Showing posts with label DIBLASIO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIBLASIO. Show all posts

April 30, 2014

Study Finds Nearly Half of New Yorkers Are Struggling to Get By


Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Mark K. Levitan, the city’s director of poverty research
N.Y. TIMES

New York City’s share of poor people appears to have plateaued since the recession, at 21.4 percent, with more people working in 2012 than the year before, but at lower wages, according to a new city study. Contributing to the city’s economic problems were increases in the number of Asian-Americans, immigrants and residents of Queens slipping into poverty.
But under a broader definition of poverty that the city applies, the picture remains grim for a far larger number of New Yorkers.
As in 2011, 46 percent, or nearly half of New Yorkers, were making less than 150 percent of the poverty threshold, a figure that describes people who are struggling to get by.
 
Even with fewer people unemployed, the poverty rate for working-age adults working full time reached 8 percent, by the city’s measure. Fully 17 percent of families with a full-time worker lived in poverty, and even among families with two full-time workers, the rate was 5.2 percent.
The latest numbers, compiled by the city’s Center for Economic Opportunity, were presented to the City Council on Tuesday and are to provide a base line for how well Mayor Bill de Blasio addresses a signature issue.
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Since 2008, when the city initiated its more comprehensive poverty index, Asians overtook Hispanics as the poorest New Yorkers. In 2008, they were statistically identical at about 23 percent. By 2012, the rate among Asians was 3.3 percentage points higher than the rate for Hispanics, at 29 percent.
Under the less exacting federal standard, a family of two adults and two children was defined as poor in 2012 if it made less than $23,283, yielding a poverty rate of 20 percent in the city. But under the city’s definition, which takes into account benefits like food stamps and expenses like higher living costs, the income threshold was $31,039, resulting in a rate of 21.4 percent.
 
A smaller proportion of people (5.4 percent) were living in extreme poverty — below 50 percent of the poverty rate — by the city’s standard than under the federal standard (8.1 percent).
While more people were working, wages were lagging because most jobs were generated in lower-wage hospitality and retail fields.
Brooklyn was the only borough to register a decline in its poverty rate between 2011 and 2012.
Compared with the federal measure, the city showed lower poverty rates among people under 18 and higher rates among those 65 and older.
The city’s measure, according to Christine D’Onofrio, the lead researcher, also demonstrated the effects of housing subsidies, an earned-income tax credit and food stamps in keeping people out of poverty and the high cost of medical care in swelling the ranks of the poor.
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The report outlined the de Blasio administration’s agenda for mitigating poverty: municipal identification cards to provide immigrants with access to basic services and other supports, raising the local minimum wage, protecting low-wage workers, giving preferential treatment to city residents in public works jobs, raising wages at companies doing business with or receiving subsidies from the city, and more school services that also allow parents to work.
Poverty will never be eliminated, said Lilliam Barrios-Paoli, the deputy mayor for health and human services. “There will always be relative poverty, but it’s not acceptable when people are mired in abject poverty,” she said.

December 5, 2013

De Blasio Names Bratton as New York Police Commissioner





N.Y. TIMES


William J. Bratton was named police commissioner of New York City for the second time on Thursday. But it is a different place than the crime-ravaged city he came to in 1994. And he said he was going to be a different kind of commissioner, overseeing a different kind of policing.

In this city, I want every New Yorker to talk about ‘their police’, ‘my police,’ ” Mr. Bratton said after his appointment was announced by Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio, before reading from a children’s book about police work he said he had cherished since he was 9.       
 
In 1994, the message was different: “We will fight for every house in the city; we will fight for every street; we will fight for every borough,” he said at the time. “And we will win.”




JIM DWYER N.Y. TIMES

Standing next to the next police commissioner on Thursday morning, Bill de Blasio promised that he would bring an end to “stop-and-frisk as we knew it.”

That was easy for him to say. It has already happened.
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At its peak in 2011, nearly 700,000 people were stopped, most of them black and Latino men; almost none of them had done anything wrong. About half were searched. A federal judge found rampant violations of the Constitution. And Mr. de Blasio — an early, eloquent and loud critic of the practice — was catapulted into the mayor’s office, in part on the force of his opposition to it.
Yet by the time Mr. de Blasio announced that he was running for mayor, the number of stops and frisks had already started a drastic decline that has continued for most of the last two years.
In October, about 3,000 people were stopped, which would be an annual rate of 36,000 — about a twentieth of what it was in 2011. Still, the mayor-elect, and his police-commissioner-designate, remained passionate about ending a practice that is pretty much over with. Mr. Bratton promised he would make quick work of it.

In fact, both he and Mr. de Blasio acknowledged that stop-and-frisk tactics, used legally and appropriately, were an essential tool for the police. They could wind up having a hard time bringing the stop-and-frisk rate below where it now stands.
You would not have heard the slightest hint of that at the news conference.
 
 

The man he is replacing as police commissioner, Raymond W. Kelly, was twice in charge of the New York police when crime went down — once in the early 1990s, and now for more than a decade. In 2001, there were 714 murders in New York City (excluding those who were killed in the attack on Sept. 11). The following year, 2002, Mr. Kelly became the commissioner. In 2012, there were 419 murders. During the 11 years in which murders declined, the city grew by 287,000 people — as if everyone from Cincinnati had moved to the five boroughs. The murder rate declined to 5.1 per 100,000 people, from 8.9.