About 70 employees at the longstanding coop might form a union to fight against what they call coercive practices of their management.
"The lockout is not over, the lockout is postponed," union leaders said about a deal to let employees work during 30 days of negotiations.
Sterling Place to 12th Street will be transformed into a "fabulous" street fair next weekend with live music, food and shopping.
Workers from Key Foods in Park Slope, Greenpoint, Sunset Park, New Urecht and Long Island have been out of work for a month, union reps say.
Another YMCA flyer chastised the mayor for not wiping down gym equipment and reminded visitors to stay out of the 2020 presidential race.
Brooklyn Key Foods employees, locked out of work for three weeks, will enter the fourth round of negotiations Tuesday afternoon.
Flyers at the Park Slope YMCA bear a warning: "By entering these premises you agree not to run for President of the United States in 2020."
A May 1 meeting will answer questions about two shelters being built on Fourth Avenue as part of the mayor's borough-based shelter plan.
Here's everything you, and your pup, need to know to get in on an Easter egg hunt for dogs — and some human-focused ones too.
An Easter Sunday service will reopen Brooklyn's oldest congregation for the first time since 2011 as part of a $9.6 million restoration.
The new business faced the threat of closing down a few months ago, but found a permanent space on 6th Avenue.
An orange tree donation from a Catholic school to its neighboring synagogue is part of a project to respond to an increase in hate incidents
Nobody hit the jackpot on Saturday's Powerball drawing, but two lucky New Yorkers will get the second prize of $1 million.
With less traditional gallery space available, a local artist group is looking for offices or restaurants that might help display their work
Tickets are on sale for the annual event, which lets attendees taste offerings from more than 40 local restaurants and bars on Fifth Avenue.
The Brooklyn Irish LGBTQ Organization was accepted this week to march in the parade, which runs through Park Slope and Windsor Terrace.
Everything you need to know to go to — or get last-minute submissions into — the second "Art Slope" short film festival.
What does Brooklyn smell like? A night sipping cocktails at a bar in Carroll Gardens, according to this Park Sloper-owned candle company.
The 79,000-square-foot, mostly residential development would be built on a vacant lot on the corner of 4th Avenue and Degraw Street.
The public outdoor seating installation will be the neighborhood's second.
A seemingly malfunctioning bus-stop sign has been "gonging" loudly for months well into the night, residents and business owners say.
The popular sale at Park Slope United Methodist Church gives out more than 10,000 books each year.
The new program teaches elementary-aged kids how to be "Citizen Squirrels," including how to use bullhorns and find volunteer opportunities.
A 1977 film soundtrack that was once nearly impossible to find has been re-released, and Slopers are invited to celebrate with a concert.
New fencing, the first on a list of renovation plans by the new stable owners, has made Prospect Park's riding ring an enclosed equine area.
UJA and Hebrew Free Loan Society offering interest-free loans to federal employees who have been furloughed or are working without pay
The Prospect Park Alliance is asking local vendors to apply for a spot in Brooklyn's backyard so it can expand the park's food options.
The New York Times has dubbed this outfit as the latest symbol of Brooklyn mom style.
VOCAL-NY on 4th Avenue will be one of five local organizations to win the foundation's Spark Prize this year.
The 2,000-square-foot dispensary comes complete with a delivery service and discounts for seniors and veterans.
The trendy dine-in theater isn't without homages to its historic past.
Here's how to plan your first trip to the highly-anticipated new theater.
Local nonprofits can apply for this grant by the end of the week.
The actress and comedian partnered with her longtime friends to open a wine store on Fifth Avenue.
A 26-year-old grandmaster from Park Slope was the first American in decades to compete for the World Chess Championship this week.
The new freeze-resistant fountains were unveiled on one the coldest Thanksgivings in recent history.
An elite crew of 72,000 lady bugs rescued Prospect Park's asters from a gang of (plant) murdering lace bugs, park officials said.
"We must scale up production," Phil Gable wrote, "to make the dream of peeing on Trump as real as possible for as many as possible."
Bar Salumi co-owner Adam Harvey pleaded guilty in Brooklyn Criminal Court to trying to kill a neighbor's silver maple tree, records show.
"Here we are, still no mayor," said Nathylin Flowers Adesegun, the woman de Blasio rebuffed at the Park Slope YMCA. "This is ridiculous."