Awardees measured the impact of the City’s congestion pricing program, strengthened food oversight in homeless shelters, modernized cemetery management at Hart Island and provided 24/7 access to lifesaving overdose supplies
Today, Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani, Chief Technology Officer (CTO) and Office of Technology and Innovation (OTI) Commissioner Lisa Gelobter and Jonathan Weiner, president of the Frederick O’Reilly Hayes Prize Foundation, honored 12 public servants with the fourth annual NYC Hayes Innovation Prize for their cutting-edge efforts to reimagine government and deliver tangible results for New Yorkers.
The winning projects — spanning eight City agencies — represent breakthroughs in affordability, government accessibility and public safety. Honorees were selected from 74 nominations across more than 30 agencies. Each winner received a $1,000 cash prize funded by the foundation. OTI and the Frederick O’Reilly Hayes Prize Foundation co-sponsored the awards.
“Delivering public goods requires public excellence, and the public servants we honor today embody that excellence — not as an abstract ideal, but as daily work in service of 8.5 million New Yorkers. Across our City government, workers are finding new ways to make this city more affordable, more accessible and more just. The recipients of the Hayes Innovation Prize show what it means to build a government that works for working people,” said Mayor Mamdani. “I’m proud to recognize their service and grateful for the care they bring to this city every day.”
“Public servants are the backbone of our city, and this award recognizes the innovative and substantial work they have accomplished to make a real difference in New Yorkers' lives,” said Deputy Mayor for Operations Julia Kerson. “The recipients of the Hayes prize embody government excellence, and what is possible when public servants go above and beyond for the people they serve. Today, we celebrate their example.”
“There is no challenge too big for New York City’s amazing public servants,” said CTO and OTI Commissioner Lisa Gelobter. “Thanks to their bold vision and leadership, this year’s Hayes Prize winners achieved remarkable results that made our city more affordable, our government run better and our streets safer for New Yorkers. In addition, our honorees deserve acclaim for raising the bar for government excellence and inspiring their colleagues to pursue their own greatness. Congratulations to all of our Hayes Prize winners!”
“Great work in public service is seriously under-recognized in our society,” said Jonathan Weiner, President, Frederick O’Reilly Hayes Prize Foundation. “The Fred Hayes Prize Foundation congratulates this year’s Prize winners for their remarkable work relatively early in their careers in our City’s service and is enormously pleased to recognize their efforts. We welcome them into the distinguished company of those who have been awarded the Prize going back to 2005. Like these former Prize winners, their projects have been innovative and marked by talented and deep use of analytics. Named after Fred Hayes, the City’s brilliant budget director in the Lindsay administration, the Prize Foundation is solely supported by those who have worked with Fred and are delighted to see first-rate commitments to public service in succeeding generations.”
OTI and the Hayes Prize Foundation launched the Hayes Innovation Prize in March 2023 to recognize excellence in public service. To date, 68 public servants have received the award. For the second consecutive year, winners were recognized in two categories: Innovation and IT Leadership. A distinguished panel of past recipients of the Frederick O’Reilly Hayes Prize, which started in 2005, and recipients of the Technology & Innovation Award selected this year’s winners.
This year’s prize winners are (in alphabetical order):
INNOVATION
Roxanne Anderson of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH), who implemented the City’s first Public Health Vending Machines (PHVMs) that provide 24/7 access to lifesaving harm reduction supplies conveniently and anonymously to address the overdose crisis meet the goals outlined in the mental health plan for NYC. Since June 2023, the City’s first four PHVMs have been utilized over 42,000 times and dispensed 4,500 nalaxone kits, in addition to other harm reduction and health and wellness resources.
Pavel Ilin of the NYC Mayor’s Office for Economic Opportunity, who spearheaded the complete rebuild and launch of the new My File NYC, a digital platform that gives New Yorkers a safe and secure place to store their vital documents and share them when applying for City services. My File is currently in use by families applying for shelter through the Department of Homeless Services’ Family Intake Center – Prevention Assistance and Temporary Housing (PATH). My File will be introduced to the Department of Housing Preservation and Development’s Set Aside Housing program later this year.
Shawn Inshan and Mallory Rutigliano of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), who pioneered a first-of-its-toolkit with a Resiliency Exposure Inventory and Resiliency Exposure Forecast designed to understand whether communities, infrastructure and environments are sufficiently protected from climate risks. This initiative serves the City’s Broader Climate Budgeting effort, which includes climate considerations across investment decisions, and is already being used to assist with policy and project planning with the Mayor’s Office of Climate and Environmental Justice, the Parks Department and the Economic Development Corporation.
Joel Owhe of the Fire Department of the City of New York (FDNY), who led the development of the FDNY Job Safety Analysis (JSA) application, a groundbreaking internal tool that digitized and standardized the process for documenting, reviewing and analyzing safety practices across training operations. Joel transformed a once paper-heavy and reactive system into an agile, digital platform that enhances the department’s ability to train, evaluate and safeguard its members.
Caleb Wendling and Julia Klauss of OMB, who expanded the flood insurance coverage of overlooked City-owned buildings with a pathbreaking approach — using mapping software, Python scripts and direct outreach — to create a new and fully comprehensive list of all City assets. Their work has helped double the number of City-owned buildings covered by the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) from 212 at the start of 2024 to more than 430, with hundreds more expected.
Kenyatta (Kym) Williams of the NYC Human Resources Administration (HRA), who managed the Cemetery Management and Tracking System — a modern, integrated platform to manage burial records, plot mapping and public access for burial operations at Hart Island, the City’s municipal cemetery and the final resting place for more than 1 million New Yorkers. As a result, families can now more accurately search burial records dating back to the 1970s, visualize the burial site on a digital map, schedule visits online and receive automated confirmations and reminders — features that did not exist before.
Matthew Yarri of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), who developed a real-time performance dashboard and data analytics framework for New York City’s congestion pricing program — one of the City’s most transformative transportation initiatives in a generation. Matthew’s dashboard equipped MTA leadership with the systemwide insights — not just MTA operations, but cars, buses, bridges and tunnels — needed to monitor impacts, communicate results and build public trust from day one as traffic patterns began to shift.
IT LEADERSHIP
Claire Boyd of the Department of Finance (DOF), who transformed the Property Modeling Group’s technical capabilities at DOF to enhance efficiency, analytical rigor and long-term sustainability across operations. In addition to expanding the scope and effectiveness of DOF’s core IT capabilities, Claire’s leadership strengthened the City’s capacity for fair, data-driven property tax assessment.
Elan Carmel of the Department of Social Services (DSS), who directed the execution of a citywide initiative to strengthen oversight of food and nutrition services within Department of Homeless Services (DHS) shelters. Working closely with the Office of the Medical Director and DHS Food Services, Elan designed and implemented a new module within the Building Compliance System that digitizes the process for tracking food ordered, received, discarded and evaluated for quality — improving the dining experience for shelter residents by ensuring meals meet quality standards and client expectations.
Mike Kutzma of the MTA, who led the design and implementation of the MTA Data Lake Program, a suite of infrastructure and applications that serve to enable analytics at scale across the MTA. The platform that Mike and his team built was responsible for the MTA’s ability to provide accurate, next-day reporting on the new congestion pricing program within days of the program’s launch.
The finalists for this year’s awards include:
- Janelle Blount and Raja Pathuri of HPD
- Chris Gettings and Emily Torem of DOHMH
- Ayesha McHugh of NYC Housing Authority (NYCHA)
- Momina Min of NYC Public Schools
- Theodore Mullally of DOHMH
- Dana Nelson of NYC Emergency Management (NYCEM)
- Matthew O’Malley of Department of Small Business Services (SBS)
- Jayabalaji Rubalingam of the MTA
- Bharti Sharma of NYC Health + Hospitals
- Courtney Yu of NYCHA
- Khusro Zafar and Brunnell Velazquez of the Taxi and Limousine Commission (TLC)
“Public health is too often described as 'invisible,' including innovative programs like our public health vending machines that put essential health supplies like naloxone kits directly in the hands of New Yorkers with no questions asked,” said NYC Health Commissioner Dr. Alister Martin. “Mission-driven staff like Roxanne are the backbone of the lifesaving work happening every day at the NYC Health Department as we continue our efforts to reduce overdose deaths across New York City. This prize is well-earned and helps make the work of public health heroes, like Roxanne, more visible to the people we serve.”
“Building a government that works for the people of New York City takes public servants who are undaunted by the serious challenges before them. This year's Hayes Prize winners have shown that creative approaches, new technology, and dedication to the work can lead to transformative outcomes that make life better for New Yorkers,” said DSS Commissioner Erin Dalton. “Congratulations to all of this year’s winners, especially Kym and Elan who have done so much to improve DSS services by leveraging technology to improve data collection and client experience. I look forward to building on this incredible progress and exploring how we can continue to enhance services with new technologies."
“The Hayes Innovation Prize recognizes Claire Boyd's leadership in tackling a key Department of Finance challenge: improving access to data for property valuation models used to assess over 1.2 million New York City properties annually,” said Department of Finance Commissioner Richard Lee. “Through her leadership, Claire streamlined data sharing across siloed systems using tools that are more efficient, transparent and reliable, while enhancing our ability to evaluate model accuracy across property types. These advancements are dramatically improving how we deliver fair, data-driven property tax assessments for New Yorkers. Together with her fellow honorees, Claire’s work highlights a broader commitment to innovation across this administration — one rooted in practical solutions and a strong sense of public service. Celebrating the achievements of these city employees is important, as it underscores how new ideas in government can meaningfully enhance the services people rely on every day. Congratulations to Claire and all of this year’s honorees on this well-earned recognition.”
“The FDNY congratulates Firefighter Joel Owhe on this well-deserved recognition from the Hayes Prize Foundation,” said FDNY Commissioner Lillian Bonsignore. “His work reflects the innovative thinking that makes the FDNY stronger every day. His application has improved a critical safety process within our department, helping us better evaluate training operations and protect our members.”
“We are thrilled that Pavel is being recognized for his leadership on the launch of the newest version of My File NYC,” said Carson Hicks, Executive Director of the Mayor’s Office for Economic Opportunity. “Pavel’s work is modernizing how New Yorkers can prove eligibility for City benefits and services, streamlining internal agency operations and strengthening collaboration across agencies to better serve New Yorkers.”
About the Frederick O’Reilly Hayes Foundation
The Frederick O’Reilly Hayes Prize Foundation is supported by private donations from former city employees and officials, many of whom worked for or with Frederick O'Reilly Hayes, the city's budget director in the late 1960s. Fred was a visionary who encouraged innovation, analysis, and commitment to the excellent management and delivery of public services. He was also dedicated to recruiting and mentoring young talent in city government.