How Mamdani Got 14 New Yorkers to Freeze to Death
Mamdani has been in office for one month, and so far, trash and dirty snow are piling up, and 14 New Yorkers are dead.

The death toll from a prolonged cold snap following Winter Storm Fern has risen to 14, with all victims found outdoors, city officials confirmed over the weekend. The fatalities, occurring between January 24 and January 31, have intensified scrutiny on Mayor Zohran Mamdani's approach to homelessness, particularly his decision to halt the clearing of homeless encampments.
Mayor Mamdani, who took office on January 1 after his election in November 2025, announced as mayor-elect on December 5, 2025, that he would ban the removal of homeless camps in Manhattan, emphasizing a shift toward voluntary outreach and housing options rather than forced interventions.
During the campaign, he described involuntary commitments as a "last resort" and pledged to end practices initiated by his predecessor, Eric Adams, which involved clinicians and police assessing and transporting individuals to hospitals if needed.Former Mayor Adams publicly criticized the policy reversal, stating on social media on January 29 that he had "begged" Mamdani not to change the approach that "kept homeless New Yorkers from freezing outdoors in makeshift encampments."
Adams urged reinstatement of the policy, warning that delays risk more lives.City Hall reported that of the 14 deaths, at least seven showed symptoms of hypothermia, though the medical examiner has not yet issued official rulings. Six of the deceased were known to the Department of Homeless Services. Officials noted that none were found in tents or encampments, and the city has placed 825 people in shelters while forcibly removing only 15 from the streets during the cold period.
Mamdani addressed the tragedy at a press conference on January 31, calling the losses "tragic" and announcing ramped-up outreach efforts. He reiterated that forcing people off the streets remains a last resort, prioritizing communication to help navigate housing. "We don't yet know whether every case will be ruled hypothermia," he said earlier in the week.
The cold snap, potentially the longest stretch of sub-freezing temperatures in NYC history, has exposed vulnerabilities among the unhoused population, many of whom suffer from untreated mental illness or addiction. Historical data shows cold exposure deaths averaged 12 annually from 2010-2019, rising to 34 per year from 2020-2023 amid the COVID-19 era.
Conservative commentators and former officials have linked the deaths directly to Mamdani's policies, with social media posts amplifying claims of "frozen corpses" resulting from lax enforcement. However, city officials maintain that the response includes Code Blue activations, which trigger enhanced shelter access during extreme cold.
As temperatures remain low, with more frigid weather expected, the administration faces growing calls to reassess its homelessness strategy. No policy changes have been announced.