Fourth annual report for DOI’s Inspector General for the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”), discussing the investigations
and recommendations made in Calendar Year 2017 and updating the status of recommendations issued previously that
have not been fully adopted by NYPD.
This report provides an analysis of what the City’s Paid Care Division has learned, model standards for paid care jobs, an overview of its accomplishments, and a roadmap for action it plans to take in the years to come as the Paid Care Division concludes its first year.
This report provides an analysis of what the City’s Paid Care Division has learned, model standards for paid care jobs, an overview of its accomplishments, and a roadmap for action it plans to take in the years to come as the Paid Care Division concludes its first year.
This report, using focus group and survey results, documents the experiences of New York City’s home-based paid care workers in their own words, offering a bottom-up perspective that is often lacking in public policy debates.
This report, using focus group and survey results, details the concerns of New York City’s home-based paid care workers whose voices are too often unheard or disregarded by policymakers or by the wider public.
DOI Report detailing the findings of a year-long investigation into how the NYPD Special Victims Division ("SVD") investigates cases involving sexual assaults.
With the rising number of homeless families and individuals in the city’s shelter system there has been a related rise in the costs of running the shelters.
TLC is required to provide MOIA an annual report of language access policies, procedures, concerns, and next steps. This report outlines language access at TLC for the calendar year 2017.
In FY 2017, the City paid out $84.5 million to continue to clear the backlog of high
exposure legacy cases that have been in litigation for a decade or more. This $84.5 million dollar
figure constitutes 13 percent of total tort payouts in FY 2017 of $675.6 million.
The City Charter requires that the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) publish documentation of forecasting methodologies used for projecting tax revenues for those taxes which account for five percent or more of total City tax revenues.