NYC Daily Local Headlines: Flurries, parades, rent complaints, and a City Hall tax-break push
New York, NY – March 1, 2026 – Snow cleanup continues as DSNY preps for flurries; Lunar New Year parade rolls today; rent hearings kick off.
1) Snow cleanup continues as DSNY gears up for more flakes
New York is still digging out from last week’s major storm, and the city sanitation department says crews remain on 12-hour shifts clearing leftover piles and keeping streets and bike lanes passable.
For today (Sunday), the city issued a winter operations advisory starting at 7 a.m., expecting a light coating to about an inch. Salt spreaders are staged, and officials warned that colder temperatures after the snow could turn slush into slick spots.
Sanitation also said trash and compost pickup should be caught up by Monday morning, with recycling resuming after that, as crews balance collection with continued snow work.
2) A busy Sunday for street closures: Lunar New Year Parade and more
Expect moving and rolling closures in Chinatown this afternoon for the Lunar New Year Parade, with nearby streets closing as the procession forms, moves, and disperses. Drivers should also watch for other event-related closures, including a 5K in Upper Manhattan and a St. Pats for All parade route in Queens.
- If you’re headed to Chinatown, build in extra time and consider taking the subway and walking the last few blocks.
- If you’re driving, double-check your route before you go and expect NYPD-controlled closures to shift during the events.
3) City rolls out new ‘rental ripoff’ listening sessions
The mayor’s team has begun a series of public hearings focused on renters’ experiences, drawing complaints about maintenance issues, pest problems, and fees that can add up fast. The sessions are being positioned as a pressure-release valve for tenant frustrations and a springboard for the administration’s broader housing agenda.
Among the biggest policy flashpoints in the background: what happens next for rent-stabilized apartments, and how the city balances affordability with building upkeep.
4) City Hall watch: property-tax relief proposal for families of fallen officers
The City Council is moving toward legislation that would expand property-tax relief for spouses of police officers killed in the line of duty. The proposal follows a state law that allows local governments to opt into the exemption, and supporters say it’s meant to provide long-term stability for families who’ve already paid an enormous price.
Sources
- https://www.nyc.gov/site/dsny/news/26-014/dsny-issues-winter-operations-advisory-sunday-march-1-beginning-7-a-m-
- https://www.nyc.gov/html/dot/html/motorist/weektraf.shtml
- https://abc7ny.com/post/nyc-lunar-new-year-2026-parade-chinatown-fire-horse-celebration-route-how-watch-live/18611807/
- https://www.businessinsider.com/zohran-mamdani-rental-ripoff-hearing-bad-landlords-rent-freeze-2026-3
- https://nypost.com/2026/02/28/us-news/nyc-council-ready-to-greenlight-police-widows-property-tax-break/