Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Governor Hochul Announces $151 Million in Savings for New York Energy Customers

High voltage electric power lines

State Zero-Emission Credits Program Helps Spark Energy Savings and Clean, Reliable Electricity Generation


Governor Kathy Hochul today announced a major affordability win for millions of New Yorkers: $151 million in energy bill savings in 2026 as a result of the State’s Zero-Emissions Credits (ZEC) program, with the potential for additional savings in future years depending on market conditions. These cost savings will flow directly to New Yorkers, reducing the costs associated with keeping vital existing nuclear power plants online.

“My top priorities are energy affordability for New York consumers and making sure the lights stay on,” Governor Hochul said. “The Zero Emission Tax Credit program is a prime example of how the state was able to take a federal tax credit and turn it into needed energy savings for ratepayers while at the same time supporting clean and reliable electricity generation in the state.”

The ZEC program was created by the New York State Public Service Commission in 2016 to compensate the four Upstate nuclear plants for their zero-emissions power. Under the program, any benefits received from the federal nuclear production tax credit (PTC) enacted in 2022 are required to be passed along to ratepayers.

Constellation Energy owns or controls the four operating nuclear power reactors, located across three facilities, including Ginna, Fitzpatrick, and Nine Mile. All three facilities are located along the southern shore of Lake Ontario. The federal nuclear PTC now being claimed by Constellation Energy will result in a $151 million benefit to electricity consumers in New York State.

Redirecting funding to protect consumers, with $360 million in surplus funding from New York’s distributed solar program, NY-Sun, used to offset costs in the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority’s energy efficiency and building electrification portfolios by 24 percent in 2026 through 2030. The Commission further reduced program costs borne by ratepayers by an additional $340 million in 2025 and 2026, while expanding access to low-income participants.

Expanding funding and access for low-income participants, through the Commission’s May 2025 Energy Efficiency and Building Electrification (EE/BE) Orders for low and moderate income (LMI) and non-LMI consumers. The Commission increased funding levels from 20 percent of the historical EE/BE budgets under the Clean Energy Fund to 30 percent for LMI consumers. This is an annual increase of $132 million to LMI EE/BE programs, including a nearly $50 million annual increase for the EmPower+, program compared to previous spending levels.

Reinforcing consumer protections through stronger performance standards and enforcement authority. Since 2021, Governor Hochul’s administration has secured roughly $214.4 million from utility shareholders for the benefit of ratepayers.

Conducting management and operations audits to identify areas where improvements are needed to maximize ratepayer value. Governor Hochul directed the Commission to initiate the Comprehensive Management Incentive audit, which is examining incentive management compensation practices across the State’s electric, gas and water utilities. For the first time, this review will evaluate multiple utilities’ management compensation programs concurrently, rather than in isolation, and expand oversight to companies that have not previously been subject to this level of review. The audit aims to ensure that compensation is directly tied to performance metrics that improve service, reliability and affordability for New Yorkers. This audit will provide critical insights into best practices and identify areas where improvements are needed to maximize ratepayer value.

Taking decisive action to protect ratepayers by recalibrating the timeline for offshore wind transmission development because of changes in federal policy. The construction of offshore wind, which involves the federal government at multiple steps throughout the process, is uniquely reliant on the success of the federal and state partnership. Our action protected the public while preserving the flexibility to act swiftly when conditions improve. New York continues to refine procurement strategies, strengthen planning and work to supercharge the pace of permitting new transmission projects. 

Permits Filed for 1013 Adee Avenue in Allerton, The Bronx

 

Permits have been filed for a four-story residential building at 1013 Adee Avenue in Allerton, The Bronx. Located between Hone Avenue and Paulding Avenue, the lot is near the Burke Avenue subway station, served by the 2 and 5 trains. Alex Stanaj under is listed as the owner behind the applications.

The proposed 41-foot-tall development will yield 7,453 square feet designated for residential space. The building will have 11 residences, most likely rentals based on the average unit scope of 677 square feet. The masonry-based structure will also have a cellar, a 35-foot-long rear yard, and six open parking spaces.

Jakov Saric of Node Architecture, Engineering, Consulting PC is listed as the architect of record.

Demolition permits will likely not be needed as the lot is vacant. An estimated completion date has not been announced.

NYC Votes - Today is Your Last Chance to Vote!


 

Attorney General James Sues U.S. Department of Education Over Weaponization of Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program


New Rule Threatens to Strip Loan Forgiveness from Teachers, Nurses, and Other Public Servants by Arbitrarily Labeling Certain Disfavored Employers as “Illegal"

New York Attorney General Letitia James led a coalition of 21 other attorneys general in suing the U.S. Department of Education (ED) and Secretary Linda McMahon for unlawfully restricting eligibility for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program, which allows government and nonprofit employees to have their federal student loans forgiven after ten years of service. Attorney General James and the coalition are challenging a new federal rule that would deem entire state governments, hospitals, schools, and nonprofit organizations ineligible for PSLF if the federal government unilaterally determines they have engaged in activities the administration disapproves of, such as support for immigrants, gender-affirming health care, or diversity programs. The coalition argues that the sweeping new rule is unlawful, politically motivated, and targeted to punish states and organizations that the administration does not like. 

“Public Service Loan Forgiveness was created as a promise to teachers, nurses, firefighters, and social workers that their service to our communities would be honored,” said Attorney General James. “Instead, this administration has created a political loyalty test disguised as a regulation. It is unjust and unlawful to cut off loan forgiveness for hardworking Americans based on ideology. I will not let our federal government punish New York’s public servants for doing their jobs or standing up for our values.”

The PSLF program, established by Congress in 2007, ensures that those who dedicate their careers to serving their communities are not financially penalized for doing so. By forgiving remaining federal student loan debt after ten years of qualifying public service, PSLF has enabled teachers, nurses, firefighters, social workers, and countless other essential workers to pursue public service careers that might otherwise be out of reach. More than one million public servants nationwide have already received loan forgiveness through the program, including tens of thousands of New Yorkers. For state governments, PSLF is a critical tool to recruit and retain qualified professionals in vital fields like education, health care, and law enforcement. 

On October 31, ED finalized a new rule granting itself the power to unilaterally declare entire agencies or organizations ineligible for PSLF if the administration determines they have a “substantial illegal purpose,” a phrase that appears nowhere in the PSLF statute. The attorneys general highlight that the Department’s limited definition of such “illegality” aligns neatly with the administration’s political targets, including: 

  • Supporting immigrants;
  • Providing gender affirming care;
  • Promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion; and
  • Engaging in political protest.  

The rule, scheduled to take effect in July 2026, would effectively transform PSLF into a political weapon against states and causes the administration does not like by allowing the federal government to deem them to be “substantially illegal” whenever it chooses. 

Attorney General James and the coalition warn that this vague and sweeping authority could have devastating consequences nationwide. Entire classes of public workers, such as teachers in states with inclusive curricula, health professionals providing gender-affirming care, or legal aid attorneys representing immigrants, could suddenly lose PSLF eligibility through no fault of their own. The result would be widespread confusion, fear, and instability in the public workforce, forcing states to confront severe staffing shortages, higher turnover, and skyrocketing costs to maintain essential services. 

The dangers are not hypothetical. Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Justice sued New York over its “Protect Our Courts Act” – a state law ensuring that immigration enforcement does not deter people from seeking justice in state courts. Under the new PSLF rule, the attorneys general argue, the administration could claim that this duly enacted, court-upheld law constitutes a “substantial illegal purpose” and use it to deny loan forgiveness to thousands of New York public employees. 

Attorney General James and the coalition emphasize that if this policy stands, hardworking teachers, nurses, social workers, and other public servants could wake up one day to find that they no longer qualify for PSLF because their employer has fallen out of favor with the current administration in Washington, D.C.

The attorneys general argue that the new rule is flatly illegal. The law that created PSLF guarantees forgiveness for anyone who works full-time in qualifying public service; it does not grant ED discretion to carve out exceptions based on ideology. In addition, the rule’s vague “substantial illegal purpose” standard is arbitrary and capricious, and therefore illegal under the Administrative Procedure Act, as it gives ED the unfettered power to target specific state policies or social programs while exempting federal agencies from scrutiny.

The attorneys general are asking the court to declare the rule unlawful, vacate it, and bar the Department of Education from enforcing or implementing it. 

Joining Attorney General James in filing this lawsuit are the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia. A group of private plaintiffs and local governments also filed a lawsuit to block implementation of the new rule.  

GreenThumb - Preparing the Garden for a Head Start in the Spring

 

November Monthly Newsletter

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Volunteers and GreenThumb staff at a volunteer workday earlier this year at George Washington Carver Community Garden in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Photo by Kyleen Sanchez, GreenThumb

In early February, GreenThumb led a volunteer workday at George Washington Carver Community Garden to engage community members in essential hands-on winter tasks and share vital information on how to join a garden. The goal of this workday was to provide volunteers an example of how neighbors can effectively take care of a community garden, together, as a group. A few hours resulted in transformative results: a completely reorganized shed, clear visibility into the garden through proper pruning of shrubs and trees, and 13 new people who have joined the garden as committed members.

Learn more about our upcoming volunteer workdays below and find out how to get involved at your local community garden on our website.

As the 2025 community garden season has come to a close and the colder months are upon us, all of us at NYC Parks GreenThumb wish to extend our deepest thanks to all the community gardeners for their countless hours of volunteering, engaging their communities with events and resources, and maintaining these important green spaces for all New Yorkers to enjoy.

Top Stories

The 2024 GreenThumb Garden Recognition Award honorees with NYC Parks GreenThumb staff, NYC Parks officials, and guests. Photo by Malcolm Pinckney, NYC Parks

9th Annual GreenThumb Garden Recognition Awards

It's the last chance to nominate GreenThumb gardens and gardeners (including your own and yourself!) for one of the 2025 GreenThumb Garden Recognition Awards! Each year, GreenThumb honors and celebrates community gardeners who are beautifying their neighborhoods, growing healthy food, protecting the environment, and healing their communities at this annual ceremony. Learn more and complete the Nomination Form by Sunday, November 30, 2025.


2026 GreenThumb Gardener Trainings

Attention GreenThumb community gardeners, applications are now open for our Spring 2026 Trainings! See below for more information.
All trainings are free of cost and are reserved for members of GreenThumb community gardens.

  • Tea Arts & Culture 
    Learn to host community programs using tea as a centerpiece! In this hands-on series with Tea Arts & Culture, you'll discover tea tasting, brewing techniques, and the histories behind tea traditions—while fostering mindfulness and connection. 
    Learn more and apply here by Friday, November 14, at 11:59 p.m.

  • GreenThumb Leadership Academy (GLA)
    Are you ready to strengthen your skills as a community garden leader? GLA is a free, citywide leadership development program for community gardeners across all five boroughs of NYC.
    Learn more and apply here by Friday, November 14, at 11:59 p.m.

  • Academia de Liderazgo de GreenThumb (GLA)
    ¿Está listo/a para fortalecer sus habilidades como líder de huerto comunitario? GLA es un programa gratuito de desarrollo de liderazgo para horticultores comunitarios en los cinco condados de NYC.
    Aprende más sobre el programa y aplica aquí antes del viernes 14 de noviembre a las 11:59 p.m.

  • Compost and Farm Apprenticeship Program
    This 11-week training with Earth Matter NY gives GreenThumb gardeners hands-on experience in small-scale urban farming with a focus on composting. Participants learn to make "Gold Standard” compost, explore various composting systems, and apply best practices to improve soil and plant health.
    Learn more and apply here by Sunday, February 1, at 11:59 p.m.

  • Connecting to Our Roots: Introduction to Herbalism Intensive Training
    This 6-session course on plant medicine rooted in Black healing traditions, covering herbal history, medicine making, and support for the nervous, digestive, and respiratory systems. Participants will gain tools for community-based herbal care and develop their intuition with medicinal plants. 
    Learn more and apply here by Sunday, February 1, 11:59 p.m.

  • Rooted In Care: Building Sustainable Volunteer Culture in Community Gardens
    Designed for garden leaders, coordinators, and organizers, this training invites participants to reimagine what a truly sustainable garden culture can look like when we center relationships, care, and interdependence—rather than overwork and burnout.
    Learn more and apply here by Monday, February 16, at 11:59 p.m.

  • Raising Chickens in the Garden Training
    What does it take to keep chickens in a community garden? In this training in collaboration with the chicken caretakers at Tranquility Farm in Brooklyn, GreenThumb community gardeners will learn the basics of chicken care, chicken health and biology, coop structure and maintenance, and more. 
    Learn more and apply here by Sunday, March 29, 11:59 p.m.


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Volunteers, gardeners, and GreenThumb staff after a successful volunteer workday at Euclid 500 Community Garden last month. Photo by Kyleen Sanchez, GreenThumb

Volunteer at a Community Garden

If you are new to community gardening, volunteering is a great opportunity to get to know community gardeners and learn how to become a garden member at these gardens.

Workshops & Events
Visit the Garden Events page for new additions, latest updates and to see upcoming workshops, activities, and public programs from GreenThumb and our partners. Visit the Community Garden Events page to find programming from GreenThumb garden groups. All free and open to the public! 
You may request translation services for any GreenThumb workshop for any language at least three weeks in advance at greenthumbinfo@parks.nyc.gov. 

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One way you can get your garden ready for winter is by adding compost and mulch to raised beds, like these volunteers are doing during a September workday at La Casita Garden in the East Village. Photo by Kyleen Sanchez, GreenThumb


Highlight of the Month:

Putting the Garden to Bed: Winterizing Raised Beds

Sunday, November 16, 11:00 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
1460 Washington Ave. Bronx, NY 10456

Prepare your raised beds for winter while building healthier soil for next season! In this practical workshop, you'll learn how to protect your beds from frost and nutrient loss by using cover crops, mulching techniques, and other simple methods that prevent your soil from being exposed to harsh winter conditions. We'll discuss the benefits of covering your soil to retain nitrogen, reduce erosion, and support soil life through the cold months. Whether you're new to gardening or looking to refine your fall practices, this workshop will help you confidently put your raised beds to bed, ensuring a strong, vibrant start in spring.

Register on our website

GreenThumb Workshops

Learn about all our upcoming programming in our Fall Program Guide!

More Workshops & Events

Grants & Opportunities

  • NYC Parks is seeking thousands of volunteers for the 2025 Trees Count to measure the size, location, and condition of the city's trees. Volunteers can sign up today at the 2025 Trees Count Hub website.

Resources & Grants for Artists

Looking for funding to bring art events and cultural programs to your community garden? Visit your local arts council to find out what grants they have available for local artists: Brooklyn Arts CouncilBronx Council on the ArtsNorthern Manhattan Arts AllianceStaten Island ArtsThe New York Foundation for the Arts currently administers the Queens Arts Fund, providing grants to artists and arts organizations within Queens.