Executive Order No. 43 shall take effect immediately as it relates to Establishing an interagency City Housing Activation Taskforce, to address the housing shortage, dated August 21, 2024; and shall expire and be deemed revoked on December 31, 2024.
The FY 2025 Adopted Budget has $4.75 billion budgeted for Asylum Seekers. Assuming that the census remains relatively flat (compared to OMB’s higher projections), and using the target per diem of $335, the Comptroller’s Office projects that overall costs will be closer to $3.42 billion.
This report includes descriptive statistics by field operations location, on the size and demographics of the client population; levels at which financial assistance and social services are requested and granted; time frames for the provision of services; and data on case closings and re-openings.
The Supportive and Intensive Crises (Crisis Respite) Residences Report, pursuant to Local Law 118 of 2023, provides a status update on the establishment of crisis respite centers for quarter 2 of 2024. The Health Department currently contracts with four community-based organizations.
The focus on the city’s housing supply challenge. One of the primary drivers of high rents is an excess of demand over supply—or, put more simply, a supply shortage.
New York City’s housing challenges have shifted from abandonment and disinvestment to gentrification and skyrocketing rents – the NYC Department of Housing Preservation and Development has financed the development and preservation of hundreds of thousands of affordable homes
This report includes descriptive statistics by field operations location, on the size and demographics of the client population; levels at which financial assistance and social services are requested and granted; time frames for the provision of services; and data on case closings and re-openings.