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35 Episodes

35 minutes | Sep 8, 2021
Why Community Colleges Matter - and Why LaGuardia Community College Matters to New York
New York's community colleges are an essential part of not just the education sector, but the overall workforce, as they provide low cost education and training to thousands of New Yorkers each year. As we head into the school year, we spoke with Kenneth Adams, president of LaGuardia Community College, about how the school recovers after Covid, the ways it could benefit from the Biden infrastructure bill, and what he sees for the school and its students going forward.
37 minutes | Jun 16, 2021
THE CITY and the Role of Independent Local Journalism
With the demise of the Daily News and the shut down of local coverage by the Wall Street Journal, THE CITY, founded in 2019, is more critical than ever to give New Yorkers independent journalism about New York City. Its service journalism was a first read for many New Yorkers during the pandemic, thanks to its interactive Covid-19 tracking map, and it has a hard hitting diverse group of investigative reporters. We speak to executive director Nic Dawes about how the newspaper will amplify the biggest concerns facing New Yorkers going forward.
34 minutes | Jun 9, 2021
On Basketball Courts, Neighborhood Crime and Policing
In the wake of the murder of George Floyd and other incidents of police violence across the country, the last year saw a dramatic increase in calls for public safety reform in New York city. At the same time, violent crime is rising to levels higher than we've seen in some time, making it harder to simply accept demands for "defunding." What is the right role of police in the city going forward? We speak to Chauncey Parker, deputy commissioner for community partnerships at the NYPD, about the ways the police department is changing, and how they can better engage with communities.
34 minutes | May 26, 2021
Why the High Line Matters Post Covid
Governor Cuomo recently announced a new spur of the High Line to link Moynihan Train Hall to the far West Side and another link to the Javits Center, too. We invited Robert Hammond, co-founder and executive director of Friends of the High Line to share his vision as the city emerges from the crisis. He’s been thinking about the way the High Line can be a connector for the needs of all New Yorkers and continue to be a source of economic development and cultural and social activity on Manhattan’s West Side.
35 minutes | May 12, 2021
Ritchie Torres: Talking about The Future of NYC with Our Newest Congressman in DC
Vaccinations, ending persistent poverty and the Cross Bronx Expressway... These are some things on the mind of new Congressman Ritchie Torres. He joined Congress in an unusual year, in the midst of Covid-19, and following the January 6th attacks on Washington. He’s advocating for his constituents in the Bronx on everything from housing to pollution to job growth to make sure New York City has the best future possible.
27 minutes | May 5, 2021
Vice, Investing and the Future of New York
There’s a new “vice” in town. New York State has now legalized marijuana, and it will mean not just booming business but also tax revenue. Catharine Dockery, founding partner of Vice Ventures, has been investing in this space - as well as others categorized as vice - for years and believes they could be a cornerstone of New York’s recovery and future.
40 minutes | Apr 28, 2021
How One Upper West Sider Became an Advocate for the Homeless
Sometimes change comes from organizations, businesses, or the government. But sometimes, change can begin with a single individual. Corinne Low, assistant professor at Wharton, is one such individual. She spoke out and stepped up to fight stigma surrounding homelessness on the Upper West Side when her neighbors and even friends were not only on the other side of the issue, but actively fundraising against her. Low is the co-founder of Upper West Side Open Hearts.
31 minutes | Apr 21, 2021
The Connection Between Inequality and the Environment
The Covid-19 pandemic highlighted socio-economic, racial and health disparities in New York. Guest Eddie Bautista, Executive Director of the NYC Environmental Justice Alliance explains how climate change and environmental conditions in lower income neighborhoods have an adverse impact for those same populations and what can be done to bring justice to those communities in New York City to benefit residents there and throughout New York.
34 minutes | Apr 14, 2021
NYForever and NYC's Comeback
Jonathan Rosen and Risa Heller great New Yorkers. Two of the best in the the public relations world, they are co-founders of the NYForever campaign. The campaign involves a pledge to commit to New York's recovery following the Covid-19 pandemic, and has gotten support from corporations, celebrities, and every New Yorkers. We speak to them about what's next for the city as we kick off Season 2.
22 minutes | Dec 14, 2020
Balance of Payments: New York and the Federal Government
Laura Schultz, executive director of research at the SUNY Rockefeller Institute of Government, looks closely at how New York state dollars funnel towards the federal government, and how those funds come back to the state and city. For a long time, New York's balance of payments have tilted toward a gap, meaning the state sends more to the federal government than it gets back. We'll look at the ways that impacts services in New York and how it might recover from Covid-19 and the resulting budget shortfall. 
36 minutes | Nov 24, 2020
What Comes Next for NYC Restaurants and Bars?
Andrew Rigie, Executive Director of the New York City Hospitality Alliance, says that the bars and restaurants that make our city what it is are heading into another dark few months because of Covid. He explains the ways we can all support local restaurants throughout the remaining months of the pandemic, and help them—-and all New Yorkers—-come out on the other side.
32 minutes | Oct 23, 2020
NYC's Budget Woes - and What We Can Do About Them
Andrew Rein, president of the Citizens Budget Commission, has been following the city and state budgets for some time, and he knows that the Covid-19 pandemic has put them both in a precarious state. Rein argues that there are lessons we can learn from previous fiscal crises, and that there are creative measures we can take before the government looks at cutting services or raising taxes, both of which could have cyclical negative impacts on the city overall. 
35 minutes | Oct 14, 2020
Rolling Out NYC Voting Reform
Jarret Berg, cofounder of VoteEarlyNY, says there's a lot that's about to change about voting in New York, and a public education campaign is needed. Following up on our previous conversation about ranked-choice voting, we talk about other ways in which the vote can be suppressed in New York City, and the reforms to combat those issues. 
31 minutes | Sep 24, 2020
What is Ranked-Choice Voting, and Why Should New Yorkers Understand it?
Susan Lerner is one of the city's leading experts on ranked-choice voting. As Executive Director of the nonprofit Common Cause, she was instrumental in the campaign during New York City ballot initiative to bring ranked-choice voting to New York City primaries and special elections. That measure, as part of a slate of Charter Commission recommendations, passed last November and goes into effect in 2021. But while an overwhelming majority of New Yorkers voted in favor of the change - there's still a lot of confusion about what it is, how it will work - and who stands to benefit.
32 minutes | Aug 26, 2020
Inside Pfizer’s Work on a Covid Vaccine
Sally Susman, Executive Vice President and Chief Corporate Affairs Officer at Pfizer, gives an insider’s look at how quickly development of a safe Covid-19 vaccine is coming along. The New York City-based pharmaceutical giant is working closely with nonprofits, government, and other private companies to solve the biggest problem facing the world today.
38 minutes | Aug 13, 2020
What is a Classroom? Covid-19, Education and Innovation
Jonathan Harber has been pushing for innovation in learning long before it became such a necessity during the pandemic. As someone who has started a charter school, as chairman of StartEd Inc, and as a board member of the Fund for Public Schools, he supports a community of innovators looking to find the pain points in education - and solve them. Perhaps nowhere is this more important than in New York City, where a large, diverse student body faces many challenges in getting an equitable education while having to learn remotely. Harber is arguing for, among other things, an innovative approach to repurposing school gyms and cafeterias for distanced learning.
38 minutes | Aug 4, 2020
Defund Police or “Divest and Invest”?
Nick Turner has spent decades working on the criminal justice, policing and community issues. As president of the Vera Institute of Justice, he oversees nonprofit work in key areas like changing conditions in prisons, combatting misuse of jails, and making justice systems more equitable and effective, especially among the city and country’s growing minority communities.  In this episode, Nick talks about the impact the coronavirus epidemic and subsequent protests against police brutality are having on his advocacy work, and the ways in which he thinks enormous policing budgets could be better spent. 
35 minutes | Jul 30, 2020
Where Tech and Policy Meet: From Mobile Voting to Solving Hunger
Bradley Tusk is a man who does many things to help democracy bring about positive change - from mobile voting to working the levers of government to bring an end to hunger. In this episode he also learns he's an unwitting trisector evangelist, as his work bridges the non profit, private, and government sector worlds in his efforts to help New Yorkers. Tusk is a venture capitalist, philanthropist, and CEO of Tusk Ventures and Tusk Strategies. He joined us to talk about how public policy can be shaped in the future.
33 minutes | Jul 22, 2020
Saving Summer Jobs for the City’s Teens
Each summer in NYC, government, private, and public organizations come together to fund and manage a program that’s become vital to tens of thousands of young people in the city: the Summer Youth Employment Program or SYEP, which matches teenagers with hundreds of employers and pays non profits to manage these relationships. This year, in the wake of Covid-19, Mayor de Blasio cancelled the $125 million program for the summer. Saskia Traill, CEO of ExpandED Schools, worked with many others to build a civic coalition to take the lead, and government followed and restored funding, ultimately saving the summer for 35,000 NYC teens.
34 minutes | Jul 1, 2020
NYC Dept Of City Planning: Working Within The Crisis To Build A More Equitable City
Throughout the COVID-19 crisis, many New Yorkers have become far more aware of the importance of local government officials in their lives through the daily press briefings delivered by the governor and mayor. But behind the curtain of city and state flags, there is an unflagging team of agencies and departments working together in novel ways to make the city livable - and more equitable. Marisa Lago, the head of the Department of City Planning and the Chair of the City Planning Commission, explains what goes into city planning — and what citizens get out of it.
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