Early voting begins on Saturday, June 13 and continues for nine days through Sunday, June 21.
You can vote at JHS 56 at the block bounded by Madison, Clinton, Henry, and Montgomery. Enter through the Madison Street Playground, or through the NYC Center for Aerospace entrance on Montgomery Street.
After a presentation from Sommer Omar at our May 28 meeting, GSD members voted to approve the following resolution.
Consolidated Edison Inc. (Con Edison) was granted an exclusive monopoly by the State of New York over the provision of electricity, gas, and steam to New York City with the expectation that in exchange for this monopoly protection, rates would be kept just, fair, and affordable for all consumers. Today, that agreement is faltering.
As a regulated monopoly, Con Edison’s rates and operations are overseen by the New York Public Service Commission (PSC), a governor-appointed board which is responsible for ensuring affordable, safe and reliable energy access to New York State consumers and fair rates. PSC determines how much Con Edison can charge consumers by overseeing a quasi-judicial process called a “rate case” where Con Edison submits requests to raise rates that PSC must review and then approve or modify.
Elected officials, advocates, and energy policy experts have sounded alarm that PSC has failed to adequately protect consumers through its oversight and administration of this process. In the most recent rate case, for instance, more than 70 elected officials across New York City issued a statement urging the PSC to oppose another significant rate increase that outpaced inflation and further aggravated a widespread affordability crisis. The PSC persisted in raising rates.
Utility costs in New York City have soaredtounaffordablerates. One in three New Yorkers cannot afford their energy bills. Last year, Con Ed terminated service for more than 110,000 households, nearly double the service terminations compared to a decade ago. And in the last five years, more than 3 million New Yorkers have fallen behind on utility payments. This crisis also has a profoundly disproportionate impact on working class Black and Latino New Yorkers who are eight times as likely to have their service terminated than more affluent New Yorkers. NYCHA is hit particularly hard, where more than $600 million in NYCHA’s annual budget is spent on utilities, with the Authority explicitly noting that “NYCHA will continue to be challenged” by “increases in expenses such as utilities.”
While New Yorkers buckle under these utility costs, Con Edison has continued to report robust financial returns. The company reported over $2 billion in shareholder profits in 2025, approaching its modern record level of reported profits of $2.5 billion in 2023. Con Edison’s billing practices are also notoriously opaque and are not fully itemised, making it nearly impossible for ratepayers to understand what they are paying for or to hold the company accountable. Worse still, consumers are themselves funding Con Edison’s efforts to raise their own rates. In the prior rate case, New York’s utilities collectively passed more than $30 million in rate case expenses, for lawyers, consultants, and expert witnesses, directly onto customers. This means that New Yorkers effectively pay for their utility company to raise their own rates without knowing it.
The burden of Con Edison’s soaring rates falls across every sector of New York City life, from renters and homeowners who can’t keep the lights on to small businesses trying to stay open and to NYCHA residents in buildings facing increasing capital constraints.
While Con Edison is a utility company operating at significant scale, the PSC rate-setting process is required to consider public input in determining utility rates. This resolution is based on the view that when utility costs are unaffordable, this process should be actively used to raise public concerns and push for more affordable outcomes.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that Grand Street Democrats recognises that utility costs are deeply unaffordable and joins as a member of the Coalition to “Fix Con Ed,” in order to:
Engage in submitting public comments in the PSC rate-setting process to advocate for improved affordability protections and transparency regarding utility billing practices.
Encourage participation in PSC public hearings to elevate community testimony on affordability and utility accountability.
Participate in coordinated public actions, including rallies, press events, and letter- writing campaigns, to support affordability and transparency reforms.
GSD members met on a beautiful Sunday to campaign with our endorsed candidates — Dan Goldman, Grace Lee, Wei-Li Tjong, and Fannie Ip. Thanks to everyone who came out!
Grand Street Dems members met on Feb. 25 for a marathon endorsement meeting. First we heard from all six candidates for State Assembly, then we discussed all the contested primaries on the ballot for June 23. Votes were cast online over the next 24 hours for the club’s endorsements. Here are the results:
N.Y. Governor
Kathy Hochul
N.Y. Comptroller
Tom DiNapoli
N.Y. Attorney General
Letitia James
U.S. Congress (NY 10)
Dan Goldman
N.Y. State Senate (SD 27)
Grace Lee
N.Y. State Assembly (AD 65)
Wei-Li Tjong
N.Y. State Democratic Committee (AD 65)
Fannie Ip Morton Minsley
N.Y. Surrogate’s Court
Rita Mella
N.Y. Civil Court
Vlad Frants Josh Hanshaft Emily Morales-Minerva
GSD will be out in the neighborhood with designating petitions for all our endorsed candidates over the next four weeks to help them get on the June ballot.
The 2026 primary season is here, with a ton of moving parts.
Right now there’s a primary expected in our Congressional district, but also a lawsuit challenging the district lines of a neighboring district that may change our district lines, rearrange the candidates, and/or postpone the primary.
State Sen. Brian Kavanagh announced that he is not seeking re-election, and two well-known candidates have thrown their hats in to campaign for that seat.
With Grace Lee now running for that open State Senate seat, there is now an open primary for State Assembly in our district with several first-time candidates.
One party position representing our Assembly district on the NY State Democratic Committee also has a primary this year.
All this uncertainty affects the timing of our club activities. For the June 23 primary, GSD wants to hear from all candidates, have a discussion among members, and vote on endorsements so that we can participate in petitioning for our endorsed candidates. Our meeting on Feb. 12 with candidates for State Senate and U.S. Congress was the beginning of this process, and we will finish that on Feb. 25 with additional candidates and our endorsement votes.
Statewide primaries
We’ve already participated in a forum for statewide candidates (Governor, Comptroller, and Attorney General) with other downtown Democratic clubs and received statements from some of the candidates. (Watch video below.)
Governor
Gov. Kathy Hochul is seeking a second full term in office. The Lt. Governor, Antonio Delgado, has ended his challenge, so Hochul has a clear path to the Democratic nomination.
We also have contested races in our local districts.
U.S. Congress (NY 10)
Incumbent Dan Goldman faces a primary challenge from Brad Lander and Nickie Kane. We heard from those candidates at our Feb. 12 candidate forum (scroll down to watch video).
State Senator Brian Kavanagh is not running for re-election. Assemblymember Grace Lee and former Assemblymember Yuh-Line Niou are competing to succeed Kavanagh. Sommer Omar, who spoke at our Feb. 12 meeting, has suspended her campaign. (Scroll down to watch video.)
The state Democratic Committee meets in February to makes nominations for statewide primaries. Each Assembly district gets to elect two representatives to this body, one female and one male. Those seats also are open with some challenges in the works. (Scroll down to watch video.)
GOTV on Grand Street Saturday, Nov. 1, 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm Corner of Grand & Clinton
Join Democratic elected officials and candidates on Saturday afternoon to get out the vote — make sure your neighbors have a plan to vote by Nov. 4 and are committed to our Democratic candidates.
Mamdani Canvass Wednesday, Oct 29 @ 5:30 pm Meet at Ahearn Park (Grand & East Broadway)
Join your Grand Street neighbors to canvass in the co-ops for Zohran Mamdani. Every vote counts! Contact GSD executive board member Ellen Garvey at 917-613-9150 if you have any questions.
This November’s ballot will include six ballot proposals seeking voter approval: one to amend the New York State Constitution, and five more that would amend the New York City Charter.
GSD members recommend the following votes:
Proposal 1
Allows skiing and related trail facilities on state forest preserve land. The site is 1,039 acres. Requires State to add 2,500 acres of new forest land in Adirondack Park.
👍 YES
Proposal 2
Fast track applications delivering affordable housing in the community districts that produce the least affordable housing, significantly reducing review time. Maintain Community Board review.
👎 NO
Proposal 3
Simplify review of modest amounts of additional housing and minor infrastructure projects, significantly reducing review time. Maintain Community Board review, with final decision by the City Planning Commission.
👎 NO
Proposal 4
Establish an Affordable Housing Appeals Board with the Council Speaker, local Borough President, and Mayor to review Council actions that reject or change applications creating affordable housing.
👎 NO
Proposal 5
Consolidate borough map office and address assignment functions, and create one digital City Map at Department of City Planning. Today, the City Map consists of paper maps across five offices.
👍 YES
Proposal 6
Move the City’s primary and general election dates so that City elections are held in the same year as Federal Presidential elections, when permitted by state law.