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Search resuls for: "Eliza Shapiro"


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There is an extravaganza of cleanliness to be found just behind an unmarked door in a corner of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. This is the home of Kingbridge’s massive new cleaning facility, which opened in January 2020. It’s where a fastidious, highly labor-intensive process takes place, one Mr. Aviles believes is necessary for clothing to be cleaned properly. He offered customers hot chocolate in the winter and lemonade in the summer, and soon learned to press shirts himself. They then tuck them into a massive wet or dry cleaning machine, or hand-clean them if the situation is dire.
Persons: Aviles, Victoria —, Organizations: Brooklyn Navy Locations: It’s
Here’s Why a New York City Lobster Roll (With Fries!) Costs $32New York City has not always been a lobster roll town. She and her husband, Ralph, started out by selling whole lobsters out of a building they had bought in Red Hook, Brooklyn. The pandemic upended everything at the Red Hook Lobster Pound. Prices surged across the board, and by mid-2022, Ms. Povich felt she had no choice but to raise the price of her signature item, a lobster roll and fries.
Persons: Fries, Povich, , Ralph Organizations: New York Locations: New York, New York City, Maine, Red Hook , Brooklyn
It’s a great time to be rich in New York City. Everyday life is increasingly unaffordable for most New Yorkers, but a new class of private, members-only and concierge services is emerging as a kind of gated community within the city. It all adds up to a city where the adages about New Yorkers of all backgrounds living and working shoulder to shoulder might now come with an asterisk. The rich have long sought to avoid the inconveniences baked into city life. Even the mayor’s favorite haunt is a members-only club.
Persons: It’s, hoi, Locations: New York City, New York
Later, on Twitter, now known as X, Ms. Salazar said she did not have any evidence that there was a pattern of corporal punishment in yeshivas. Ms. Salazar did not respond to a message seeking comment on Thursday. Assemblyman Charles Lavine, a Nassau Democrat who sponsored the legislation, said he wrote the bill because he did not know corporal punishment was allowed in private schools until reading about it in The Times. “I am very pleased that New York is protecting our children by outlawing the use of physical punishment in our schools,” he said on Thursday. In June, New York City completed its own long-stalled investigation into Hasidic boys’ schools.
Persons: Julia Salazar, Salazar, Charles Lavine, Organizations: Democrat, Times, Twitter, Nassau Democrat Locations: Brooklyn, The Times, , New York, New York City
Median prices for nearly every type of child care in New York City have shot up since 2017, according to state surveys of providers. And the workers who provide child care are reeling from high costs and are leaving the industry. Many make just over minimum wage, leaving them barely able to afford to stay in New York City or pay for care for their own children. Interviews with more than three dozen parents, nannies, day care providers and experts revealed a potentially devastating crisis for the future of New York City. In recent years, only the astronomical cost of housing has presented a greater obstacle to working families than the cost of child care, experts said.
Organizations: Yorkers, New York City, U.S . Department of Labor Locations: New York, New York City, York City
If the findings are upheld by the state education department, as is expected, the schools could be required to submit detailed improvement plans and face government monitoring. The law, however, does not make clear what consequences the schools might face if they do not commit to improving. A spokesman for the city’s Department of Education said in a statement that it had performed a “thorough, fair review” of the Hasidic schools. “Schools that are found to not provide a substantially equivalent education will work with the Department of Education to create and implement a remediation plan,” the spokesman, Nathaniel Styer, said. Hasidic leaders have defended the schools previously, saying they prepared students for happy and fulfilling lives in the Hasidic community.
Persons: Nathaniel Styer, Organizations: city’s Department of Education, , Department of Education, , The New York Times Locations: Brooklyn, Hudson
How Are New Yorkers Handling the Costs of Child Care?
  + stars: | 2023-06-26 | by ( Eliza Shapiro | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
The Times wants to know more about how New York City residents are dealing with child care. Credit... Brittainy Newman for The New York Times
Persons: Brittainy Newman Organizations: The New York Locations: New York City
Beatrice Weber wakes up most mornings afraid that her son’s Hasidic Jewish school is setting him up to fail. Her 10-year-old, Aaron, brims with curiosity, and has told his mother that he wants to work for NASA. But his school, like other Hasidic boys’ schools in New York, teaches only cursory English and math and little science or social studies. It focuses instead on imparting the values of the fervently religious Hasidic community, which speaks Yiddish rather than English and places the study of Jewish law and prayer above all else. Recently, Ms. Weber said, Aaron’s teacher told him that the planets revolve around the Earth.
Persons: Beatrice Weber, Aaron, Weber Organizations: NASA Locations: New York
Eliza Shapiro is a reporter covering New York City education. She joined The Times in 2018 and grew up in New York, attending public and private schools in Manhattan and Brooklyn. @elizashapiro
Persons: Eliza Shapiro Organizations: Times Locations: New York City, New York, Manhattan, Brooklyn
To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android. The Hasidic Jewish community has long operated one of New York’s largest private schools on its own terms, resisting any outside scrutiny of how its students are faring. But in 2019, the school, the Central United Talmudical Academy, agreed to give state standardized tests in reading and math to more than 1,000 students. Students at nearly a dozen other schools run by the Hasidic community recorded similarly dismal outcomes that year, a pattern that under ordinary circumstances would signal an education system in crisis. But where other schools might be struggling because of underfunding or mismanagement, these schools are different.
Organizations: New York Times, Central United Talmudical Academy
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