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New York|Some of the Things You’ll Be Paying More For

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Newsletter


NEW YORK TODAY


SOME OF THE THINGS YOU’LL BE PAYING MORE FOR

Gas and electric bills are going up, and so are bridge and tunnel tolls, not to
mention subway fares.

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By James Barron

Aug. 4, 2023, 2:00 a.m. ET
You’re reading the New York Today newsletter.  Local reporting on the stories
that define the city. Plus weather, upcoming events, Metropolitan Diary and
more. Get it sent to your inbox.

Good morning. It’s Friday. Today we’ll look at why your electric and gas bill
went up if you are a Con Edison customer, and why tolls for some bridges and
tunnels will go up starting Sunday. We’ll also look at two investigations of
people who are, or were, close to Mayor Eric Adams.


Image
Credit...Spencer Platt/Getty Images


Roger Aguinaldo was not surprised when he heard about the Con Edison rate
increase that took effect on Tuesday.

“What are you going to do, yell at the kids to turn the lights off?” said
Aguinaldo, who lives in Rego Park, Queens. “But wait, the lights are LEDs, so
they don’t consume that much electricity anyway.”



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The state Public Service Commission said that as of Aug. 1, a residential
customer’s Con Edison bill would jump $14.44 a month, or 9.1 percent, for 600
kilowatt-hours of electricity. The same customer’s bill will go up again in
January by $7.20 a month, or 4.2 percent, and by a further $2.43 a month, or 3.8
percent, in January 2025, assuming he or she uses 600 kilowatt-hours.

Con Edison’s rates for natural gas also went up at the beginning of the month,
by an average of 8.4 percent, or $17.28 a month. Like Con Edison’s electric
customers, gas users will see their rates jump again in January 2024 (by 6.7
percent a month, or an average of $14.90) and in January 2025 (by 6.6 percent a
month, or an average of $15.61).

But a Con Edison spokesman said that low-income customers who signed up for
affordability programs that provide discounts would see their bills decrease by
$2.99 a month for electricity and $2.11 for natural gas.

As part of the rate case, Con Edison is promising investments in clean energy as
it moves away from fossil fuels. Among other things, it plans to upgrade its
service to accommodate increased demand from electric heating and electric
vehicles.

“Electric vehicles could put a lot of additional load on the electric grid,”
said Paul DeCotis, a former chairman of the New York State Energy Planning Board
who is now a senior director of the digital consulting firm West Monroe. “Say
the M.T.A. converted its bus fleet to electricity,” DeCotis said, referring to
the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. “That’s a lot more electricity that
Con Edison is going to have to deliver.”



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By coincidence, two days after the Public Service Commission approved the higher
utility rates, the M.T.A. approved a plan to build an electric bus-charging
station next to its Gun Hill Road Bus Depot in the Bronx.


BRIDGE AND TUNNEL TOLLS

Starting Sunday, it will cost more to drive across the bridges or through the
tunnels run by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority — 39 cents more for
cars with E-ZPasses at six major crossings. The new E-Z Pass rate will be $6.94,
up from $6.55, at the Bronx-Whitestone, Robert F. Kennedy, Throgs Neck and
Verrazzano-Narrows Bridges and the Queens Midtown and Hugh L. Carey Tunnels.

In percentage terms, that is slightly more than the increase in subway fares
scheduled for later in the month. The price of a subway ride will climb to
$2.90, from $2.75, on Aug. 20.

The price rise is steeper for drivers who do not have E-ZPasses and are charged
by mail — $11.19 starting Sunday, up from $10.17 now. The agency said that
drivers with E-ZPasses issued in New York would save 2 percent more than before,
compared with customers who are billed by mail.

When the M.T.A. approved the higher tolls and fares, its chairman, Janno Lieber,
described them as a return to every-other-year increases that would match
inflation. The agency had been facing a budget gap of nearly $3 billion by 2025.
A bailout from Gov. Kathy Hochul and the State Legislature bolstered the balance
sheet, but not enough to avoid the increases, and the agency is counting on
more. It foresees 4 percent increases in 2025 and 2027.



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GASOLINE PRICES

Gasoline prices are up, too, though not much. AAA said the average price of a
gallon of regular in New York City was $3.912 on Thursday, up slightly more than
a penny from Wednesday and slightly more than two cents above the statewide
average of $3.888 a gallon.



The current price in the city is 9 cents more than the week-ago average, but
it’s 22 cents less than the comparable figure from a month ago — and nearly 61
cents below the price at this time last year.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Weather

Prepare for a chance of showers, persisting through the evening, with
temperatures near 80. At night, temps will drop to around the high 60s.

ALTERNATE-SIDE PARKING

In effect until Aug. 15 (Feast of the Assumption).

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



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THE LATEST NEW YORK NEWS


Image

Credit...David ‘Dee’ Delgado/Reuters



CRIME

 * Sentenced: Edward Mullins, the ex-leader of the New York City sergeants’
   union who pleaded guilty to stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from
   its members, was sentenced to two years in federal prison.

 * Charged: A chemistry professorlured at least three women to the Bronx from El
   Salvador, promising them a better life. Instead, federal prosecutors said, he
   raped, sexually assaulted and sexually abused them.


MORE LOCAL NEWS

 * The future of streetside sheds: Outdoor dining along New York City streets is
   set to become permanent — in a way that could prompt many restaurant owners
   to take down their streetside sheds.

 * Covid cases: A small uptick in Covid cases has led to more hospitalizations,
   but the numbers, about 800 statewide, are still far below previous waves.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



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DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S INVESTIGATIONS FOCUS ON PEOPLE IN ADAMS’S CIRCLE


Image

Mayor Eric Adams, left, and Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan district
attorney.Credit...Mary Altaffer/Associated Press


One case involves Mayor Eric Adams’s former buildings commissioner, a real
estate developer and a discounted apartment.

The other involves six people, including a former police inspector who is
longtime friend of Adams. They are accused of recruiting and reimbursing donors
to get more money for Adams’s campaign under the city’s campaign finance
program.

My colleagues Jonah E. Bromwich and William K. Rashbaum write that the two cases
have brought the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, uncomfortably close
to the mayor, who has not been implicated in any wrongdoing. But — not for the
first time since — Adams finds himself in the awkward position of having to
explain himself or account for associates.

The first case involves Eric Ulrich, who resigned as buildings commissioner last
year. He has been charged in a sealed indictment with corruption-related crimes,
according to two people familiar with the investigation who asked for anonymity
to discuss charges that have not been made public. (Bragg is expected to
announce the indictment next month.)

Ulrich is accused of accepting a discounted apartment from Mark Caller, a
Brooklyn-based developer who has had business with the city and who is also
charged in the indictment, the people familiar with the investigation said.



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A lawyer for Ulrich, Samuel Braverman, said last month that until he saw an
indictment, he would not comment. He said on Thursday that he had nothing to
add. Caller’s lawyer, Benjamin Brafman, said that he had not seen the indictment
but called the allegation about a marked-down apartment “patently false.”

Ulrich told investigators that months before he resigned, the mayor had warned
him that he was the focus of a criminal investigation, the two people said.
Ulrich’s account was first reported by The Daily News. Adams has denied giving
Ulrich such a warning.

In the other case, which Bragg announced last month, the lead defendant is
Dwayne Montgomery, a retired police inspector who was a colleague when Adams was
on the force. Court papers say that Montgomery and Rachel Atcheson, an Adams
aide, arranged fund-raisers at which straw donors gave Adams’s campaign $250
apiece.

The city has a matching funds program intended to reward small donations. For
every personal contribution of $250 to a mayoral campaign, the city gives the
campaign $2,000.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



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METROPOLITAN diary


SHARP JAB

Image



Dear Diary:

On a sweltering Saturday in summer 1995, I was 25, hung over and waiting for the
No. 1 train at 116th Street with a friend. We were on our way to Penn Station to
pick up another friend.

When the train arrived, I stepped inside and stopped immediately so that I could
lean against the door when it closed. A few moments later, I felt a sharp jab to
my ribs and heard a stern, “Step aside!”

I apologized sheepishly.

The elbow jabber turned and looked at me. She was a petite woman about my age,
and something happened when our eyes met.

“You’re not from around here, are you?” she said.

“No,” I said, feeling myself blush. “I just moved here from upstate.”



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“You apologized,” she said, smiling. “That’s how I knew.”

“I just finished a parks restoration job upstate,” she continued. “Where did you
live?”

By the time we got to Penn Station, I had her phone number and we had arranged
to meet with a group of her friends and mine at an East Village bar that night.

We talked until 4 a.m., then went for falafels at Mamoun’s on St. Marks until
the sun came up. June 27 was our 25th wedding anniversary.

— John Diefendorf

Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Send submissions here and read more Metropolitan Diary
here.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Glad we could get together here. See you on Monday. — J.B.

P.S. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. You can find all our
puzzles here.

Melissa Guerrero and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach
the team at nytoday@nytimes.com.

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox.



James Barron is a Metro reporter and columnist who writes the New York Today
newsletter. In 2020 and 2021, he wrote the Coronavirus Update column, part of
coverage that won a Pulitzer Prize for public service. He is the author of two
books and was the editor of “The New York Times Book of New York.” More about
James Barron

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