Tuesday, November 15, 2022

NYC Comptroller Outlines Framework for Comprehensive Property Tax Reform

 

Lander Proposes Bringing Together Long Overdue Reform for Overtaxed Homeowners with Changes to Multifamily Taxation in the Wake of the Expiration of 421-a

Framework Would Bring Fairness and Transparency, Incentivize New Rental Housing Production, Tie Tax Breaks to Actual Affordability, and Include a 21st Century Mitchell-Lama Program for Permanently Affordable Cooperative Homeownership

At a City Council Finance Committee hearing on property taxes Tuesday, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander presented a framework for addressing inequities in NYC’s convoluted property tax system. Lander argued this is a critical moment of opportunity for comprehensive reform to link long overdue relief for overtaxed homeowners with a better way of taxing multifamily development in the wake of the expiration of the 421-a property tax break for new development.    

Building on the NYC Advisory Commission on Property Tax Reform’s 2021 recommendations, Lander proposed changes to address an opaque system with gaping inequities between homeowners in different neighborhoods and building types, while including a phase-in and protections for potentially vulnerable homeowners in areas where rates would rise over time.  

The Comptroller’s framework would also incentivize new rental housing production by reducing their base tax rate approximately 30% to be on par with condos, and tie tax breaks to the actual cost and affordability of buildings.  

In place of the widely-panned “130% AMI” program under 421-a that built subsidized housing unaffordable to the vast majority of residents in those neighborhoods, Lander proposed a new, 21st century version of the Mitchell-Lama program to create permanently affordable, cooperative homeownership for tens of thousands of working New Yorkers.  

“New York’s opaque and inequitable property tax system is hurting working families across our city, while inhibiting the housing development our city needs amidst a housing crisis,” said Comptroller Brad Lander. “We have a unique moment this year to solve several problems at once, with structural changes to the tax system to bring fairness and common sense to our city’s largest revenue stream. If we get it right, we can address the unfair burden of high property taxes in the outer boroughs and create new affordable homeownership and rental opportunities that maximize public dollars to bring down costs for New Yorkers.”  

Promoting Fairness Among Homeowners 

In December 2021, the New York City Advisory Commission on Property Tax reform released a set of recommendations, following eight in-person public hearings during 2018-2019 and five remote public hearings during 2021.​ Those hearings focused on three core problems with the current tax structure:  

  1. 1-3 family homes, co-ops and condos are not subject to the same rules for valuation. Large rentals are taxed at approximately double the rate of condo and co-ops. 
  2. The system is generally opaque and difficult to understand. Variation in assessment ratios by property type confuses owners and makes the system less transparent.​ 
  3. The differences in effective tax rates across neighborhoods is too wide.​ Outer-borough homeowners pay far higher rates than upper- and middle-class Manhattan and brownstone Brooklyn. 

Building on the recommendations of the Advisory Commission, the Comptroller made the following recommendations to address those problems:  

  • Aggregate Class 1, Class 2 condos and coops, and small rentals (up to 10 units) in one class and uniformly value all properties in the class at sales-based market value.  
  • End fractional assessments and apply one tax rate to the sales-based market value. 
  • Phase the changes in over five years, with potential consideration of allowing homeowners to defer the higher tax burden until sale of the property, or even waiting until sale to reset the rates. 
  • Provide a homestead exemption for homeowners who use their property as a primary residence and circuit breakers to protect potentially vulnerable homeowners in areas where rates may rise over time.  

A Better Way to Tax Multifamily Development and Subsidize Real Affordability 

For forty years, New York State has layered on a patchwork of exemptions and abatements to lower tax rates for developers of multifamily housing, rather than dealing with structural flaws in the property tax system.  

The largest of those has been the 421-a tax incentive program, viewed as necessary in large part because NYC taxes rentals at nearly double the rate of condo and coop development. But at $1.77 billion in annual forgone tax revenue, and with widespread fraud, it was far too expensive for the few genuinely affordable units it produced. The Comptroller was among the leading proponents of allowing the 421-a tax abatement to expire in June 2022.  

Comptroller Lander outlined structural reforms to taxation of multifamily residential buildings that would better incentivize new rental housing production, tie tax breaks to actual affordability, and include a 21st century Mitchell-Lama program for permanently affordable cooperative homeownership: 

  • Reduce the tax rate on new large rental buildings by 30%, dramatically reducing the disparity in taxation between new rentals and condos. The lower tax rate makes market-rate rental housing production more possible in core and non-core markets. 
  • Allow the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) to underwrite full or partial exemptions for new development based on projected costs and affordability, aligned with HPD’s affordable housing programs, in order to appropriately support development and prevent double-dipping. 
  • Instead of the outer-borough 130% AMI program in 421-a, which created units unaffordable to most residents of the neighborhoods where it was built, offer a 21st century Mitchell-Lama program, combining tax relief and capital subsidies to provide permanently affordable, multifamily, limited-equity cooperative homeownership at a range of incomes.  

The Comptroller’s framework as presented to the City Council is available here.

Attorney General James Secures $3.1 Billion from Walmart for Communities Nationwide to Combat the Opioid Crisis

 

New York to Receive Up to $116 Million as Part of Multistate Agreement with Walmart for Failing to Regulate Opioid Prescriptions

AG James Has Now Delivered More Than $2.1 Billion Total to New York to Fund Opioid Abatement, Treatment, and Prevention

New York Attorney General Letitia James today announced a $3.1 billion multistate settlement with Walmart, resolving allegations that the company contributed to the nationwide opioid crisis by failing to regulate opioid prescriptions at its stores. Attorney General James co-led a coalition of attorneys general in negotiating the settlement, which will provide $3.1 billion to communities nationwide and will require significant improvements in how Walmart's pharmacies handle opioids. The state attorneys general on the executive committee, attorneys representing local governments, and Walmart have agreed to this settlement, which is now being sent to other states for review and approval. New York state will receive up to $116 million as part of the settlement, bringing the total amount secured by Attorney General James to combat the opioid crisis in New York to more than $2.1 billion.

“For decades, the opioid epidemic has ravaged communities here in New York and across the country,” said Attorney General James. “Pharmacies such as Walmart played an undeniable role in perpetuating opioids’ destruction, and my fellow attorneys general and I are holding them accountable. You cannot put a price on lives lost and communities destroyed, but with the $2.1 billion we have delivered to New York, we will continue to recover, rebuild, and strengthen our defenses against future devastation.”

In addition to providing $3.1 billion to be divided by sign-on states, local governments, and tribes to be used for opioid treatment, recovery, and abatement, the settlement announced today will include broad, court-ordered requirements Walmart must comply with, such as robust oversight to prevent fraudulent prescriptions and flag suspicious prescriptions.

Attorney General James and her colleagues are optimistic that the settlement will gain support of the required 43 states by the end of 2022, allowing local governments to join the deal during the first quarter of 2023. Further details about how the money will be distributed among localities is forthcoming. Last month, states confirmed that promising negotiations were also underway with Walgreens and CVS. Efforts to reach those agreements are ongoing.

In 2021, Attorney General James championed legislation to create an opioid settlement fund to ensure these monetary settlements are invested in helping New Yorkers impacted by the opioid crisis. The bill, now codified as New York Mental Hygiene Law 25.18, passed unanimously through the state legislature, and requires all funds secured in opioid settlements by Attorney General James — totaling more than $2.1 billion — be used for opioid abatement, treatment, and prevention efforts in communities devastated by this epidemic.

Joining Attorney General James in leading the executive committee that negotiated this agreement are the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Texas.

Earlier this month, Attorney General James secured up to $523 million from Teva Pharmaceuticals, Ltd., its American subsidiary Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, and its affiliates (Teva) for their role in fueling the opioid crisis, resolving the remedies phase of New York’s opioid trial after she achieved a historic liability verdict following a seven-month jury trial against Teva in 2021. In June 2022, Attorney General James secured up to $58.5 million from Mallinckrodt for fueling the opioid crisis in New York. In December 2021, Attorney General James reached a $200 million agreement with Allergan. In September 2021, Attorney General James secured $50 million from Endo to combat the opioid crisis. In July 2021, Attorney General James secured a settlement with McKesson, Cardinal Health, and Amerisource Bergen that will deliver $1 billion to New York. In June 2021, Attorney General James announced a settlement that will deliver $230 million to New York and end Johnson & Johnson’s sale of opioids nationwide

KRVC - Join us this Thursday for our Gallery 505 Opening "Nature Close Up"


505BX Banners_2.jpeg

Nature Close Up

opens Thursday, November 17th

7-9 pm

Featuring the work of Herb Kaplan


Live Music with Scott Bravo

Refreshments


Gallery 505

505 West 236th Street

Bronx

“Beginning in the early 2000s, in addition to taking photos to record my travels with my wife Leah in the U.S. and abroad, I began to take pictures of nature, scenery and landscapes.

 

In recent years, I have become more interested in the visual effect of the pictures I take, moving much closer in to capture the mystery, the intimacy, the sensuality in nature.”

 

Herb’s photographs have been exhibited at his synagogue in Manhattan (SAJ), Gallery 18 at Riverdale Y, Riverdale-Yonkers Society for Ethical Culture, and KRVC ‘s Art at Amalgamated annual exhibit.

HerbKaplanPhotography.com

This coming Sunday

our annual art exhibition is back!



Art at Amalgamated

Sunday, November 20th 1-5 pm



Featuring 18 Bronx Fine Artists


There will be a shuttle bus running every hour from KRVC, 505 West 236th Street, to Vladeck Hall and back.

4Bronx is a community service program focused on supporting homeless families and other underserved community members.


A local Manhattan College student has a goal of collecting non-perishables to distribute on Thanksgiving Day to people in our community battling food insecurity. Please help if you can.

@4BronxProject

Look forward to seeing you at our upcoming events!


KRVCDC.ORG/EVENTS


KRVC | 505 West 236th StreetBronx, NY 10463

NYSOFA, AgingNY and Blooming Health Partner to Strengthen Older New Yorkers' Access to Community-based Aging Services

 

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Initial partnership offers access to Blooming Health platform through select group of county offices for the aging to engage 10,000 older adults in their communities

The New York State Office for the Aging (NYSOFA) and Association on Aging in New York (AgingNY) have partnered with Blooming Health to improve older adults’ awareness and connection to community-based aging services via an inclusive, digital engagement platform being made available through a select group of county-based offices for the aging.

Last year, New York’s offices for the aging served more than 1.3 million older New Yorkers and their family caregivers. This number is expected to increase over 20 percent by 2025, demanding scalable and efficient communication tools that can maximize network capacity to reach older New Yorkers and keep them engaged.

Aging care providers can use Blooming Health’s web application to send personalized and targeted communications to older adults and caregiver clients across text messages, voice calls, or email, and in 25 languages. Clients do not need access to broadband internet or a smart device to receive these communications. Providers can also receive longitudinal data on clients’ needs and outcomes, coordinate care, and better manage their population's health risks.

Blooming Health’s inclusive, digital engagement solution enables aging care providers across New York, Arizona, and California to scalably engage tens of thousands of older adults and caregiver clients. For its existing clients, Blooming Health has contributed to a three-fold increase in older adult engagement with provider services while saving two hours per day in outreach capacity for program staff and garnering an 85 percent satisfaction rate for older adult end-users. Through a recent collaboration with the AARP Foundation and New York City-based community organizations, Blooming Health helped drive a five-fold increase in the number of older adults applying for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits (relative to 2021). Blooming Health also helped reduce the time from initial outreach with older adults about SNAP benefits application and their final application submission, from 57 days to 30 days – a 47 percent decrease.

Greg Olsen, Director of the New York State Office for the Aging, said: "NYSOFA is proud to play a role in the digital evolution of services and outreach to older adults. Our partnerships with innovative technology solutions have connected hundreds of thousands of older adults to combat social isolation while also providing evidence-based tools to help individuals caring for loved ones, and so much more. Blooming Health is a unique digital platform in that it will help enhance, extend, and better coordinate services that aging services providers are already delivering in their communities. NYSOFA is thrilled to work with a select group of offices for the aging to utilize this powerful technology and develop best practices that could potentially expand this partnership in the future."

Association on Aging in New York (AgingNY) Executive Director Becky Preve said: “The Association on Aging in New York is incredibly proud to work in conjunction with NYSOFA and Blooming Health to continue to enhance and expand access for older New Yorkers. Blooming Health is an additional tool that aging services providers can utilize to drive engagement, decrease social isolation and loneliness, and improve health outcomes. New York State continues to lead the nation in enhancements to our service infrastructure, and Blooming Health is now available as a resource for our communities.”

Blooming Health Co-founder and CCO Kavitha Gnanasambandan said: “Blooming Health is honored to partner with the innovative New York aging network to power healthy aging-in-place for all New Yorkers. We believe that inclusive and personalized engagement can help connect more older adults in need with the quality services offered by the New York aging network, while streamlining the network capacity and improving operational efficiencies.”


About the New York State Office for the Aging

The New York State Office for the Aging (NYSOFA) continuously works to help the state’s 4.6 million older adults be as independent as possible for as long as possible through advocacy, development and delivery of person-centered, consumer-oriented, and cost-effective policies, programs, and services that support and empower older adults and their families, in partnership with the network of public and private organizations that serve them. Stay connected—visit the NYSOFA Facebook page; follow @NYSAGING on Twitter and NYSAging on Instagram; or visit aging.ny.gov.


About the Association on Aging in New York

The Association on Aging in New York (AgingNY) supports and advocates for New York’s mostly county-based Area Agencies on Aging (AAAs) and works collaboratively with a network of organizations that exist to promote independence, preserve dignity, and provide support for residents of New York State as they age. For more information, follow AgingNY on Facebook, visit www.agingny.org, or call (518) 449-7080.


About Blooming Health

Blooming Health is an agetech company founded in New York with a mission to power healthy aging in place for all. Its inclusive, digital engagement solution enables aging care providers across New York, Arizona, and California to scalably engage tens of thousands of older adults and caregiver clients in a personalized way across text, voice calls, emails, and over 25 languages. The Blooming Health solution is intentionally designed to remove the technology and language barriers for older adults to receive the care they need at the right time. Aging care providers have seen a three-fold increase in client engagement via the Blooming Health solution, while also saving two hours per day in outreach capacity for their care staff.


To learn more about Blooming Health and this partnership, please visit www.gobloominghealth.com or reach out at team@gobloominghealth.com.

Drug Dealer Charged With Trafficking 19 Kilos Of Fentanyl

 

 Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Frank A. Tarentino III, the Special Agent-in-Charge of the New York Field Office of the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”), announced that JUSTO VARGAS was charged for possessing nearly 20 kilograms of fentanyl with the intent to distribute it, in concert with others.  VARGAS was arrested on Sunday and presented yesterday before Magistrate Judge Paul E. Davison. 

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “As alleged, the defendant conspired to distribute fentanyl, one of the deadliest drugs on Earth.  Thanks to our law enforcement partners, nearly 20 kilograms of this poison have been taken off the street.”

As alleged in the Complaint:[1]

On or about November 13, 2022, VARGAS met with a confidential source to sell that confidential source approximately 19 kilograms of fentanyl.  VARGAS arrived at the Cross County Center parking lot in Yonkers, New York, and parked adjacent to the confidential source’s vehicle.  The parties exited their respective vehicles and stood next to the open trunk of VARGAS’s vehicle, which contained what appeared to the confidential source to be 19 kilograms of fentanyl.  Agents and officers then intervened and arrested VARGAS and seized the fentanyl, which is pictured below:

Picture of seized fentanyl

VARGAS, 31, of New York, New York, is charged with one count of possession with intent to distribute 400 grams and more of fentanyl and one count of conspiring to do the same.  Those offenses carry mandatory minimum sentences of 10 years in prison and maximum potential sentences of life in prison.  

The mandatory minimum and maximum potential sentences in this case are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the judge. 

Mr. Williams praised the outstanding work of the DEA’s New York Drug Enforcement Task Force comprising agents and officers of the DEA,  New York City Police Department, and New York State Police.  Mr. Williams also thanked the Office of the Special Narcotics Prosecutor at the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and the Yonkers Police Department for their assistance in this case.

The charges contained in the Complaint are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

[1] As the introductory phrase signifies, the entirety of the text of the Complaint, and the description of the Complaint set forth herein, constitutes only allegations, and every fact described therein should be treated as an allegation.

MAYOR ADAMS APPOINTS FOUR NEW MEMBERS TO NYCEDC BOARD

 

New York City Mayor Eric Adams today appointed four new members to the board of the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC), reiterating his commitment to a fair and inclusive economic recovery for the city. Eric A. Clement, DeWayne Louis, Joseph Shamie, and Elizabeth Velez join Margaret Anadu, who was appointed as the chair of NYCEDC’s board of directors earlier this year.

 

“This group of economic development leaders are experts in the field — and they know firsthand what it means to prioritize justice in our city’s recovery,” said Mayor Adams. “We are building a highly qualified and capable economic development team with a clear focus. With Andrew Kimball and Margaret Anadu at the helm, and with the contributions of these experienced leaders, NYCEDC is well positioned to deliver the comeback New Yorkers deserve.”

 

“I look forward to welcoming this impressive slate of proven leaders to the NYCEDC board and thank them in advance for their service,” said Deputy Mayor for Economic and Workforce Development Maria Torres-Springer. “I know that the diversity of their experiences and perspectives will be invaluable to Andrew Kimball, his team, and the entire administration as we work collectively to chart a recovery that creates economic opportunity for all New Yorkers and fuel a new generation of inclusive growth.”

 

“The new leaders joining the NYCEDC board will bring fresh perspectives and key industry expertise,” said NYCEDC President and CEO Andrew Kimball. “I am thrilled to partner with this talented and accomplished team to continue creating a vibrant and inclusive economy for all New Yorkers to thrive.”

 

“I am honored to be named as a mayoral appointee on behalf of the Adams administration,” said Eric A. Clement, senior vice president and fund manager, social impact and sustainability investments, RXR Realty. “I am equally as excited to work with my colleagues — old and new — at the New York City Economic Development Corporation. I look forward to collaborating with Andrew Kimball, the NYCEDC staff, and the board in creating a better and brighter future for New York City.”

 

“I am honored to serve on the New York Economic Development Corporation board of directors,” said DeWayne Louis, founding partner, Versor Investments. “Mayor Adams has ambitious plans to create fair economic growth opportunities across all five boroughs. I agree with his vision. As a 20-plus-year veteran of the financial services industry, I've witnessed the benefits of sound and thoughtful economic development. I look forward to volunteering my time with my fellow directors and working with the NYCEDC staff to make New York City stronger, safer, and more equitable.”

 

“I am thrilled to join the board of the New York City Economic Development Corporation and look forward to working with Mayor Adams to advance shared prosperity,” said Joseph Shamie, president, Delta Children. “As a lifelong New Yorker and a business owner, I look forward to helping the EDC advance its mission. Having also served on many nonprofit boards and acting as a strategic advisor, I am ready to hit the ground running and contribute my expertise. With an eye toward sustainability and innovation, together we can create more well-paying jobs and economic opportunities. I thank Mayor Adams and his administration for their trust and confidence in appointing me to this important role.”

 

“New York City is the most vibrant, diverse, and leading city in the world,” said Elizabeth Velez, president, Velez Organization. “I am thrilled to contribute to the economic development engine for New York City — driving growth, innovation, and opportunities for our citizens and stakeholders.”

 

About Eric A. Clement

 

Eric A. Clement oversees the social impact and sustainability portfolios at RXR. He is principally responsible for defining the portfolio’s strategic vision and investment strategy, delivering against the dual mandate of attractive returns and tangible ESG outcomes.

 

Prior to RXR, Clement was senior managing director and head of the Strategic Investments Group at NYCEDC, where he oversaw the negotiation of tax incentives, debt issuances, new market tax credit investments, and dedicated debt-equity funds. He led deployment of NYCEDC’s $15 billion portfolio to expand financial access, mobilize private capital, and support the City of New York’s core growth objectives.

 

Clement was previously a partner at Blue Frontier Group, an emerging markets private equity firm, SGI Global Holdings, Ltd., and has held various executive- and management-level positions at Accenture, Citigroup, and J.P. Morgan. He received his M.B.A. from Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford, where he is an Associate Fellow, and his undergraduate degree from Lehigh University, where he currently serves on the University’s board of trustees and the Arts and Sciences Dean’s Advisory Council.

 

About DeWayne Louis

 

DeWayne Louis has over 20 years of financial markets experience. In 2014, Louis co-founded Versor Investments, a quantitative investment management firm based in New York City.

 

Prior to co-founding Versor, he was one of the inaugural members of the North American hedge fund group at Investcorp, a global alternative investment firm. During his nine-plus years at Investcorp, DeWayne helped grow the business to peak assets of $8 billion, advised institutional investors on customized investment solutions, and designed new product offerings.

 

He previously worked at UBS in the private equity secondaries group, focusing on buying and selling private equity interests in the secondary market. Early in his career, DeWayne worked at Credit Suisse Group, where he focused on mergers, acquisitions, and project finance transactions.

 

He is a graduate of Georgetown University.

 

About Joseph Shamie

 

With over 40 years of experience in the juvenile furniture industry, Joseph Shamie is at forefront of revolutionizing and innovating the landscape of affordable and safe children’s products. Together, with his brother, Sam, Joseph helped grow their father’s retail store in Bedford-Stuyvesant into Delta Children. He’s assumed multiple roles, including overseeing product development, sales, marketing, and safety. Committed to creating products that every family can afford, Joseph is constantly working towards providing children worldwide a safe place to sleep.

 

A native of New York City, Joseph grew up in Brooklyn and is dedicated to helping families in Brooklyn live better. He has partnered with the Brooklyn Borough President’s Office on multiple projects, including giving away over 400 cribs to Brooklyn residents in need and opening New York City’s largest Breastfeeding Empowerment Zone at Brooklyn Borough Hall.

 

Joseph resides in Brooklyn with his wife, Adrienne. Together they raised four children, Louis, Lorraine, Gloria and David, and recently welcomed three grandchildren.

 

About Elizabeth Velez

 

Elizabeth Velez spearheads strategic growth and project diversification for the 50-year-old Velez Organization as president and principal. Hundreds of projects have come to fruition under her direction, including over 600 units of housing made affordable by state and federal grants in the Bronx and Harlem and over $10 billion dollars of significant educational, health care, and large-scale projects throughout New York.

 

Velez was appointed in 2022 by New York Governor Kathy Hochul to the board of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and served until 2021 as a commissioner on the New York City Property Tax Reform Commission. From 2020 to 2021, she served for both Mayor Bill de Blasio and Governor Andrew Cuomo on the COVID pandemic advisory and recovery boards, and, for the latter, on the New York State Stands with Puerto Rico Recovery and Rebuilding Committee and the New York Memorial Commission for Hurricane Maria.

 

A leader in New York’s design and building industry, Velez was chair of the New York Building Congress (NYBC) — the first person of color and only the second woman to serve in that role in the NYBC’s 100-year history. During her 2020-2021 tenure, she provided leadership and direction to the industry during the COVID-19 pandemic, spearheaded the Equity and Inclusion Task Force and Council, and celebrated the organization’s centennial. She continues in a leadership role with the NYBC as the newly created chair of the NYBC Council of Presidents.

 

Ms. Velez is a graduate of Hofstra University, earning both her B.A. and M.B.A.

Attorney General James and Multistate Coalition Secure $391.5 Million from Google for Misleading Millions of Users about Location Data Tracking

 

Google Failed to Tell Users That Their Web and App Activity Tracked Location Data

 New York Attorney General Letitia James, as part of a coalition of 40 attorneys general, today secured $391.5 million from Google for misleading millions of users about its location data tracking. A multistate investigation found that Google failed to notify users that location tracking services were automatically turned on for web and app activity. Millions of consumers with Google accounts who used Google’s apps, such as Google Maps, Google Search, Google Chrome, and other Google apps, were unaware that their location was being tracked. Google told consumers they could turn off location tracking under “location history” in their settings, but failed to notify consumers that their “Web & App Activity” setting also collected location data. As a result of today’s historic $391.5 million agreement with Google, the tech company must also reform its practices to be more transparent with consumers. New York will receive more than $20 million from the agreement. 

“Big tech companies should not collect consumers’ data without their awareness or consent,” said Attorney General James. “Google quietly tracked its users to turn a profit and today they are being held accountable. Every individual should be able to make their own decisions about their data and how it is being used. We will continue to hold companies that violate the law accountable and protect consumers from companies that put profits over people.”

Location data is a key part of Google’s digital advertising business. Google uses the personal and behavioral data it collects to build detailed user profiles and target ads on behalf of its advertising customers. Location data is among the most sensitive and valuable personal information Google collects. Even a limited amount of location data can expose a person’s identity and routines and can be used to infer personal details. 

The multistate coalition opened an investigation into Google following a 2018 Associated Press article that revealed that the company tracked users’ location even when they choose to opt out. Google has two location account settings: “Location History” and “Web & App Activity.” Location History is off unless a user turns on the setting, but Web & App Activity, a separate account setting, is automatically on when users set up a Google account, including all Android phone users. The multistate coalition found that Google misled consumers by making them believe that only the “Location History” setting tracked location and failing to inform users that the “Web & App Activity” setting also tracked location data. Google caused users to be confused about the scope of the “Location History” setting, the fact that the “Web & App Activity” setting existed and collected location information, and the extent to which consumers who use Google products and services could limit Google’s location tracking by adjusting their account and device settings. 

Today’s agreement requires Google to be more transparent with consumers. As a result of today’s agreement, Google must:
• Show additional information to users whenever they turn a location-related account setting “on” or “off”;
• Make key information about location tracking unavoidable for users (i.e., not hidden); and
• Give users detailed information about the types of location data Google collects and how it’s used at an enhanced “Location Technologies” webpage.  

Joining Attorney General James in today’s agreement are the attorneys general of Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, and Wisconsin.