Affirms OTI's commitment to support and enforce the rights and protections afforded by the NYC EEO Policy, the City and State Human Rights Law, and all other relevant laws for all employees, applicants, contractors, consultants, agency partners, and members of the public served by our Agency.
Pursuant to Local Law 98 of 2022, OTI and NYC311 published the protocol for identifying the languages spoken by customers calling into 311 in November of 2022. The protocol is available in English and in the ten designated Citywide languages on 311 Online.
Monthly Publication from the Municipal Library highlighting different relevant topics. Published on a monthly basis the newsletter highlights and compares current topics with similar topics in NY City's history, utilizing various Library holdings.
Mandated by the New York City Charter, Sect. 309, the board consists of 15 members who are appointed by the Mayor. The Board's mandate is to advise the Commissioner of DORIS on matters that he/she requests and report annually to the government and administration of the city. With transcript.
The Mayor's Management Report (MMR), which is mandated by the City Charter, serves as a public account of the performance of City agencies, measuring whether they are delivering services efficiently, effectively and expeditiously. The MMR is released twice a year.
The PMMR provides an early update of how the City is performing four months into the fiscal year. The full-fiscal MMR, published each September, looks retrospectively at the City's performance during the prior fiscal year.
Executive Order No. 33, dated July 3, 2023 is being submitted and pertains to the designation of Deputy Mayors and Senior Leadership effective immediately.
Executive Order No. 31 shall take effect immediately. Chapter 225 provides the Public Housing Preservation Trust be governed by Board of Trustees, Chief Housing Officer of the City of New York, performs the duties and powers commensurate to a Deputy Mayor in areas of public policy, and housing.
Executive Order No. 24, dated January 27, 2023 is being submitted for the effectiveness and integrity of city government operations where there shall be a Mayor's Office of Risk Management and Compliance and there shall be a Mayor's Office of Municipal Services Assessment effective immediately.
Executive Order No. 27 is being submitted by the power vested by the Mayor to appoint a Chief Public Realm Officer who will be reporting to the Deputy Mayor for Operations, dated February 16, 2023, effective immediately.
Executive Order No. 29, dated, March 16, 2023, designation, there shall be six Deputy Mayors, a Chief Housing Officer, Chief Technology Officer, Chief Efficiency Officer, Chief of Staff, Chief Advisor, Chief Counsel to the Mayor, Dir. of Intergovernmental; etc. order shall take effect immediately.
Executive Order No. 36 dated September 22, 2023, as it relates to the designation of the seven Deputy Mayors is being submitted to take effect immediately.
The Identifying Information Law (Local Laws 245 and 247 of 2017) sets forth requirements for city agencies to follow in the event that agency collection and/or disclosure of personal identifying information constitutes a breMCB4 2022 Identifying Information Law - Agency Compliance Report - COMPLETED
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.
The Daily Shelter Census report contains statistics for the prior calendar day immediately preceding such weekday, excluding holidays. Reports various statistics such as, but not limited to the number of individuals, families, children (disaggregated).
Pursuant to the Local Law 27 requirements and the instructions from DCAS re: the queries for preparing the LL27 Reports, please see resultant data applied to the submitted publication, DCAS_FISA&OPA_LL27 Template (Excel Format)_Tables A_to_E_Completed_01-03-2024.xlsx
Report details annual activities of the Commission to fulfill crucial mandates pursuant to Chapter 36 of the New York City Charter, Local Law 13 of 2019, and the effectiveness of city agencies' affirmative employment efforts.
Report details annual activities of the Commission to fulfill crucial mandates pursuant to Chapter 36 Section 831 (d) of the New York City Charter, and the effectiveness of city agencies' affirmative employment efforts.
Report detailing each small purchase award made, amounts, vendors awarded, and type of goods or services provided during the quarter approximately three months before this publication.
Since the moment COVID-19 arrived in New York City, the burden of the pandemic’s many challenges have fallen heaviest on women, especially women of color.
The City of New York is at a pivotal fiscal moment. Tax revenues for the current fiscal year are coming in far above projections, yielding a substantial surplus; however, neither the Mayor’s Office nor the Comptroller’s Office expect this trend to continue.
Comptroller’s Office analysis of the FY23 Preliminary Budget (PowerPoint) Federal Stimulus Funds Tracker , Focus on the Basics, Invest for a More Inclusive Recovery, Build a More Resilient City
The Preliminary Budget closes the $2.88 billion budget gap projected in November, on the strength of an expected $2.77 billion surplus in FY 2022, derived primarily from $1.60 billion in additional tax revenues and savings of $866 million from the Program to Eliminate the Gap (PEG).
Advancing the vision of a smaller, safer and fairer jail system remains one of the City’s most pressing challenges and will necessitate collective action on the part of all criminal legal system stakeholders.
Fiscal Year 2023 begins in a period of significant economic uncertainty. There are meaningful signs of continued recovery from the pandemic, with jobs at 96% of pre-pandemic levels, tourism and Broadway rebounding, record numbers of new business applications, and tax revenues coming in...
The NYC Comptroller recognizes employees, supervisors, managers, and units demonstrates superior accomplishments in diversity, equity, inclusion and equal employment opportunities.
Letter Report on the Review of the New York City Housing Authority’s Calculation of Rent Increases for Public Housing Tenants at the Red Hook East and Red Hook West Developments
The challenges of retaining permanent nurses and the growing spending on higher-cost agency and traveling nurses pose risks to H+H’s financial stability and undermine the City’s commitments to both its public sector employees and its patients.
The City began FY 2023 (FY23) with $8.159 billion in cash-on-hand, versus $8.469 billion at the same time last year. During the first half of fiscal year 2023 (1H23), the City’s cash balances averaged $8.126 billion, compared to $7.274 billion at the same time last year.
The City of New York can ensure that NYC remains a place that people want to build families, start businesses, and create new ideas by investing in high quality public education from pre-K to university, universal child care, robust public transit, and affordable housing
Comptroller Brad Lander and Public Advocate Jumaane Williams and a majority of New York City elected officials urged the federal government to accelerate funding to municipalities to support arriving asylum seekers.
The Comptroller’s office estimates that under the Clean Slate Act, over half a million New York City residents would be eligible to have their criminal history automatically sealed, nearly 80 percent of whom are Black or Latinx.
A version of the following letter was sent by a coalition of investors to the leadership of 11 companies named in a New York Times investigation on migrant child labor in the supply chains of various companies.
New York City prepares for future crises from extreme weather to future health emergencies, City agencies must be prepared to contain emergency spending costs.
The audit found that the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) established testing and vaccination services in communities most affected by COVID-19, as required.
The audit found that the Human Resources Administration (HRA) appropriately reimbursed Career Pathways providers for achieving aggregate milestones and interacted with providers in monitoring the services provided to clients.
The Department of Homeless Services (DHS) had limited success in convincing the homeless individuals encountered during the sweeps[1] of homeless encampments to enter temporary shelters.
The breakdown in contract negotiations between UPS and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. Low pay contributes to the high turnover rates UPS experiences among part-time employees, who perform crucial roles as package handlers, loaders and unloaders throughout the UPS system.
The City of New York’s budget process is an annual rite of projections, proposals, debate, and ultimately adoption of plans for how much money will be collected by the City over a fiscal year and how that money will be spent.