experience government every day — from accessing services to trusting that systems work fairly and responsibly. As CTO and Commissioner, my focus will be on using technology in service of the public good: improving delivery, strengthening accountability, and ensuring innovation reflects the needs of all New Yorkers,” said CTO and OTI Commissioner Gelobter. “I’m excited to work alongside the extraordinary team at OTI, our partners, and communities across the City to deliver technology that truly works for everyone.”

    “Lisa Gelobter’s decades-long career as a computer scientist, innovator, and entrepreneur has been defined by her commitment to leveraging technology for the public good,” said Mayor Mamdani. “I am honored that she will bring that same vision and leadership to City Hall as our next Chief Technology Officer.”

    “New York City needs leaders who are smart, creative, and deeply committed to advancing the public good. Lisa Gelobter is all three. No matter where she works, Lisa brings a relentless belief in the ability of technology to uplift and empower people — to create a country where every person can access and afford an education, to create a tech industry where every person can deepen their skills and find a job, to create programs where every person can participate and get ahead. I am excited to see her bring that belief to the Mamdani Administration,” said State University of New York Chancellor John B. King, Jr. “Working in the trenches with Lisa at the U.S. Department of Education when I was U.S. Secretary of Education for President Obama, I saw first-hand Lisa’s intelligence and work ethic, her compassion and kindness, her commitment and drive. Congratulations to Mayor Mamdani on an excellent appointment and congratulations to Lisa on this extraordinary opportunity.”

    “Lisa Gelobter is the real deal. I’ve seen firsthand how she cancels bad contracts without hesitation, builds teams that deliver, and always puts the needs of everyday people first,” said Erie Meyer, former CTO, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. “She listened to overwhelmed students who were getting ripped off by for-profit schools and published the truth in open data. Lisa is fearless when it comes to making sure government serves the people it’s supposed to serve and that taxpayer dollars deliver real value. That’s exactly the kind of CTO you want leading technology in the middle of an affordability crisis. Bad actors should be on notice — Lisa will make sure city tech works for New Yorkers, not just well-connected companies.”

    “Lisa is absolutely the right person at the right moment to be leading technology efforts in the Mamdani Administration. We have backed her as an entrepreneur for nearly a decade and seen her in action advising startups how to work with the public sector. Her unwavering commitment is to closing gaps of access, opportunity and outcomes for low-income communities and communities of color,” said Mitch and Freada Kapor, Founding Partners, Kapor Capital. “Lisa is dedicated to using tech to create more inclusive and fair workplaces, and to make services more accessible, more respectful and more cost-effective. Our experience tells us that Lisa will make a transformative difference for her fellow New Yorkers.”

    “Lisa Gelobter has always been a catalyst for change. She brings the rare combination of deep technical and digital service design experience, and a lifelong commitment to equity that New York City needs in its next Chief Technology Officer,” said Noel Hidalgo, Executive Director, BetaNYC. “From helping shape the early internet and streaming media to improving federal digital services in the U.S. Department of Education, she has consistently demonstrated how technology can deliver real results for the public. We are excited about the opportunity to work with a CTO who understands that modern, accessible, and trustworthy digital infrastructure is essential to a city that works for all New Yorkers.”

    “New Yorkers excited about Mayor Mamdani’s vision should be thrilled with his choice for OTI Commissioner and CTO,” said Jennifer Pahlka, author, Recoding America, and founder, Recoding America Fund. “Lisa is a wise and seasoned tech leader who has proven she understands more than technology.
    She knows how to make government work for people.”

    About Nisha Agarwal

    An accomplished public interest attorney as well as public servant, Nisha Agarwal will serve as Commissioner of the New York City Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities (MOPD).

    Working across the public, advocacy, and legal sectors, Commissioner Agarwal has dedicated her career to empowering vulnerable New Yorkers. Commissioner Agarwal previously served as the Executive Director for Policy and Communications at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Division of Mental Hygiene. She also served as Deputy Executive Director for Impact and a Senior Advisor at International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP), a global legal aid and advocacy organization. Under the de Blasio administration, Commissioner Agarwal led the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs — building landmark initiatives like IDNYC, the city’s municipal identification card, and Cities for Action, a national advocacy coalition of local elected officials. Commissioner Agarwal also served as Senior Advisor to the Deputy Mayor for Strategic Policy Initiatives, where she worked to boost civic engagement among New Yorkers and build DemocracyNYC’s efforts on immigration, people with disabilities, and justice involved communities. Before entering city government, Commissioner Agarwal led the Health Justice Program at the New York Lawyers for the Public Interest, served as Deputy Director and Co-Founder of the Center for Popular Democracy, and worked as Executive Director of the Immigrant Justice Corps.

    As head of MOPD, Commissioner Agarwal will work across city government and with the disability community to make sure that every New Yorker can access the city’s spaces, services, and resources.

    “I am honored to be the commissioner of the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities. All of the priorities that Mayor Mamdani supports are critical for people with disabilities: affordable housing and food, access to health and mental health, free transportation, education equity, and employment opportunities,” said MOPD Commissioner Agarwal. “I will work with and on behalf of disabled New Yorkers to tackle these issues and ensure that people with disabilities are at the forefront for creating this city more livable for all.”

    “It’s not enough for New York City to be affordable for everyone — it must be accessible to everyone, too. With decades of experience in public service, Commissioner Agarwal will help our administration deliver on that mission and build a city where every New Yorker can succeed,” Mayor Mamdani said. “From housing to health care to education, Commissioner Agarwal will work across government to break down barriers and ensure that our administration delivers for New Yorkers with disabilities.”

    “New York’s most vulnerable populations rely on steady leadership in government to make our city more accessible, livable, and affordable,” said Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services Dr. Helen Arteaga. “I am so proud to welcome these outstanding public servants — each of whom brings a wealth of experience in their respective fields — to the administration. Every voice should be heard and valued, and I look forward to working alongside the incoming commissioners to ensure New York is a city where everyone can live to their full potential.”

    “New York Lawyers for the Public Interest (NYLPI) applauds Mayor Mamdani’s appointment of Nisha Agarwal as the commissioner of the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities,” said Ruth Lowenkron, Director, NYLPI’s Disability Justice Program. “NYLPI has worked with Ms. Agarwal extensively over the years, including in her role as executive director for policy and communications at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and as executive director of the International Refugee Assistance Project, where she started up a disability justice program. Her lived experience as a person with disabilities, as well as her advocacy on behalf of the disability community, make her an excellent candidate for the job, and we look forward to working with her.”

    “Nisha Agarwal will be a tremendous partner and advocate for disabled New Yorkers as Mayor Mamdani’s Commissioner for the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities,” said Joe Rappaport, Executive Director, Brooklyn Center for Independence of the Disabled. “We congratulate her. As in her past work with us, we know she will listen to New Yorkers with disabilities, fight for us and work inside and outside the administration to advance equal access and equity for our community.”

    “Nisha Agarwal is a dedicated public servant and we are thrilled to see her serve as the next commissioner for the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities,” said Roderick Jones, President, Goddard Riverside. “At Goddard, we help thousands of community members get the supports needed to live with dignity and respect. But we cannot do this without partners who understand diverse communities, the barriers they face, and how to ensure they have what they need to thrive. As a lawyer with both nonprofit and government leadership experience, Nisha has the combination of knowledge, creativity, and heart needed in City Hall to ensure New Yorkers with disabilities have equitable access to services and opportunities. We will be excited to work with her towards a more accessible New York City for all.”

    About Dr. Lisa Scott-McKenzie

    A longtime city employee and community leader, Dr. Lisa Scott-McKenzie will serve as Commissioner of the New York City Department for the Aging (NYC Aging).

     Dr. Scott-McKenzie has served the North Brooklyn community for nearly four decades, most recently as Chief Operating Officer (COO) at New York City Health + Hospitals/Woodhull. In that role, she shepherded multi-million-dollar construction projects and helped lead key divisions across the hospital, including Facilities Management, Engineering, Central Sterile, Environmental Services, Emergency Management, Biomedical Engineering, Patient Relations, Social Work Services, Hospital Police, Environment of Care, Support Services, Ancillary Services, Public Affairs, Community Affairs and Patient Experience Divisions. For her work leading H+H Woodhull, Dr. Scott-McKenzie was voted one of the Top 50 COOs in the world and received a 2024 OnCon Icon Award. Dr. Scott-McKenzie is also a Certified Emergency Manager, serving as Incident Commander for events ranging from the Y2K Conversion to the Northeastern Blackout in 2003 to Superstorm Sandy in 2012. She began her career in 1986 as a Stenographic Secretarial Associate in Radiology at NYC H+H.

    As the head of NYC Aging, Commissioner Dr. Scott-McKenzie will help make sure that older adults can access the housing, health care, and city services they need to age in New York City.

    “It is my distinct honor to have been selected by Mayor Mamdani to serve New York City seniors and older adults and be a strong advocate for affordable housing, enhanced safety, food and economic stability as well as to take measures to ease the effects of loneliness,” said NYC Aging Commissioner Dr. Scott-McKenzie. “Our seniors have earned the right to age gracefully with dignity and respect in the city that we love. I will work tirelessly to make this a reality.”

    “We want to make sure the seniors who shaped our city can stay in it — with an affordable place to live, accessible parks to enjoy and reliable access to the benefits they’ve earned. NYC Aging is central to that mission, and I can’t think of a better person to lead it than Dr. Scott-McKenzie,” Mayor Mamdani said. “From helping oversee our public hospital system to coordinating emergency responses during major crises, Dr. Scott-McKenzie has dedicated her career to protecting, uplifting and empowering New Yorkers. She has fought relentlessly to make government work for the people who need it most, and I’m excited to bring her leadership and experience to NYC Aging.”

    “With so many older adults who are food insecure, in need of affordable healthcare, and suffering loneliness in New York City, I am super excited to welcome Dr. Lisa Scott-McKenzie as the new Commissioner for the Department for the Aging,” said New York City Councilmember Lynn Schulman, Chair of the Health Committee. “I have known Dr. Scott-McKenzie for almost two decades and worked alongside her at H+H/Woodhull where I witnessed firsthand how she treated those most vulnerable among us. She is smart, warm and kind. I know our city’s older adults (of which I am one) will be in good hands under her leadership.”

    “I congratulate the Mamdani Administration on the appointment of Dr. Lisa Scott-McKenzie as Commissioner for the Aging. As a former Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services and DFTA Commissioner, I believe that Dr. Scott-McKenzie’s experience in the healthcare field, her compassion and her management skills will enable her to make a real difference in the lives of the aging population of New York City,” said former Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services Dr. Lilliam Barrios-Paoli. “Her commitment to addressing critical issues being faced by so many seniors, such as increasing poverty and isolation, unstable housing and food insecurity, make her appointment an important statement by the administration. I am sure that the seniors, the provider community and the advocates in the field will be well served by this appointment.”

    “We at LiveOn NY congratulate Dr. Lisa Scott-McKenzie on her appointment as NYC Aging Commissioner and we are excited to begin this new chapter of aging in New York City,” said Allison Nickerson, Executive Director, LiveOn NY. “As our city ages we must ensure that we are doing everything we can to make sure we have the housing and services we need to remain vital members of our communities. We are looking forward to working with Dr. Scott-McKenzie to make New York a better place to age.”

    Mayor Mamdani announced the appointments at the SAGE Center Brooklyn at Stonewall House, which provides LGBTQ+ seniors with a welcoming space to access culturally competent services, community spaces, and digital resources.

    Sources: NYC.gov , Midtown Tribune News

    Midtown Tribune Independent USA news from New York

  • New York. A Story About Returning  People $2 Billion Climate money and Democrats

    New York. A Story About Returning People $2 Billion Climate money and Democrats

    What Happened in the Senate

    • On February 5, 2026, the amendment was brought up for a vote. Every Democratic member of the New York State Senate voted against the proposal, so it failed.

    Once upon a winter day in New York State, a State Senator named Mark Walczyk had an idea to help everyday people. Many families were struggling with very high utility bills — the cost of keeping their lights on and homes warm was putting a strain on their wallets. NYsenate.gov

    Senator Walczyk thought, “There’s money that’s been set aside but not used. What if we returned that money to people so their bills could be a little lower?” So he proposed a plan to take $2 billion of unused funds and use it to give credits on utility bills, which could help families pay less. nysenate.gov/

    But when it was time for the measure to be voted on in the New York State Senate, something surprising happened.
    Every Democratic Senator said no to the plan. They all voted against it — even though it was meant to take effect right away and help with the high costs people were facing. nysenate.gov/

    Senator Walczyk was disappointed. He said that this was a missed chance to help New Yorkers struggling with energy costs. And that’s how the day’s big idea to lower energy bills ended — not with a yes, but with a big no in the Senate.

    What the Proposed Measure Would Do

    • The proposal was offered as an amendment on the floor of the New York State Senate by Republican senators including Mark Walczyk and Tom O’Mara.
    • It aimed to provide immediate relief for New Yorkers facing high utility bills by allowing unused funds in the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority’s (NYSERDA) Climate Investment Account to be returned directly to utility ratepayers as bill credits. Around $2 billion was cited as available from previously collected surcharges that hadn’t yet been spent.
    • Sponsors argued these funds were already paid by ratepayers through charges on their utility bills and could be used to offset steep increases in energy costs many households face.

    Why Democrats Opposed It

    There hasn’t been a detailed official public explanation in the press release itself of Democrats’ specific reasoning for voting against this particular amendment. However, broader reporting on the context around utility-cost policy in Albany shows:

    • The Democratic majority in the Senate has been advancing a separate legislative package focused on longer-term utility rate reforms — including changes to how utility rates are set and how regulatory authority is exercised — rather than one-time refunds or credits. nysenate.gov/
    • Democratic leaders have emphasized systemic changes to the rate-setting process through bills meant to increase transparency, strengthen the Public Service Commission’s oversight, and protect consumers over time, rather than simply returning existing funds as credits. timesunion.com
    • Some analysts and social media discussions note that Democrats may prefer a more comprehensive overhaul of energy policy and rate structures rather than targeted bill credits that Republicans proposed in this amendment.

    What connection does this “climate fund” have to reality, and why are people being charged for it?

    What is this fund and who manages it?
    This refers to climate and “green” accounts administered by NYSERDA — the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority. The money is accumulated in various climate and energy programs under the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA).

    Formally, this is not a single “wallet,” but a collection of funds and accounts into which money flows for climate-related goals.

    Where does the money come from (the key point)?
    ❗ These are not abstract grants or “money out of thin air.”

    The main sources are:

    • surcharges and add-ons in electricity and gas bills;
    • fees imposed on energy companies, which are passed on to consumers;
    • revenues from emissions allowance trading;
    • mandatory “climate contributions” built into utility rates.

    In simple terms: ordinary residents and businesses pay for it every month through their utility bills.

    What is the official purpose of collecting this money?

    The stated goals are:

    • transition to “clean energy”;
    • reduction of CO₂ emissions;
    • subsidies for solar panels, heat pumps, and electric vehicles;
    • grants for “green” projects and NGOs;
    • funding long-term climate programs through 2030–2040.

    On paper, this looks like an investment in the future.

    Where does the disconnect with reality arise?

    This is where issues of trust and common sense begin:

    People pay now, while the benefits are hypothetical and deferred.
    Bills are rising today. The “climate benefits” are promised in 10–20 years.

    The fund is weakly connected to actual bill reductions.
    In practice, climate programs more often increase utility rates than decrease them.

    Money accumulates while the crisis is ignored.
    When billions of dollars sit unused in accounts, yet people are told, “Be patient, now is not the time to return the money,” that starts to look like bureaucratic absurdity rather than climate policy.

    Lack of emergency logic.
    Climate change is a long-term issue.
    Rising utility bills are an urgent social problem.
    Yet authorities consciously place ideology above people’s ability to pay.

    Why critics see this fund as disconnected from reality

    Because:

    • the fund does not protect consumers, but uses them as a source of financing;
    • money is collected mandatorily, but not returned even during crises;
    • decisions are made by technocrats and politicians, while ordinary ratepayers foot the bill;
    • climate rhetoric is used as a universal justification for additional charges.

    In effect, it looks like this:

    “We know you’re struggling, but the climate matters more than your heating bill.”

    In its current form, the climate fund:

    • has a weak connection to people’s everyday reality;
    • is financed through what amounts to a hidden tax in utility bills;
    • is treated as untouchable reserve money, even when households are suffocating under rising costs.

    That is why the refusal to return at least part of these funds looks less like care for the future and more like indifference to the present.

    Sources: NYsenate.gov , Midtown Tribune news

    Midtown Tribune Independent USA news from New York

  • Mayor Mamdani Announces Opening of Shirley Chisholm Recreation Center

    Mayor Mamdani Announces Opening of Shirley Chisholm Recreation Center

    Video: Mayor Mamdani Announces Opening of Shirley Chisholm Recreation Center.

    Feb 9, 2026First ever rec center in Central Brooklyn and now borough’s largest rec center will serve over 41,000 New Yorkers.

    Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced the opening of the brand-new Shirley Chisholm Recreation Center in East Flatbush. He was joined by NYC Parks Commissioner Tricia Shimamura, Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, State Senator Kevin Parker, Assemblymember Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn, and Councilmember Farah Louis.
    The new center is the first new Parks recreation center in over a decade, the first ever in Central Brooklyn, and the largest recreation center in the whole borough. Located in the heart of Little Haiti, the center is expected to serve residents of East Flatbush and Midwood, with over 41,000 New Yorkers living within a 15-minute walk or transit ride of the new center.
    The approximately 74,000-square-foot recreation center provides space for swimming, team sports, exercise, educational programming, and even A/V production in a media lab. Like all Parks recreation centers, discounts are available for New Yorkers of all ages, and membership is entirely free for people 24 years and younger.
    The center will fully open to the public on Tuesday, February 10. For the first week, all New Yorkers will have the opportunity to use the brand-new center for one free day of their choosing, prior to becoming members. Parks is also hosting guided tours, registration events, and demonstrations to help New Yorkers experience what the new facility has to offer.
    Now Brooklyn’s largest recreation center, the Shirley Chisholm Recreation Center includes brand-new fitness resources for New Yorkers of all ages and backgrounds, including:
    • Competition-sized 6 lane pool, including a ramp, chairlift, and stairs so all visitors can comfortably enter the water regardless of ability
    • Three lane walking track
    • Competition-sized gym perfect for basketball, pickleball, and volleyball
    • Exercise rooms for cardio workouts, weightlifting, and spin classes The center also features spaces for events, classes, and relaxation, including:
    • Teaching kitchen
    • Afterschool space with its own outdoor play area
    • Dedicated teens-only space with supervision
    • Dr. Roy A. Hastick Sr. Media Lab with a mixing room for A/V production
    • Multipurpose rooms for events and classes The new center is named for Shirley Chisholm, the Brooklyn-born politician who became the first African American woman to serve in Congress, representing Brooklyn in the House of Representatives from 1969 to 1983
    Shirley Chislom Recreation Center 3002 Foster Avenue Brooklyn February 9, 2026

    Midtown Tribune Independent USA news from New York

  • New York . At Annual Interfaith Breakfast, Mayor Mamdani Reaffirms City’s Sanctuary Status, Launches Expansive “Know Your Rights” Push to Protect Immigrant New Yorkers From Federal Overreach

    New York . At Annual Interfaith Breakfast, Mayor Mamdani Reaffirms City’s Sanctuary Status, Launches Expansive “Know Your Rights” Push to Protect Immigrant New Yorkers From Federal Overreach

    – Today ( February 6, 2026), at the first annual Interfaith Breakfast (The NYC mayor’s interfaith breakfast was established as an annual tradition by Mike Bloomberg in 2002, ) of his administration, Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced sweeping new actions to uphold New York City’s sanctuary city laws and protect immigrant New Yorkers.
    The breakfast brought together nearly 400 faith and community leaders from across the five boroughs.

    During the event, Mayor Mamdani signed a comprehensive executive order to reaffirm the city’s commitment to being a sanctuary for all New Yorkers. The order protects the privacy and data of immigrants and all residents; bolsters restrictions on federal immigration enforcement on city property; initiates an audit to make sure city agencies are complying with sanctuary laws; and establishes a committee to coordinate crisis response across city government in the event of escalating federal immigration actions or other major events.

    Mayor Mamdani also launched a citywide “Know Your Rights” push, distributing nearly 32,000 flyers and booklets in 10 languages for faith leaders to share with their congregations. The materials provide clear, accessible information about New Yorkers’ rights during interactions with federal immigration authorities, including the right to remain silent, the right to speak to an attorney, and the right to a translator.

    View Mayor Mamdani’s full address HERE.

    “Across this country, day after day, we bear witness to cruelty that staggers the conscience. Masked agents, paid by our own tax dollars, violate the Constitution and visit terror upon our neighbors,” said Mayor Mamdani. “That is why this morning, I am signing an executive order that will strengthen our city’s protection of our fellow New Yorkers from abusive immigration enforcement. This order is a sweeping reaffirmation of our commitment to our immigrant neighbors. We have also prepared 30,000 guides to New Yorkers’ rights in ten languages spoken by some of the most heavily targeted populations in our city, teaching our neighbors what to do if ICE comes for them. These guides are here today, ready for you to take. If you run out, we will print more. I urge you to share these with your congregants — even those who are citizens, even those whom you think ICE may not target. These materials apply to us all: those who have been here for five generations, those who arrived last year. They apply to us all because the obligation is upon us all. To love thy neighbor, to look out for the stranger.”

    Executive Order 13

    Executive Order 13 takes critical steps to keep not only immigrant New Yorkers but all New Yorkers safe from aggressive, unlawful, and xenophobic federal actions as well as deepen trust between New Yorkers and their city government.

    Executive Order 13 reaffirms that information collected by city agencies for city purposes must remain protected and cannot be shared with federal immigration authorities, except as required by law. Under the order, each agency has 14 days to appoint a privacy officer, conduct training, and certify compliance with sanctuary protections limiting information sharing.

    Executive Order 13 also makes clear that city property — including parking garages, parking lots, schools, shelters, hospitals, and other public spaces — is for city purposes only. Federal authorities may not enter city property without a judicial warrant. The order also directs core agencies to develop and distribute training for city employees on how to interact with federal immigration authorities.

    Moreover, Executive Order 13 requires agencies — including the NYPD, New York City Department of Correction (DOC), New York City Department of Probation (DOP), Administration for Children’s Services (ACS), and Department of Social Services (DSS) — to conduct comprehensive audits of all internal policies governing interactions with federal immigration authorities, update protocols and guidance as needed, and provide public transparency into any new policies that are created as a result.

    Finally, Executive Order 13 establishes an Interagency Response Committee to coordinate crisis policy across city agencies and ensure a whole-of-government response.

    “Know Your Rights” Push

    As part of the new “Know Your Rights” push, the city is distributing nearly 32,000 flyers and booklets to faith institutions across New York City. The materials are available in English, Spanish, Mandarin, French, Bangla, Russian, Arabic, Kreyole, Urdu, and Yiddish – languages spoken by those most targeted by federal immigration crackdowns.

    The materials outline key rights and options during encounters with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), including the right to remain silent, the right to ask for a judicial warrant, the right to speak with an attorney and the right to request an interpreter. They also explain New York City’s sanctuary laws and provide information about the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA) Legal Support Hotline.

    The hotline — available Monday and Wednesday from 9:00 AM to 8:00 PM; Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday from 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM; and on the last Saturday of each month from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM — offers free information and referrals to immigration legal assistance at 1-800-354-0365. During his remarks, Mayor Mamdani called on faith leaders to help ensure this information reaches every corner of the city by distributing the flyers to their congregations.

    Below are Mayor Mamdani’s remarks as prepared for delivery:

    Good morning. What a privilege it is to be here with you all. I join everyone present in sending our best wishes to Rabbi Schneier, and our hopes for a quick recovery.

    And I know that many of us are shocked by the news that we’ve just heard from Pakistan, where dozens of people were killed in a horrific attack on a Shia Mosque. Innaa lillaahi wa innaa ilaihi raajioon.

    I look around this room, and I see the faces of friends I have marched with through searing heat and bracing cold. People I have mourned alongside, celebrated alongside, organized alongside. And I see so many others I have only just met, but whom I am eager to work alongside to improve New York.

    And I see those whom the people of this city turn to for guidance and grace. This city may have only one Mayor, but it has countless leaders. When our neighbors seek to make sense of a world where sense is not there to be found, they often turn first not to those they elected, but to you.

    Thank you for welcoming me today — and for all that you do, in ways seen and unseen, for those you serve.

    I was raised in New York City as a Muslim kid with a Hindu mother. I celebrated Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha with my family, lit diyas in Riverside Park for Diwali, and like any New Yorker, encountered faiths different from my own. I still remember coming home from a friend’s Bar Mitzvah one night and demanding an explanation from my father. “Baba,” I asked, “Why don’t Muslim kids have Bar Mitzvahs too?”

    And over the past fifteen months, as I ran to become Mayor of our incredible city, that encounter only deepened as I came face-to-face with the living tapestry of faith that is New York.

    Faith, we’re told, is the belief in things unseen. And while it certainly took faith to imagine a thing truly unseen—a path to victory—it was nothing compared to the faith I saw New Yorkers summon just to make it through the day. Faith that the bus would arrive. Faith that somehow, some way, the rent would get paid. Faith that a leader would place the concerns of the many before the interests of the few.

    I saw that faith everywhere. On subways and street corners, at forums and front doors. And increasingly, as the winter snow melted into the renewal of spring and then the heat of summer, I found it where many New Yorkers return, week after week, in search of meaning.

    You welcomed a stranger into your sanctuaries. And whether we were together at Shul, at church services on Saturday or Sunday morning, at a Gurdwara or a mosque or a mandir or a temple, New Yorkers told me of the worries they hold close, the dreams they refuse to let go.

    What a gift they gave me. Not just understanding New York better — but understanding how close we truly are.

    Because for all our different faiths, we share a common belief: that our city can be restored, and it must. That the wealthiest city in the wealthiest country in the history of the world has enough for everyone to live a life of dignity. That we need not worship the same God to share the same values, or to fight for the same future.

    If anything unifies every religion across our city, it is an understanding of faith not solely as a tool for reflection, but as a call to action.

    Standing before you today, I think of Deuteronomy 10:17-18, which describes the lord as one who: “shows no partiality and accepts no bribes. He defends the cause of the orphan and the widow, and loves the stranger residing among you, giving them food and clothing.”

    Over the past fifteen months, New Yorkers of all faiths built a movement inspired by that cause of the orphan, the widow, and the stranger.

    Seniors spent hours making phone calls to strangers because they believed every kid deserves child care. If that is not defending the cause of the orphan, what is?

    Neighbors climbed six-floor walkups to knock doors because they believed a single mother in a rent-stabilized apartment should be able to sleep easily on the last night of the month, knowing that her rent would not climb the next day. If that is not defending the cause of the widow, what is?

    And today, my friends, I want to reflect on the third charge: loving the stranger.

    Across this country, day after day, we bear witness to cruelty that staggers the conscience. Masked agents, paid by our own tax dollars, violate the Constitution and visit terror upon our neighbors. They arrive as if atop a pale horse, and they leave a path of wreckage in their wake. People ripped from their cars. Guns drawn against the unarmed. Families torn apart. Lives shattered—quietly, swiftly, brutally.

    If these are not attacks upon the stranger among us, what is?

    This cruelty is no faraway concept. ICE operates here in New York. In our courthouses. Our workplaces. They skulk at 26 Federal Plaza—the same building where I waited in fear as my father had his citizenship interview.

    If these are not attacks upon the stranger among us, what is?

    ICE is more than a rogue agency — it is a manifestation of the abuse of power. And it is also new. It was founded only in 2002. Four Mayors ago, it did not exist. Its wrongs need not be treated as inevitable or inherited. In fact, there is no reforming something so rotten and base.

    I think of a story that Reverend Galbreath — the senior pastor at Clarendon Road Church — shared recently. Two Haitian immigrants in his congregation, a father and son, had traveled to 26 Federal Plaza for fingerprinting. The man’s wife, the boy’s mother, had gone the week before without incident. They thought little of the trip. It was routine. In New York, surely one would be safe at an appointment like this.

    And then, without explanation or warning, they were whisked away. ICE took them first to the Brooklyn Detention Center. The next day, they were flown to Louisiana. They felt hopeless and helpless, Reverend Galbreath said. Hopeless and helpless.

    If these are not attacks upon the stranger among us, what is?

    As the federal government attacks our neighbors — those who worship in the next pew over — they command us not to believe what we see. They compel us, as George Orwell wrote nearly eighty years ago, “to reject the evidence of our eyes and ears.” And they would succeed, were it not for the many among us who have not only read the scripture, but who live the scripture—those who refuse to abandon the stranger.

    I speak of Renee Good, whose final words to the man who murdered her moments later were: “I’m not mad at you.”

    I speak of Alex Pretti, who died as he lived, caring for the stranger. Here was a man who held the hand of the afraid and the afflicted in their final moments. Here was a man who dedicated his life to healing those he had never met. ICE shot him ten times because he did something they could never fathom doing themselves: he extended his arm towards a stranger—not to push her down, but to help her up.

    I speak of the tens of thousands across our city and nation who took to snowbound streets in the dead of winter, refusing to allow those with the most power to impose their will upon those with the least.

    If that is not love for the stranger among us, what is?

    In a moment such as this, I look to the Bhagavad Gita, which teaches us that the highest calling is to become someone “who sees the true equality of all living beings and responds to the joys and sorrows of others as if they were their own.”

    Each of us has been a stranger at one point in our lives. Each of us has known the feeling of arriving somewhere new alone, of depending on the kindness of someone else. As ICE fosters a culture of suspicion and fear, let this city of strangers set an example for how to make the sorrows of others our own. Let us offer a new path — one of defiance through compassion.

    In so doing, we can offer something more expansive and durable than a mere rejection of atrocity. We can rely on our faith to offer an embrace of one another. After all, few forces hold as much power to extend humanity to all. As Dr. King once said: “The church is the one place where a doctor ought to forget that he’s a doctor. The church is the one place where the lawyer ought to forget that he’s a lawyer. When the church is true to its nature, it says, “Whosoever will, let him come.”

    That doctrine—whosoever will, let him come — is not limited to Christianity. Each of our faiths asks the same of us.

    I think of Exodus 23:9, the words of the Torah: “Thou shalt not oppress a stranger: for ye know the heart of a stranger, seeing ye were strangers in the land of Egypt.” Few have stood so steadfast alongside the persecuted as Jewish New Yorkers. I think of Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman, who gave their lives alongside James Chaney so that all could exercise the right to the franchise. I think of Rabbi Heschel and marched from Selma alongside Dr. King. And I think of Yip Harburg, born on the Lower East Side, who wrote ‘Somewhere Over the Rainbow,’ and uplifted Americans waiting on breadlines during the Great Depression.

    I think of the freedom from suffering that Buddhism teaches us is only possible if we remove the three poisons of desire, hatred, and ignorance from our daily lives. We need not accept suffering as unchangeable. We need not treat hatred as the natural state. We have the power to set ourselves free.

    And I consider my own faith, Islam, a religion built upon a narrative of migration. The story of the Hijra reminds us that Prophet Muhammad (SWT) was a stranger too, who fled Mecca and was welcomed in Medina. Sura An-Nahl 16:42 tells us: “As for those who emigrated in the cause of Allah after being persecuted, we will surely bless them with a good home in this world.”

    Or, as the Prophet Muhammad (SWT) said: “Islam began as something strange and will go back to being strange, so glad tidings to the strangers.”

    If faith offers us the moral compass to stand alongside the stranger, government can provide the resources. Let us create a new expectation of City Hall, where power is wielded to love, to embrace, to protect. We will stand with the stranger today, tomorrow, and all the days that are still to come.

    That is why this morning, I am signing an executive order that will uphold our city’s protection not just of our fellow immigrant New Yorkers — but of all New Yorkers — from abusive immigration enforcement.

    This order is a sweeping reaffirmation of our commitment to our immigrant neighbors and to public safety as a whole. We will make clear that ICE will not be able to enter New York City property without a judicial warrant. That means our schools, our shelters, our hospitals, our parking lots.

    We will protect New Yorkers’ private data from being unlawfully accessed by the federal government and stand firmly against any effort to intrude on our privacy. No New Yorker should be afraid to apply for city services like child care because they are an immigrant.

    This order will mandate that essential city agencies are complying with city laws and conduct thorough audits of all policies guiding agency interactions with immigration authorities.

    And it will establish an Interagency Response Committee, so that in the event of a major crisis, we are ready and equipped to do the job of protecting New Yorkers. We will create a centralized mechanism for coordinating policy across agencies, so that government speaks with one voice in times of need.

    City Hall will not look away.

    But we need our faith leaders with us. Your moral clarity, your integrity — they are the pillars upon which countless movements for justice have been built. Many of you have long practiced the tradition of supporting the forgotten and the downtrodden. When our immigrant neighbors are in trouble, they often turn first to their faith networks — for counsel, for legal aid, for someone to accompany them to court.

    Today, I call upon you to help us give language to courage. Help us remind New Yorkers that they are not alone.

    We have prepared 30,000 guides to New Yorkers’ rights, in ten languages spoken by some of the most heavily targeted populations in our city, teaching our neighbors what to do if ICE comes for them. These guides are here today, ready for you to take. If you run out, we will print more.

    I urge you to share these with your congregants — even those who are citizens, even those whom you think ICE may not target. These materials apply to us all: those who have been here for five generations, those who arrived last year. They apply to us all because the obligation is upon us all. To love thy neighbor, to look out for the stranger.

    If we are truly to champion the cause of the stranger, let these materials serve as instructions for how to stand in solidarity. If anything can turn back the rising tide of hatred, it is a chorus of those who worship differently and live differently, singing the same undaunted song.

    For we are all New Yorkers. And yet that has not always been accepted.

    My friends — for as long as people have called New York home, a question has been contested: who is a New Yorker? At each juncture, many have sought to narrow the answer. The stranger has been ostracized on job postings, on placards denying entry to restaurants and shops, in neighborhoods where only some New Yorkers were allowed to live. Every conceivable crack has been exploited into a chasm of division.

    On every occasion where the forces of darkness have raised the question, “Who is a New Yorker?” The people of this city have offered our own answer. All of us.

    And yet we know that that answer is not permanent, nor is it predetermined. Each generation must assert what we know to be true, because New York serves as living proof—we are stronger when we welcome the stranger.

    This will not be an easy contest. Those on the other side, the ICE agents of the world, hold power and weaponry and a sense of impunity. And yet, we hold one advantage over them, one advantage that no matter how hard they try, they cannot overcome, as they mask their faces to attack and murder: we are not ashamed of our answer.

    So let us answer the question — who is a New Yorker? — once more, with conviction, and without shame. It is all of us.

    So together, New York, let us advance the cause of the orphan.

    Together, New York, let us advance the cause of the widow.

    Together, New York, let us love the stranger among us, because we are them, and they are us.

    Thank you.

    NEW YORK February 6, 2026

    Sources: NYC.gov , Midtown Tribune news

    Midtown Tribune Independent USA news from New York

  • Jeff Bezos sacks 300 ‘anti-Trump’ journalists from The Washington Post (Video)

    Jeff Bezos sacks 300 ‘anti-Trump’ journalists from The Washington Post (Video)

    The segment argues that the Washington Post’s reported layoffs under Jeff Bezos reflect a broader collapse in trust and demand for legacy media, with Brianna Lyman claiming readers are abandoning outlets they view as partisan and credibility-damaged by major political narratives (Russia-collusion coverage, Kavanaugh allegations, and optimistic portrayals of Biden’s fitness).
    She frames the layoffs as a market correction—if a paid product doesn’t deliver value, it fails—rejecting calls for Bezos to subsidize the newsroom indefinitely.
    The discussion then shifts to Don Lemon, with Lyman arguing “journalism” is not legal immunity if someone obstructs or disrupts a church, and criticizing what she portrays as selective enforcement against conservatives in prior years.
    Finally, they highlight a U.S. investigation into Nike over alleged discrimination against white workers, using it as an example of DEI-driven corporate practices facing legal and political backlash and reiterating a merit-based hiring standard.

    USA news Bezos Washington Post P

    Washington Post layoffs, media trust

    Host:
    I’m thrilled to be joined now by The Federalist’s elections correspondent, Brianna Lyman. Brianna, thanks so much for coming on the program tonight.

    Huge news out of Washington: it looks like the paper that devoted itself to the idea of “democracy dies in darkness” is now dying a slow death itself — with publisher Jeff Bezos laying off 300 workers, about a third of the newsroom. What’s your reaction? Because while nobody cheers when a journalist is fired, it seems to me this proves the Washington Post’s business model of anti-Trump “hackery” doesn’t sell anymore. Does it?

    Brianna Lyman:
    No. Right now — at least in the United States — trust in the mainstream media is at a record low, or as I like to call it, the “propaganda press.” And the Washington Post is a case study.

    This is an outlet that pushed the Russia-collusion narrative, promoted the Kavanaugh rape smear, and insisted Biden was healthy and fully cognizant — which wasn’t true. Readers have lost trust. And when you’re being charged to read the Washington Post, you realize you’re not getting much for your money when you can go to free sites — you can go to Sky News, Fox News — and access news without the left-wing spin.

    A lot of people say Bezos should have dipped into his own money and paid staffers for years. But that’s what happens when the real world collides with liberal fantasies: in a capitalist society, if your product doesn’t sell, you’re done. It’s unfortunate they lost their jobs, but if they have useful skills, they should be able to find new ones.

    Host:
    Exactly. And you mentioned the hoaxes. This paper was used to launder all sorts of “deep state” narratives about Trump. It pushed the Steele dossier — full of claims and alleged lies — in what many saw as an attempt to influence an election. Once a newspaper is trying to be a political player in an election, it’s over, isn’t it?

    Brianna Lyman:
    Yes. The Washington Post presents itself as neutral — “democracy dies in darkness.” But for them, democracy only “dies in darkness” when Republicans are winning.

    When a Republican is in office, everything is framed as bad, illegal, unconstitutional. When a Democrat is in office, even when something is illegal or unconstitutional, it gets wiped away or swept under the rug.

    Readers don’t want this anymore. They cut sections like books and sports. And people are tired of being told they have to accept ideological narratives in sports — they just want to watch sports. You can go to Fox Sports and they talk about the game, not constant political lectures. The Post could have changed years ago; it didn’t — and now it’s facing the consequences.

    Source: Video Sky News , Midtown Tribune news ,
    Official WP ( Archive WP )

    Midtown Tribune Independent USA news from New York

  • Mayor Mamdani Hosts Annual Interfaith Breakfast

    Mayor Mamdani Hosts Annual Interfaith Breakfast

    In a February 6, 2026 announcement, Mayor Zohran Mamdani outlined a package of emergency cold-weather actions aimed at moving unsheltered New Yorkers indoors during what the city describes as the two coldest days of the winter. Measures include adding about 60 hotel shelter rooms through mid-next week for people reluctant to enter congregate shelters, operating a total of 62 warming centers and warming vehicles (including reopening 10 public schools as warming centers and partnering with Northwell and CUNY), expanding mobile warming units, and intensifying street outreach with additional personnel such as trained school nurses, “peer” outreach involving formerly homeless New Yorkers, and support from community groups and Business Improvement Districts. The release also cites over 1,250 DHS shelter placements during the cold spell and urges residents to call 311 if they see someone in need, emphasizing Code Blue protocols and that no one will be turned away.

    NYC Activates Emergency Warming Centers and Hotel Shelter Expansion Ahead of Winter’s Coldest Days

    TODAY, Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced new efforts that the city will take ahead of the two coldest days of this winter. As part of a wide range of additional actions the city is taking, the Mamdani Administration is activating new direct street outreach workers, mobilizing additional mobile warming units with clinicians and resources, and recruiting health care professionals, non-profits, and providers to open up additional warming facilities — all part of the effort to keep every New Yorker safe this weekend.  

    Mayor Mamdani also announced a new expansion in hotel shelter units through the middle of next week, targeted towards individuals who have been resistant to other forms of more traditional shelter. In addition, earlier this week, the Mayor announced the opening of 50 safe haven beds in Upper Manhattan and the expedited opening of a safe haven, 106-bed shelter in Lower Manhattan. These shelter options provide New Yorkers a respite from the cold — and are a first step towards long-term stability. These new efforts build on the over 1,250 DHS placements into shelter, including 27 involuntary DHS transports, to keep New Yorkers safe and out of the cold. On the night of February 5th into February 6th, DHS saw a doubling of shelter placements from the previous night – indicating that our repeated efforts and additional shelter options are bringing more New Yorkers out of the cold and indoors.    

    “With this cold continuing to endure, so too will our efforts. While City government is doing everything in our power to offer warm spaces, shelter and protection, I am echoing my call to our fellow New Yorkers,” said Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani. “We all must do our part to keep one another safe over the days to come. If you see someone in need, please call 311 immediately so our outreach workers and first responders at FDNY and NYPD can provide assistance. And to those who may consider themselves more comfortable on the streets, I want to speak directly to you to implore you — come inside. These temperatures are too low and too dangerous to survive. Please wait out the cold in a safe place with a warm bed.

    Mayor Mamdani announced that the city will take the following new steps to ensure that homeless New Yorkers have as many options to come out of the cold and indoors this weekend. Working with city agencies, local nonprofits, and through new public-private partnerships, the city is:

    • Adding ~60 new hotel shelter rooms through the middle of next week. This shelter type is specifically designed for individuals resistant to staying in more congregate settings.  
    • Operating a total of 62 warming centers and vehicles over the weekend, including the addition of the following sites:
      • Reopening 10 NYC Public Schools as warming centers this weekend, building on existing capacity and access across the city.  
      • Partnering with Northwell for 2 warming facilities.  
      • Partnering with CUNY for 2 warming centers.  
    • Keeping two Overdose Prevention Centers open 24 hours over the weekend to serve their clients.  
    • Increasing the number of mobile warming units to 27 on Friday and 33 by Saturday night.
      • Bolstering our direct street outreach efforts by taking these new actions:  
      • Enlisting the assistance of over 50 school nurses who have been trained on direct street outreach and will assist DHS outreach workers throughout the weekend.  
      • Mobilizing the Crisis Management System (CMS), a network of neighborhood-based violence interrupters, to help do direct street outreach.  
      • Partnering with Association of Community Employment Programs for the Homeless (ACE), an organization that works with New Yorkers with histories of homelessness, incarceration, and addiction, to deploy staff to enhance our direct street outreach efforts.  
      • Recruiting Business Improvement Districts citywide to ask for their help in doing direct street outreach, and sharing messaging with them about how to help get folks connected to shelter and resources.   
      • Piloting an innovative “peer” outreach model where formerly homeless New Yorkers are paired with outreach workers to try and bring homeless New Yorkers indoors.  
    • Building on our direct communication efforts with New Yorkers by:
      • Implementing, alongside LinkNYC, a feature on kiosks citywide where people can look up the nearest warming center.  

    Since the start of these life-threatening weather conditions earlier this month, the Mamdani Administration has taken aggressive action to keep New Yorkers safe. The Mayor put out four PSAsopens in a new tab on the cold weather conditions, including one on LinkNYC terminals across the cityopens in a new tab, which can be used to contact emergency services.   

    Mayor Mamdani continues to emphasize that no New Yorker will be turned away. The City remains in Code Blue protocols with expanded outreach canvassing and relaxed intake procedures. Being outdoors for even a brief amount of time this weekend will be dangerous and life-threatening. New Yorkers are encouraged to cover their skin, including their mouths, ears, and face.  

    As Mayor Mamdani has repeatedly said: if you are still outdoors, please come inside. We want to help you. We want to keep you safe.   

    Sources: NYC.gov , Midtown Tribune news

    Midtown Tribune Independent USA news from New York

  • First month of a New Era. The work has only just begun.

    First month of a New Era. The work has only just begun.

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  • Mayor Mamdani Makes a Child Care Announcement with Chancellor Samuels

    Mayor Mamdani Makes a Child Care Announcement with Chancellor Samuels

    Video: Mayor Mamdani Makes a Child Care Announcement with Chancellor Samuels.

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  • Secretary Rubio holds a press availability on the Critical Minerals Ministerial (Video)

    Secretary Rubio discusses the Critical Minerals Ministerial (0:06), an initiative aimed at diversifying global supply chains for critical minerals (0:06-0:26). He emphasizes that the current concentration of these minerals in one country poses risks of geopolitical leverage and supply disruptions (0:52-1:07).

    Key points of the ministerial and related initiatives include:

    • Goal: To establish reliable and diverse supply chains for critical minerals, essential for technological innovation, economic strength, and national security (1:11-1:18).
    • Economic Challenges: Foreign competitors often undercut prices through state subsidies and unfair practices, making it economically unviable for other countries to explore and process critical minerals (1:26-1:52).
    • U.S. Actions: The U.S. is leading by example with permitting reform for domestic critical mineral industries and creating demand through a strategic stockpile (2:09-2:26).
    • Global Response: The ministerial seeks to create a global forum and launched the Forge initiative (2:32-2:46) to address this challenge, with 55 partners and more expected to join (0:08-0:16).
    • Future Sessions: Upcoming sessions will cover a price floor mechanism to ensure economic viability for investments in these sectors (3:12-3:29) and showcase financing tools from various U.S. departments (3:31-3:41).
    • Bilateral Agreements: New critical minerals frameworks are expected to be signed with several partners (3:49-3:52), highlighting the billions of dollars the U.S. government has committed to this endeavor (3:57-4:03).

    Secretary Rubio also addresses specific country roles and foreign policy matters:

    • Ukraine: Critical minerals are vital for Ukraine’s future economic prosperity and rebuilding efforts post-war (7:14-7:42).
    • Argentina: Recognized as a key partner in critical minerals due to its natural resources and expertise in processing (8:33-9:11).
    • Iran: The U.S. is open to engaging with Iran, but talks must include their ballistic missile program, sponsorship of terrorist organizations, nuclear program, and treatment of their own people (10:04-11:20).
    • Morocco: Plays a crucial role due to its critical mineral deposits and willingness to invest in processing, contributing to a diversified global supply network (15:08-16:01).

    U.S. Department of State Feb 4, 2026

    Sources: U.S. Department of State , Video directly
    Midtown Tribune news

    Midtown Tribune Independent USA news from New York

  • A Message from the Mayor on TPS for Haitian New Yorkers

    A Message from the Mayor on TPS for Haitian New Yorkers

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