Will Cam Christie and Dawson Garcia remain Gophers? An in-depth look at the men’s basketball roster going forward.

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Tom Izzo has a tendency in postgame news conferences to toss bouquets to opponents his Michigan State team has just beat. The Spartans head coach did it again after dispatching Minnesota and head coach Ben Johnson in the Big Ten Tournament on March 14.

“They played well,” Izzo said after 77-67 win in Minneapolis. “Ben’s done an unbelievable job with the program. They could be the No. 1 team in the league next year. So hats off to them.”

Izzo, who recruited Johnson out of DeLaSalle High School and again when Johnson transfered from Northwestern to Minnesota, isn’t disingenuous in his praise. He’s not going to hand out a dozen red roses at every team in the Big Ten. He also says he is paying it forward.

“As far as Ben Johnson, everybody in the room knows that I’m close with Ben and should be close with Ben because there were people that took care of me when I came in,” Izzo said at Target Center. “You’re going to see one (March 15 in former Purdue coach) Gene Keady, and the Bobby Knights and the Clem Haskins, those guys. I try to do some of that with Ben because I believe in him, and I believe what he’s done.

“All he has to do is hold this team together,” Izzo continued on the Gophers. “And they’ll come in as, if not the favorite, one of the favorites. It’s a very, very good basketball team. I’ve been really impressed.”

Izzo’s praise comes with contingencies such as “if” and “could be” because of the high level of uncertainty that permeates every college basketball roster with name, image and likeness (NIL) deals available to entice players to enter the NCAA transfer portal. There’s also the option pursue a shot in the NBA draft.

Minnesota’s roster might be especially susceptible. The Gophers NIL fund via the Dinkytown Athletes collective has improved, but it’s not as deep pocketed as some competing programs.

The power of NIL to potentially sway players to leave will be determined in the upcoming weeks.

As the Gophers advanced in the National Invitational Tournament last week, Johnson admitted there was some “guessing” about what his roster will be next season. After the 76-64 loss to Indiana State on Sunday, Johnson said he would meet with players in end-of-season sit-downs.

“The biggest thing is getting back and meeting with the guys and starting with the development plan looks like,” Johnson said on the KFAN postgame show. “Hopefully we are able to retain and have a lot of the core group of guys back.”

The Gophers had eight players leave after Johnson’s first season in 2021-22, with the majority being graduations or eligibility running out.

The U had five players exit after Johnson’s second season a year ago, with the majority being transfers, including Jamison Battle, Talon Cooper and Jaden Henley.

How much turnover will the Gophers have this offseason?

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Most of the attention focuses on the U’s two best players, forward Dawson Garica and guard Cam Christie. Neither player has let on publicly what their plans might be — another college or an NBA leap. Garcia did say during the regular season that he planned to make a decision soon after the season ended.

There are a handful of noticable question marks on other players such as Josh Ola-Joseph who saw his starts and playing time fall off drastically when the season moved to February.

Parker Fox, a smart and spirited player off the bench, has a seventh season available for next year, but has appeared hesitant to reporters on using it or move onto the next phase of life. Playing another season after two serious knee injuries also will be a consideration.

Isaiah Ihnen battled through two season-ending injuries like Fox but didn’t play much this winter. Braeden Carrington was a key reserve to end the season, but took a midseason pause to address his mental health.

Elijah Hawkins, the starting point guard and one of the top assist men in the nation, told the Star Tribune he will return for next season. Pharrel Payne and Mike Mitchell Jr., might be safe bets to return for next fall.

The Gophers have two scholarships opening up (center Jack Wilson and forward Will Ramberg) and both are being filled by incoming freshman (guard Isaac Asuma and forward Grayson Grove).

Freshman Kadyn Betts and Kris Keinys rarely played in 2023-24. How they and the U view their development will go a long way toward them returning for next season.

Izzo isn’t alone in a sunny forecasts of what next year might become at Minnesota. Gophers AD Mark Coyle, who is not known for headline-indicting comments, said the U can be a preseason Top 25 team next fall.

The Gophers, who had a 11-win improvement over last season, have been active in reaching out to possible incoming transfers — a sign that there could be a fair amount of roster turnover this spring.

“Then it becomes what are we going to do this spring and summer to really take that next step individually and as a team,” Johnson said Sunday. “That is the fun part. That is the exciting part. I told them now you know the formula and you know what success looks and feels like when you’ve won and also when you’ve lost.

“Now we can use that to really transform our bodies, transform our games, transform our minds so that we are a much stronger group,” Johnson continued. “We’ve got that experience under our belt and now we can really attack the offseason with purpose because you understand it.”

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UN demands cease-fire in Gaza during Muslim holy month of Ramadan, its 1st demand to halt fighting

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By EDITH M. LEDERER (Associated Press)

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United Nations Security Council on Monday demanded a cease-fire in Gaza during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, its first call to halt fighting.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu immediately canceled a planned visit to Washington by a high-level delegation to protest the decision.

The resolution passed 14-0 after the U.S. decided not to use its veto power and instead abstained on the resolution, which also demanded the release of all hostages taken captive during Hamas’ Oct. 7 surprise attack in southern Israel. But the measure does not link that demand to the cease-fire during Ramadan, which ends April 9.

Netanyahu accused the U.S. of “retreating” from what he said had been a “principled position” by allowing the vote to pass without conditioning the cease-fire on the release of hostages held by Hamas. Hamas has been designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, Canada and the European Union.

The Israeli delegation was to present White House officials with plans for an expected ground invasion of the strategic Gaza town of Rafah, where over 1 million Palestinian civilians have sought shelter from the war.

White House national security spokesman John Kirby said the U.S. had been “consistent” in its support for a cease-fire as part of a hostage deal.

“The reason we abstained is because this resolution text did not condemn Hamas,” Kirby said.

The vote comes after Russia and China vetoed a U.S.-sponsored resolution Friday that would have supported “an immediate and sustained cease-fire” in the Israeli-Hamas conflict.

The United States warned that the resolution approved on Monday could hurt negotiations to halt hostilities by the U.S., Egypt and Qatar, raising the possibility of another veto, this time by the Americans.

The resolution, put forward by the 10 elected council members, was backed by Russia and China and the 22-nation Arab Group at the United Nations.

A statement issued Friday night by the Arab Group appealed to all 15 council members “to act with unity and urgency” and vote for the resolution “to halt the bloodshed, preserve human lives and avert further human suffering and destruction.”

“It is long past time for a cease-fire,” the Arab Group said.

Because Ramadan ends next month, the cease-fire demand would last for just two weeks, though the draft says the pause in fighting should lead “to a permanent sustainable cease-fire.”

Since the start of the war, the Security Council has adopted two resolutions on the worsening humanitarian situation in Gaza, but none has called for a cease-fire.

More than 32,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed during the fighting, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. The agency does not differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count, but says women and children make up two-thirds of the dead.

Gaza also faces a dire humanitarian emergency, with a report from an international authority on hunger warning March 18 that “famine is imminent” in northern Gaza and that escalation of the war could push half of the territory’s 2.3 million people to the brink of starvation.

U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the council Friday that the resolution’s text “fails to support sensitive diplomacy in the region. Worse, it could actually give Hamas an excuse to walk away from the deal on the table.”

“We should not move forward with any resolution that jeopardizes the ongoing negotiations,” she said, warning that if the diplomacy isn’t supported, “we may once again find this council deadlocked.”

“I truly hope that that does not come about,” Thomas-Greenfield said.

The United States has vetoed three resolutions demanding a cease-fire in Gaza, the most recent an Arab-backed measure on Feb. 20. That resolution was supported by 13 council members with one abstention, reflecting the overwhelming support for a cease-fire.

Russia and China vetoed a U.S.-sponsored resolution in late October calling for pauses in the fighting to deliver aid, the protection of civilians and a halt to arming Hamas. They said it did not reflect global calls for a cease-fire.

They again vetoed the U.S. resolution Friday, calling it ambiguous and saying it was not the direct demand to end the fighting that much of the world seeks.

The vote became another showdown involving world powers that are locked in tense disputes elsewhere, with the United States taking criticism for not being tough enough against its ally Israel, even as tensions between the two countries rise.

A key issue was the unusual language in the U.S. draft. It said the Security Council “determines the imperative of an immediate and sustained cease-fire.” The phrasing was not a straightforward “demand” or “call” to halt hostilities.

Before the vote, Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said Moscow supports an immediate cease-fire, but he criticized the diluted language, which he called philosophical wording that does not belong in a U.N. resolution.

He accused U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield of “deliberately misleading the international community” about calling for a cease-fire.

“This was some kind of an empty rhetorical exercise,” Nebenzia said. “The American product is exceedingly politicized, the sole purpose of which is to help to play to the voters, to throw them a bone in the form of some kind of a mention of a cease-fire in Gaza … and to ensure the impunity of Israel, whose crimes in the draft are not even assessed.”

China’s U.N. ambassador, Zhang Jun, said the U.S. proposal set preconditions and fell far short of expectations of council members and the broader international community.

“If the U.S. was serious about a cease-fire, it wouldn’t have vetoed time and again multiple council resolutions,” he said. “It wouldn’t have taken such a detour and played a game of words while being ambiguous and evasive on critical issues.”

Friday’s vote in the 15-member council was 11 members in favor and three against, including Algeria, the Arab representative on the council. There was one abstention, from Guyana.

After the vote, Thomas-Greenfield accused Russia and China of vetoing the resolution for “deeply cynical reasons,” saying they could not bring themselves to condemn Hamas’ terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, which the resolution would have done for the first time.

A second “petty” reason, she said, is that “Russia and China simply did not want to vote for a resolution that was penned by the United States, because it would rather see us fail than to see this council succeed.” She accused Russia of again putting “politics over progress” and having “the audacity and hypocrisy to throw stones” after launching an unwarranted invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

The resolution did reflect a shift by the United States, which has found itself at odds with much of the world as even allies of Israel push for an unconditional end to fighting.

In previous resolutions, the U.S. has closely intertwined calls for a cease-fire with demands for the release of Israeli hostages in Gaza. This resolution, using wording that’s open to interpretation, continued to link the two issues, but not as firmly.

NYC Housing Calendar, March 25-April 1

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City Limits rounds up the latest housing and land use-related events, public hearings and upcoming affordable housing lotteries that are ending soon.

Adi Talwar

Welcome to City Limits’ NYC Housing Calendar, a weekly feature where we round up the latest housing and land use-related events and hearings, as well as upcoming affordable housing lotteries that are ending soon.

Know of an event we should include in next Monday’s calendar? Email jeanmarie@citylimits.org

Upcoming Housing and Land Use-Related Events:

Monday, March 25 at 6 p.m.: The NYC Commission on Human Rights will hold a class for tenants, landlords, and realtors to learn about protections against harassment and discrimination in NYC rental housing. More here.

Tuesday, March 26 at 9:30 a.m.: The NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission will meet. More here.

Tuesday, March 26 at 11 a.m.: The NYC Council’s Subcommittee on Zoning and Franchises will meet on a number of land use applications, including a zoning text amendment to allow up to three casinos/gaming facilities in select commercial and manufacturing districts. More here.

Wednesday, March 27 at 10 a.m.: NYCHA will hold its monthly board meeting. More here.

Wednesday, March 27 at 6:30 p.m.: NYC Department of City Planning will hold a virtual public information session on the mayor’s proposed “City of Yes for Housing” plan, focused on addressing “missing middle” housing, or low-rise buildings in low-density areas. More here.

Thursday, March 28 at 11 a.m.: The NYC Council’s Subcommittee on Landmarks, Public Sitings and Dispositions will meet. More here.

Thursday, March 28 at 11 a.m.: The NYC Council’s Committee on Land Use will meet. More here.

Monday, April 1 at 1 p.m.: The NYC Planning Commission will hold a review session. More here.

NYC Affordable Housing Lotteries Ending Soon: The New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) are closing lotteries on the following subsidized buildings over the next week.

710 East 215th Street Apartments, Bronx, for households earning between $106,458 – $165,230

779 Flatbush Avenue Apartments, Brooklyn, for households earning between $80,572 – $165,230

Q-188 Apartments, Queens, for households earning between $78,858 – $165,230

132-53 41st Avenue Apartments, Queens, for households earning between $75,429 – $227,630

351 East 10th Street Apartments, Manhattan, for households earning between $55,955 – $198,250

645 East 9th Street Apartments, Manhattan, for households earning between $59,692 – $198,250

3831 Carpenter Avenue, Bronx, for households earning between $85,303 – $165,230

340 Lenox Road Apartments, Brooklyn, for households earning between $64,183 – $165,230

1140 Grant Ave Apartments, Bronx, for households earning between $113,726 – $227,630

New York Lawmakers Consider Tax Reforms to Aid ITIN-Filers

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Both the Senate and the Assembly have included tax-related reforms in their “one-house” budget proposals that would impact those with Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers (ITINs), often used by immigrant workers. Advocates say extending credits to this population would help reduce child poverty.

Adi Talwar

Ciria Santiago with her daughter in their Queens apartment on March 8, 2024. Santiago’s family would be among those aided by the proposed Working Families Tax Credit. “I would use that money to save for my daughter’s college,” said Santiago.

In 2011, Ciria Santiago began filing taxes with an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN)—used by people without Social Security numbers to file federal taxes with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). But despite having a 10-year-old daughter who was born in the United States, and unlike many other parents who file, she receives no tax credits.

Claudia Vildavila has five children, two of whom—the youngest—were born in the U.S., and she has been filing taxes since she arrived in the country nine years ago. However, she too is unable to claim tax credits on their behalf.

While New York offers some tax credits for which families with mixed immigration status may be eligible, such as the lesser-known Empire State Child Credit, ITIN filers are still unable to access most other credits intended for low-income families,  lagging behind several other states that have made more inclusive tax reforms. 

Advocates say that locks out many immigrant families with children from the long-term effects and benefits of tax credits in reducing child poverty, at a time when housing and living costs have become increasingly unaffordable for many. They point to an increasingly robust body of research showing the health, educational, and financial benefits that come from such access. 

After years of proposed reforms, state lawmakers are about to begin another round of negotiations this session. Both the Senate and the Assembly included tax policy changes in their “one-house” budget proposals unveiled this month. However, the two houses presented differing options. 

The Senate included a proposal that would replace the existing Empire State Child Credit with the new, more generous Working Families Tax Credit (WFTC). It would provide a $550 per child credit for single taxpayers earning under $75,000, or $130,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly, targeting the lowest-income families by removing the phase-in provision and allowing them the maximum credit. 

The Assembly, in contrast, presented a proposal to include ITIN filers in the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), a refundable tax credit for low- to moderate-income working individuals with a valid Social Security number (SSN), which currently disqualifies many mixed-status families filing with an ITIN.

The governor’s executive budget does not include either of these proposals, further complicating the picture at the negotiating table. While state lawmakers will remain in session through June, a state budget deal—often used as a means for passing priority policies—is due April 1. 

Both houses have put in a price tag of nearly $500 million on these proposals, according to Assemblyman Andrew Hevesi, who sponsored the Working Families Tax Credit Bill (A4022A) in the Assembly. “The fact that both one houses have funding and some components of the Working Families Tax Credit puts us in an excellent spot to begin negotiations,” Hevesi’s office said in an email.

When asked what the governor’s office thought about including ITIN filers in the state’s tax credits, City Limits did not receive a direct response.

“Governor Hochul’s Executive Budget makes record-setting investments in New York’s future while ensuring the state remains on a stable long-term fiscal trajectory,” said Aja Worthy-Davis, a spokesperson for the governor. “She will work with the Legislature to craft a final budget that achieves these goals.”

The governor’s office noted several provisions to aid working families included in the executive budget: summer food benefits for low-income students; $17 million for departments of social services to connect more New York families to public benefits for which they are eligible; funding to ensure that state-supported youth employment opportunities are maintained; and $50 million to address the immediate needs of children and families in upstate cities.

But advocates, poverty experts, and lawmakers said bigger commitments are needed to achieve greater reductions in child poverty, which the state pledged to reduce by 50 percent over 10 years through the Child Poverty Reduction Act passed in 2021.

 Hevesi’s Working Families Tax Credit (WFTC) bill, co-sponsored by State Senator Andrew Gounardes, would consolidate three existing benefits—Empire State Child Credit, Earned Income Tax Credit, and the Dependent Exemption—into one omnibus tax credit.

The bill’s supporters project it would help 2.4 million families.

“Basically, every family with kids in New York State,” said Pete Nabozny, policy director of The Children’s Agenda. 

In that figure, families with ITINs would represent only a small fraction.

While the IRS said it has no published data on how many ITIN filers there are in New York, the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy estimated that approximately 107,610 children live in ITIN-filing households across the state.

“We look at this as being a way to get money into the hands of people who need it most across New York, which is, again, just a huge benefit,” said Liza Schwartzwald, the director of economic justice and family empowerment for the non-profit New York Immigrant Coalition, which has prepared a benefit calculator for the WFTC to estimate how much families could earn.

“The little increase that might exist will benefit me, my daughter, and the whole family. And indeed, my community,” said Santiago, who has rallied in Albany asking more legislators to join in supporting the bill.

Several supporters told City Limits they would like to see both tax proposals included in the Senate and Assembly’s one-house budget resolutions approved.

“Instead of pitting these two priorities against each other,” said Samantha Waxman, deputy director of state policy research at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, “New York should raise revenue from wealthy people and profitable corporations to fund them both, and there’s no shortage of good ideas on how to do that.”

“One [house proposal] expands the number of people who are eligible, the other [house proposal] gives more to those who qualify,” said Immigration Research Initiative director David Kallick. “It’s like asking a parent which of their children they care about most.”

But some also said that the proposed WFTC would reach more New Yorkers.

“If the goal is to cut child poverty, the Senate’s proposal would have the more impact,” said Loris Toribio, a senior policy advisor for anti-poverty nonprofit Robin Hood.

Dorothy (Dede) Hill, director of policy at the Schuyler Center for Analysis and Advocacy, seconded that. “The [Senate] proposal provides the largest credit to the lowest income families and is available to families over a broader income range, thus benefiting a larger group of tax filers,” Hill said.

Which would benefit an ITIN filer more, said Nabozny, depends on their marital status, number of children, and most importantly, income. “Nearly all families with four or more children who file using an ITIN would be better off under the Senate plan, while a broader range of families with one child would benefit more from the Assembly plan,” he explained.

The New York State Child Poverty Reduction Advisory Council (CPRAC), established by Gov. Kathy Hochul, has suggested similar reforms for the state in its annual progress reports. The group’s suggestions have included establishing a “relief credit” for rent-burdened New Yorkers with flexible rules around immigration status, and making ITIN filers eligible for child credits.

According to a recent report by the Center on Poverty and Social Policy at Columbia University and Robin Hood, New Yorkers saw the largest annual increase in poverty in a decade from 2021 to 2022, with nearly 2 million New Yorkers living in poverty that year, including one in four children.

While New Yorkers born outside the U.S. also face higher poverty rates, the report says, what is often overlooked is that many of the families of foreign-born parents include children born in the U.S.

“What is really important to include or emphasize or highlight is the many unique barriers that we still need to keep identifying, and then removing, to really allow a lot of these families to be integrated,” said Luisa Godinez-Puig, senior research associate at the Urban Institute. “Many of the children that end up not receiving the Child Tax Credit, for instance, are American children.”

William Alatriste/NYC Council Media Unit

City and state lawmakers at a 2023 rally calling for passage of the Working Families Tax Credit, sponsored in Albany by State Sen. Andrew Gounardes (right).

For the two New York immigrant families City Limits spoke with, the destabilizing effects of the pandemic are still unfolding: in the Santiago and Vildavila families, there is still only one primary breadwinner.

Both Santiago and Vildavila have played with the New York Immigration Coalition’s calculator tool to see how their budgets would benefit if the WFTC bill were to pass. 

“I would use that money to save for my daughter’s college,” said Santiago.

In addition to ITIN being excluded from some tax credits, many communities are unaware of the benefits for which they are eligible, and so are their tax preparers, Godinez-Puig explained.

“There is a lot of misinformation out there about the availability of these programs for immigrant families,” she said, pointing to several barriers identified in a Boston study that could also be found in New York.  

“Passing the legislation to expand the tax parameters and eligibility [is] definitely one thing, and then connecting families to those credits that they’re eligible for, is a whole other thing,” said Aravind Boddupalli, research associate in the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center and co-author of the Boston study. 

When asked about the prospect of his WFTC bill, State Sen. Gounardes said he’s “very confident that we have enough momentum,” to pass it this year.

”You have Republican sponsors as well. It’s a bipartisan issue. I think people are generally very supportive of it,” he added of the legislation, which currently has 23 sponsors in the Senate.

On the Assembly side, Hevesi said, support for tax credits for working families and the poor is very strong.

“Even more than it was last year,” when the state expanded the Empire State child credit to include children younger than 4

Both Gounardes and Hevesi said reaching  ITIN filers is a priority. 

“We don’t want to exclude ITIN filers,” Gounardes said. “That’s a non-negotiable.” 

“We have no intention of leaving them out this year,” Hevesi said.

To reach the reporter behind this story, contact Daniel@citylimits.org. To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

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