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| | | 1. | ROLL CALL | | | | | |
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| | | 2. | INVOCATION - Delivered by: Reverend Doctor C. Vernon Mason, Minister in Residence, Friendship Baptist Church, 144 West 131 Street, New York, NY 10027.
Motion to spread the Invocation in full upon the record by Council Member Salaam. | | | | | |
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| | | 3. | ADOPTION OF MINUTES - Motion that the Minutes of the Stated Meeting of March 26, 2026 be adopted as printed by Council Member De La Rosa. | | | | | |
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| | | 4. | MESSAGES & PAPERS FROM THE MAYOR - None | | | | | |
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| | | 5. | COMMUNICATIONS FROM CITY, COUNTY & BOROUGH OFFICES - None | | | | | |
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| | | 6. | PETITIONS & COMMUNICATIONS - None | | | | | |
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| | | 7. | LAND USE CALL-UPS – | | | | | |
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M 0059-2026
| * | | | | Zoning, Denino's, Manhattan (D 2650094566 SWM). | Land Use Call-Up | | | |
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| | | 8. | COMMUNICATION FROM THE SPEAKER | | | | | |
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| | | 9. | DISCUSSION OF GENERAL ORDERS | | | | | |
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| | | 10. | REPORTS OF SPECIAL COMMITTEES - None | | | | | |
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| | | 11. | REPORTS OF STANDING COMMITTEES | | | | | |
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| | | | REPOT OF THE COMMITTEE TO COMBAT HATE | | | | | |
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Int 0327-2026
| B | Mercedes Narcisse | | Amended and Coupled on General Orders | Reimbursing nonpublic schools for the cost of video surveillance cameras. | Introduction | Pursuant to Local Law, the City currently operates a program to provide reimbursement to nonpublic schools for costs related to employing security guards. This legislation will expand this program by providing reimbursement for the purchase and installation of video surveillance cameras. Reimbursement levels would be capped based on enrollment size. The administering agency would further consider qualifying nonpublic schools’ tuition costs and other relevant factors in determining reimbursement levels and potential cost-sharing obligations. | | |
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| | | | REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND WATERFRONTS | | | | | |
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Int 0730-2026
| B | James F. Gennaro | | Amended and Coupled on General Orders | Requiring water quality testing and the posting of water quality testing results online. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) to conduct water quality testing at at least 15 testing sites within New York City’s waterbodies. The bill would require DEP to choose such testing sites in areas that are used for secondary contact recreation such as boating and fishing, within 1,000 feet of a combined sewer outfall, and within 5 to 20 feet of a waterbody’s shore or other access point, or as close as possible to a shore or other access point while maintaining 5 feet of water depth. Under this bill, such testing would be required monthly from November to April, and weekly from May to October. Finally, the bill would require DEP to post their water quality testing results online—bacteria results would be posted every week, and other water quality indicators would be posted quarterly. | | |
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| | | | REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON FINANCE | | | | | |
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Res 0420-2026
| * | Linda Lee | | Preconsidered - Coupled on General Orders | Approving the new designation and changes in the designation of certain organizations to receive funding in the Expense Budget. | Resolution | | | |
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| | | | REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON LAND USE | | | | | |
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LU 0045-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, 37-59 Hamilton Avenue Rezoning, Staten Island (C 250318 ZMR). | Land Use Application | | | |
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Res 0432-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | Coupled on General Orders | LU 45 - Zoning, 37-59 Hamilton Avenue Rezoning, Staten Island (C 250318 ZMR). | Resolution | | | |
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LU 0046-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, 37-59 Hamilton Avenue, Staten Island (N 250320 ZRR). | Land Use Application | | | |
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Res 0433-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | Coupled on General Orders | LU 46 - Zoning, 37-59 Hamilton Avenue, Staten Island (N 250320 ZRR). | Resolution | | | |
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LU 0049-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, Sabrosura, Bronx (D 2650051365 SWX). | Land Use Application | | | |
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Res 0434-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | Coupled on General Orders | LU 49 - Zoning, Sabrosura, Bronx (D 2650051365 SWX). | Resolution | | | |
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LU 0050-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, Cicchetti BK, Brooklyn ( D 2650179761 SWK). | Land Use Application | | | |
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Res 0435-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | Coupled on General Orders | LU 50 - Zoning, Cicchetti BK, Brooklyn ( D 2650179761 SWK). | Resolution | | | |
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| | | | REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE USE | | | | | |
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Int 0722-2026
| A | Lynn C. Schulman | | Amended and Coupled on General Orders | Reporting and publication of mental health emergency response data. | Introduction | The bill would require, starting June 1, 2027, that the New York City Mayor’s Office of Community Mental Health submit twice a year to the Mayor and Speaker of the City Council—and post publicly online—a report on mental health emergency calls from the prior six months. Each report would include call volume; how many calls were eligible for and received a B-HEARD response versus police or EMS; response times; outcomes, such as treatment, hospitalization, arrest, or involuntary removal; use of force incidents; demographic information; and call locations by precinct and borough. The bill would also require the New York City Fire Department to add new columns to its public 911 call data on the Open Data Portal indicating whether B-HEARD was dispatched and whether it responded, along with a randomly generated ID to enable data linking while protecting privacy. | | |
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| | | | REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON PARKS AND RECREATION | | | | | |
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Int 0577-2026
| A | James F. Gennaro | | Amended and Coupled on General Orders | A map of trails in parks or properties under the jurisdiction of the department of parks and recreation. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) to post on its website a map of trails located in each park or property under DPR jurisdiction. DPR would be required to update the map upon the completion of any project that improves an existing trail or creates a new one and would have to consider how any project that improves or creates a trail would improve public access to that trail. | | |
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Int 0740-2026
| A | Ty Hankerson | | Amended and Coupled on General Orders | A study on increasing the amount of green space in various community districts. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Parks and Recreation, and other relevant City agencies, to conduct a study to identify at least the top 10 community districts that lack the most green space, and to make recommendations to the Mayor and Council on how to increase green space, including parkland, in such areas. | | |
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Int 0806-2026
| A | Phil Wong | | Amended and Coupled on General Orders | The development of a citywide wildlife management plan. | Introduction | This bill would create a wildlife management advisory board to develop a citywide wildlife management plan, to analyze wildlife management issues and recommend policies to preserve and promote biological diversity and the humane treatment of wildlife. All agencies would be required to consider the effect of their actions on wildlife and an annual report would be released by the Mayor’s Office of Animal Welfare, in consultation with the Department of Parks and Recreation updating the status of ongoing wildlife management problems. | | |
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Int 0805-2026
| A | Phil Wong | | Amended and Coupled on General Orders | A cool pavement pilot project in parks. | Introduction | This bill would require the Parks Department (DPR), along with the Departments of Health and Mental Hygiene, Environmental Protection, Transportation and the Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability to conduct a study and pilot program concerning the use and installation of cool pavement materials on DPR property within, abutting, or directly adjacent to a playground, in at least 1 heat vulnerable community in each borough. DPR would be required to post the results of the pilot on its website and submit it to the Mayor and the Speaker of the Council no later than February 1, 2031. | | |
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| | | | REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON RULES, PRIVILEGES, ELECTIONS, STANDARDS AND ETHICS | | | | | |
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M 0053-2026
| * | | | | Nadia Shihata, NYC Department of Investigations. | Mayor's Message | | | |
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Res 0436-2026
| * | Sandra Ung | | Coupled on General Orders | M 53 - Nadia Shihata, NYC Department of Investigations. | Resolution | | | |
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| | | | REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON SANITATION AND SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT | | | | | |
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Int 0355-2026
| A | Sandy Nurse | | Amended and Coupled on General Orders | Organic waste recycling by city agencies. | Introduction | This bill would designate, for City agencies, organic waste as a recyclable material, and require DSNY to establish rules governing the source separation of organic waste that is generated by City agencies in the preparation and service of meals. | | |
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| | | 12. | GENERAL ORDERS CALENDAR | | | | | |
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| | | | COUPLED ON GENERAL ORDERS CALENDAR | | | | | |
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| | | | COMBAT HATE | | | | | |
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Int 0327-2026
| B | Mercedes Narcisse | ~coupled | A and GO | Reimbursing nonpublic schools for the cost of video surveillance cameras. | Introduction | Pursuant to Local Law, the City currently operates a program to provide reimbursement to nonpublic schools for costs related to employing security guards. This legislation will expand this program by providing reimbursement for the purchase and installation of video surveillance cameras. Reimbursement levels would be capped based on enrollment size. The administering agency would further consider qualifying nonpublic schools’ tuition costs and other relevant factors in determining reimbursement levels and potential cost-sharing obligations. | | |
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| | | ~coupled | ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND WATERFRONTS | | | | | |
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Int 0730-2026
| B | James F. Gennaro | ~coupled | A and GO | Requiring water quality testing and the posting of water quality testing results online. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) to conduct water quality testing at at least 15 testing sites within New York City’s waterbodies. The bill would require DEP to choose such testing sites in areas that are used for secondary contact recreation such as boating and fishing, within 1,000 feet of a combined sewer outfall, and within 5 to 20 feet of a waterbody’s shore or other access point, or as close as possible to a shore or other access point while maintaining 5 feet of water depth. Under this bill, such testing would be required monthly from November to April, and weekly from May to October. Finally, the bill would require DEP to post their water quality testing results online—bacteria results would be posted every week, and other water quality indicators would be posted quarterly. | | |
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| | | ~coupled | FINANCE | | | | | |
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Res 0420-2026
| * | Linda Lee | ~coupled | Preconsidered - GO | Approving the new designation and changes in the designation of certain organizations to receive funding in the Expense Budget. | Resolution | | | |
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| | | ~coupled | LAND USE | | | | | |
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Res 0432-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~coupled | GO | LU 45 - Zoning, 37-59 Hamilton Avenue Rezoning, Staten Island (C 250318 ZMR). | Resolution | | | |
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Res 0433-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~coupled | GO | LU 46 - Zoning, 37-59 Hamilton Avenue, Staten Island (N 250320 ZRR). | Resolution | | | |
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Res 0434-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~coupled | GO | LU 49 - Zoning, Sabrosura, Bronx (D 2650051365 SWX). | Resolution | | | |
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Res 0435-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~coupled | GO | LU 50 - Zoning, Cicchetti BK, Brooklyn ( D 2650179761 SWK). | Resolution | | | |
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| | | ~coupled | MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE USE | | | | | |
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Int 0722-2026
| A | Lynn C. Schulman | ~coupled | A and GO | Reporting and publication of mental health emergency response data. | Introduction | The bill would require, starting June 1, 2027, that the New York City Mayor’s Office of Community Mental Health submit twice a year to the Mayor and Speaker of the City Council—and post publicly online—a report on mental health emergency calls from the prior six months. Each report would include call volume; how many calls were eligible for and received a B-HEARD response versus police or EMS; response times; outcomes, such as treatment, hospitalization, arrest, or involuntary removal; use of force incidents; demographic information; and call locations by precinct and borough. The bill would also require the New York City Fire Department to add new columns to its public 911 call data on the Open Data Portal indicating whether B-HEARD was dispatched and whether it responded, along with a randomly generated ID to enable data linking while protecting privacy. | | |
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| | | ~coupled | PARKS AND RECREATION | | | | | |
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Int 0577-2026
| A | James F. Gennaro | ~coupled | A and GO | A map of trails in parks or properties under the jurisdiction of the department of parks and recreation. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) to post on its website a map of trails located in each park or property under DPR jurisdiction. DPR would be required to update the map upon the completion of any project that improves an existing trail or creates a new one and would have to consider how any project that improves or creates a trail would improve public access to that trail. | | |
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Int 0740-2026
| A | Ty Hankerson | ~coupled | A and GO | A study on increasing the amount of green space in various community districts. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Parks and Recreation, and other relevant City agencies, to conduct a study to identify at least the top 10 community districts that lack the most green space, and to make recommendations to the Mayor and Council on how to increase green space, including parkland, in such areas. | | |
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Int 0805-2026
| A | Phil Wong | ~coupled | A and GO | A cool pavement pilot project in parks. | Introduction | This bill would require the Parks Department (DPR), along with the Departments of Health and Mental Hygiene, Environmental Protection, Transportation and the Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability to conduct a study and pilot program concerning the use and installation of cool pavement materials on DPR property within, abutting, or directly adjacent to a playground, in at least 1 heat vulnerable community in each borough. DPR would be required to post the results of the pilot on its website and submit it to the Mayor and the Speaker of the Council no later than February 1, 2031. | | |
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Int 0806-2026
| A | Phil Wong | ~coupled | A and GO | The development of a citywide wildlife management plan. | Introduction | This bill would create a wildlife management advisory board to develop a citywide wildlife management plan, to analyze wildlife management issues and recommend policies to preserve and promote biological diversity and the humane treatment of wildlife. All agencies would be required to consider the effect of their actions on wildlife and an annual report would be released by the Mayor’s Office of Animal Welfare, in consultation with the Department of Parks and Recreation updating the status of ongoing wildlife management problems. | | |
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| | | ~coupled | RULES, PRIVILEGES, ELECTIONS, STANDARDS AND ETHICS | | | | | |
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Res 0436-2026
| * | Sandra Ung | ~coupled | GO | M 53 - Nadia Shihata, NYC Department of Investigations. | Resolution | | | |
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| | | ~coupled | SANITATION AND SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT | | | | | |
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Int 0355-2026
| A | Sandy Nurse | ~coupled | A and GO | Organic waste recycling by city agencies. | Introduction | This bill would designate, for City agencies, organic waste as a recyclable material, and require DSNY to establish rules governing the source separation of organic waste that is generated by City agencies in the preparation and service of meals. | | |
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| | | ~coupled | GENERAL ORDERS CALENDAR | | | | | |
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| | | 13. | INTRODUCTION & READING OF BILLS (SEE BELOW) | | | | | |
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| | | 14. | DISCUSSION OF RESOLUTIONS | | | | | |
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| | | 15. | RESOLUTIONS | | | | | |
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Res 0351-2026
| * | Harvey D. Epstein | | Adopted by the Committee on Environmental Protection and Waterfronts | Endangered Species Act. | Resolution | | | |
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| | | 16. | GENERAL DISCUSSION | | | | | |
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| | | 17. | EXTENSION OF REMARKS | | | | | |
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| | | | INTRODUCTION AND READING OF BILLS - Pursuant to Section 33-a of the New York City Charter, the New York City Council may vote on the following items no earlier than 30 days from the date of this notice. The New York City Council reserves the right to vote without the notice required pursuant to Section 33-a on any proposed local laws that do not relate to the public safety operations of the New York City Police Department, the Fire Department or the Department of Correction. | | | | | |
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Int 0807-2026
| * | Shaun Abreu | ~SPONSOR | Economic Development | A plan to expand access to public bathrooms during the World Cup. | Introduction | This bill would require a City agency designated by the mayor to submit to the mayor and the speaker of the Council a plan to expand access to public bathrooms during the 2026 World Cup. The plan would be required to include details of any planned actions by the agency related to: identifying public spaces expected to receive increased foot traffic from World Cup activities; posting wayfinding signage directing the public to nearby available public bathrooms; extending the hours during which public bathrooms are accessible; installing temporary public bathrooms; increasing the frequency of public bathroom maintenance; prioritizing public bathrooms with accessibility features; and compiling and promoting a list of public bathrooms. The agency would be required to submit the plan no later than June 1, 2026. The final plan would also be posted on the agency’s website. | | |
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Int 0808-2026
| * | Shaun Abreu | ~SPONSOR | Economic Development | Development of a World Cup events calendar and map of cultural corridors and small businesses connected to the participating nations. | Introduction | This bill would require that a City agency designated by the mayor develop and publish a calendar of 2026 World Cup activities. The calendar would include viewing parties, recreational events, performances, street festivals, and other cultural programming celebrating any of the 48 nations participating in the tournament. The bill would also require that the Department of Small Business Services develop and publish a map of neighborhoods or geographic areas within the City with a significant concentration of residents or businesses sharing a cultural or historical connection to a participating nation, and small businesses with culinary, historical, or other cultural connections to participating nations that consent to inclusion. The department of small business services would be required to conduct outreach to small businesses to help them maximize economic engagement during the World Cup. | | |
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Int 0809-2026
| * | Selvena N. Brooks-Powers | ~SPONSOR | Criminal Justice | Requiring the department of correction to create and implement policies to address medical needs during and after lock-ins. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Correction (“DOC”) to develop and implement a plan, in consultation with Correction Health Services (“CHS”) to address medical appointments during and after a lock-in. The plan would require DOC to provide CHS with adequate notice of an impending lock-in when possible and DOC and CHS to communicate during and after a lock-in. The plan would also require CHS to determine the order in which individuals who were not produced for a medical appointment due to a lock-in are produced, based on medical necessity, and DOC to continue to escort patients to medical appointments, whenever practicable.
This bill would also require DOC to report when mental health units are locked down pursuant to a lock-in and how services were supplemented during that time, and CHS to report on the number of missed appointments due to a lock-in. | | |
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Int 0810-2026
| * | Selvena N. Brooks-Powers | ~SPONSOR | Criminal Justice | Prohibiting triple tours of duty for department of correction custodial officers. | Introduction | This bill would limit the assignment of tours of duty for Department of Correction (“DOC”) custodial officers to not more than two consecutive tours of duty. The bill would establish a tour of duty as consisting of not more than 8 consecutive hours. Assignment of additional hours into a third consecutive tour of duty would be prohibited. | | |
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Int 0811-2026
| * | Selvena N. Brooks-Powers | ~SPONSOR | Sanitation and Solid Waste Management | Requiring the department of sanitation to clean and maintain all city-owned vacant lots. | Introduction | This bill would require that the Department of Sanitation be the sole agency responsible for cleaning and maintaining all City-owned vacant lots and the sidewalks abutting such lots, regardless of which City agency owns such vacant lot. | | |
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Res 0417-2026
| * | Selvena N. Brooks-Powers | ~SPONSOR | Criminal Justice | Parole eligibility for certain incarcerated individuals aged fifty-five years of age or older ( A.514/S.454). | Resolution | | | |
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Res 0418-2026
| * | Eric Dinowitz | ~SPONSOR | Higher Education | Ensure that all campuses award an appropriate number of college credits to students who earned a New York State Seal of Civic Readiness in high school. | Resolution | | | |
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Int 0812-2026
| * | Elsie Encarnación | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Aging | Wellness checks on older adults during certain weather events. | Introduction | This bill would require the Commissioner of the New York City (NYC) Department for the Aging (DFTA) to develop a protocol in collaboration with NYC Emergency Management (NYCEM) and relevant agencies to conduct in-person and phone-based wellness checks during extreme weather events, including Code Blue and Code Red alerts, or during heat-related emergencies as determined by the National Weather Services or the Commissioner of the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Wellness checks would include a set of questions developed by DFTA to gauge an older adult’s well-being, a determination of such older adult’s apparent well-being, an evaluation and report of the conditions in such older adult’s place of residence, including the temperature, the presence of and functionality of heating or cooling devices or equipment, and any other concerns in relation to the well-being of the older adult. | | |
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Int 0813-2026
| * | Harvey D. Epstein | ~SPONSOR | Consumer and Worker Protection | Refusing to renew, suspending, or revoking a license of a tobacco retail dealer that has violated certain authorization requirements of the cannabis law. | Introduction | This bill would allow the Commissioner of Consumer and Worker Protection to refuse to renew, suspend, or revoke a tobacco retailer dealer license upon a finding that the holder of such license violated subdivision 1 of section 125 of the Cannabis Law through the distribution for sale, selling at wholesale or retail, or delivering to consumers of any cannabis, cannabis product, medical cannabis, or cannabinoid hemp or hemp extract product without the appropriate registration, license, or permit issued by New York State. This bill would also require the Commissioner of Consumer and Worker Protection to conduct an education and outreach campaign to inform affected licensees of the new grounds added by this local law for refusal to renew, suspension, or revocation of a license. | | |
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Int 0814-2026
| * | Harvey D. Epstein | ~SPONSOR | Sanitation and Solid Waste Management | Citizen enforcement program for illegal disposal of household or commercial refuse in public litter baskets. | Introduction | This bill would allow individual New Yorkers to file complaints regarding the illegal disposal of trash from homes or commercial venues into public trash cans. Once a complaint is filed with the Department of Sanitation, the Department would have 45 days to either issue a notice of violation itself or deny the complaint as frivolous. If 45 days pass without either of those actions happening, the person who filed the complaint could summon the person accused of illegally disposing of their trash to the Office of Administrative Trials and Hearings and prosecute the action personally. A person who filed a complaint would be entitled to 25% of proceeds if the Department of Sanitation prevailed in a hearing at the Office of Administrative Trials and Hearings over someone that person complained about, or 50% of the civil penalty if they themselves prosecuted the case and won. Finally, the Department of Sanitation would have to provide best practices on its website for filling out a complaint. | | |
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Int 0815-2026
| * | Harvey D. Epstein | ~SPONSOR | Transportation and Infrastructure | Lighting controls for street lighting fixtures. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Transportation (DOT), when installing a new or replacement street lighting fixture on a residential street, to install a shielded fixture that is controlled by a motion sensor to automatically dim at certain times, subject to certain exceptions. DOT would also be required to conduct a study on the possible citywide use of shielded street lighting fixtures that utilize adaptive lighting controls. Until the completion of such study, DOT would be required to submit annual reports regarding its progress on such study, as well as on the installations on residential streets. | | |
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Res 0419-2026
| * | Harvey D. Epstein | ~SPONSOR | Finance | Amend the constitution and applicable statutory law to increase New York City’s debt limit. | Resolution | | | |
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Int 0816-2026
| * | Amanda C. FarĂas | ~SPONSOR | General Welfare | Limiting the documentation of housing history required as part of an application for shelter by a family with children. | Introduction | This bill would bar the Department of Homeless Services from requiring that families applying for shelter provide any documentation to verify their housing history other than a written attestation that the housing history they provided in their application is accurate. | | |
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Int 0817-2026
| * | Oswald J. Feliz | ~SPONSOR | Finance | Requiring monthly reports on scheduled construction work on capital projects. | Introduction | This local law would require every City agency that manages capital projects to submit a monthly report to the Mayor, or an office or agency designated by the Mayor, which would detail all construction work scheduled in the ensuing three months and provide a status update on all construction work that had been scheduled during the prior six months. The Mayor, or office or agency designated by the Mayor, would be required to compile the reports of the managing agencies into a citywide which would be reviewed to promote coordination between managing agencies and to ensure that work on capital projects is being scheduled and conducted in an efficient and effective manner. The citywide report would be submitted to the Council, gas and electrical utility companies in the City, and the Empire City Subway Company, as well as be posted on the City’s website, in a machine-readable format. | | |
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Int 0818-2026
| * | Oswald J. Feliz | ~SPONSOR | Housing and Buildings | Creation of an interagency derelict housing and neglected property task force, and providing for the repeal of such local law upon the expiration thereof. | Introduction | This bill would establish an interagency task force to study derelict housing and neglected property, and to make recommendations on how to effectively address the health and safety risks that they create. The task force would convene for a period of one year and would be required to submit a report to the Mayor and the Council. | | |
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Int 0819-2026
| * | James F. Gennaro | ~SPONSOR | Economic Development | Freight rail expansion. | Introduction | This bill would amend section 25-120 of the administrative code by requiring the Department of City Planning and the Department of Small Business Services to include policies and strategies to expand and improve the freight rail network and freight rail usage in the city in industrial development strategic plans produced every eight years that are due after 2025. The bill would also require those same departments to issue an interim rail freight plan to the mayor and the city council at the end of 2026 covering the same topic. | | |
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Int 0820-2026
| * | Jennifer Gutiérrez | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Early Childhood Education | Establishing a child care workforce grant and services program. | Introduction | This bill would require an agency or office designated by the mayor to establish and administer a program to assist people without experience in child care to complete educational programs that satisfy the requirements of the Department of Education or the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to work in child care. The agency or office would provide loans or grants to participants and the participants in the program would be required to agree to work in child care in New York City for at least 5 years after finishing the program. The program would also be required to provide child care services to program participants during hours of the educational program and conduct outreach about its offerings to the public and high school students in New York City. The program must begin processing applications no later than 6 months after the effective date of the local law. | | |
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Int 0821-2026
| * | Linda Lee | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Aging | Requiring the department for the aging to maintain non-digital access to forms and services. | Introduction | This bill would require the New York City Department for the Aging (DFTA) to make any applications, forms, benefits, program enrollment, informational resource, or services which are offered by DFTA in an online or digital format accessible through non-digital means, including by phone and in paper form in the designated citywide languages. The DFTA Commissioner (the “Commissioner”) would be permitted to review DFTA services and submit in writing to the Mayor and to the Speaker of the Council a determination as to whether any such service is necessary to provide in non-digital formats, and the rationale for the Commissioner’s determination. The Commissioner would then be allowed to implement changes pursuant to a determination no earlier than 90 days following the written submission of such determination. | | |
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Res 0420-2026
| * | Linda Lee | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Finance | Approving the new designation and changes in the designation of certain organizations to receive funding in the Expense Budget. | Resolution | | | |
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Int 0822-2026
| * | Virginia Maloney | ~SPONSOR | Parks and Recreation | The naming of two thoroughfares and public places. | Introduction | This bill would co-name two thoroughfares and public places, based on requests of Council Members whose district includes the location. | | |
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Int 0823-2026
| * | Christopher Marte | ~SPONSOR | Fire and Emergency Management | Requiring agencies that issue vacate orders to provide documentation of vacate orders to affected occupants upon request. | Introduction | This bill would require agencies that issue vacate orders—specifically, Department of Buildings (DOB), Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH), Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD), and New York City Fire Department (FDNY) — to provide documentation about vacate orders, including the reason for an order and the date it was issued, to affected occupants upon request. Occupants who were required to leave a building due to a vacate order would be allowed to submit a request for documentation online and by mail to the agency that issued the order, and the agency would be required to provide the requested documentation within 14 days of receipt of the request. | | |
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Int 0824-2026
| * | Christopher Marte | ~SPONSOR | Parks and Recreation | Establishment and development of school gardens. | Introduction | This bill would establish an interagency school community garden team within the Mayor’s Office of Sustainability. The team would include various representatives from City agencies responsible for developing initiatives and practices to promote the use of community gardens in schools. The team would also be required to submit an annual report to the Council on their efforts to promote school gardens. | | |
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Int 0825-2026
| * | Christopher Marte | ~SPONSOR | Transportation and Infrastructure | Department of social services issuing replacement transit benefit cards. | Introduction | This bill would require the New York City Human Resources Administration (HRA) to issue duplicate transit benefit cards under the Fair Fares NYC program where a participant’s card was damaged, destroyed, stolen, or lost. HRA would be required to provide one replacement card free of charge, but would charge a fee of $15 for any subsequent replacement cards. The bill would prohibit HRA from limiting the number of requests of a duplicate card a participant could make, provided they pay the $15 fee. | | |
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Int 0826-2026
| * | Christopher Marte | ~SPONSOR | Aging | Anti-discrimination training on sexual orientation, gender identity and expression for senior service providers. | Introduction | This legislation would require senior service providers to attend a training to prevent and eliminate discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity, and expression and to take a refresher training at least once every three years. The Department would also be required to hold at least two educational sessions each year to provide counseling and training to guests and senior center members on such discrimination. Senior centers would also be required to post signs in common areas with information about discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, including how to report such instances and available avenues of relief and action. | | |
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Int 0827-2026
| * | Christopher Marte | ~SPONSOR | Sanitation and Solid Waste Management | Requiring that notices of violation issued by the department of sanitation be accompanied by a photograph of the alleged violation. | Introduction | The proposed bill would require that notices of violation issued by the Department of Sanitation be accompanied by a photograph of the alleged violation. | | |
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Int 0828-2026
| * | Darlene Mealy | ~SPONSOR | General Welfare | Making available training and operational support to staff of food pantries. | Introduction | This bill would require the Mayor to designate an office or agency to offer training and operational support to staff of food pantries. The training and operational support would concern ensuring sufficient food inventory, making efforts to maintain food inventory that reflects food variety and local food preferences, maintaining sufficient hours, and other relevant issues. The designated office or agency would be required to conduct outreach to food pantries to advertise the available training and operational support. Lastly, the designated office or agency would be required to report annually to the Mayor and the Speaker of the Council on the types of training and operational support it offered within the previous 12 months and number of food pantry staff who participated in the trainings within this period, and to post this report online. | | |
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Res 0421-2026
| * | Darlene Mealy | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Aging | Authorizing the New York State Office for the Aging to establish, operate, and maintain programs for transportation services. (S.8689/A.10055) | Resolution | | | |
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Int 0829-2026
| * | Frank Morano | ~SPONSOR | General Welfare | Expanding and decentralizing the landlord management unit. | Introduction | This bill would expand the Landlord Management Unit within the Department of Social Services (DSS) to require units physically located within each of the five boroughs. The bill would also require that DSS maintain various communication methods for landlords who participate in DSS-administered rental subsidy programs such as CityFHEPS. Methods would include in-person appointments, telephone, an online portal and a mechanism to submit complaints. The bill would require any correspondence the units receive from landlords be responded to within certain timeframes. Finally, the bill would require the publication of an annual report that details the number of complaints received, average resolution times, and any patterns of issues and problems identified by DSS upon reviewing complaints. | | |
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Int 0830-2026
| * | Frank Morano | ~SPONSOR | Health | Cats in retail food stores. | Introduction | This bill would override the provisions of the New York City Health Code that prohibit owners of retail food stores from keeping a cat within their store. Importantly, however, this bill standing alone would not permit store owners to keep cats in their stores. Instead, further action would be required by the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets to change its regulations prohibiting the keeping of live animals within stores.
Additionally, this bill would require the Office of Animal Welfare, in collaboration with the Department of Small Business Services, to establish a program to provide free vaccinations and spaying and neutering services to cats residing in retail food stores and to conduct an outreach campaign to inform retail food store owners regarding these programs. | | |
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Int 0831-2026
| * | Frank Morano | ~SPONSOR | General Welfare | Providing leave for bone marrow and living organ donation and establishing a city bone marrow and living organ donor honor roll. | Introduction | This bill would amend New York City’s (the “City”) Earned Safe and Sick Time Act by requiring that employers provide up to 5 business days of unpaid leave to donate bone marrow and up to 20 business days of unpaid leave to undergo a medical procedure to make a living organ donation. Subject to appropriation, the bill would require the City to establish a program to provide employees with a wage-replacement benefit to compensate employees for unpaid leave taken for bone marrow donation or living organ donation leave. This time would be paid at the employee’s regular pay rate and be in addition to their accrual or use of existing safe/sick time. Within certain limits, an employer could require reasonable documentation from the employee on the use of the time. An employer could not require the employee to work additional hours to make up for the original hours the employee was unavailable, or find a replacement employee to cover their hours, due to the employee’s use of the time. The bill would provide relief and penalties for failure to provide this time. The bill would also require the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to establish a voluntary public honor roll recognizing City employees who donate bone marrow or donate a living organ. | | |
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Int 0832-2026
| * | Sandy Nurse | ~SPONSOR | Fire and Emergency Management | Requiring the fire department to provide mental health support services to emergency responders. | Introduction | This bill would require the Fire Department to provide emergency responders with mental health support services and information designed to reduce the effects of psychological trauma emergency responders may experience during and after critical incidents. The services would include expanded availability of clinicians and peer support profession, voluntary wellness information sessions, posting information on available resources on FDNY’s website and in department facilities, and providing training to supervisors on first responder mental health. | | |
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Int 0833-2026
| * | Sandy Nurse | ~SPONSOR | Land Use | Restrictions on the location of buildings and other structures on Eastern parkway. | Introduction | This bill would repeal certain building setback restrictions along Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn from Ralph Avenue to Bushwick Avenue. | | |
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Res 0422-2026
| * | Sandy Nurse | ~SPONSOR | Environmental Protection and Waterfronts | Issue an emergency rule restricting Con Edison’s ability to apply its interconnection methodology. | Resolution | | | |
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Res 0423-2026
| * | Sandy Nurse | ~SPONSOR | Sanitation and Solid Waste Management | Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act. (A.1749/S.1464) | Resolution | | | |
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Int 0834-2026
| * | Lincoln Restler | ~SPONSOR | Contracts | Reporting on minority- and women-owned business participation in subcontracts for human services contracts. | Introduction | This bill would require each contractor that has entered into a human services contract with a city agency to disclose certain information about any subcontract to the contracting agency within 30 days of executing a subcontract with an entity known to the contractor to be a certified minority- or women-owned business enterprise for construction, professional services, standard services, or goods. Such disclosures would include the name, address, and contact information of the subcontractor and the value and type of work or goods to be provided. No later than October 31 of each year, each agency that administered a human services contract during the preceding fiscal year would be required to transmit those disclosures to the Mayor’s Office of Contract Services for each such subcontract executed or amended during that fiscal year. | | |
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Int 0835-2026
| * | Lincoln Restler | ~SPONSOR | Education | Establishment and maintenance of a school bus performance dashboard. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Education (DOE) to report information related to school bus on-time performance. DOE would be required to report monthly on early and late school bus pickups and drop-offs from home and from school, the amount of time, in minutes, that bus routes were early or late, and missed pickups and drop-offs, among other data points. An office or agency chosen by the mayor would be required to maintain an online dashboard that presents the reported data to the public in an accessible and easy to understand manner. | | |
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Res 0424-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~SPONSOR | Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Relations | Declaring January 5 as Kappa Alpha Psi Day. | Resolution | | | |
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Int 0836-2026
| * | Yusef Salaam | ~SPONSOR | Education | Distribution of information regarding the availability of halal and kosher food in schools. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Education (DOE) to distribute information at the start of each school year to students of public schools and their parents on the availability of halal and kosher meals at schools. DOE would also have to post this information on its website. DOE would be required to distribute and post the information in English, the 9 most common languages spoken by students at home, and any additional languages as determined by DOE. | | |
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Int 0837-2026
| * | Yusef Salaam | ~SPONSOR | Consumer and Worker Protection | A public outreach and education program regarding Hajj-related scams. | Introduction | This bill would direct the Commissioner of Consumer and Worker Protection, in consultation with the Chairperson of the New York City Commission on Human Rights, the Director of the Office of Immigrant Affairs, and the Commissioner for the Aging, to establish and implement an ongoing outreach and education program for New York City residents about scams related to Hajj. The outreach and education would address fraudulent offers of travel, accommodation, and catering services and visas, and involve recommendation of practices for identifying fraud and booking related services. The involved agency heads would have to, at a minimum, develop and update informational materials and distribute them to the public and post them online. | | |
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Int 0838-2026
| * | Justin E. Sanchez | ~SPONSOR | Technology | Creation of a centralized mobile application for accessing city services. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (DoITT) to create a single mobile application allowing the public to access services provided by different City agencies. The application would be accessible for persons with disabilities. The department would encrypt all exchanges or transfers between a web server and the mobile application. The application software would be open source and publicly accessible. | | |
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Int 0839-2026
| * | Pierina Ana Sanchez | ~SPONSOR | Housing and Buildings | Making the certification of no harassment pilot program permanent and adding criteria for inclusion of certain buildings in the program. | Introduction | This bill would make the Certification of No Harassment (CONH) pilot program permanent. It would also add to the CONH program list buildings that have the same owner or head officer as buildings where there has been a finding of harassment within the past 60 months. | | |
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Int 0840-2026
| * | Kayla Santosuosso | ~SPONSOR | Health | Requiring health insurance coverage for pre-implantation testing for city employees. | Introduction | This bill would require the City to offer health insurance to City employees who are not part of a bargaining unit that includes coverage for pre-implantation genetic testing for aneuploidy (PGT-A) which is performed during in vitro fertilization (IVF) to check embryos for abnormalities in the number of chromosomes. | | |
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Int 0841-2026
| * | Lynn C. Schulman | ~SPONSOR | Health | A pilot program to establish a pet food pantry. | Introduction | This bill would require the Commissioner of Health and Mental Hygiene to establish a pet food pantry in at least one location for at least 12 months. It would also require the Commissioner to deliver a report on the impact of the pilot program and feasibility of continuing or expanding the program. | | |
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Res 0425-2026
| * | Lynn C. Schulman | ~SPONSOR | Health | Requiring vaccines to be regulated based on the recommendations of various nationally and internationally recognized healthcare organizations. (A.8824A, A.9648, and A.9060C, S.8334A/A.8824A, S.8853/A.9648, and S.8496C/A.9060C) | Resolution | | | |
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Res 0426-2026
| * | Lynn C. Schulman | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - General Welfare | “Hot Foods Act of 2025" (S.1202/H.R.2512). | Resolution | | | |
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Res 0427-2026
| * | Lynn C. Schulman | ~SPONSOR | Health | “New York affordable drug manufacturing act”. (S.4786/A.8345A) | Resolution | | | |
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Int 0842-2026
| * | Althea V. Stevens | ~SPONSOR | Civil and Human Rights | Requiring quarterly reporting on lawful source of income discrimination in housing accommodations. | Introduction | This bill would require the New York City Commission on Human Rights to issue quarterly reports regarding source of income discrimination complaints it has received, initiated, and resolved the previous quarter as well as unresolved complaints received or initiated prior to the previous quarter and the status of such complaints. | | |
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Int 0843-2026
| * | Althea V. Stevens | ~SPONSOR | Public Safety | Establishing a program to provide public notification of school emergencies. | Introduction | The bill would require the City to establish an alert system to notify the public of emergencies that require law enforcement at schools. | | |
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Int 0844-2026
| * | Shanel Thomas-Henry | ~SPONSOR | Consumer and Worker Protection | Licensing massage therapy businesses. | Introduction | This bill would require that businesses providing or offering massage in a fixed location (“massage therapy businesses”) have a license to operate. Massage therapy businesses would be required to post the license in the location where they operate. Massage therapy businesses would be prohibited from employing or retaining any person to provide massage unless that person has a state license to practice massage therapy or is exempt from the requirement to have such a license pursuant to state law and would be required to retain records for each person providing massage that show the person is licensed or exempt. Any person in violation of these requirements would be liable for civil penalties. | | |
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Int 0845-2026
| * | Shanel Thomas-Henry | ~SPONSOR | Transportation and Infrastructure | Requiring the department of transportation to install lighting under elevated train lines. | Introduction | This bill would require that the Department of Transportation assess streets and sidewalks underneath elevated train infrastructure to determine if lighting is needed. In areas where the Department determines that lighting is needed, the Department would be required to install lighting in that area within 3 years. Subject to appropriations and necessary approvals, such lighting would need to be of a non-standard, distinctive design. The Department would be required to provide a report on the successes and failures of installation. | | |
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Int 0846-2026
| * | Shanel Thomas-Henry | ~SPONSOR | Transportation and Infrastructure | Ferry service to Willets Point. | Introduction | This bill would require the New York City Department of Transportation to provide regular ferry service from Willets Point in Queens to the borough of Manhattan. | | |
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Res 0428-2026
| * | Shanel Thomas-Henry | ~SPONSOR | Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Relations | Celebrating the arrival of the 2026 World Cup in the City of New York. | Resolution | | | |
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Int 0847-2026
| * | Sandra Ung | ~SPONSOR | Consumer and Worker Protection | Providing outreach and education on consumer protection issues that affect tourists. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (DCWP) to establish and implement an outreach and education program to create awareness of common scams targeting and impacting tourists. The program would require DCWP to develop educational materials that include: identification of and safety tips for avoiding common scams; contact information for reporting scams in real time; and instructions for filing a consumer complaint with the department. Educational materials would be required to be posted on DCWP’s website in multiple languages and updated annually. This bill would also require DCWP to develop and distribute educational materials specifically targeted to tourists during the 2026 World Cup. Finally, the bill would make purely technical changes to the headings of four sections of the Administrative Code that established related outreach and education programs administered by DCWP. | | |
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Int 0848-2026
| * | Sandra Ung | ~SPONSOR | Environmental Protection and Waterfronts | Increasing penalties for excessive noise from speakers and motor vehicles. | Introduction | This bill would prohibit a motor vehicle owner from affixing a speaker to the exterior of a vehicle, and would impose a civil penalty of between $100-225 for a first violation, $150-400 for a second violation, and $200-575 for a third and any subsequent violation. This bill would also increase the civil penalties for creating an unreasonable noise from a personal audio device. The Police Department would also be required to tow a vehicle for any repeat offenses of these violations. | | |
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Int 0849-2026
| * | Nantasha M. Williams | ~SPONSOR | Economic Development | Requiring certain contracted entities to develop and implement a cultural passport program encouraging visitation to participating sites in each borough. | Introduction | This bill would provide for the New York City Economic Development Corporation (“EDC”) to develop and implement a cultural passport program in consultation with the Department of Small Business Services, the Department of Cultural Affairs, and New York City Tourism + Conventions. The goal of the program would be to encourage visitation to participating sites in each borough. Such program would be required to include: identification of at least five participating sites in each borough; production and distribution of a cultural passport document; a system by which participating sites can recognize visitation; incentives for cultural passport holders; and promotion, including publication of the program on a dedicated website. EDC would have one year to develop and implement the program. | | |
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Int 0850-2026
| * | Nantasha M. Williams | ~SPONSOR | Environmental Protection and Waterfronts | Tracking the disposal of lead water service lines. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Environmental Protection to track, and report to the mayor and the council, information regarding the department’s disposal of the lead water service lines that it removes and replaces. | | |
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Int 0851-2026
| * | Nantasha M. Williams | ~SPONSOR | Housing and Buildings | Requiring housing developers that receive public financing to assume financial responsibility for repairs required within 10 years of construction. | Introduction | A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to requiring housing developers that receive public financing to assume financial responsibility for repairs required within 10 years of construction | | |
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Int 0852-2026
| * | Nantasha M. Williams | ~SPONSOR | Technology | Requiring the 311 customer service center to indicate that an agency is unable to respond to a service request or complaint and implement protocols providing proof of action. | Introduction | This bill would require that if an agency is unable to take action on a 311 service request or complaint, the 311 customer service center (NYC311) must indicate in the description of the action taken on a 311 request or complaint in the 311 system that the responding agency is unable to resolve the request. The responding agency would also be required to indicate their ability to respond to a complaint or service request to NYC311. This bill would also require NYC311, in consultation with relevant agencies, to develop and implement protocols to provide proof of action taken when a responding agency resolves a 311 request for service or complaint. | | |
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Res 0429-2026
| * | Nantasha M. Williams | ~SPONSOR | Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Relations | Recognizing the life and legacy of Alvin Ailey. | Resolution | | | |
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Res 0430-2026
| * | Nantasha M. Williams | ~SPONSOR | Environmental Protection and Waterfronts | Lead Pipe Replacement Act. (S6892/A7878) | Resolution | | | |
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Int 0853-2026
| * | Susan Zhuang | ~SPONSOR | Education | Requiring a study on how language access needs, income, and geographic location affect access to special education programs and services. | Introduction | This bill requires the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities, in consultation with the Department of Education and community-based early childhood organizations, to study how language access needs, income, and geographic location affect students’ access to special education programs and services. The study must evaluate whether students with language access needs, low-income students, and students in geographically underserved areas of the city face unique challenges accessing special education programs. The study must also analyze the availability, capacity, and geographic distribution of special education programs and related services and make recommendations on how to address any identified disparities. A public report with findings and recommendations to improve equitable access must be issued within 6 months. | | |
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Int 0854-2026
| * | Susan Zhuang | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - General Welfare | Creating a SNAP anti-fraud officer and fraud awareness campaign. | Introduction | This bill would create the role of SNAP Anti-Fraud Officer within the Department of Social Services (DSS). The SNAP Anti-Fraud Officer would be required to identify locations with the highest instances of fraud, determine proactive measures to notify SNAP recipients of fraud, identify procedures to prevent fraud, coordinate with non-profits and organizations on fraud cases, and provide an annual report on SNAP fraud in New York City. The annual report would include details on the areas where the highest incidence of SNAP fraud cases occurred in the prior year, responses DSS took to address SNAP fraud cases, and any best practices and procedures DSS identified to respond to SNAP fraud. | | |
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Int 0855-2026
| * | Susan Zhuang | ~SPONSOR | Sanitation and Solid Waste Management | Exempting or partially exempting seniors and certain persons with disabilities from penalties for failing to remove snow or ice from sidewalks, crosswalks, curbs and other locations. | Introduction | The bill would require the Department of Sanitation to establish a program to assist seniors and persons with disabilities with snow removal from sidewalks abutting buildings such individuals own, lease or occupy. It would also reduce the fines by at least 50 percent for seniors and persons with disabilities who fail to remove snow from these sidewalks. | | |
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Int 0856-2026
| * | Susan Zhuang | ~SPONSOR | Transportation and Infrastructure | Installing safety signs near schools. | Introduction | This bill would require the Department of Transportation to paint school safety signs and install overhead school safety signs on each street where a school entrance is located to alert drivers to the presence of school-aged children and pedestrians. | | |
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Res 0431-2026
| * | Susan Zhuang | ~SPONSOR | Finance | Authorizing property tax incentives for property owners who dedicate fifteen percent of existing housing stock to senior citizens and individuals experiencing homelessness. | Resolution | | | |
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LU 0051-2026
| * | | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Zoning & Franchises | Zoning, St. Francis Prep Commercial Overlay, Queens (C 250302 ZMQ). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0051-2026
| * | | | | Zoning, St. Francis Prep Commercial Overlay, Queens (C 250302 ZMQ). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0052-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Zoning & Franchises | Zoning, 9201 4th Avenue Rezoning, Brooklyn (C 260048 ZMK). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0052-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, 9201 4th Avenue Rezoning, Brooklyn (C 260048 ZMK). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0053-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Zoning & Franchises | Zoning, 9201 4th Avenue Rezoning, Brooklyn (N 260049 ZRK). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0053-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, 9201 4th Avenue Rezoning, Brooklyn (N 260049 ZRK). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0054-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Zoning & Franchises | Zoning, 46 Nelson Street Rezoning II, Brooklyn (C 250094 ZMK). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0054-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, 46 Nelson Street Rezoning II, Brooklyn (C 250094 ZMK). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0055-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~SPONSOR | Preconsidered - Zoning & Franchises | Zoning, 46 Nelson Street Rezoning II, Brooklyn (N 250095 ZRK). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0055-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, 46 Nelson Street Rezoning II, Brooklyn (N 250095 ZRK). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0056-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~SPONSOR | Zoning & Franchises | Zoning, 147-14 Northern Boulevard Rezoning, Queens (C 220415 ZMQ). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0056-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, 147-14 Northern Boulevard Rezoning, Queens (C 220415 ZMQ). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0057-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~SPONSOR | Zoning & Franchises | Zoning, 147-14 Northern Boulevard Rezoning, Queens (N 220416 ZRQ). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0057-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, 147-14 Northern Boulevard Rezoning, Queens (N 220416 ZRQ). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0058-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | ~SPONSOR | Zoning & Franchises | Zoning, Denino's, Manhattan (D 2650094566 SWM). | Land Use Application | | | |
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LU 0058-2026
| * | Kevin C. Riley | | | Zoning, Denino's, Manhattan (D 2650094566 SWM). | Land Use Application | | | |
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Not available
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