Intimate partner elder abuse affects the health and safety of many New Yorkers and their families.
Public awareness of the issue and a coordinated multidisciplinary response are required as the
New York City elder population continues to increase.
Mayor Bill de Blasio announced during a town hall today, alongside Council Member Margaret Chin, a dedicated team of 10 specialists within the Public Engagement Unit to proactively support the NYC Rent Freeze and Homeowner Tax Exemption Programs across the five boroughs.
Deputy Mayor for Strategic Policy Initiatives Richard Buery and DFTA today released Age-Friendly NYC: New Commitments For a City For All Ages at Sunnyside Community Services in Queens.
The New York City Department for the Aging (DFTA) and the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) to celebrate Falls Prevention Awareness Day “Ten Years Standing Together to Prevent Falls” during the Manhattan edition of “City Hall in Your Borough.”
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.
Mayor Bill de Blasio today announced “Seniors First,” a slate of new affordable housing programs that will increase the amount of senior housing across the city. the City will double its commitment to senior housing over the extended 12-year, serving 30,000 senior households by 2026.
his Citywide Statement of Needs FY 2019/2020 contains agency proposals to establish, replace, consolidate, expand, or close City facilities during the next two fiscal years.
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.
This Administration is focused on making New York the fairest big city in America. Every decision in this budget was weighed on whether it brought us closer to that goal. Mayor Bill de Blasio presented New York City’s Preliminary Budget for Fiscal Year 2019 (FY19).
Report defines the scope of the problem by listing conditions at all homeless shelter facilities and tracks progress made by the expanded repair program. Includes total number of inspections conducted, new problems found, and violations and other conditions resolved.
The New York City Commission on Human Rights (“The Commission”) submits this Language
Access Policy and Implementation Plan pursuant to Local Law 30 of 2017. This document is
updated as of April 2018.
April 2018 Executive Budget, Fiscal Year 2019- Highlights the Mayor's proposed budget initiatives; the Capital Plan and financial program for the next four fiscal years.
April 2018 Executive Budget, Fiscal Year 2019 - A summary of the major programs, priorities and objectives of the Executive Budget, capital priorities and initiatives, etc.
This is to reexamine internal processes and policies, use resources efficiently, and re-estimate expenses, and re-estimate expenses, all without sacrificing service delivery to New York City residents
It is presented by unit of appropriation within agency with programmatic description of each unit of appropriation. The Revenue Budget lists revenue categories by agency.
Presents information on capital appropriations and commitments with implementation schedules projected, and the ensuring three years for all active capital budget projects.
Presents information on capital appropriations and commitments with implementation schedules projected, and the ensuring three years for all active capital budget projects.
Presents information on capital appropriations and commitments with implementation schedules projected, and the ensuring three years for all active capital budget projects.
Presents information on capital appropriations and commitments with implementation schedules projected, and the ensuring three years for all active capital budget projects.
Details the expense budget of certain agencies by major functional areas. Within each functional area, expenditures by personal services and other than personal services are presented.
Submission of the Modification to the Financial Plan for the City and Covered Organizations by the City to the Financial Control Board pursuant to Section 8.3 of the Financial Emergency Act.
April 2018 Executive Budget, Fiscal Year 2019 - Details of financial plan by Agency, personal service expense, other than personal service expense and funding.
Mayor de Blasio's administration released the budget for the fiscal year 2019, including $754 million in savings – made up of partial hiring freezes, agency efficiencies and debt service re-estimates- amongst other proposals.
The Regulatory Agenda for FY 2019 includes: rules regarding refuse and recycling collection on privately owned streets and during street events; enforcement penalties; and plain-language amendments.
The Important Updates for Workers palmcard is intended to provide updates to NYC’s Paid Safe and Sick Leave Law and Minimum Wage and to be used in conjunction with pre-printed materials with outdated information.
Agency Watch List spotlights City agencies – the Department of Correction (DOC), Department of Education (DOE), and Homeless Services (DHS) – that raise the most budgetary concerns due to rapidly increased spending and meager measurable results.
Agency Watch List spotlights City agencies – the Department of Correction (DOC), Department of Education (DOE), and Homeless Services (DHS) – that raise the most budgetary concerns due to rapidly increased spending and meager measurable results.
Agency Watch List spotlights City agencies – the Department of Correction (DOC), Department of Education (DOE), and Homeless Services (DHS) – that raise the most budgetary concerns due to rapidly increased spending and meager measurable results.
DFTA has crafted “Plan 2025”, which lays out a blueprint for adding new services, and making
enhancements to or transforming existing services, to respond to the needs of the burgeoning
population of older people.
The New York City Department for the Aging (DFTA) has launched a citywide ad campaign to bring attention to expanded respite services, which allow caregivers to take much-needed time off.