What Options Doc?

Urban Investigations

What Options Doc?

What Do Incarcerated Parents Need to Know About ACS?

Technical Assistance

What Do Incarcerated Parents Need to Know About ACS?

We Are Public Housing

Making Policy Public

We Are Public Housing

Air it Out

City Studies

Air it Out

Keep Your Family's Home

Public Access Design

Keep Your Family's Home

What's in the Water?

Making Policy Public

What's in the Water?

Print Hello, My Name is Minimum Wage

Minimum wage has been a hot topic since President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law the first national minimum hourly pay in 1938. Over 75 years later we’re still debating the value of a paycheck. Is minimum wage enough to live on? Should the government keep increasing the current rate?

In the Spring of 2015, CUP Teaching Artist Jenn Anne Williams worked with Alhassan Sussu’s Economics class at the International Community High School in the Bronx to explore whether the government should be involved in income equality.

To investigate, students tried to balance a monthly minimum wage paycheck, went into the neighborhood to survey community members on their opinions, and debated the pros and cons. Students created puppets, collages, and drawings to illustrate the information in the accordion booklet that shares what they discovered. 

Stand Up to Clean Up!

Public Access Design

Stand Up to Clean Up!

Your Guide to Welfare in NYC

Making Policy Public

Your Guide to Welfare in NYC

Share, Where?

Urban Investigations

Share, Where?

Engage to Change

Technical Assistance

Engage to Change

Rent Regulation Rights

Making Policy Public

Rent Regulation Rights

Bronx Be Well

Urban Investigations

Bronx Be Well

What Up With DAT?

Technical Assistance

Reclaim Your Worker Rights

Making Policy Public

Reclaim Your Worker Rights