Your morning links from NYC and beyond - A spotted lanternflies update - Hochul and Zeldin debating whether to debate - NASA hit the asteroid + more
are scheduled to take effect next month for the city's roughly one million rent-stabilized apartments.
Given the city's dire shortage of affordable housing, both advocates and real estate developers are nowof letting City Councilmembers effectively veto zoning changes in their district that would allow new units to get built.near St. John's university.are going to leave or die by November once it gets too chilly, but this summer of smushing them — and admiring them – has been fun.and face elevated risks of drought, extreme heat and overloading their power grids.
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PolitiFact - House Democrats have objected to presidential election results, though under different circumstancesU.S. House Democrats made objections to election results in 2001, 2005 and 2017, when the losing candidate had already conceded. They were mostly symbolic measures.
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Early Addition: It's like Guitar Hero, but for tromboneBecause everyone's playing Trombone Champ, here are your early links: Mystery assemblymember keeps parking their Maserati illegally, 3rd Avenue in Midtown is doomed, today's the day a NASA spacecraft bumps into an asteroid, and more.
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Canadian Food Inspection Agency raises alarm as spotted lanternfly pest nears borderThe CFIA is asking Canadians to keep an eye out for an invasive bug that could spell disaster for the country’s wineries and fruit growers.
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Forest Service to build new cabins in the Tongass and ChugachThe Forest Service is planning to build a slate of new cabins in high-demand areas of the Chugach and Tongass national forests.
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