The New York City Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is working to improve the water quality of New York's waterbodies through planning, investment, innovative technologies, and stakeholder participation focused on controlling "combined sewer overflow" or CSO.
Reports on the development, progress and achievements of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection's source water protection programs established to maintain the Filtration Avoidance Determination (FAD) for the Catskill/Delaware portion of the New York City water supply.
In accordance with New York City Administrative Code § 18-131 (as amended by Local Law No. 29 of 2005), this annual report summarizes the 2017 Beach Surveillance and Monitoring Program for permitted beaches, including the dates and results of all inspections of these beaches, and the dates and reasons for any warning or closure.
In accordance with the CSO Order on Consent (DEC Case No. CO2-20110512-25, modification to DEC Case No. CO2-20000107-8), the New York City Department of Environmental Protection submits quarterly reports on its actions toward complying with the Order's milestones.
This report details the number of Criminal Summons that were issued in lieu of Civil Summons, organized by reason criteria, to provide statistics requested by the Criminal Justice Reform Act.
This quarterly report analyzes the statistics of when desk appearance tickets (DATs) are used in lieu of custodial arrests pursuant to New York State Penal Law section 140.20(1).
A Domestic Violence report containing quarterly complaint and radio run statistics involving domestic incidents. It includes information on the number of radio runs, number of rape complaints, number of felony assault complaints, and the number of murder complaints in each precinct. It also includes the percentages of total felony complaints involving domestic incidents and the percentages of domestic violence complaints involving an intimate partner, organized by precinct, as well.
Student Safety Act (SSA) reporting is published quarterly. It compiles data related to NYPD activity in New York City Schools. The SSA Report by Precinct lists statistics about intervention type, restraints used, gender, age, and race of a person who has been intercepted by the NYPD, organized by precinct.
Student Safety Act (SSA) reporting is published quarterly. It compiles data related to NYPD activity in New York City Schools. The SSA Report by School lists statistics about incidents according to school campus, expanding on the incident location, if it was school related, who enforced it, if force was used, and any charges, among other details, as well.
Student Safety Act (SSA) reporting is published quarterly. It compiles data related to NYPD activity in New York City Schools. The FADO report lists data on how many FADO complaints were received in the last quarter against School Safety Agents. The FADO acronym stands for: Force, Abuse of Authority, Discourtesy, Offensive Language.
REPORT: Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams asked how many hours do subway riders lose to delays during the morning rush and what does it cost in monetary terms. We provide our estimates
Local Law 1 of 2004 requires the New York City Department of Health & Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) to annually report to the New York City Council on the City's progress toward reducing childhood lead poisoning and increasing blood lead testing in New York City. This report is submitted in compliance with this requirement.
This report summarizes regulation by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene's Mobile Food Vending, pursuant to Local Law 16 of 2013, covering the Period from June 1, 2016 to May 31, 2017.
Student Safety Act (SSA) reporting is published quarterly. It compiles data related to NYPD activity in New York City Schools. This report details the statistics on the number of injuries to department personnel caused by student misconduct.
In fulfillment of Mayor de Blasio's June executive order to adopt and commit the City to the principles of the Paris Agreement, this plan lists actions the City will take in the next three years to accelerate greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions and put the city on a path to deep de-carbonization. This is the first Paris Agreement-compliant plan from any city in the world.
The 1.5 degrees celcius plan aligns local climate actions with a goal to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees celcius. A 1.5 degrees celcius outcome was agreed to in the Paris Agreement in order to limit the worst impacts of climate change. By implementing the identified prioritized set of actions across energy, transportation, building, and waste sectors by 2020, NYC will enable faster reductions of GHG over the following 30 years than even the already aggressive goals in the City's 80 x 50 plan - a plan to reduce GHG emissions 80% by 2050. The potential for GHG reduction of all the quantified actions in the report is 10 million metric tons of C02e - or the equivalent of taking more than 2 million cars off the road by 2030.