January 2022 - ciaooo!

In this issue:

Let’s talk about homelessness, free Covid tests and what you can do to help. 

CORONAVIRUS

1. HERE’S THE NY SCOOP

THE STATS:

16,052,317 vaccines  administered across NYC
496 new hospitalizations
😱 16,330 new cases down from 20,200 last week

GOOD NEWS

Covid Cases Going Down, Down In An Earlier Round  🎵 Today’s NYC COVID #s show continuing rapid drop in cases and positivity but that doesn’t mean we’re out of the doghouse yet. More people get Covid-19 at the post-peak than during the pre-peak days, so continue to mask up w the K95s. 

TREAT YO’SELF… To Free Covid Tests  Every home in the U.S. is eligible to order 4 free at-⁠home COVID-⁠19 tests. The tests are completely free. Orders will usually ship in 7-12 days. Order now so you have them! 

BAD NEWS…

Heartbreaking MTA Murder  An Asian woman, 40 year old Michelle Go, was pushed into the train tracks to her death on Saturday by a homeless man with multiple past crimes and mental health issues. Gov Hochul and Mayor Adams are partnering to provide more protection for the subway and offer more mental health services. The case has not been declared a hate crime, sadly.

DID YOU KNOW?

2. LET’S TALK ABOUT HOMELESSNESS

How does one become homeless in NYC…Is it crime? Lack of policing? Too much policing? Drugs? Mental Health? The #1 cause of homelessness is actually none of the above. 
 
It’s a lack of affordable housing. 
 
We all know NYC is expensive, but this wasn’t always this case. 
 
After the Great Depression, a new form of housing popped up to accommodate for all of the low income folks moving to cities looking for work. This was called the Single Room Occupancy or SRO. 
 
SROs were single rooms where people could rent out single rooms in buildings with shared bathrooms, kitchens and living rooms (not to be confused with today’s trendy micro apartments). 
 
BUT THERE WAS DRAMA OF COURSE
At its peak during the 1950s, there were over 200,000 SROs in NYC.
 
They were affordable for one of today’s largest demographic of homeless people, single older males. Unfortunately, SROs started to get a bad rap as they started to fill with the recently incarcerated, poor, and those released from mental institutions. Crime began to prevail and officials began tearing them down. 
 
Between 1976 and 1981, nearly two-thirds of all remaining SRO units were torn down and converted into…you guessed it,  luxury apartments, hotels and Starbucks (just kidding about the last one).

SO WHAT DO WE DO?
Today, the multitudes of homeless people flooding the subway systems and streets, are the very same group of people who would have been living in SROs just a few decades ago. 
 
The number of homeless single adults is 92 percent higher than it was ten years ago.
 
According to the NYPD, while overall subway crime is down from pre-pandemic levels, transit crime is up 41% over the last month and up 65% so far this year. There were 30 subway shoving incidents in 2021, compared to 26 the year before.
 
The solution should be a mix of ACTUAL affordable housing, integrated social work and mental health support. What do you think? 

WHAT CAN WE DO?

3. WHAT SHOULD WE COVER NEXT?

What do you want to read about next? Is there an issue you think we should cover or feature in an upcoming newsletter? We’d love to hear your suggestions. Feel free to write back, we read every response! 

team ciaooo

ciaooo! is an NYC based editorial site, newsletter, and events company. We're the local's guide to conquering NYC. Follow us on Instagram @ciaooomag for the latest. Nice to see you here!

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In this issue:

It’s 2022 friends…and with it, a plethora of Omicron. In this issue, NYC’s first step into Blockchain, the new Mayor and buh-bye to the East River Park as we know it. 

CORONAVIRUS

1. HERE’S THE NY SCOOP

THE STATS:

15,503,434  vaccines administered across NYC
469 new hospitalizations😱 
34,294 new cases up from 20,200 last week
Cases are on the RISE…mask up and stay protected! Tap our link here to get tested.

GOOD NEWS

There’s a New Mayor in Town– Buh-Bye DeBlasio. January 1st marked the end of DeBlasio’s mayorship and the new throne of Eric Adams. Expect lots of heat from the former cop who’s stance on cracking down on crime (keeping solitary confinement), keeping schools and businesses open in person and continuing the fight against the Omicron Virus.

Governor Cap  Governor Hochul is proposing a 2 term limit (8 years) similar in vein to the Mayoral and Presidential limit on the heels of Governor Cuomo’s drop from office. His last tenure lasted 10 years and his control is still haunting as the District Attorney just dropped their case against his sexual assault charges. 

BAD NEWS…

Bad News 🐻 s  NYC is averaging nearly 40,000 cases a day with over 4,500 residents hospitalized. That’s now growing faster than at any point since the beginning of the Pandemic in 2020.

DID YOU KNOW?

2. NEW YEAR ROUNDUP

A roundup of things you should know that happened in the New Year 
👷🏽 East River Park Demolished – The 82 year old park is being torn down this week to create the controversial $1.45 billion East Side Coastal Resiliency Project (ESCR) – a new park that would act as a storm surge barrier.
👶 NYC’s highest deaths, lowest births in 2020 – New findings from the Health Dept show that NYC births dropped 9.4 percent from the prior year to 100,022, while deaths surged by 51 percent to 82,143. That’s the highest # of deaths since the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
💊No Health Insurance? Sign Up for NYC’s #OpenEnrollment  by Jan. 31 for low to no cost health insurance.
🖥 NYC Moving to Web3? – Blockchain is here to stay, and it seems like the city is following suit. NYC announced it will test uploading open data on city demographics to a distributed network. If successful, NYC will consider moving more of its data onto the network and investing in more opportunities.
☣️ Health Insurance Reimbursements for At Home Tests – Starting next week, insurance companies will be required to reimburse you for the cost of at-home COVID tests, and the US will be quadrupling the # of at home tests.
👶 A New Bill for Juvenile Delinquents – raising the age when a Juvenile can be arrested and prosecuted from age 7 to 12. This was the lowest age a child could be prosecuted in the entire nation with kids as young as 10 being detained.

DID YOU KNOW?

3. A NOTE FROM A READER

IN RESPONSE TO LAST WEEK’S NEWSLETTER RE: THE NEW BUSHWICK PARK 

Juan S. wrote in last week saying:  Just writing to let you know that the $75M is not for “Bushwick gentrification”. In fact, despite the name, the park is not even in Bushwick, is in Greenpoint/Williamsburg. The Bushwick Inlet Park is a promise that was made many years ago to the community and is a much needed park that create space for people instead of a big building doing nothing. I think that talking about money for gentrification is something that a lot of people can see as a negative when in fact is restoring a much needed green space for all New Yorkers to enjoy! Hey Juan! Duly noted, and thank you for the correction. We do write for shock value sometimes because we are entertainers after all – but the new renovations surrounding the Bushwick Inlet Park are in dire need of a transformation, and it shouldn’t be seen as a negative. Here’s to a much better waterfront in Brooklyn!  
– The ciaooo! team

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team ciaooo

ciaooo! is an NYC based editorial site, newsletter, and events company. We're the local's guide to conquering NYC. Follow us on Instagram @ciaooomag for the latest. Nice to see you here!

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