I Live Here Westchester NY

The Friday Intel | 06.05.26: Westchester's Crime Drop — What a 25% Decline Actually Tells You

3 min · 5 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Friday Intel | 06.05.26: Westchester's Crime Drop — What a 25% Decline Actually Tells You

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] Violent crime in Westchester County fell 25% in 2025 — and that number deserves more than a headline. All seven major crime categories declined simultaneously. Overall index crime dropped 17%. And one city — Mount Vernon — reported zero shooting incidents in the first quarter of 2026, placing it among just five departments statewide to reach that mark. This week on The Friday Intel, Jim breaks down what actually drove the numbers: the Real Time Crime Intelligence Center, the multi-agency DOVE enforcement operation, and the focused deterrence model behind both. Then he asks the harder question: can it hold? In This Episode: 00:00 — The number: 25% 01:45 — The mechanism: Real Time Crime Center and DOVE 04:10 — The breakdown: all seven categories 05:30 — The standout: Mount Vernon's zero-shooting quarter 08:00 — The sustainability question 11:15 — Close Sources: - Westchester County State of the County Address, May 2026 - Talk of the Sound / Mid Hudson News crime reporting - NYS DCJS (cross-reference pending) Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/support] I Live Here Westchester is a production of I Live Here Media. We spotlight the voices, visionaries, and stories that make Westchester County more than just a place to live—it’s a place to belong. Have a guest suggestion or want to partner with us? Email: jimjockle@iliveheremedia.com Website: www.iliveheremedia.com [https://www.iliveheremedia.com/] Follow us on Instagram: @iliveheremedia [https://www.instagram.com/iliveheremedia/] Subscribe, rate, and share to support local storytelling.

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129 episodios

episode The Friday Intel | 06.26.26: Westchester's $10,000 Tax Bill, Decoded artwork

The Friday Intel | 06.26.26: Westchester's $10,000 Tax Bill, Decoded

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] Westchester County has the highest property taxes of any county in America — a typical bill near $10,000 a year. But the government everyone blames takes the smallest slice. This week on The Friday Intel, we break your property tax bill apart: how Westchester compares to the wealthiest suburbs in the country, how wildly the bill swings from Scarsdale to the rest of the county, and the one finding that should change who you pay attention to — schools take about 63 cents of every property tax dollar, while county government takes only about 16. In This Episode: - (0:00) Cold Open — the highest tax bill in the country - (0:30) Intro and Context — decoding one lump number - (1:30) The Data — the ranking, the peer comparison, the town-by-town spread - (4:00) The Surprise — where your tax dollar actually goes - (5:15) What This Means for You — your bill, home-shopping, and the new SALT cap - (6:15) Close Sources: Tax-Rates.org (Census-based county rankings); New York State Comptroller (property tax distribution); Ownwell (Scarsdale); Wiss (2026 SALT cap). Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or share with a neighbor. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/support] I Live Here Westchester is a production of I Live Here Media. We spotlight the voices, visionaries, and stories that make Westchester County more than just a place to live—it’s a place to belong. Have a guest suggestion or want to partner with us? Email: jimjockle@iliveheremedia.com Website: www.iliveheremedia.com [https://www.iliveheremedia.com/] Follow us on Instagram: @iliveheremedia [https://www.instagram.com/iliveheremedia/] Subscribe, rate, and share to support local storytelling.

Ayer4 min
episode The Westchester Brief | 06.25.26: Federal Food Cuts Hit Westchester artwork

The Westchester Brief | 06.25.26: Federal Food Cuts Hit Westchester

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] When Washington cuts food aid, the cost lands somewhere, and this month it landed in Westchester County. This episode examines two federal nutrition programs under pressure: WIC, which a House spending bill would fund $200 million below current levels while cutting its fruit-and-vegetable benefit 10%, and SNAP, whose lapsed funding hit local food providers immediately. County Executive Ken Jenkins opposed the WIC cuts and steered $50,000 to Feeding Westchester, a move that shows both the county's response and the limits of backfilling federal programs with local dollars. In This Episode: (0:00) When Washington cuts, the cost lands here (1:00) WIC: what the House bill would do (2:15) SNAP, and the county's $50,000 to Feeding Westchester (3:15) The pattern: federal pullback, county budget pressure (5:00) Quick hit: $122.5 million for 94 new Bee-Line buses Sources: Westchester County ("Healthy Food is a Lifeline, Not a Luxury"); Black Westchester (county allocates $50,000 to Feeding Westchester); Food Research and Action Center (House WIC and SNAP cuts). Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or share this episode with a neighbor. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/support] I Live Here Westchester is a production of I Live Here Media. We spotlight the voices, visionaries, and stories that make Westchester County more than just a place to live—it’s a place to belong. Have a guest suggestion or want to partner with us? Email: jimjockle@iliveheremedia.com Website: www.iliveheremedia.com [https://www.iliveheremedia.com/] Follow us on Instagram: @iliveheremedia [https://www.instagram.com/iliveheremedia/] Subscribe, rate, and share to support local storytelling.

25 de jun de 20264 min
episode Six Thousand Doors: One Candidate's Case for Yonkers artwork

Six Thousand Doors: One Candidate's Case for Yonkers

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] Dan D'Amico has knocked on nearly six thousand doors in Yonkers District 16. Not with a team. Largely by himself. What he's heard is not what the county is spending money on. D'Amico is a former FDNY firefighter, a working real estate broker, and the Republican candidate challenging the incumbent for Westchester County Legislature District 16. In this conversation, he breaks down what affordability actually looks like when you're sitting across from a family trying to buy a home in Yonkers, why the county's $45 million EV charging station line item doesn't match a single conversation he's had at the doors, and what four years of inaction on Hurricane Ida flooding has cost his neighbors on Warburton Avenue. He also walks through what a county legislator can actually do — and what they can't — so you know what you're voting for when November arrives. In this episode: the broken math of homeownership in Westchester. The 18-month timeline to build a single home in New York versus six months in Florida. Why the county cut every department by 8% and raised taxes in the same budget. The fire victim in downtown Yonkers who got a housing voucher in one hour after weeks of getting nothing from his own legislator. And what D'Amico wants you thinking about when you're standing in the booth. Subscribe to The Westchester Brief at iliveherewestchester.com. New episodes Monday through Friday at 6 AM. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/support] I Live Here Westchester is a production of I Live Here Media. We spotlight the voices, visionaries, and stories that make Westchester County more than just a place to live—it’s a place to belong. Have a guest suggestion or want to partner with us? Email: jimjockle@iliveheremedia.com Website: www.iliveheremedia.com [https://www.iliveheremedia.com/] Follow us on Instagram: @iliveheremedia [https://www.instagram.com/iliveheremedia/] Subscribe, rate, and share to support local storytelling.

24 de jun de 202633 min
episode The Westchester Brief | 06.24.26: Can the County Run Playland? artwork

The Westchester Brief | 06.24.26: Can the County Run Playland?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] Playland, the county-owned amusement park in Rye, opened its 98th season this spring with the historic Dragon Coaster restored. But behind the nostalgia is a real governance question for Westchester County: after the private operator Standard Amusements exited its contract in January 2025, the county is running the park directly, and last season drew just over 213,000 visitors. This episode looks at how Playland ended up back in county hands, what it costs taxpayers to run an amusement park, and why this summer's attendance is the number that decides the park's future. In This Episode: (0:00) The most fun question in county government (0:45) Playland's history and the Standard Amusements breakup (2:30) A bumpy 2025: attendance and the closed Dragon Coaster (3:30) Why a public amusement park is a financial risk (5:00) Quick hit: the 2026 SALT deduction cap jumps to $40,400 Sources: Westchester County Parks (Playland 2026 season); Rye Record (county takes over Playland operations; 2025 season recap). Subscribe to our newsletter at iliveherewestchester.com. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/support] I Live Here Westchester is a production of I Live Here Media. We spotlight the voices, visionaries, and stories that make Westchester County more than just a place to live—it’s a place to belong. Have a guest suggestion or want to partner with us? Email: jimjockle@iliveheremedia.com Website: www.iliveheremedia.com [https://www.iliveheremedia.com/] Follow us on Instagram: @iliveheremedia [https://www.instagram.com/iliveheremedia/] Subscribe, rate, and share to support local storytelling.

24 de jun de 20264 min
episode The Westchester Brief | 06.30.26: Your SALT Cap Just Hit $40,400 artwork

The Westchester Brief | 06.30.26: Your SALT Cap Just Hit $40,400

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] For seven years, Westchester County homeowners could deduct only $10,000 of their state and local taxes. For 2026 that cap jumps to $40,400, a swing worth thousands of dollars a year for most households below the income phase-out. We explain how the new SALT cap works, why it expires in 2029, and how the Conley versus Lawler race in New York's 17th district will help decide its future. In This Episode (0:00) The deduction you lost in 2018, and the news most people missed (0:20) How the $10,000 cap became $40,400, and the $505,000 phase-out (1:45) What the change is worth at a Westchester kitchen table (2:45) Cait Conley, Mike Lawler, and the 2029 clock (3:30) What else is happening: the New York Blood Center's new Rye campus (4:00) Close Sources SmartAsset and Anchin: the 2026 SALT cap and phase-out News 12 Westchester: the NY-17 Democratic primary result Leave a review on Apple Podcasts, or share this episode with a neighbor who owns a home here. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/support] I Live Here Westchester is a production of I Live Here Media. We spotlight the voices, visionaries, and stories that make Westchester County more than just a place to live—it’s a place to belong. Have a guest suggestion or want to partner with us? Email: jimjockle@iliveheremedia.com Website: www.iliveheremedia.com [https://www.iliveheremedia.com/] Follow us on Instagram: @iliveheremedia [https://www.instagram.com/iliveheremedia/] Subscribe, rate, and share to support local storytelling.

23 de jun de 20263 min