Photos of Americans turning to food pantries as shutdown drags on

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The Associated Press

Americans who cannot afford to feed themselves and their families, including their pets, are lining up at food pantries across the country amid the government shutdown fight in Washington.

The financial struggles of federal workers after a month of missed paychecks are compounded by the federal food assistance program facing delays.

This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

California National Guard sort produce at the Los Angeles Food Bank Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Ethan Swope)
TSA agent Sashene McLean, holding her one-year-old daughter, comes from work to collect a donation of produce, meat and yogurt at a food distribution center organized to assist federal employees missing paychecks during the government shutdown, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025, in Dania Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
Volunteers at the San Antonio Food Bank load bags of potatoes for a food distribution for SNAP recipients and other households affected by the federal shutdown, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, in San Antonio. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
An owner surrendered cat is seen at the New Leash On Life animal shelter, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, in Lebanon, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Hundreds of people wait in line to receive free meals from the World Central Kitchen as they provide food to federal employees and their families near the U.S. Navy Memorial Plaza, during the federal government shutdown, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)
Tammy Norton, a furloughed federal employee of 16 years who currently works for the Internal Revenue Service, speaks with emotion as she describes running through her limited savings to support her family during the government shutdown, at a food distribution for federal employees impacted by the government shutdown, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025, in Dania Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
Aidan Tavor, center, directs traffic as volunteers help load vehicles during a food distribution at the San Antonio Food Bank for SNAP recipients and other households affected by the federal shutdown, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, in San Antonio. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
People receive free meals from the World Central Kitchen as they provide food to federal employees and their families near the U.S. Navy Memorial Plaza, during the federal government shutdown, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)
Margaret Dickinson announces the opening of food pantry service with the placement of a sign at Calvary Episcopal Church on Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025, in Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/Jon Cherry)
People wait to shop for food at Irving Park Community Food Pantry in Chicago, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
Volunteer Regie Robles, right, helps residents without a vehicle navigate a drive-through food distribution at the San Antonio Food Bank for SNAP recipients and other households affected by the federal shutdown, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, in San Antonio. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
FILE – Brock Brooks, a disabled Marine Corps veteran, cries while describing the impending SNAP shutdowns while waiting in line to enter the food pantry service at Calvary Episcopal Church on Oct. 30, 2025, in Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/Jon Cherry, File)
Volunteers help load vehicles during a food distribution at the San Antonio Food Bank for SNAP recipients and other households affected by the federal shutdown, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, in San Antonio. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
Micah Getter, whose husband is a civil service employee of Keesler Air Force Base who is furloughed due to the government shutdown, unpacks provisions from a food pantry, in Gulfport, Miss., Monday, Nov. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

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Funding Uncertainty Looms in FiDi-Seaport Climate Plan, Last Link in Lower Manhattan Flood Protection Projects

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A plan to add flood walls and elevated park space is the most complicated and expensive link in the Lower Manhattan Coastal Resiliency portfolio: a chain of flood-proofing projects, devised in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, to protect the island’s tip from coastal flooding.

An evening view of the Financial District in Manhattan in February, 2023. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

Picture a park stretching all the way from the Brooklyn Bridge to the Battery. It’s raised 15 to 18 feet above the current shoreline, and armed with nearly eight acres of green space, resilient ferry hubs, flood walls, deployable flood gates, and a multilevel esplanade projecting 90 to 200 feet into the East River. 

If all goes well in the next decade, that’s what the waterfront along the South Street Seaport and Financial District could look like, once the neighborhood’s Climate Resilience Master Plan is complete. The challenge now is securing $5-7 billion to build it.

The FiDi-Seaport plan is the most complicated and expensive link in the Lower Manhattan Coastal Resiliency (LMCR) portfolio: a chain of flood-proofing projects, devised in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, to extend the shoreline and protect the island’s tip from coastal flooding due to sea level rise and storm surges. 

Most of the other projects are partially or fully funded and will wrap up construction by 2031. The only outlier is the FiDi-Seaport plan, which is still in the design phase. Construction has yet to start, and it will take at least 10 years (if not longer) to finish once it does. 

“[It’s] such a significant project, both in its location and its scale, that it raises issues we haven’t always had to grapple with on other projects,” said Jordan Salinger, the deputy director of adaptation strategies at the Mayor’s Office of Climate & Environmental Justice.  

Funding, he added, must be addressed through “a creative solution between the federal government, state government, and the city.” 

The need for the upgrades is clear, officials say. The New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC)—a public benefit organization spearheading the plan—projects that Lower Manhattan’s waterfront will experience frequent tidal flooding due to sea level rise by the 2040s. 

The area has also seen significant population growth over the last decade, in part due to a slew of luxury housing projects and office-to-residential conversions, including those at 25 Water St., 55 Broad St., and One Wall St. Nearly 300,000 people also pass through the neighborhood while commuting to work each day.

The Seaport and the Financial District are some of the lowest-lying areas in Lower Manhattan, and they also suffered some of the worst water-logging during Hurricane Sandy. If the FiDi-Seaport plan isn’t implemented in time, NYCEDC estimates that future flooding could cause over $20 billion in direct and indirect damages to life, property, and businesses in New York City. 

NYCEDC has proposed funding schemes for the project that combine grants from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT), the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and funds from the city and state. 

They’ve also been pitching the plan to residents. During Climate Week NYC in September, the EDC ran a pop-up exhibit at the South Street Seaport Museum, and organized community outreach events and educational tours.

On Sept. 22, representatives from engineering firm Arcadis and Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architects (both consultants hired by NYCEDC) led a tour group on a 0.8-mile-long walk along the East River. The tour leaders told attendees NYCEDC hoped to secure up to 65 percent of the necessary funding from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE).

Yet a week earlier in a Manhattan Community Board 1 meeting, a planner from the Army Corps’ New York District stated that it’s unlikely the project will receive USACE funding until at least 2028 or 2030. Even with funding, preliminary studies for projects of such magnitude can take multiple years, the planner said. 

Tammy Meltzer, the chairperson of Manhattan Community Board 1, sees this window of time as an opportunity to iron out the project’s finer points. “I don’t think there’s room for panic. I think there’s room for careful planning,” she told City Limits. “I think we need to take stock of interim steps that can be done. We’re looking at this as a once in a lifetime opportunity.” 

Future USACE funding for the FiDi-Seaport plan has to be allocated by Congress through the Water Resources Development Act. However, since coming into power, the Trump administration has repeatedly targeted climate infrastructure projects under the pretext of cutting “wasteful” spending. 

Back in April, the Department of Homeland Security eliminated FEMA’s Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) grant program, which provides funds for local governments seeking to mitigate damage due to natural disasters. New York State alone lost over $300 million in BRIC grants. 

More recently, on Oct. 1, after the federal government shut down, U.S. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy announced that the USDOT would not distribute $18 billion in federal grants for the Second Avenue Subway and Hudson Tunnel projects in New York. Two weeks later, Russell Vought, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, threatened to withhold $11 billion for Army Corps projects in New York, San Francisco, Boston, and Baltimore. It’s still unclear which projects will be affected. 

So while the federal government’s actions have dented hopes of securing construction funds, design work on the FiDi-Seaport project has also seen challenges. 

During the 2025-2026 city budget cycle, the NYCEDC and Manhattan CB1 sought $15 million for an environmental review that would help secure Army Corps funding in the future. However, the executive budget released in May didn’t account for these funds, and design work was set to halt at the end of the year. 

It took a last-minute push from NYCEDC, the Waterfront Alliance, and the Mayor’s Office of Climate & Environmental Justice to secure $7.5 million in the adopted city budget, which will keep design work on the project going until 2027. 

“This project in particular had to stay alive,” said Tyler Taba, director of resilience at the Waterfront Alliance. “The FiDi-Seaport plan is the last connecting piece of the LMCR portfolio. Because engagement and design had already started on the project, leaving it in the middle unfunded would have been a huge missed opportunity for the city to close that gap.”

Historic storefronts along Fulton Street in the South Street Seaport, pictured here in 2015. (Credit: f11photo/Shutterstock.com)

There are other barriers to implementation. The restrictions on infrastructure development along the Seaport stem from the area’s protected city landmark status, the presence of an elevated parkway in the form of the FDR Drive, and a mishmash of subway lines underground. As a result, designers and engineers have little room to maneuver. 

And the project has to go beyond just flood protection, stakeholders say.

“It’s not about the bottom line costs of flood control. It’s about the public waterfront and the experience we’re building for the next generation,” Alexis Taylor, NYCEDC’s vice president of climate resilience, said at a Manhattan CB1 meeting in August.

In the past year, officials completed two major flood-proofing projects in Manhattan, both of them parks. Segments of East River Park—part of a $1.45 billion resiliency project to protect the East River and the Lower East Side—opened in May after years of tense and difficult community engagement. 

On the west side, Wagner Park, a $300 million project in Battery Park City (one of the least affected areas during Sandy), reopened at the end of July. Aside from flood-proof infrastructure to shield Manhattan against both sea level rise and another 100-year storm, the two revamped parks were  designed as accessible public spaces. 

The stakeholders behind the FiDi-Seaport plan have similar aspirations. “The city has set itself a number of goals,” said Matthijs Bouw, founder of One Architecture and Urbanism, and one of consultants on the plan. “They want this coastal resiliency infrastructure to be a multi-benefit infrastructure so that it enhances the waterfront as a piece of social infrastructure. And in order to deliver on that, it’s very important to get input from the community.”

So far, the community engagement process has revealed a variety of concerns and priorities.

“One of the things that we really desperately need is open recreation areas,” said Alice Blank, vice chair of Manhattan CB1. Meltzer told City Limits that she wants to ensure the project’s design would “connect the public to the water.” 

Catherine McVay Hughes, who was chair of Community Board 1 during Hurricane Sandy, said she is curious about how the project would change the slope of the ground between the waterfront and FDR Drive. It is also vital, she added, to safeguard “the harbor which made New York City the financial capital. It’s very important to protect it because this is where New York City started.” 

Some locals also fear parts of their neighborhood becoming construction sites for the next decade. 

Between these issues and dealing with an uncooperative federal government, the project’s stakeholders have their work cut out for them. Even so, there’s no option but to keep moving forward, said Salinger.

“FiDi-Seaport is a generational effort that has already spanned multiple federal administrations, multiple governors, multiple city administrations,” he said. 

“While it’s impossible to avoid partisanship in 2025, we have the science on our side, we have the community support, and we have the solution,” he added. “I think that’s all that we can control. Our focus is on delivering the right project at the right time.”

To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

Want to republish this story? Find City Limits’ reprint policy here.

The post Funding Uncertainty Looms in FiDi-Seaport Climate Plan, Last Link in Lower Manhattan Flood Protection Projects appeared first on City Limits.

Typhoon Fung-wong blows away from the Philippines, leaving 8 dead and 1.4 million displaced

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By JIM GOMEZ, Associated Press

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Typhoon Fung-wong blew out of the northwestern Philippines on Monday after setting off floods and landslides, knocking out power to entire provinces, killing at least eight people and displacing more than 1.4 million others.

The typhoon was forecast to head northwest toward Taiwan.

Fung-wong lashed the northern Philippines while the country was still dealing with the devastation wrought last week by Typhoon Kalmaegi, which left at least 224 people dead in central provinces on Nov. 4 before pummeling Vietnam, where at least five were killed.

Fung-wong slammed ashore in northeastern Aurora province on Sunday night as a super typhoon with sustained winds of up to 185 kph (115 mph) and gusts of up to 230 kph (143 mph).

The 1,800-kilometer (1,100-mile)-wide storm weakened as it raked through mountainous northern provinces and agricultural plains overnight before blowing away from the province of La Union into the South China Sea, according to state forecasters.

One person drowned in flash floods in the eastern province of Catanduanes, and another died in Catbalogan city in eastern Samar province when her house collapsed on her, officials said.

In the northern province of Nueva Vizcaya, three children died in two separate landslides and four others were injured, police told The Associated Press. An elderly person was killed in a mudslide in Barlig, a town in northern Mountain Province, according to officials.

Another landslide in Lubuagan town in nearby Kalinga province killed two villagers and two others were missing, provincial officials said late Monday.

More than 1.4 million people moved into emergency shelters or the homes of relatives before the typhoon made landfall, and about 318,000 remained in evacuation centers on Monday.

Fierce wind and rain flooded at least 132 northern villages, including one where some residents were trapped on their roofs as floodwaters rapidly rose. About 1,000 houses were damaged, Bernardo Rafaelito Alejandro IV of the Office of Civil Defense and other officials said, adding that roads blocked by landslides would be cleared as the weather improved on Monday.

“While the typhoon has passed, its rains still pose a danger in certain areas” in northern Luzon, including in metropolitan Manila,” Alejandro said. “We’ll undertake today rescue, relief and disaster-response operations.”

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. declared a state of emergency on Thursday due to the extensive devastation caused by Kalmaegi and the expected damage from Fung-wong, which was also called Uwan in the Philippines.

Tropical cyclones with sustained winds of 185 kph (115 mph) or higher are categorized in the Philippines as a super typhoon to underscore the urgency tied to more extreme weather disturbances.

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The Philippines has not called for international help following the devastation caused by Kalmaegi, but Teodoro said the United States, the country’s longtime treaty ally, and Japan were ready to provide assistance.

Authorities announced that schools and most government offices would be closed on Monday and Tuesday. More than 325 domestic and 61 international flights were canceled over the weekend and into Monday, and more than 6,600 commuters and cargo workers were stranded in ports after the coast guard prohibited ships from venturing into rough seas.

The Philippines is hit by about 20 typhoons and storms each year. The country also has frequent earthquakes and has more than a dozen active volcanoes, making it one of the world’s most disaster-prone countries.

Former French President Sarkozy released from prison pending appeal in conspiracy case

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By NICOLAS VAUX-MONTAGNY and SYLVIE CORBET, Associated Press

PARIS (AP) — France’s former President Nicolas Sarkozy was freed from prison Monday after a Paris appeals court granted him release under judicial supervision, less than three weeks after he began serving a five-year sentence for criminal conspiracy in a scheme to finance his 2007 election campaign with funds from Libya.

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Sarkozy, 70, left La Santé prison by car and later quickly stepped into his home in western Paris. The brief scene was in contrast to his very public incarceration 20 days earlier, when he walked down the alley near his house hand-in-hand with his wife and former supermodel Carla Bruni-Sarkozy as he waved to supporters.

The former president, who denies wrongdoing, is banned from leaving the French territory and from being in touch with key people including co-defendants and witnesses in the case, the court said.

An appeals trial is expected to take place later, possibly in the spring.

Sarkozy became the first former French head of state in modern times to be sent behind bars after his conviction on Sept. 25. He was jailed on Oct. 21 pending appeal but immediately filed for early release.

Sarkozy describes prison as “a nightmare”

During Monday’s hearing examining his request, Sarkozy, speaking from the prison via video conference, argued he has always met all justice requirements.

“I had never imagined I would experience prison at 70. This ordeal was imposed on me, and I lived through it. It’s hard, very hard,” he said.

Sarkozy also paid tribute to prison staff who he said helped him through “this nightmare.” His wife and two of his sons attended the hearing at the Paris courthouse.

Monday’s proceedings didn’t involve the motives for the sentencing.

Still, Sarkozy told the court he never asked Libya’s longtime ruler Moammar Gadhafi for any financing. “I will never admit something I didn’t do,” he said.

French law provides that release should be the general rule pending appeal, while detention should be reserved for those considered dangerous or at risk of fleeing to another country, or to protect evidence or prevent pressure on witnesses.

Sarkozy’s lawyer, Christophe Ingrain, praised “normal implementation of law” in a brief statement. “The next step is the appeal trial and our work now … is to get prepared for that,” he said.

Banned from meeting justice minister

In a rare decision, the court specifically banned Sarkozy from being in touch with Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin.

Darmanin, a former conservative who once considered Sarkozy as his mentor before rejoining President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist party in 2017, paid him a visit in prison last month. Some French magistrates criticized the move as undermining the independence of judges.

Sarkozy, who governed from 2007 to 2012, faces separate proceedings, including a Nov. 26 ruling by France’s highest court over illegal financing of his failed 2012 reelection bid, and an ongoing investigation into alleged witness tampering in the Libya case.

In 2023, he was found guilty of corruption and influence peddling for trying to bribe a magistrate in exchange for information about a legal case in which he was implicated. France’s highest court, the Court of Cassation, later upheld the verdict.