I Live Here Westchester NY

The Westchester Brief | 06.03.26: Fifteen Years Without County Mental Health Services. What Did It Cost?

4 min · 3 jun 2026
aflevering The Westchester Brief | 06.03.26: Fifteen Years Without County Mental Health Services. What Did It Cost? artwork

Beschrijving

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] In 2011, Westchester County closed its outpatient mental health clinics. This past March, after nearly fifteen years, the county opened a new Mental Health Safety Net Clinic in White Plains. County Executive Jenkins called it a signature initiative. The honest version: it's a policy reversal — and the 2011 closure was a policy choice with real consequences. Today's Brief examines what the fifteen-year gap actually cost: ER overcrowding, overburdened nonprofits, and a system that left the people with the least private-market access to care with the least county support. It also asks whether one clinic, in one location, is proportionate to the problem. In This Episode: (0:00) Cold open — the 2011 closure (0:30) What the new clinic offers and where it is (1:15) What the fifteen-year gap cost: ERs, nonprofits, families (2:30) Income stratification and mental health access in Westchester (3:15) What the county got right in 2026 (4:00) Whether one clinic is enough (4:45) Close Sources: Westchester County government | County budget documents | American Hospital Association | National Alliance on Mental Illness 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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aflevering The Westchester Brief | 07.06.26: Penn Station Access slips to 2030 artwork

The Westchester Brief | 07.06.26: Penn Station Access slips to 2030

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] Westchester commuters are paying higher Metro-North fares in 2026, but the marquee benefit keeps moving. We break down Penn Station Access, the New Haven Line's one-seat ride into Penn Station that promises up to 40 minutes a day in savings, and why its timeline just slipped to 2027 at the earliest and possibly 2030 for full service. We also look at where the county is spending now, from a roughly $125 million Yonkers station upgrade to cleaner, stronger locomotives on the Hudson Line. In This Episode (0:00) The commute shake-up: what's changing on your line, and when (0:35) Penn Station Access and the one-seat ride to the West Side (1:40) Why the timeline slipped to 2027, and maybe 2030 (2:25) Higher 2026 fares now, benefit later: the core tension (3:15) Yonkers, New Rochelle, and new Siemens Charger locomotives (4:30) What to watch next (4:55) What's Happening: free World Cup Final watch party at Kensico Dam Sources MTA, Penn Station Access project page (project overview and stations) NBC New York, Metro-North to Penn Station timeline reporting Streetsblog NYC, Penn Access completion delayed to 2030 MTA, 2026 fare and toll increase press release (effective January 4, 2026) Governor Hochul's office / New York State United, Kensico Dam World Cup Final watch experience Subscribe to our free newsletter at iliveherewestchester.com for the full story and everything else we're tracking across the county. 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.

6 jul 20264 min
aflevering The Friday Intel | 07.03.26: The Airport's $150M Comfort Problem artwork

The Friday Intel | 07.03.26: The Airport's $150M Comfort Problem

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] Westchester County wants to spend up to $150 million modernizing the HPN airport terminal. The Friday Intel digs into the data and finds the catch: HPN moves 2.2 million passengers through a 1995 terminal capped at 240 scheduled passengers every half hour, a 1980s limit the renovation won't touch. The county is buying comfort, not capacity. In This Episode (0:00) A $150 million fix, and the number nobody mentions (0:25) The 1995 terminal and 2.2 million passengers (1:10) The 240-per-half-hour cap and four-of-six-gates rule from the 1980s (2:15) The surprise: comfort versus capacity (3:00) What it means if you fly HPN, live nearby, or pay county taxes (3:50) Close Sources Westchester County and HNTB: the terminal modernization and feasibility study Airport capacity data: HPN passenger counts and the Terminal Capacity Agreement 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.

3 jul 20263 min
aflevering The Westchester Brief | 07.02.26: Retail Musical Chairs in Westchester artwork

The Westchester Brief | 07.02.26: Retail Musical Chairs in Westchester

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] Barnes & Noble is gone from White Plains City Center and Neiman Marcus is leaving The Westchester, while Wayfair plants its first New York store in Yonkers. We map who is moving out and who is moving in across Westchester County, and explain what vacant anchors do to mall values and the local sales-tax base. In This Episode (0:00) Two stores out, a furniture warehouse in (0:20) The closings: Barnes & Noble, CH Martin, Neiman Marcus, Saks Off Fifth (1:15) The openings: Wayfair, MINISO, and the dining wave (2:15) Why a dark anchor hits shopping-center values and the tax base (3:00) The 20,000-unit residential bet underneath it all (3:40) What else is happening: Housing Flex Fund II's August 21 deadline (4:05) Close Sources Westchester Magazine: business openings and closings Westfair: Neiman Marcus and the Saks Global restructuring 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.

2 jul 20263 min
aflevering The Westchester Brief | 07.01.26: 47,000 Lose Coverage Today artwork

The Westchester Brief | 07.01.26: 47,000 Lose Coverage Today

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] The Essential Plan cliff lands today. As of July 1, New York lowered the income line for its no-premium health plan, and roughly 47,000 Hudson Valley residents, many in Westchester County, lose coverage. We trace the change from a 2025 federal law to a Westchester kitchen table, and explain where the costs go next. In This Episode (0:00) A rule changes today, and 47,000 neighbors wake up uninsured (0:25) How the income line dropped from 250% to 200% of poverty (1:15) The federal law that cut $7.5 billion from a $14 billion program (2:15) Marketplace plans, premiums, and the $2.5 billion left unspent (3:00) Why uninsured residents become a hospital and county cost (3:40) What else is happening: the Katonah Museum's founding-families exhibit (4:10) Close Sources Fiscal Policy Institute: regional impacts of the July 2026 Essential Plan cliff NY State of Health and NY Health Access: the income-eligibility change Subscribe to the newsletter for the full story delivered to your inbox 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.

1 jul 20263 min
aflevering I Live Here Westchester | Nick Khamsopa: The Real Housing Bottleneck Isn't Land artwork

I Live Here Westchester | Nick Khamsopa: The Real Housing Bottleneck Isn't Land

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2468485/fan_mail/new] Westchester is short roughly 21,000 homes and rental vacancy sits under two percent. The usual explanation is land, money, and demand. This week's guest, developer Nick Khamsopa, makes a different case: the real bottleneck is people, specifically the shortage of developers who can hold a municipality, a pension fund, an environmental attorney, a lender, and an architect together long enough to break ground. Nick started with a hammer, spending five years in a union carpentry apprenticeship before moving up through contracting into financing and community development. Today he runs Hudson Housing Lifestyle in Warwick, building on brownfield sites with union labor and long-term financing designed to keep working families where they already live. We get into the unglamorous, deal-by-deal work of actually assembling a project, and why that, not land, is where Westchester's housing math breaks down. In This Episode  (0:00) The headline housing story, and what it misses  (1:30) Why the bottleneck is developers, not land or money  (4:00) From union carpenter to community developer  (8:00) Brownfields, union labor, and financing that keeps families in place  (15:00) What it actually takes to break ground 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.

30 jun 202633 min