
Mayor unveils plans to accelerate NYC's economic recovery
Adams says the bureaucratic way of doing things is out the window as he strives to reinvent the city post-COVID.
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Marcia Kramer joined CBS News New York in 1990 as an investigative and political reporter. Previously, she was the City Hall bureau chief at the New York Daily News.
Her reports on the local, national, and international level have garnered her multiple honors, including a George Foster Peabody award, two Edward R. Murrow awards, nine Emmy awards, two New York Press Club Golden Typewriter awards, and a first-place award from the Associated Press for her investigative reports. Her work has been recognized in editorials in the New York Times and the New York Post, as well as in a piece entitled "Marcia Kramer: Journalism at its Best," which ran in the New York Observer in March 1998.
Kramer broke a story exposing the improper use of lights and sirens by city government officials. Her story led to Mayor Michael Bloomberg's crackdown resulting in the removal of lights and sirens from hundreds of vehicles. Other credits include a report on people stealing school supplies and selling them on the black market, a story on schools that served old food past its freshness date, and a film exposing school board members vacationing in Las Vegas on taxpayer dollars. She has also been cited for her reports on the Swiss banks and Nazi gold that culminated in a decision by the Swiss to finally give back the money. Kramer is also known for her 1992 interview with President Bill Clinton in which he confessed he "never inhaled."
Adams says the bureaucratic way of doing things is out the window as he strives to reinvent the city post-COVID.
The $11 billion project will bring Long Island Rail Road service to Grand Central Terminal.
Members of the ring reportedly resold the stolen goods on eBay, prompting the mayor to lash out, again, at social media.
Adams marked the anniversary by meeting with members of Floyd's family to outline steps he has taken to fix the NYPD.
One event scheduled before Tuesday's massacre took on a new sense of urgency.
Daniel Enriquez, the victim in the Q train shooting, was apparently on the subway because Uber was too expensive.
Mayor Adams took the subway to City Hall the day after a man was murdered in cold blood on the Q train.
Toll evaders cost the agencies millions of dollars and officials are determined to go after drivers who break the law to avoid paying them.
CBS2's Marcia Kramer experienced firsthand Thursday how effective the scanning system can be.
Rep. Tom Suozzi called her a hypocrite, charging that when she was in Congress she was a big supporter of the NRA.
A stunning decision redrawing maps for many districts has set off a fierce scramble for seats.
About a year before Saturday's tragedy, state police ordered the 18-year-old to undergo a psychiatric evaluation.
It's the largest, most comprehensive program in the nation and will help students whose parents lack the financial ability to send their kids to special private schools.
Hochul said it would be a mistake for women concerned about reproductive rights to elect a Republican governor.
The mayor is raising the specter of a return to the bad old days of corruption, politics, and bureaucracy if Albany fails to act.