New York

New York is home to some of the most densely populated cities and rural communities in the U.S. This archive tracks positive milestones from across the state — from public health and housing wins to environmental and civic progress.

Empty bottles of alcohol, for article on psilocybin-assisted therapy

First-of-its-kind study reveals how psilocybin helps treat alcohol dependence

Psilocybin-assisted therapy helped 13 people who had struggled with heavy drinking reach the root of what they were drinking to escape, according to new interviews published in Psychology of Addictive Behaviors. Participants described years of self-blame and isolation quieting after their sessions, replaced by something many had never felt toward themselves: compassion. They credited the trained therapists and carefully held setting as much as the medicine itself, calling both essential to feeling safe enough to face old pain. The researchers are honest about the study’s limits, including a mostly white, higher-income participant group. Still, as Oregon and Colorado open legal pathways, these first-person accounts offer a hopeful glimpse of how psychedelic care might one day reach the communities who need healing most.

Vials and syringes in a lab, for article on not-for-profit drug access

Pfizer to sell all its drugs in 45 low-income countries at non-profit price

Pfizer’s not-for-profit pricing pledge now spans all 500 of its medicines — including chemotherapy and oral cancer treatments — across 45 of the world’s lowest-income countries. That’s a major expansion of an accord the company launched in 2022, which originally covered only patented drugs. By including off-patent medicines too, Pfizer is acknowledging that even decades-old cancer treatments often remain out of reach where generic supply chains never took hold. For patients across much of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, where cancer and heart disease are rising fast, this could quietly move the floor on what’s possible. And when the world’s largest drugmaker makes a move this broad, the rest of the industry tends to notice.

Cannabis being weighed, for article on legal cannabis dispensary

New York opens its first legal recreational cannabis dispensary

New York’s first legal recreational cannabis dispensary opened with a meaningful twist: the very first retail license went to Housing Works, a nonprofit that serves people with HIV, homeless New Yorkers, and the formerly incarcerated. Revenue from the shop will flow back into those social services, turning a newly legal market into direct support for communities hit hardest by the war on drugs. New York reserved its earliest licenses for nonprofits, people with past marijuana convictions and their families, women- and minority-owned businesses, and veterans, backed by a $200 million equity fund. It’s an ambitious bet that legalization can repair harm rather than just generate profit, and other states are paying close attention.

Trees reflecting in lake, for article on Onondaga land return

1,000 acres of forest to be returned to Onondaga Nation in historic lake cleanup agreement

Land has been returned directly to a Native American tribe in New York for the first time, and the parcel is significant: nearly 1,000 acres of forest, wetlands, and the sacred headwaters of Onondaga Creek. The Onondaga Nation, original stewards of central New York, will own the land outright and care for it using traditional ecological knowledge, with plans to bring native brook trout back to waters they fished for centuries. The transfer grew out of a Superfund settlement with Honeywell, the company behind decades of industrial pollution nearby. It’s one of the largest Indigenous land returns in U.S. history — a small but meaningful shift in a global movement recognizing Native nations as the rightful caretakers of their homelands.