Articles

  • 1 month ago | nydailynews.com | Eric Adams |Bill de Blasio |Mitchell H. Katz

    On this day, exactly five years ago, we lost the first New Yorker to COVID-19. In the days and weeks that followed, the city went into lockdown, as schools and all non-essential businesses closed for what we thought — at the time — would be a few days, possibly a few weeks. We recall the eerily silent streets, sirens wailing in the night, Zoom classrooms, and our health care heroes working tirelessly.

  • Jan 11, 2025 | wlwt.com | Eric Adams

    For more than seven decades, speed has been the hallmark of commercial aviation. But while we have the capability to push those speeds from around 500 mph to even greater extremes thanks to faster-than-sound supersonic flight, doing so comes with a stiff penalty: ear-splitting, glass-rattling, baby-waking sonic booms.

  • Jan 6, 2025 | philippinedailymirror.com | Eric Adams

    1 Mayor Eric Adams has an in-person media presence. City Hall on Tuesday, December 31, 2024. Credit | Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office. 2025 marks a historic occasion — our city’s 400th anniversary. It marks four centuries since the first European settlement of Manhattan in 1625, on land known as Lenapehoking, the homeland of the Lenape people. The tiny Dutch colony began as New Amsterdam and then changed to New York when the English took control and expanded rapidly.

  • Dec 30, 2024 | amny.com | Eric Adams

    The hospitality and tourism industry are the lifeblood of New York City’s economy. When we came into office three years ago, our city was emerging from the depths of the pandemic. Streets were empty and businesses were struggling to survive — and our tourism industry was hit hard. But our administration went to work to build a safer, more affordable city for working-class New Yorkers and their families.

  • Dec 30, 2024 | politicsny.com | Eric Adams

    Posted on The hospitality and tourism industry are the lifeblood of New York City’s economy. When we came into office three years ago, our city was emerging from the depths of the pandemic. Streets were empty and businesses were struggling to survive — and our tourism industry was hit hard. But our administration went to work to build a safer, more affordable city for working-class New Yorkers and their families.

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