(Bloomberg) A dispute over how much contractors paid their workers to clean New York City subway cars during the pandemic is heating up as the city’s comptroller claims two companies owe $2.6 million in unpaid wages and penalties.Most Read from BloombergNvidia Rises Most in About Nine Months as AI Drives SalesStocks Rally as AI Craze Sweeps Across the World: Markets WrapT-Bills Without Tax Bills? This Fund Says It Cracked the CodeAT&T Says Mobile Network Restored as US Starts InvestigationBid
Subway COVID Cleaners Stiffed Out Of $2.5M, Comptroller Says - New York City, NY - But a lawyer for one of two companies being sued for wage theft shot back: "It is entirely, 100 percent untrue."
NYC Subway Contractors Owe $2 6 Million, Comptroller Lander Says bnnbloomberg.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bnnbloomberg.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Snowstorm meltdown: Remote learning software crashes for 1M New York City public school students politico.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from politico.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
NEW YORK — Two days after a Bronx man got into an altercation with the Guardian Angels in Times Square, the group’s leader, Curtis Sliwa, took his lumps Thursday from a broad swath of elected officials and everyday New Yorkers. Sliwa, who erroneously identified the Bronxite as a Venezuelan migrant during a live interview Tuesday night on national TV, gave a defiant mea culpa Thursday afternoon .