L.A. Beats NYC? Who has better crazies? Last night, California law enforcement moved in to start clearing the pro-Palestine encampment of protesters at UCLA. Not to be outdone by the New Yorkers over at Columbia, ... 05/2/2024 - 2:33 am | View Link
NYC pushes new bus and bike lanes with congestion pricing coming With congestion pricing expected to reduce motor vehicle traffic in Manhattan, city officials are planning for 37 new projects to expand bus, bike and pedestrian infrastructure, according to a ... 05/1/2024 - 10:00 pm | View Link
NYC Parks launches new office on Jamaica Bay to keep city waterway safe from derelict vessels NYC Parks recently began removing abandoned boats from the waters off City Island in the Bronx under the auspices of its new Office of Marine Debris Removal ... 05/1/2024 - 5:00 am | View Link
Things to Do This Week in NYC: May 1st – 8th Get in the holiday spirit, explore an indoor urban farm, and find more exciting things to do in NYC this week! 05/1/2024 - 2:15 am | View Link
The Latest | More than 100 march near Columbia University campus More than 100 people, most identifying themselves as Columbia University faculty and staff, marched and chanted near the school's New York campus Wednesday. They marched on the eastern side of the ... 05/1/2024 - 12:25 am | View Link
It’s been more than five years since the Larimer County commissioners said no to Thornton burying miles of pipe in the county to transport water from the Cache la Poudre River. Now the northern Denver suburb is back in the same hearing room.
And it has the same basic request: Let us move the water we own to our fast-growing and thirsty community.
Larimer County’s board of commissioners will decide the fate of the 70-mile, half-billion-dollar infrastructure project as soon as Monday.
The Northglenn City Council on Wednesday unanimously voted to file an ethics complaint against state Sen. Faith Winter after she appeared at an April 3 community meeting in that city while apparently intoxicated.
As outlined in a letter drafted by City Attorney Corey Hoffmann, the city alleges that Winter’s conduct at the meeting violated the Senate’s ethical standards.
This article is part of The D. C. Brief, TIME’s politics newsletter. Sign up here to get stories like this sent to your inbox.
Across nearly every faith and in all but five states, a majority of Americans support at least some access to abortion. That’s a major conclusion of a new massive survey of 22,000 people from the Public Religion Research Institute.
People don’t seem to mind the idea of former President Donald Trump acting as a dictator, he told Time magazine in an interview that drew swift rebuke from the Biden-Harris campaign.
In a wide ranging interview given to the magazine — and shared by the 45th President Tuesday morning via his Truth Social media platform — Trump was asked to explain comments he made to Fox News host Sean Hannity, in which the former president said he would become a dictator on his first day in office.
“A lot of people like it,” Trump reportedly told Time.
As might be expected, President Joe Biden’s reelection team was quick to note the revelations contained in the interview and respond.
“Not since the Civil War have freedom and democracy been under assault at home as they are today – because of Donald Trump.