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22nd March 2010

Photo reblogged from think on this.

abbyjean:

The Bloomberg administration said Friday that the number of people living on New York’s streets and subways soared 34 percent in a year, signaling a setback in one of the city’s most intractable problems. Appearing both startled and dismayed by the sharp increase, a year after a significant drop, administration officials attributed it to the recession, noting that city shelters for families and single adults had been inundated.
Robert V. Hess, the commissioner of homeless services, said in a subdued news conference that the city began feeling the increase in its vast shelter system more than two years ago. “And now we’re seeing the devastating effect of this unprecedented poor economy on our streets as well,” Mr. Hess said. The city’s annual tally indicated an additional 783 homeless people on the streets and in the subway system, for a total of 3,111, up from 2,328 last year. That is in addition to almost 38,000 people living in shelters, which is near the city’s high. (via City Tally Cites Big Spike in Number of Homeless - NYTimes.com)

Hey Bloomberg, you can afford to house these people OUT OF YOUR POCKET. 

abbyjean:

The Bloomberg administration said Friday that the number of people living on New York’s streets and subways soared 34 percent in a year, signaling a setback in one of the city’s most intractable problems. Appearing both startled and dismayed by the sharp increase, a year after a significant drop, administration officials attributed it to the recession, noting that city shelters for families and single adults had been inundated.

Robert V. Hess, the commissioner of homeless services, said in a subdued news conference that the city began feeling the increase in its vast shelter system more than two years ago. “And now we’re seeing the devastating effect of this unprecedented poor economy on our streets as well,” Mr. Hess said. The city’s annual tally indicated an additional 783 homeless people on the streets and in the subway system, for a total of 3,111, up from 2,328 last year. That is in addition to almost 38,000 people living in shelters, which is near the city’s high. (via City Tally Cites Big Spike in Number of Homeless - NYTimes.com)

Hey Bloomberg, you can afford to house these people OUT OF YOUR POCKET. 

Source: The New York Times

5th November 2009

Photo reblogged from reaching the shore with 52 notes

reachingtheshore:

guerrillamamamedicine:

savingpaper:

It is what it is.
(via banalitycheck, originally via poisonville)


HAHAHAHA

BWAHAHHAHHA

reachingtheshore:

guerrillamamamedicine:

savingpaper:

It is what it is.

(via banalitycheck, originally via poisonville)

HAHAHAHA

BWAHAHHAHHA

4th November 2009

Post

Cops - We need them

$100 million pays the salaries of over 2,000 NYPD 1st-year cops.

3rd November 2009

Post

Small businesses, anyone?

$100 million could pay for microloans for 573,000 lenders and 239,000 entrepreneurs.

http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/11/01/four-years-after-founding-kiva-hits-100-million-in-microloans/

3rd November 2009

Quote

@seasonothebitch started the bloomberg’s $ tumblr: http://tinyurl.com/yjq2emw // $100 million could hire 2000 school guidance counselors

Source: twitter.com

3rd November 2009

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Question: What would you do with Bloomberg’s $100 million? (@seasonothebitch). I would buy ever NYer a pony. And good public schools.

Source: twitter.com

3rd November 2009

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PAID for 2,200 first year teachers RT @seasonothebitch We should start a blog. “What NYC could’ve done with Bloomberg’s $100 million.

Source: twitter.com

3rd November 2009

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$100 million that Bloomie spent = one f-22 fighter jet. Not sure which side of that equation is grossest.

Source: twitter.com

3rd November 2009

Post

Bloomberg’s Money

Michael Bloomberg spent $100 million of his own money to become mayor of New York City for a third term.

I bet we could come up with a few things that we could’ve better spent that money on.

Post ‘em here.