The top of the 2024 WNBA Draft lacks any intrigue or mystery whatsover heading into Monday night at BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music). Caitlin Clark will go No. 1 to the Indiana Fever unless a meteor strikes Fort Greene before Commissioner Cathy Englebert can finish her sentence. And while Stanford’s Cameron Brink may not be the prospect Clark is, she’s nearly as much of a guarantee to go No. 2 to the Los Angeles Sparks. Then, the chaos will start, the fun will begin. Of course, the New York...
Here is a 2024 WNBA draft pick-by-pick breakdown for the New York Liberty.
Kaitlyn Davis played college ball in New York before coming to USC. She'll
Mississippi State center Jessika Carter saw the next chapter of her career
New Jersey residents whose jobs are in New York pay taxes there. A new incentive will pay New Jersey residents who sue over the rule.
The three-bedroom, two-and-a-half bath New Jersey condo is on the market. Just yesterday, the Denver Broncos acquired Wilson from the New York Jets. DailyMail.com
Telecommuting, a pandemic-era novelty that has become a permanent alternative for many people, has some Connecticut and New Jersey employees of New York-based companies questioning why they still have to pay personal income tax to the Empire State. Their home states are wondering as well. Fed up with losing out on hundreds of millions of […]
New Jersey is incentivizing taxpayers who work from home for New York based employers to sue New York in court for taxing their wages
New Jersey is motivating telecommuters to appeal their New York tax bills. Connecticut may be next
Korey Cunningham was found dead on Thursday at his home in New Jersey. Police say his death was self-inflicted and have no suspicions of foul play. Cunningham, 28, played for the Giants, Cardinals and Patriots in the NFL
WNYC / Gothamist Albany reporter Jon Campbell talks about what's in and what's out of the just-approved New York State budget, including housing incentives, zoning changes, limited tenant protections, mayoral control of the schools, and more.
Governor Hochul and & legislative leaders agree on a tentative 237-billion-dollar State Budget deal. The agreement includes renewed subsidies for developers to build new housing in New York City and additional tenant protections. Pro-housing communities, like the Town of Plattsburgh, will share 650-million-dollars to help build new homes. Another half-billion dollars will be used for housing on state-owned sites, including former prisons. No word yet whether that could include the former Moriah...