Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-156, this quarterly report contains the non-desk appearance ticket rate for offenses for which 500 or more arrests were made. This report also contains the number of DATs issued in total and disaggregated by precinct, borough, race, gender, and age.
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-157, this quarterly report contains information on the # of criminal and civil summonses issued, disaggregated by offense, race, gender, age, borough, precinct, police service area, and transit district, as well as NYPD reason codes for criminal summonses issued.
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-172, this quarterly report contains the total numbers of fare evasion arrests and fare evasion summonses, disaggregated by transit bureau district, transit station, and race/sex/age, as well as the numbers of DATs vs. live arrests for fare evasion arrests.
Our audit found that not all of the Staten Island Community Boards complied with other City Charter requirements relating to public meetings and hearings and maintaining websites.
This report documents the early days of the Voluntary Local Review movement and the multiple influences that gave rise to it. It also highlights the importance of local actors’ efforts in creating transformations for a sustainable future.
This report examines who in New York City holds debt, for whom this debt was taken out for, how much they owe, how they are managing their debt, and how their debt affects major life choices, confidence about repayment, and evaluation of their educational decisions.
This report is the second required annual report issued pursuant to Local Law 152 of 2018 and includes information related to putrescible transfer stations and non-putrescible transfer stations covered by LL152.
This report provides a statistical overview of the 673 domestic violence homicide incidents involving 721 victims that occurred in New York City from 2010 through 2020.
The 2021 Disparity Report analyzes city-wide trends in racial disparities for youth and young adults in New York City across 28 indicators. The report finds that while disparities persist in four sectors (education, economic security, health and justice), outcomes have improved significantly.