Mayor Eric Adams: King of NY Official Thread

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Wargames

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By
Stephen Nessen
Published Feb 21, 2023
Modified Feb 22, 2023 at 9:54 a.m.

MTA urges social media companies to remove subway surfer videos after teen’s death​


A J train crossing the Williamsburg Bridge.

Scott Heins/Getty Images


The MTA will implore social media companies to take down videos of subway surfers, Chairman Janno Lieber said Tuesday, one day after a teen died riding atop a J train crossing the Williamsburg Bridge.

Lieber said an MTA analysis found that videos of young people riding atop the subways surged by 160% between 2019 and 2022. The agency urged TikTok, Snapchat and Instagram to take down the videos last summer, Lieber said.

Monday's death of Zackery Nazario, 15, has prompted the MTA to contact the companies again.

“We’ve made approaches to the social media companies and we’re going to renew it again. This is something nobody wants to see – a 15-year-old kid. It just breaks your heart,” Lieber said at an MTA board meeting on Tuesday. “Social media companies, it’s not news to anybody, you’re not always focused on discouraging reckless behavior.”

Nazario, of the Lower East Side, was on top of the train on Monday evening when his head struck a beam and he tumbled onto the tracks, according to the NYPD.

A GoFundMe page for Nazario hopes to raise money for funeral costs.

A GoFundMe page for Nazario hopes to raise money for funeral costs.

Screenshot via GoFundMe

In December, another 15-year-old subway surfer died after falling from a train as it crossed the Williamsburg Bridge and making contact with the third rail.
MTA stats show the trend is gaining popularity. In all of 2019, the MTA documented 490 incidents of people riding outside of trains. In 2022, there were 928 incidents.

Mayor Eric Adams said at an unrelated event that he planned to launch an awareness campaign about the dangers of subway surfing.

“I think the national government must come in and say, ‘what is the corporate responsibility of social media?’” he said. “I'm just surprised this hasn't been done.”

On Tuesday afternoon, Gothamist quickly found a video of subway surfers on the Instagram account of rapper Talib Kweli, who has more than 1 million followers.

Speaking with Gothamist on Tuesday, Zackery Nazario's mother Norma Nazario said social media websites need to take down videos of subway surfers and the MTA needs to do more to restrict access to the roofs of subway cars.

"My son was just a great kid and it's unfortunate that he's gone," she said. "We'll miss him. I just want to tell the MTA that they need to do something about it. I don't wish other mothers to go through the same."

Norma Nazario said the behavior was out of character for her son, and feared videos on Instagram may have influenced him.

"[He was] an old soul, just very mature for his age," she said, adding she knew he was interested in the history of trains, but never imagined he would do something so dangerous.

The MTA didn’t respond to questions about the response it received from the social media companies. A spokesperson for TikTok could not find any subway surfing videos live on the network. Emails to the other companies were not returned.

“We cannot stress enough how dangerous it is to ride on the outside of trains,” New York City Transit President Richard Davey wrote in a statement. “Our hearts go out to loved ones at yet another tragic time. We implore other families to speak with their children on the real dangers of what can seem like a thrill but is too often deadly.”

The NYPD recently increased patrols on the 7 and J lines. Both lines have long stretches along elevated tracks and are popular among subway surfers.


Catalina Gonella and Elizabeth Kim contributed reporting
This story has been updated to correct the total number of MTA incidents involving people riding outside of trains in 2022.
 

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NYC Mayor Eric Adams decries remote work: 'You can't stay home in your pajamas all day'​

Jake Lahut
Feb 23, 2022, 12:38 PM

Eric Adams wears a flat cap and red jacket with a sash in Mandarin.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D). Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images
  • New York City Mayor Eric Adams once again criticized remote work.
  • "You can't stay home in your pajamas all day," Adams said on Wednesday.
  • Indefinite "work from home" policies aren't economically sustainable for the Big Apple, he argued.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams renewed his call for New Yorkers to return to the office on Wednesday, positing that remote work is economically unsustainable and ultimately harmful to low-income New Yorkers.

"In order for our economic — financial ecosystem, I should say — to function, we have to have human interaction," Adams said at an economic development event at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. "It can't be done from home. And if we do that, then we're going to greatly impact low wage workers."

Since taking office in January, Adams has embraced his own genre of pep talks, telling New Yorkers things they may not want to hear or likely haven't heard from local politicians.

From urging constituents to change their pandemic mindset and stop feeling "so used to getting the L's" to comparing heroin addiction to being "hooked on cheese," Adams often addresses the public directly at his events.

After making a similar point on remote work back in early January, Adams sparred with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a fellow New York Democrat, over his comment that "low-skilled workers" don't have "the academic skills to sit in the corner office."

"When you talk about closing down our city, you're talking about putting low-wage workers out of a job," Adams said during the Omicron surge. "I'm not letting that happen."

At the Brooklyn Navy Yard on Wednesday, Adams argued that the current situation of indefinite remote work across white collar employment sectors should not become the new normal. He also said "everything is on the table" when it comes to rezoning Manhattan's business districts, which could allow for large office spaces to be converted into apartments.

"So it's imperative that our economic leaders sit down and say what our business centers and districts are going to look like," Adams said. "Do we change the zoning? Do we allow these new workforce housing that's coming together outside, because there's new ways people are doing business? So we need to look at all of those things.

But one thing that can't happen: You can't stay home in your pajamas all day," Adams continued. "That's not who we are as a city. You need to be out, cross-pollinating ideas, interacting with humans. It is crucial. We are social creatures, and we must socialize to get the energy we need as a city."
 
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Wargames

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A lot of the mid tier and lower level white collar city workers are leaving because they see their friends/peers in higher paying jobs that are hybrid.

Working for NYC is great on your resume and they are not so invested in the pension they can’t just say fukk it and leave.

It was only a matter of time, the market has spoken and a hybrid work model is the future.
 

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A lot of the mid tier and lower level white collar city workers are leaving because they see their friends/peers in higher paying jobs that are hybrid.

Working for NYC is great on your resume and they are not so invested in the pension they can’t just say fukk it and leave.

It was only a matter of time, the market has spoken and a hybrid work model is the future.
exploring a remote option is b.s since many city employees worked remotely just fine for over a year. they know it works in many cases, so what is there to explore?
 

Wargames

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exploring a remote option is b.s since many city employees worked remotely just fine for over a year. they know it works in many cases, so what is there to explore?
He’s basically dragging his feet. He doesn’t want this, but it’s clear it needs to happen.

NYC doesn’t pay as well as the private sector or even top tier nonprofits. The perks is the pension and the benefits. Hybrid work is the hottest benefit a company can offer right now and on the low the pension tiers ain’t what it use to be either unless you came in two tiers ago.

This could be smoke, but I think it’s just him stalling. He really doesn’t want to do this.
 
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