In accordance with the requirements of the New York State Municipal Assistance Corporation Act and the New York State Financial Emergency Act, the City of New York is required to submit monthly financial reports.
New York City’s current property tax system is notoriously opaque, unfair, and regressive. For the past four decades, rather than dealing with its structural flaws, New York State has layered on a patchwork of exemptions and abatements to lower tax rates for various owners.
Capital Project Detail Data - Citywide - Fiscal Year 2022 February Capital Commitment Plan: Reports on implementation milestone schedules for capital construction projects. It includes dates for the completion of scope, design and construction, and reasons for delays in any such dates.
Capital Project Detail Data - Manhattan - Fiscal Year 2022 February Capital Commitment Plan: Reports on implementation milestone schedules for capital construction projects. It includes dates for the completion of scope, design and construction, and reasons for delays in any such dates.
Capital Project Detail Data - Queens - Fiscal Year 2022 February Capital Commitment Plan: Reports on implementation milestone schedules for capital construction projects. It includes dates for the completion of scope, design and construction, and reasons for delays in any such dates.
Capital Project Detail Data - Staten Island - Fiscal Year 2022 February Capital Commitment Plan: Reports on implementation milestone schedules for capital construction projects. It includes dates for the completion of scope, design and construction, and reasons for delays in any such dates.
Capital Project Detail Data - Brooklyn - Fiscal Year 2022 February Capital Commitment Plan: Reports on implementation milestone schedules for capital construction projects. It includes dates for the completion of scope, design and construction, and reasons for delays in any such dates.
Capital Project Detail Data - Bronx - Fiscal Year 2022 January Capital Commitment Plan: Reports on implementation milestone schedules for capital construction projects. It includes dates for the completion of scope, design and construction, and reasons for delays in any such dates.
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).