Pursuant to Chapter 76, Section 3202 of the City Charter, the Commission shall submit to the Mayor and the Speaker of the Council and shall make available on the Commission's website an annual report no later than September 30, 2021, and by September 30 of each year thereafter.
The annual report describes the activities of the Civic Engagement Commission for the year 2023. It includes charter mandated programs (citywide participatory budgeting, poll site language assistance, community board trainings) and reporting on the TRIE Neighborhood Initiative and DemocracyNYC.
This report covers the Civic Engagement Commission's work in 2022. The report includes charter mandates (citywide participatory budgeting, poll site language assistance, and community board trainings) and Mayoral initiatives, including the TRIE Neighborhood Initiative and DemocracyNYC.
A report on the achievements of the City and the Commission on Gender Equity on behalf of gender equity as well as the Commission on Gender Equity's goals for 2021.
The 2023 Annual Report covers the period from January 1, 2023 through December 31, 2023 and describes the work and activities performed in the Commission on Gender Equity's three focus areas--Economic mobility and opportunity, health and reproductive justice, and safety.
On August 31, 2016, Mayor de Blasio signed Local Law 102 of 2016 requiring a designated agency to review requests and to develop a list of ‐ at minimum ‐ three neighborhoods where interagency collaboration, or a “neighborhood support team,” would address quality of life issues.
On August 31, 2016, Mayor de Blasio signed Local Law 102 of 2016 requiring a designated agency to review requests and to develop a list of ‐ at minimum ‐ three neighborhoods where interagency collaboration, or a “neighborhood support team,” would address quality of life issues.
On August 31, 2016, Mayor de Blasio signed Local Law 102 of 2016 requiring a designated agency to review requests and to develop a list of ‐ at minimum ‐ three neighborhoods where interagency collaboration, or a “neighborhood support team,” would address quality of life issues.
On August 31, 2016, Mayor de Blasio signed Local Law 102 of 2016 requiring a designated agency to review requests and to develop a list of ‐ at minimum ‐ three neighborhoods where interagency collaboration, or a “neighborhood support team,” would address quality of life issues.
Bronx Community Board 10's submission is to comply with the Agency Privacy Information Law. Please review our submission for any questions to the agency.