Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-158(b), this quarterly report contains 1) use of force incidents, disaggregated by category of force, precinct/unit, and on/off duty status 2) injuries to officers/civilians, disaggregated by injury type, precinct/unit, on/off duty status, and officer/civilian injury
New York City Board of Correction Weekly COVID-19 Updates including population changes, Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) updates to the Board of Correction (BOC), and housing information.
Summarizes the Board’s initial summer 2020 heat conditions findings. It also outlines the Department of Correction’s progress in implementing many of the recommendations made in the Board’s September 2019 heat report.
This report highlights the challenges Black entrepreneurs face when starting and growing their businesses and offers solutions through public-private partnerships.
NYC BY THE NUMBERS: Was $1 billion cut from the New York Police Department budget for this year? And how much of that cut continues next year and beyond in the city’s financial plan?
The city’s public hospital system, NYC Health + Hospitals, was regaining fiscal stability. Then the Covid-19 pandemic arrived. There may be enough federal aid to help H+H recover, at least in the near term. How much can the system expect to receive and what are the fiscal challenges ahead?
Pursuant to LL18 of 2012, a report and comments on contracts and purchasing, with transmittal letter about project cost increase of more than 10% during that quarter.
New York City Board of Correction Weekly COVID-19 Updates including population changes, Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) updates to the Board of Correction (BOC), and housing information.
NYC BY THE NUMBERS: With City Hall preparing for layoffs due to the pandemic-related recession, IBO looked at the rise and fall in city staff before, during, and after the Great Recession. Which agencies had the deepest cuts? Which grew the most in recent years?
NYC BY TNE NUMBERS: When New York City went on a pandemic “pause” in the spring, work at some 35,000 construction sites came to a halt. But not for long. How many sites restarted work—and why—during the pause?
New York City Board of Correction Weekly COVID-19 Updates including population changes, Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) updates to the Board of Correction (BOC), and housing information.
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-158(b), this quarterly report contains 1) use of force incidents, disaggregated by category of force, precinct/unit, and on/off duty status 2) injuries to officers/civilians, disaggregated by injury type, precinct/unit, on/off duty status, and officer/civilian injury
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-171, this quarterly report contains clearance rates, by borough and citywide, for homicide, rape, robbery, felony assault, burglary, grand larceny, and grand larceny motor vehicle
The Daily Shelter Census report contains statistics for the prior calendar day immediately preceding such weekday, excluding holidays. Reports various satistics such as, but not limited to the number of individuals, families, children (disaggregated).
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-153(c), this quarterly report contains 1) the number of leaving the scene incidents with a critical injury; 2) the number of such incidents the department closed to arrest and closed without an arrest; and 3) the number of notices of violation issued for 19-191
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-176, this quarterly report contains information on the # of opioid antagonists the dept has available, the # of officers trained to administer opioid antagonists, and the # of times the dept administered an antagonist to an overdose victim, disaggregated by borough
New York City Board of Correction Weekly COVID-19 Updates including population changes, Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) updates to the Board of Correction (BOC), and housing information.
The City of New York is legally mandated to submit the federal EEO-4 report every two years, which is mandated from all jurisdictions with 15 or more employees by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act as amended by the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972.
In accordance with the CSO Order on Consent (DEC Case No. CO2-20110512-25, modification to DEC Case No. CO2-20000107-8), the New York City Department of Environmental Protection submits quarterly reports on its actions toward complying with the Order's milestones.
In accordance with the CSO Order on Consent (DEC Case No. CO2-20110512-25, modification to DEC Case No. CO2-20000107-8), the New York City Department of Environmental Protection submits quarterly reports on its actions toward complying with the Order's milestones.
A report on the agency’s efforts during the previous quarter to implement the plan adopted pursuant to paragraph nineteen (annual plan) of Section 815(a).
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-153(c), this quarterly report contains 1) the number of leaving the scene incidents with a critical injury; 2) the number of such incidents the department closed to arrest and closed without an arrest; and 3) the number of notices of violation issued for 19-191
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-153(c), this quarterly report contains 1) the number of leaving the scene incidents with a critical injury 2) the number of such incidents the department closed to arrest and closed without an arrest 3) the number of notices of violation issued for 19-191
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.
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.
The Identifying Information Law requires City agencies to submit comprehensive biennial reports related to their collection, disclosure, and retention of identifying information and their privacy protection practices.
The CFB’s Human Resources Director also verbally informed staff during an agency-wide meeting on April 9, 2019 that all staff may provide a preferred name directly to the HR unit in order to change certain internal records to allow staff to better identify themselves in the workplace.
The CFB’s Human Resources Director also verbally informed staff during an agency-wide meeting on April 9, 2019, that all staff may provide a preferred name directly to the HR unit in order to change certain internal records to allow staff to better identify themselves in the workplace.
REPORT: With hunger and food insecurity rising amid the Covid-19 pandemic, the de Blasio Administration launched the Grab & Go food program at many city schools, where anyone in need could pick up free meals. But were the sites located in the areas with the greatest economic need?
New York City Board of Correction Weekly COVID-19 Updates including population changes, Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) updates to the Board of Correction (BOC), and housing information.
The following report lists the number of crashes reported to TLC that involve a TLC-licensed vehicle. Below those lines, the number of TLC-licensed vehicles involved in those crashes are disaggregated by vehicle type. Please note that multiple TLC-licensed vehicles can be involved in a single crash.
REPORT: Our new economic forecast and projections for tax revenue & spending based on the recently adopted budget for fiscal year 2021 & financial plan through 2024. The report, which includes our latest projection of job losses & gains and estimates of budget surpluses and gaps in the coming years.
New York City Board of Correction Weekly COVID-19 Updates including population changes, Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) updates to the Board of Correction (BOC), and housing information.
NYC BY THE NUMBERS: The Covid-19 pandemic brought renewed attention to the importance of parks and open space in neighborhoods. But some NYC neighborhoods have substantially more park space than others. We map the differences by square foot per resident.
New York City Board of Correction Weekly COVID-19 Updates including population changes, Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) updates to the Board of Correction (BOC), and housing information.
NYC BY THE NUMBERS: The Covid-19 pandemic has led to a surge in unemployment and an increase in government assistance, including cash assistance grants. How much have New York city’s cash assistance rolls grown in recent months?
Subway and bus ridership fell with onset of Covid-19, playing havoc with the MTA’s budget. Many of the same factors keeping riders off the MTA’s rails, buses, bridges & tunnels is also leading to a slump in the agency’s dedicated tax revenues, another primary source of its funding.
New York City Board of Correction Weekly COVID-19 Updates including population changes, Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) updates to the Board of Correction (BOC), and housing information.
PSEG Report – Pursuant to Local Law 90 of 2015, the Department is required to submit to its website quarterly segregated housing statistics. This includes a variety of statistics related to PSEG, ESH, CAPS, and RHU.
This report describes the City's effort to ensure minority and women-owned businesses have greater access to public contracting opportunities. The reporting period covers program accomplishments for the first three quarters of Fiscal Year 2020 (July 1, 2019 - March 31, 2020)
A quarterly report on EDC’s expenditure, as well as, retention or designation of persons or organizations to engage in lobbying or lobbying activities before the council or any member thereof, the city planning commission, a borough president, a borough board or a community board.
FOCUS ON THE EXECUTIVE BUDGET: Before the Mayor’s recent announcement that that the city may need to lay off or furlough as many as 22,000 municipal workers, the Executive Budget included the elimination of some vacant positions and a partial hiring freeze.