New York State’s Preferred Source requirements were established by Section 162 of
the New York State Finance Law. Purchases from preferred sources take precedence over all other
sources of supply and do not require competitive procurement methods.
Pursuant to Local Law 50 of 2011, these guidelines shall apply to any solicitation
valued at more than $100,000 for food or food-related services (e.g., catering), and to
any solicitation for social services through which more than $100,000 of food would
be purchased annually
IDNYC quarterly report Includes, but not limited to, number cards issued, cards to minors, denials made to requesting agencies for information collected about applicants, efforts to promote acceptance such as banks, outreach, & types of services that accept the ID as proof of identity and residency.
On or before September thirtieth, two thousand and three, and on or before the last day of every quarter thereafter, the mayor or his or her designee shall submit to the council and the comptroller a report detailing each small purchase award made pursuant to this section during the quarter.
The following report lists the number of crashes reported to TLC that involve a TLC-licensed vehicle. Below those lines, the number of TLC-licensed vehicles involved in those crashes are disaggregated by vehicle type. Please note that multiple TLC-licensed vehicles can be involved in a single crash.
Local Law 18 of 2012 requires MOCS to report to the New York City Council cost increases in capital contracts with an initial registration value of $10 million or more.