Find a job at a party on the Lower East Side
Brooklyn-based job posting site Bandana is hosting a 'job party' on Thursday from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Manny Cantor Center on East Broadway. Job-seekers can get resume advice and browse current job openings alongside free empanadas and a DJ.
More Local News
At the party, attendees will get free headshots, free interview clothes from ReLoved Boutique, resume help, interview prep, and other educational workshops.
If you're looking for more immediate work, you can talk to recruiters from organizations currently hiring, including Educational Alliance, Grand Street Settlement, Chinese-American Planning Council, Henry Street Settlement and University Settlement.
Bandana only posts full-time jobs with a minimum of $17 per hour pay and health insurance.
There are positions open across New York City right now, including hundreds of jobs with NewYork-Presbyterian. The city government is also hiring seasonal positions for the spring, from park maintenance to plumbing.
Emily Rahhal is a digital reporter who has covered New York City since 2023 after reporting in Los Angeles for years. She joined PIX11 in 2024. See more of her work here and follow her on Twitter here.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
7 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Aetna, AvMed fought to run Miami-Dade County employee health care plan. Who won?
Miami-Dade's more than 31,000 county employees are on track for a new insurance provider after Aetna ousted longtime administrator AvMed in a County Commission vote on Wednesday. The planned change would bring the county a new insurance administrator for the first time since George W. Bush was president and raises the stakes for Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, who recommended the switch as a way to save money during a budget crunch. Aetna, a national insurance company owned by the CVS pharmacy chain, claims its national purchasing power produces the kind of discounts that can save Miami-Dade about $40 million a year over rates offered by AvMed, a Florida-based provider with headquarters in Doral. 'We're going to try and reduce the cost curve,' said Carladenise Edwards, chief administrative officer under Levine Cava. 'As we do that, the county will save money over time.' While Miami-Dade commissioners approved the switch in a 7-to-2 vote, AvMed already has a legal challenge that could stall or overturn the decision. As commissioners initially prepared to decide the contract in a last-minute vote last month, AvMed sued, with claims that the Levine Cava administration violated bidding rules in how it recommended awarding the contract to Aetna — allegations the county denies. That vote got delayed, prompting a rare special meeting on Wednesday dedicated solely to the proposed Aetna contract recommended by the mayor. Voting against the switch were Commissioners Roberto Gonzalez and Danielle Cohen Higgins. Commissioners Marleine Bastien, Juan Carlos Bermudez and Eileen Higgins did not attend the meeting. Barring a judge's intervention, the commission vote sets up a scramble to replace the insurance administrator for one of South Florida's largest workforces just weeks ahead of the open-enrollment session that typically begins in late October. AvMed first won the county health care contract in 2007. Like most large governments, Miami-Dade pays for its own employee health care costs and hires an insurance company to administer the billing and reimbursement process for about $600 million in claims per year. The administrator earns a yearly fee for the work — Aetna charges $15 million and AvMed, $10 million — but the county's main costs come from the reimbursement rates negotiated by the administrator for prescriptions, medical procedures and hospitalizations. Two consultants hired by Miami-Dade concluded the Aetna rates would save Miami-Dade about $40 million when compared to AvMed's rates — math AvMed disputed as flawed. Commissioner Oliver Gilbert, who sponsored the legislation approving the Aetna contract, said it made no sense for board members to try and reach their own conclusions in the complex field of actuarial methods, repriced health care claims and shared savings in self-funded insurance plans. 'I'm left with the people we pay to analyze that,' Gilbert said as the meeting neared its third hour and Cohen Higgins and Gonzalez pressed the administration on the competing numbers. 'This is theater at this point.' Cohen Higgins said the board lacked the information and explanations needed to justify a major switch in the county's health care landscape on a shortened timetable. 'I need more,' she said. Levine Cava did not attend the meeting. In the sharpest words of the day, Gonzalez blamed what he called a flawed rollout by Levine Cava last month for causing anxiety among county workers about the proposed Aetna switch. 'I don't trust the mayor — and I want to trust the mayor,' Gonzalez said. Namita Uppal, the county's procurement director and top negotiator on the health care contract, emphasized insurance fees won't change for county employees or the retirees that continue receiving coverage from Miami-Dade. She also said Aetna was already helping answer employees' questions about the potential switch and whether existing AvMed providers will be covered under Aetna. 'I haven't found an example where Aetna came back and said: 'It's not covered,'' she said.


Business Wire
7 minutes ago
- Business Wire
Luxfer Appoints Stewart Watson to Board of Directors
RIVERSIDE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Luxfer Holdings PLC (NYSE: LXFR) ('Luxfer' or the 'Company'), a global industrial company innovating niche applications of advanced materials, today announced the appointment of Stewart Watson, a UK national, as a Non-Executive Director to its Board, effective September 1, 2025. Upon joining the Board, Mr. Watson will serve on the Nominating and Governance Committee and the Audit Committee. Mr. Watson is a CIMA qualified accountant and a seasoned executive with more than 35 years of leadership experience, including over two decades in the aerospace and defense industry. He spent 23 years at Meggitt PLC, where he held several senior positions, including President of the Meggitt Equipment Group, and served as Divisional Finance Director with responsibility for global operations across the US, UK, Canada, and Spain, including two years working in California. Throughout his career, Mr. Watson has demonstrated expertise in strategic planning, operational transformation, international business leadership, and M&A execution. He currently serves as a Non-Executive Director for two private UK companies - SeaBot Maritime and Poka Audio - and brings valuable governance and strategic advisory experience to the Luxfer Board. 'We are pleased to welcome Stewart to the Luxfer Board,' said Patrick Mullen, Luxfer's Board Chair. 'His deep financial expertise, global operating experience, and proven leadership in complex industrial environments will be a strong asset as we continue to execute our strategy and deliver long-term value for shareholders.' Mr. Watson's appointment underscores Luxfer's continued focus on enhancing Board capabilities in support of operational excellence, strategic growth, global expertise, and disciplined capital deployment, while also positioning for the anticipated retirement of a long-standing UK-based board member next year. About Luxfer Holdings PLC Luxfer (NYSE: LXFR) is a global industrial company innovating niche applications in materials engineering. Using its broad array of proprietary technologies, Luxfer focuses on value creation, customer satisfaction, and demanding applications where technical know-how and manufacturing expertise combine to deliver a superior product. Luxfer's high-performance materials, components, and high-pressure gas containment devices are used in defense and emergency response, clean energy, healthcare, transportation, and specialty industrial applications. For more information, please visit
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Rigetti Computing unveils 36-qubit system on cloud platforms
Rigetti Computing, a US-based firm specialising in quantum technology, has announced the general availability of its 36-qubit multi-chip system, Cepheus-1-36Q. The system is now accessible on Rigetti Quantum Cloud Services (QCS) and will soon be available on Microsoft Azure. According to Rigetti, this machine features the largest number of chiplets ever integrated into a quantum computer, leveraging four separate chips. The Cepheus-1-36Q system is claimed to deliver a 2x reduction in two-qubit gate error rate compared to its predecessor, the Ankaa-3 system. It achieves a median two-qubit gate fidelity of 99.5%. Key enhancements in the new system include a proprietary chiplet-based architecture that replaces monolithic chips. This approach yields better chip uniformity and performance through reduced manufacturing complexity and improved fabrication yield. Rigetti stated that optimised two-qubit gates contribute to faster gate times while reducing coherent errors, enhancing overall fidelity which is critical for executing quantum error correction. The company said that these technological improvements have facilitated its goal of introducing a 100+ qubit system by the end of 2025 with similar fidelity metrics. Rigetti CEO Subodh Kulkarni said: 'It's our view that superconducting qubits are the leading modality for quantum computers due to their ability to scale, and their ability to achieve gate speeds more than 1,000 times faster than other modalities like ion traps and pure atoms. 'Rigetti's superconducting qubits leverage technologies, like chiplets, that have been maturing in the semiconductor industry for decades, enabling Rigetti to use well-established methods to scale to higher performance and qubit counts.' Last month, Rigetti announced it had reached its mid-year performance milestone of 99.5% median two-qubit gate fidelity with its modular 36-qubit system, doubling the error reduction seen in their previous single-chip Ankaa-3 system. This 36-qubit setup comprises four 9-qubit chiplets and represents an essential step towards the company's larger objectives. Financially, Rigetti reported a net loss of $39.7m for the second quarter ending 30 June 2025, with total revenues reaching $1.8m for the same period. "Rigetti Computing unveils 36-qubit system on cloud platforms" was originally created and published by Verdict, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Melden Sie sich an, um Ihr Portfolio aufzurufen. Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten