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This is a message from the City of White Plains.
The National Weather Service has issued a Winter Storm Watch for Sunday, January 25th through Monday, January 26th. Snow is expected to be heavy at times with significant accumulation.
The City’s Department of Public Works crews will be working through the storm to clear roads as quickly and completely as possible. Snow is expected to be heaviest from 11:00 AM to 7:00 PM on Sunday, with high snowfall rates, causing near white-out conditions at times and significantly impacting road conditions. Please refrain from unnecessary travel during this storm.
In order to enable DPW to do their job it is vital that vehicles not be left parked on the street. As a courtesy, the City of White Plains is offering free parking to White Plains residents for vehicles registered to addresses within the City of White Plains in the Hamilton-Main Garage starting at 5:00 PM on Saturday, January 24th until Monday, January 26th at 10:30 AM. All other garages, lots and on street parking will remain subject to normal enforcement. There will be strict enforcement of the City’s ban on overnight on-street parking, as vehicles left on the street impair the City’s ability to clear snow, creating hazardous conditions and lengthening the storm’s impact.
Thank you for your cooperation and please stay safe.
Thank you, The City of White Plains
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WHAT 8 DEGREES LOOKS LIKE: 16 INCHES OF SNOW 30 MPH WINDS BEGINNING EARLY SUNDAY MORNING ENDING 6 PM MONDAY

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THE BLOOD SHORTAGE

YOUR LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGIST DR. KATYLIN JETTELINA ON THE MEASLES SPREAD

COVID IN WESTCHESTER — 1,191 NEW CASES BY END OF JANUARY 40 A DAY
PAUL FEINER AND THE GREEENBURGH FLOOD AND WHAT IT IS SAYING ABOUT OUR INFRASTRUCTURE
THE WESTCHESTER ECONOMY TOMORROW

THE WESTCHESTER COUNTY ASSOCIATION AND
WESTCHESTER COUNTY ANNOUNCE THE BLUEPRINT DEVELOPMENT PLAN
JOHN BAILEY TAKES A LOOK AT IT
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ALBANY — The New York State Public Service Commission (Commission) today adopted the terms of an agreement for three-year electric and gas rate plans for Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc. (Con Edison) that was either signed or not opposed by 17 parties in the proceeding.
Parties approving the proposal include the company, Department of Public Service (DPS) staff, consumer advocates, environmental groups, and large industrial customers.
The Commission’s action significantly reduces the company’s request for total electric delivery revenues by more than $1.37 billion (87 percent decrease from the initial request)
in the first year. The adopted joint proposal delivers $156.5 million in total efficiency savings, defers non-essential capital projects, and supports energy affordability programs and protections for vulnerable customers.
“The adopted joint proposal meets the legal requirement that the company continue to provide safe and adequate service at just and reasonable rates,” said Commission Chair Rory M. Christian.
“The three-year rate plan is in the public interest. It is a forward-looking plan that benefits customers and includes provisions that further important state and Commission objectives, while keeping customer affordability first and foremost in mind.”
Throughout this review process, Governor Kathy Hochul made it clear the original rate proposal was too high.
At Governor Hochul’s direction, the DPS staff scrutinized Con Edison’s rate case to prioritize affordability. It’s the Commission’s responsibility to find the right balance between the resources needed to ensure system reliability and minimize costs to ratepayers.
The joint proposal reduced Con Edison electric and gas rates by nearly 87 percent from what was initially proposed by the utility.
The approved rates for the next three years are limited to approximately the rate of inflation, while advancing safety, reliability, and climate goals.
Con Edison is New York’s largest electric and gas utility, with more than 3.6 million electric customers and 1.1 million natural gas customers in New York City and Westchester County.
The joint proposal was submitted by 12 parties, including Con Edison, Department staff, the City of New York, Alliance for a Green Economy, Consumer Power Advocates, Electrify America, Environmental Defense Fund, AMTRAK, New York Energy Consumers Council, Inc., NY-GEO, the New York Power Authority, and the Retail Energy Supply Association. Additional active parties, Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the Public Utility Law Project, the Utility Intervention Unit of the Division of Consumer Protection in the Department of State, New Yorkers for Clean Power and the Westchester Municipal Consortium, did not oppose the joint proposal.
Statements in support filed by the signatory parties on Nov. 26, 2025, include the following:
The Commission said the way revenues will be collected, through shaping the amounts over the three-year term of the Rate Plans and collecting the revenues associated with the make-whole over the balance of the first-rate year, will help ease the impact on customers.
Moreover, customer bill discounts and the company’s implementation of the Commission’s enhanced energy affordability policy should help to limit the bill impacts on eligible customers. The increases appropriately balance affordability concerns with the Commission’s obligation to ensure that the company has adequate revenue to allow it to deliver safe and reliable service and meet regulatory and statutory requirements.
Con Edison filed amendments for new rates on January 31, 2025, proposing to increase its annual electric and gas delivery revenues for the 12-month period ending December 31, 2026. As of its April 10, 2025 updated testimony, Con Edison proposed to increase its electric delivery revenues by approximately $1.6 billion (an 11.3 percent increase in total revenues or 17.9 percent increase in base delivery revenues), and its natural gas delivery revenues by approximately $349 million (a 10.5 percent increase in total revenues or 14.9 percent increase in base delivery revenues).
The adopted joint proposal will result in electric revenue requirement increases of $234 million in the first year, $409.7 million in the second year, and $421.1 million in the third year.
This equates to total revenue increases of 2.8 percent per year, or 4.4 percent increase in delivery revenues.
The gas increases will be $27.5 million in the first year, $68.8 million in the second year, and $70.3 million in the third year, with total revenue increases of 2.0 percent and delivery revenue increases of 2.8 percent per year. The revenue requirements reflect a return on equity of 9.4 percent, which is below what Con Edison had originally sought and below the national average for utilities.
The adopted rate plan reflects capital investments of approximately $11.7 billion for electric and $2.8 billion for gas to ensure the company can continue to provide safe and reliable service to its customers.
The adopted joint proposal reflects increased outreach for the recently expanded Energy Affordability Program, enhanced performance metrics, and it is supportive of the objectives of the state’s climate goals.
The Commission believes this joint proposal is the best possible path forward in this case. Property taxes are among the main rate drivers in the first year of the electric and gas rate plans, along with costs attributable to capital investments to maintain safety and reliability, including leak prone pipe replacement; increases to operation and maintenance expenses to provide the company the ability to operate the electric and gas businesses; and a return on equity that reflects market conditions and allows the company to obtain funding for its capital investments at reasonable rates.
The adopted joint proposal continues or enhances numerous provisions in the prior rate order such as customer service performance metrics, gas safety metrics, low-income and energy affordability provisions. The adopted joint proposal also encourages the company to pursue non-pipeline alternatives.
As part of the rate-setting process, Department staff reviewed and considered the thousands of public comments submitted in the proceeding. The Commission also held more than a dozen in-person and virtual public statement hearings, as well as an evidentiary hearing, as part of the proceeding.
In its decision, the Commission found that approved 9.40 percent return on equity was a reasonable outcome given the current economic environment, and that it is less than rates set for other utilities in the United States and New York State.
Today’s decision may be obtained by going to the Commission Documents section of the Commission’s website at www.dps.ny.gov and entering Case Numbers 25-E-0072 or 25-G-0073 in the input box labeled “Search for Case/Matter Number”. Many libraries offer free Internet access. Commission documents may also be obtained from the Commission’s Files Office, 14th floor, Three Empire State Plaza, Albany, NY 12223 (518-474-2500). If you have difficulty understanding English, please call us at 1-800-342-3377 for free language assistance services regarding this press release.
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GILLIBRAND SECURES MORE FOR NEW YORK IN RECENTLY PASSED FEDERAL FUNDING PACKAGE
Bill Includes Funding for Environmental Conservation, Science, Technology, Research, Economic Development, and More
Washington, D.C. –
Today, U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, a member of the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee, announced that several of her priorities were included in the just-passed Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 Energy and Water Development, Commerce-Justice-Science, and Interior and Environment funding bills.
In addition to the $65 million in funding Gillibrand personally secured for New York projects as congressionally directed spending items, she secured the following big wins for federal programs and agencies that invest directly in New York via these appropriations bills.
“This funding package is a huge win for New Yorkers,” said Senator Gillibrand. “These federal dollars will help bolster economic development, aid in efforts to protect our environment, and preserve our state’s historic sites for future generations. I was proud to deliver these funds despite the Trump administration’s opposition to many of these priorities, and I will continue fighting to bring home critical federal funding for New York.”
Advancing Science, Technology, and Research
Investments in Environmental Conservation, Stewardship, and Remediation
Promoting Economic Development and Energy Affordability
Promoting Historic Preservation and National Parks
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BOIL WATER ADVISORY LIFTED
(White Plains, NY) – The boil water advisory has been lifted by the Westchester County Health Department for all the residents in the following areas in the Town of Greenburgh served by Greenburgh Consolidated Water District #1:
Test results of water samples taken by the town of Greenburgh were satisfactory.
Since Sunday, January 18, 2026 these residents and businesses were strongly advised to boil all tap water at a rolling boil for a minimum of one minute prior to drinking it or using it to prepare food, wash dishes by hand or brush teeth. The boil water advisory was issued as a precaution to protect residents from potential contamination caused by ground water infiltration into water mains as a result of the reduction in water main pressure caused by the water main break/repair.
If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Greenburgh Consolidated Water District #1 at (914) 989-1900 or Westchester County Health Department at (914) 813-5000.