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Salsa Not War, a Benefit For Ukrainian Refugees, Comes to Manny Cantor Center | The Lo-Down : News from the Lower East Side

Salsa Not War, a Benefit For Ukrainian Refugees, Comes to Manny Cantor Center | The Lo-Down : News from the Lower East Side
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New Yorkers rally to turn derelict school building back into community space

On Sunday afternoon, more than a hundred locals gathered to demand that the former P.S. 64 in the East Village be turned back into a community center.

Dominick Dunne, Writer of Wrongs

The success of the HBO TV series Succession and the recent feature film House of Gucci are proof that the wretched excesses of the fabulously wealthy never lose their audience appeal. Nobody knew that better than the late novelist and journalist Dominick Dunne. He spent the last 30 years of

State Budget Scraps Health Care Cuts To At-Need Hospitals Hit Hard By COVID

arrow Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn CHINE NOUVELLE/SIPA/Shutterstock Hospital groups and health equity advocates are celebrating now that the upcoming state budget does not include the broad cuts to health care spending initially proposed by Governor Andrew Cuomo. Those changes would have disproportionately impacted safety-net hospitals, which serve communities that were hardest hit by COVID-19. When Cuomo released his executive budget in January, he anticipated a $15 billion shortfall over the next two years. He sought to fill part of the gap by slashing about $600 million in health care spending. His proposals included a 1% reduction in Medicaid rates and cuts to state subsidies for already-struggling safety-net hospitals that serve low-income New Yorkers.

NYC mayoral wannabes grapple with health disparities for New Yorkers of color

NYC mayoral wannabes grapple with health disparities for New Yorkers of color Shant Shahrigian Around the country, COVID has hit communities of color hardest, both inflicting new devastation and highlighting bitter, longstanding truths about the public health system. While Black and Hispanic New Yorkers have died at nearly twice the rate of white and Asian people, the city’s vaccination efforts have left many people of color behind Black New Yorkers make up about a quarter of the city’s population, but had received just 11% of shots as of late January; Hispanics, who comprise 29% of the population, got 15% of doses.

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