Where’s Sandy recovery money going? New tracker gives incomplete answers
City Council bill demands more details on billions in federally funded recovery spending, including wages paid to workers
City Council bill demands more details on billions in federally funded recovery spending, including wages paid to workers
In the shadow of Red Cross and Robin Hood, micro charities sprung up to do their part for New York storm relief
Sandy doomed a classic 1956 hot dog truck — but not the career of proprietor Dawn Lavigne, who has fed Hylan Boulevard for most of her life
Residents of Arverne’s Ocean Village look back on a year of improvisation and hope
A local news service born in the storm endures to keep a close watch on rebuilding
Rooted in the surfer scene, Uma’s and Sayra’s aspire to be crossroads for an island both battered and divided
Stories of New Yorkers’ homegrown successes in rebounding from Sandy’s destruction. Click on an image to explore.
Last year’s superstorm wiped these fixtures off the cityscape…but some could still rise back from the dead
Facing funding uncertainty in federal shutdown, city puts those with most storm damage and economic need at top of the list for aid
Federal-government shutdown stalls an already achingly slow rebuilding process; no aid yet months after applications
More than 22,000 medical and religious exemptions were granted to students for the 2013-14 school year, up 27 percent from 2010-11, according to the state Health Department. Public and private enrollment over the same period remained largely flat.
Over the past several years, more than 120 law enforcement agencies across the state, from the NYPD to Tuckahoe, have obtained military-grade equipment through the Pentagon’s 1033 program, which transfers excess military equipment to state and local police across the country.
Department of Education data obtained by The New York World reveals a stark contrast between a few well-funded PTAs and more than 1,000 other smaller organizations across the city.
As new speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito takes the helm, financial disclosures reveal the baggage and benefits 51 members bring to public service
INTERACTIVE: How dirty is your local grocery store?
Good things happen when nonprofit newsrooms collaborate across state lines — and New York now has Minnesota to thank for helping us keep a close watch on our legislature
The New York World focuses on producing data-driven investigative projects.
Funding for The New York World has been provided by the Barth Family Fund of the Dallas Foundation, Renee S. Edelman '80, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the Eleanor & Howard Morgan Family Foundation, the Rockefeller Family Fund, Rick Smith '70, Amy Entelis '79, Margaret Berkheimer '43, Joelson Foundation, Joan K. Davidson (The J.M. Kaplan Fund), Christina R. Davis, Charina Endowment Fund, Evan A. Davis and William B. Wiener, Jr. Foundation, Dyson Foundation, The Indian Point Foundation.
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