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What Shaun Donovan knows about housing

SHARE: Near the end of an endorsement interview with Democratic New York City mayoral candidate Shaun Donovan, New York Times editorial board member Mara Gay asked if he knew the median sales price of a home in Brooklyn. He guessed $100,000, which is off by a factor of nine. Donovan, in an email to the newspaper the next day, said he misunderstood the question as referring to assessed value for property taxes, which is a much lower figure.  Getting that answer so outrageously wrong would be embarrassing for any mayoral candidate, but it’s especially embarrassing for Donovan, the former U.S. secretary of Housing and Urban Development and one-time housing commissioner in New York City. 

Bloomberg donates $25 million for fellowship at New York University s Wagner Graduate School of Public Service

Bloomberg donates $25 million for fellowship at New York University’s Wagner Graduate School of Public Service Last month, New York University (NYU) announced that Bloomberg Philanthropies had donated $25 million to the university’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. The donation will be used to endow the Georgina and Charlotte Bloomberg Public Service Fellows Program. Bloomberg Philanthropies is the philanthropic organization of former New York City mayor and multibillionaire founder of Bloomberg News Michael R. Bloomberg. The announcement takes place under conditions where over 2,000 graduate student workers at the university are preparing to go on strike next week for a living wage, decent health care coverage and adequate childcare benefits. The donation by number 21 on the global list of billionaires is one more exposure of the NYU administration’s fraudulent argument throughout 10 months of negotiations that it has “no money” to improve the living

Vaccinated Minnesotans express relief, with caution

Vaccinated Minnesotans express relief, with caution For many, finally getting their COVID-19 vaccines is offering a glimpse of hope after a dark time. They’re looking forward to seeing familiar faces, going out to eat and slowly returning to normal life after months of lockdown and worry. Written By: Becca Most / St. Paul Pioneer Press | 1:42 pm, Mar. 7, 2021 × Malcolm McDonald in the Bentson Family Assisted Living Residence in St. Paul on Wednesday, March 3, 2021. (John Autey / St. Paul Pioneer Press) ST. PAUL Since getting vaccinated against COVID-19, Malcolm McDonald has seen his son in person for the first time in months. But for the 84-year-old, who received his final vaccination at the end of February, many things haven’t changed. Activities at his St. Paul senior-living facility are still limited or on hold, and he often has to stay in his room where he’s grown to enjoy the quiet solace of gazing out onto the Mississippi River from his wi

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