See the latest announcement from the Kings County Government.
In Partnership with Cornell University, Free Online Training in Public Health Preparedness for New Yorkers to Build a Network of Public ...
Interim Outdoor Recreation Space for Manhattan's Western Shore at Site of Former NYPD Tow Pound
The share of U.S. residents holding four-year or higher degrees has been on the rise. Here's how it’s changed in Brooklyn.
There was a drastic change in bankruptcy filings across the country last year. Here are the numbers for Brooklyn.
Here's an update on how the waning coronavirus epidemic is affecting hospital capacity in Brooklyn and across NY.
See how well utility providers in the Fort Greene-Clinton Hill area and across NY serve their customers.
Here's how many hospital beds are currently filled in Brooklyn and across NY as the pandemic wanes.
The federal government is tracking the decline of COVID-19 cases in nursing homes, including in the Fort Greene-Clinton Hill area.
The federal government has been tracking coronavirus cases and deaths in nursing homes, including in Fort Greene-Clinton Hill.
New federal data shows how the coronavirus epidemic is affecting hospitals and their ICUs in Brooklyn.
Here's an update on how the COVID-19 epidemic is affecting hospital and ICU capacity in Brooklyn and across NY.
Here are the latest numbers on which hospitals are nearing capacity in the Fort Greene-Clinton Hill area and across New York.
New data from the federal government shows which hospitals are nearing capacity in Brooklyn.
New data from the federal government shows which hospitals are closest to capacity in Brooklyn.
Despite the pandemic, it may still be possible to safely find your ideal Christmas tree this year in the Fort Greene-Clinton Hill area.
An opinion piece on the national election
Originally delayed due to COVID-19, Governors Island will reopen for the season on Wednesday, July 15.
"Effective immediately, there will no longer be twice-weekly street cleanings."
Community Board 2 will hold its monthly parks, land use and transportation committee meetings next week.
Applications are currently being accepted for 20 newly constructed units at 1 Flatbush Avenue in Downtown Brooklyn.
Community Board 2 received the following message from the New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB).
An Opinion Piece on Race, Protest, and Justice
Federal prosecutors charged two women and a man with using improvised incendiary devices to damage and destroy police vehicles.
Community Board 2 (CB2) will hold two committee meetings online next week, both of which are scheduled for 6:00 p.m.
The board's executive committee will consider an application to construct a new, 24-story, residential building at 130 St. Felix Street.
“Before we start offering our youth writing workshops online, we'd like more information on how much is needed, and where the need is most."
The sports and gaming bar chain has applied for a liquor license in the Atlantic Avenue Center mall, records show.
Miss Ada on Dekalb Avenue got a shout-out in the food experts' "Top Restaurant Standbys" of the year.
Police are looking for a man who kicked and damaged the iconic Brooklyn restaurant's door and then sped away in his BMW.
"I can't tell you how good it is to feel that I belong here," Diedra Nottingham, a new resident of the Stonewall House, said at its opening.
The transportation hub got New York City's first public "Oonee Pod," a secure parking and service center for bikes and scooters.
From the tree lighting in Fort Greene Park, to the Navy Yard's holiday market, here are the seasonal events coming up in the next few weeks.
One of Brooklyn Technical High School's teachers was among the seven NYC educators given a prestigious award for math and science this year.
An email sent to the school's principal saying there was a bomb in the school led to an hours-long evacuation for the Fort Greene school.
Check out renderings of the 50,000-square-foot cultural center at 300 Ashland Pl., where construction started this week.
From restaurants long gone, to dancing at the Navy Yard, a new book asks Brooklyn's older residents, "what no longer/still feels like home?"