New York Post

New York Works (Not)

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Add one more overblown, expensive failure to Mayor de Blasio’s list: the $1.35 billion New York Works program. It started over two years ago, with his lofty promise to tackle income inequality by creating 100,000 jobs in 10 years that would pay $50,000 or more.

“We have to drive up incomes,” de Blasio said in a State of the City Address. “That means actually helping people to get the kind of jobs that allow you to afford to live in New York City — good-paying jobs.”

He put the city Economic Developmen­t Corp. in charge of delivering. Two years on, EDC chief James Patchett told the City Council this week, the program has spent $300 million to create . . . 3,000 jobs.

That comes out to $100k per job, and a rate that would deliver roughly just 15 percent of the promised 100,000 jobs by 2027.

Yes, Patchett claimed 16,000 more are in the pipeline but also said it’s “impractica­l for the city to track specific jobs created”

and couldn’t say how many jobs have gone to low-income workers, as was the point.

This debacle follows the cancellati­on of the $773 million Renewal Schools program, as well as news that the $850 million ThriveNYC mental-health initiative can’t quite explain what it’s achieved.

Even de Blasio’s fellow progressiv­es are furious. As Councilman Ritchie Torres (D-Bronx) noted: “Renewal Schools is failing to renew. ThriveNYC is failing to thrive, and New York Works is failing to work.”

Call it The de Blasio Way.

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