Monday, December 8, 2014

MAYOR BILL DE BLASIO HOSTS IMMIGRATION SUMMIT FOR CITIES ACROSS COUNTRY


Mayors and representatives from over two dozen cities came together to discuss implementation of President Obama’s plan to act on immigration and strategize on effectively building grassroots coalition to push for comprehensive immigration reform

   Mayor Bill de Blasio today at Gracie Mansion convened over a dozen Mayors and representatives from across the country for an immigration summit. The summit focused on coordinating and sharing expertise for the implementation of President Obama’s plans to act on immigration. The Mayors also discussed the road ahead and strategies to push for comprehensive immigration reform.

At Gracie Mansion, the Mayors signed on to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Five Point Challenge to:

·         Launch a mayoral war room for federal action on immigration reform
·         Establish local Cities United for Immigration Action coalitions
·         Safeguard immigrants from fraudulent services
·         Reach all eligible applicants through community outreach and public education
·         Audit services and programs to ensure efficient and affordable delivery of services to maximize enrollment by city residents

Following the Summit, the cities will take the ideas and expertise discussed at the Immigration Summit today and build grassroots support at the local level through strategies including:

  • Organizing local coalitions for action—including faith, business, community and labor leaders—before Congress gets back for unified demonstration of solidarity.
·         A Mayoral Lobby Day in DCafter matching congressional members to mayoral coalition membersto push back against any efforts to dismantle the President’s Executive Actions and push for comprehensive immigration reform.
  • Convening state tables of mayors in key states, working with allies to have parallel organizing, labor, faith tables in each state, and bringing in key suburban or county leaders.
  • Generating constituent call-in and email-in to push for action with key targets in each state.
  • Coordinating Know Your Rights events in all cities with allies, partners, and stakeholders as the first phase of the President’s plan goes into effect.
  • Highlighting stories of DREAMers who have been or will be helped by the President’s Executive Actions.

The summit included Mayors and staff representing 25 cities from across the country, including: Atlanta, Boston, Buffalo, Charlotte, Dayton, Hartford, Houston, Jersey City, Los Angeles, Louisville, Madison, New Haven, Newark, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Providence, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, San Juan, Santa Fe, Schenectady, Seattle, Syracuse, Tacoma and Washington, D.C.

Mayors in attendance:
·         Mayor Bill de Blasio, New York, NY
·         Mayor Ras Baraka, Newark, NJ
·         Mayor Ralph Becker, Salt Lake City, UT
·         MayorElect Muriel Bowser, Washington, D.C.
·         Mayor Byron Brown, Buffalo, NY
·         Mayor-Elect Jorge Elorza, Providence, RI
·         Mayor Javier Gonzales, Santa Fe, NM
·         Mayor Toni Harp, New Haven, CT
·         Mayor Edwin Lee, San Francisco, CA
·         Mayor Gary McCarthy, Schenectady, NY
·         Mayor Stephanie Miner, Syracuse, NY
·         Mayor Edward Murray, Seattle, WA
·         Mayor Kasim Reed, Atlanta, GA
·         Mayor Pedro Segarra, Hartford, CT
·         Mayor Paul Soglin, Madison, WI
·         Mayor Marilyn Strickland, Tacoma, WA
·         Mayor Angel Taveras, Providence, RI
·         Mayor Nan Whaley, Dayton, OH
The Cities United for Immigration Action coalition, launched two weeks ago, includes an additional 18 cities who were not able to join the summit.

“The President’s plan to act on immigration reform is crucial to creating a more just country, and the federal government is depending on cities to implement the plan. It is critical that we get it right,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “Mayors are in the trenches and see firsthand the need for comprehensive immigration reform. We will take this opportunity to lay the ground work for a deeper national movement from the grassroots up.”

“As the son of immigrant parents, this issue is personal to me. The President’s bold action on immigration has set the course, and now we must follow through,” said San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee. “Most of the nation’s 12 million undocumented immigrants live in America’s cities, and so as Mayors we must lead on this reform to provide all of our residents with hope, opportunities and the services they deserve. We know our diversity drives our economies and makes us stronger. I thank New York City Mayor de Blasio for convening us today, and I am eager to create the change we need to see in our cities to help our residents succeed.”

“The President has taken an important first step in moving our nation forward on the critical issue of immigration. I applaud his efforts, which in many ways mirror the spirit of our Utah Compact. I appreciate meeting with his White House team and the Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson this morning thanks to New York Mayor de Blasio.  We will all work together on the vital next steps,” said Salt Lake City Mayor Ralph Becker.

“President Obama has defined a path forward on immigration and we are so grateful for that. I appreciate Mayor de Blasio convening us today. As Mayors, we will now take the baton and work within our communities to ensure we make this successful. But to be truly successful, we need Congress to pass comprehensive immigration reform,” saidHartford Mayor Pedro Segarra.

“Our immigration system is broken. Every day Congress delays action on meaningful reform further hurts families and affects our economy. These issues impact our cities each day, which is why I am proud to join Mayor de Blasio and others to support the President’s executive order and implement change now. We can no longer afford to wait,” saidProvidence Mayor Angel Taveras.

“We’re committed to comprehensive immigration reform, which will start with acting thoughtfully to ensure that millions of families benefit from the President’s important incremental action," said Mayor Ed Murray of Seattle. “But we must do more to protect the parents of Dreamers, themselves inspired by the American dream, who work two or three jobs to put their kids through college. As mayors, we’re working in our communities to build the coalition – business, labor, faith communities and others – that will achieve the broader solution,” from Seattle Mayor Ed Murray.

Former Council Member Madeline Provenzano Passes Away


 Former Council Member Madeline Provenzano has passed away. Councilwoman Provenzano was elected in the 1997 election, and took office on January 1, 1998. She was preceded by Councilman Michael Demarco, and succeeded by current 13th Councilman James Vacca on January 1, 2006. 

There will be a wake on Wednesday December 10th from 2 - 5 PM and again from 7 - 9 PM, and on Thursday December 11th from 2 - 5 PM and again from 7 - 9 PM. 

Schuyler Hill Funeral Home 
located at 3535 East Tremont Avenue
Bronx N.Y.
Is where the Wake for Ms. Provenzano is being held. 

In lieu of flowers, please donate to the Susan G. Komen Foundation:
http://ww5.komen.org/ 

Statement from Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. 

“Madeline Provenzano was a good friend, and someone who was passionate about her community. As a City Council Member Madeline helped make the East Bronx a better place, and was a champion for the creation of a new golf course at Ferry Point Park and a fighter for the needs of senior citizens and youth throughout the community. Madeline Provenzano was a strong women, a paragon of public service and a role model for other elected officials, and her spirit and conviction will be sorely missed.
“The thoughts and prayers of the people of The Bronx are with her family in their time of need,” said Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr.
Statement from State Senator Jeff Klein
“Madeline Provenzano shared a piece of my district in the East Bronx as a City Councilwoman. She dedicated her life to our communities and advocating for all of our issues in the City Council. I’m proud that, together, we successfully fought for everything from attracting a world class golf course to Ferry Point Park to pooling city and state funding to combat graffiti. Madeline was a wonderful leader and friend. My thoughts and prayers are with her family during this time.”




TOO HARD FOR ME TO SWALLOW


What You Should Know 
By Senator Rev. Rubén Díaz
32nd Senatorial District 



You should know that “I can’t breathe” were the last words that Mr. Eric Garner ever pronounced.  He said these words eleven times before he fell unconscious while being subject to brutal acts of excessive police force.  While Mr. Eric Garner was being subjected to an illegal chokehold, he also had his face crushed into the sidewalk by the knees of a Police Officer.

It is important for you to know some facts surrounding that incident.

#1  The use of the chokehold was banned by the New York City Police Department in 1993.  The NYPD Patrol Guide clearly states: “Members of the New York City Police Department will NOT use chokeholds. A chokehold shall include, but is not limited to, any pressure to the throat or windpipe, which may prevent or hinder breathing or reduce intake of air.”

#2  The autopsy results that were conducted on Mr. Eric Garner’s body by the New York City Medical Examiner’s Office ruled that his death was a homicide and that a chokehold killed him.

#3  It is common knowledge that any prosecutor or District Attorney has all of the power and tools and resources to personally control the legal process in court to indict a ham sandwich if he or she ever wanted to.

#4  There is a video that was taken to document what took place during the police actions on the day of Mr. Eric Garner’s death. This video captured the conversation, the intent of the police officer to detain Mr. Eric Garner, the action of the police officer to use excessive force, the last words of Mr. Eric Garner who cried for help saying: “I can’t breathe,” and the inaction of the other police officers and the Emergency Medical team.  Lastly, the video also captured the smirk and mocking attitude Police Officer Daniel Pantaleo showed on camera during the moments that Mr. Eric Garner was taken into the ambulance.

You should also know that Americans throughout our nation – including both those who are pro-police officer and anti-police officer – as well as the full spectrum of media from conservative to liberal, have all expressed some form of repudiation, anger, disgust and disbelief about the way Mr. Eric Garner lost his life at hands of the New York City Police Department.

The questions that I continue to ask about Mr. Eric Garner’s death are:  How is possible that a District Attorney, who could indict a ham sandwich, did not find any wrongdoing to present to the Grand Jury?  What kind of evidence did the Staten Island District Attorney present to the Grand Jury? Did the Grand Jury pay attention to the video and the dialogue that took place on the same video that the whole country has seen the way that Mr. Eric Garner was treated while he was on the ground clearly saying: “I can’t breathe.” eleven times?

To me, it is very difficult if not impossible to understand why, after hearing the forensics reports and after seeing a video that speaks for itself showing Mr. Eric Garner’s head being crushed into the concrete sidewalk, how could someone claim that Mr. Eric Garner was resisting arrest?  To me, it is ridiculous to think that anyone in that position could be resisting arrest.

My prayers are for Mr. Eric Garner’s family. I am most hopeful that when the federal government takes charge of this case, the federal court will render the justice this case deserves.

Ladies and gentlemen, I believe that our city should be free of crime and safe enough for our senior citizens and our entire community to walk on our streets without fear.  I am a law abiding citizen who has always and will continue to respect police officers and support the New York City Police Department, but this specific incident is too hard for me to swallow.

This is Senator Reverend Rubén Díaz, and this is what you should know.

Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz, other elected officials insist that permanent changes must be made to improve service on Bx7 and Bx10 bus lines


 After hearing from MTA NYC Transit officials, Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz, State Senator Jeffrey Klein, Council Member Andrew Cohen, and Bronx Community Board 8 Traffic & Transportation Committee Chair Michael Heller declared the MTA’s recent efforts to improve service on the Bx7 and Bx10 bus lines to be promising first steps but insisted that more permanent measures must be implemented to address serious overcrowding issues on the two routes.

For several years, service on the Bx7 and Bx10 bus lines has been plagued by delays, overcrowding, and long waits, particularly during the morning and evening rush hours. In August, Assemblyman Dinowitz and State Senator Klein held a press conference at the West 231st Street stop, demanding that the MTA take steps to improve service. While, over the past several months, the MTA has made a number of short-term changes that have reduced some overcrowding along the Bx7 line, the authority has not yet changed bus schedules or permanently added buses to either line. Assemblyman Dinowitz and his colleagues in government are adamant that lasting changes must be undertaken to truly fix the problem.

Assemblyman Dinowitz said, “Delays and overcrowding on the Bx7 and Bx10 bus lines will never be truly resolved without permanent changes. While I credit the MTA for listening to the concerns of myself and others in the community and searching for solutions to this problem, I urge the MTA to add additional buses to both routes, as well as investigate the possibility of extending nearby bus lines into the Northwest Bronx to accommodate the thousands of commuters who rely on these public services every week.”

Assemblyman Dinowitz’s recommendations include:

  • Permanently add buses to the Bx7 and Bx10 routes.
  • Extend the Bx3 up Broadway into Riverdale.
  • Extend the M100 from Manhattan into the Bronx or increase service to the Bx20 route.


Senator Jeff Klein  said: “The measures taken by the MTA and transit officials to fix the Bx10 and Bx7 bus lines are great first steps, but they are just that – first steps. More needs to be done to ease congestion and improve the daily commute of countless of Bronx residents. We need these buses to run on time and make the right stops for commuters. After months of trying to solve this, it’s simply unacceptable that on these lines, buses are still too crowded and people are still waiting too long.” 

“While the current efforts to improve service on the Bx7 and Bx10 bus lines have had a positive response, I believe our request to permanently add buses to these routes, as well as extend the Bx3 and M100 routes farther north into The Bronx will drastically improve the severe overcrowding conditions commuters are currently experiencing. These improvements, along with the bus countdown clock that will be installed at the West 231st Street bus stop from capital funds I allocated at the beginning of my term will also help relieve the long wait times now that the harsh winter months are approaching,” said Council Member Andrew Cohen.

Michael Heller, Chair of the Traffic & Transportation Committee of Bronx Community Board 8 said, “We were very pleased that the MTA sent senior managers to our Traffic and Transportation Committee, and we hope that spirit of cooperation extends to concrete improvements in services to our community.’

At the invitation of the Bronx Community Board 8 Traffic and Transportation Committee, MTA NYC Transit officials attended the committee meeting in November to explain the steps they have taken in recent months to improve bus service. The MTA officials announced several changes, including: temporarily adding three articulated buses to the Bx7 route between West 231st and West 263rd during weekday rush hours; improving communication systems between MTA drivers on each line to minimize bus bunch-ups; and eliminating the practice of having several 1 trains turn around before reaching the Bronx during rush hours, which led to doubly-full trains arriving at the West 231st Street station. At the meeting, the MTA officials agreed to study the recommendations made by Assemblyman Dinowitz and members of the community. Bus schedules are reviewed by the MTA four times annually, with the next change coming this spring.


Sunday, December 7, 2014

MAYOR DE BLASIO, CHANCELLOR FARIÑA, CSA ANNOUNCE TENTATIVE CONTRACT AGREEMENT


  Fiscally responsible agreement includes an average of 2 percent in raises a year over the life of the contract, consistent with established pattern—including unprecedented health care savings; with this agreement, 67 percent of City workforce is now settled

Pattern settlement underpins key elements of de Blasio administration’s education priorities: new Ambassador Principals/APs to support struggling schools, principals’ support to strengthen PROSE schools, new Model and Master Principal/AP roles to help strong leaders mentor peers
  
NEW YORK—Mayor Bill de Blasio announced today that the City of New York has reached a tentative contract agreement with the Council of School Supervisors and Administrators (CSA), meaning that the de Blasio administration has now reached agreements with 67 percent of the City workforce that had previously been working under expired contracts.

CSA represents public school principals, assistant principals, supervisors, and education administrators. The pattern of the tentative agreement with CSA is consistent with the pattern established with the United Federation of Teachers (UFT) contract earlier this year. The agreements also include the unprecedented health care savings agreed upon with the Municipal Labor Committee, ensuring that these raises are affordable and responsible for the City and its taxpayers. Even after the City’s budget factored in the pattern settlement for the first time since the contracts were left open in 2009, out-year gaps remained well below the historical average under prior administrations.

As part of today’s tentative contract, the City and the CSA have agreed to deepen the commitment to improving struggling schools. Ambassador teams will go to targeted struggling schools, including Renewal Schools, across the city to support and reinvigorate leadership. The Master and Model positions combine for leaders who excel and take on substantial additional roles and responsibilities outside their usual roles and, in many cases, extend their reach to other schools. This will leverage great leaders across the city. 

The proposed nine-year, one-month, 15-day contract with CSA would begin, retroactively, on March 6, 2010 and expire on April 20, 2019 and include an average of 2 percent per year in raises over the life of the contract.

“This agreement with CSA means that all of our school administrators will get the fair wages they deserve in a way that protects the City’s long-term fiscal health,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “Our administration has made it a priority to restore a productive and respectful dynamic between the City and its employees—and, as a result, we’ve reached agreements with 67 percent of our workforce that are consistent with the pattern we established earlier this year, including the unprecedented and guaranteed health care savings. But above all else, this is an education contract that will spur innovation and help us ensure the best educators are leading our schools.”

“As a former member of CSA, I believe strongly that principals make a major difference in the lives of children, families, teachers and everyone they come into contact with,” said Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña. “Being able to work collaboratively towards this contract ensures that the children of New York City will come first in many different ways. Today, we are celebrating a new beginning for the City with our school leaders coming together around the most important school issue: to support our students learning and ensure student achievement.”

“CSA members will now have the contract they demanded, one that recognizes their invaluable role in educating our children, and one that reflects Chancellor Fariña’s ethic of cooperation,” said CSA President Ernest Logan. “Every one of our DOE members will get the compensation they expected. And this includes the lump sum payments they earned as teachers of our children. This encompasses those who were promoted from the classroom into CSA leadership positions; those who will be promoted into CSA in the future; and those who have been promoted out of CSA to superintendent positions or management positions at Tweed and other offices throughout the system. The wisdom of this is that the Chancellor will now have little trouble promoting from within the school system to get the experienced, professional educators she needs to carry out her visionary agenda. With this agreement, CSA members will also have more authority to effectively manage their work days to be better able to deal with longer Monday and Tuesday class days; a more carefully monitored paperwork load; and a more expeditious system of investigations. All of these advances will help lessen certain gratuitous burdens on our school leaders and let them be better able to focus on their first priority, the instructional needs of our children.”

Under the tentative agreements announced today, CSA employees would receive the same restructured payments in lieu of the raises that had been granted by the previous administration to much of the municipal workforce: 4 percent for 2010 and 4 percent for 2011, provided in increments from 2015 through 2021. CSA employees, including those who had been promoted to supervisory positions since 2009, will receive the full restructured payments; the cost of these payments will be shared between CSA and the City, ensuring that the total cost of the contract remains affordable.

All employees would also receive raises of approximately 2 percent a year, each year from 2015 through 2018.

In total, the MLC and the City have agreed to secure $3.4 billion in health care savings through Fiscal Year 2018, and $1.3 billion in savings every year thereafter. The City and the municipal unions will work to secure cost-cutting measures, aimed at bending the curve of rising health care costs for the first time. These savings are guaranteed and enforceable by arbitration. 

All additional benefits agreed upon with the CSA will also be fully funded within the pattern settlement. 

CSA’s over 6,000 employees have worked without a contract since 2010. The terms of the agreements must be approved by the union’s full in-service membership.

Key Educational Reforms

Ambassador Program to Support Struggling Schools

To bring strong leadership to struggling schools, including Renewal Schools, the contract establishes a Principal/Assistant Principal Ambassador program for accomplished leaders to turn around low-performing schools. These expert teams will include a highly skilled principal and assistant principals from successful schools, who will be brought in to fill vacancies or take over leadership at struggling schools. These leaders will have the option of remaining at their new schools after one year, or returning to their home schools. Ambassador Principals and Assistant Principals will be compensated an additional $15,000 and $10,000, respectively. 

PROSE Schools

The contract reinforces the administration’s PROSE Schools program, paving the way for 200 schools to innovate new ways to improve student outcomes, ranging from reworking the school day and year, to wider variations in how a school day is programmed. The changes will be accomplished through exemptions to certain Chancellor’s Regulations or CSA contract provisions. 

Support Quality Public Schools in Underserved Communities

The agreement establishes new incentives to attract and retain quality principals and assistant principals in high-need schools. The “Hard to Staff School Differential” will additionally compensate principals and assistant principals, selected at the Chancellor’s discretion.

Reward and Retain the Best Professionals

The contract establishes an unprecedented career ladder for excellent educators through new Model and Master Principal/Assistant Principal positions. These positions, created at the Chancellor’s discretion, will give principals and assistant principals who excel additional responsibilities, including coaching their colleagues. Master Principals will be compensated an additional $25,000; Assistant Principals will be compensated an additional $20,000. Model Principals and Assistant Principals will receive an additional $15,000 and $10,000, respectively.

Excessed supervisors will have severance opportunities and an expedited disciplinary process mirroring the process created earlier this year in the teachers’ contract.

Fair Wages

The tentative contract agreement includes an average of 2 percent in raises a year over the life of the contract, conforming with the pattern settlement in place for other City unions.

For the “2008 to 2010” round of bargaining, as with UFT employees, CSA employees will receive restructured payments in lieu of the raises that had been granted by the previous administration to much of the municipal workforce: 4 percent for 2010 and 4 percent for 2011.

The wages CSA employees did not receive will be restructured and provided in incremental lump sum payments, from 2015 to 2020, reflecting a percentage of the balance as of the payout date—12.5 percent in 2016, 12.5 percent in 2018, and 25 percent each in 2019, 2020, and 2021. 

The increases they did not receive will also be restored to their salaries at 2 percent a year, each year, from 2015 through 2018, as follows:

September 6, 2015: 2.0%
September 6, 2016: 2.0%
September 6, 2017: 2.0%
September 6, 2018: 2.0%

For the “2010 to 2017” round of bargaining, employees will receive increases, also based on the established pattern:

September 6, 2013: 1.00%
September 6, 2014: 1.00%
September 6, 2016: 1.50%
October 6, 2017: 2.50%
October 6, 2018: 4.00%
                                                                        
The agreement also includes a one-time $1,000 ratification bonus.

Affordable Costs

The costs of today’s tentative agreement are as follows:

FY2014-2018:
Gross Cost: $500.9 million
Health Savings and Stabilization Fund: ($73.4 million)
Net Cost: $427.5 million

FY2019-2021:
Gross Cost of Lump Sum Payments: $390 million
Health Savings: ($74.1 million)
Net Cost: $315.9 million

The contract adheres to existing labor patterns in place for all other City unions. The total costs above include $72 million required to ensure CSA employees receive comparable benefits to other City workers; all other costs above were included in previous budgetary projections.

Friday, December 5, 2014

Just What is the Speed Limit - Especially by a School



  The above photo was taken on the Thursday December 4th afternoon outside Public School 81 on Riverdale Avenue. This is the school that former Mayor Mike Bloomberg visited with his then Traffic Commissioner to thank Senator Jeff Klein for the Speed Camera legislation that Senator Klein had sponsored. 

  Moving to today Mayor Bill de Blasio stood outside PS/MS 95 boasting of the increased number of speed cameras in New York City that was passed by the state legislature. You check the September archive section for September 2nd '120 New Speed Cameras', and you can read about it and see one of the six speed camera cars the mayor showed off. 

  Starting November 7th the Mayor and City Council passed a law reducing the speed limit on New York City roads from 30 miles per hour to 25 MPH unless otherwise posted. It was said that all street speed limit signs would be changed especially by schools. 

  So Mister Mayor why is it that in front of a public school that the former Mayor made such a big stink about speeding still has the higher 30 MPH speed limit sign? Is this another 'Tale of Two Cities ' where Manhattan comes first and the outer boroughs come next? Didn't you promise to end that?



Con Edison comes to the Boston Road Area



  This was what the corner of Boston Road and Waring Avenue looked like this past week, as Con Edison came to the area to dig and lay high pressure gas lines. You will see in the other photos just as I have been reporting in the Northwest Bronx area of Community Board 8 that the Boston Road area of Community Board 11 will have the pleasure or should I say displeasure of having Con Edison Rip up their streets. You will also see as before how Con Edison leaves the street condition, and always is up to date on permits. Just who am I trying to fool. you will also see the posted permits where the completion date on one is 12 - 9 - 2009. 















Left - The dates of start and completion have been scratched off on this permit.
Right On the only other permit the date of completion is Dec. 9, 2009, almost 5 years ago.














Left -  The middle of Boston Road and Waring Avenue.
Right - Just how deep are they digging.

  
Waring Avenue is left like this after the high pressure gas pipe is laid in the street.


Shades of the movie Tremors, no this is only the high pressure gas pipe being placed underground not one of the giant worms from the movie.

MAYOR DE BLASIO, COMMISSIONER STEVEN BANKS AND COMMISSIONER NISHA AGARWAL ANNOUNCE FULL ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA AND OPERATIONAL DETAILS OF IDNYC


  Mayor de Blasio commits to robust fraud prevention measures and strict privacy protections for applicant information

   Mayor Bill de Blasio, Human Resources Administration (HRA) Commissioner Steven Banks, and Commissioner of Immigrant Affairs Nisha Agarwal announced today the publication of the municipal identification card program eligibility and privacy policies, establishing broad access for all New Yorkers to apply for the card while implementing strong measures to ensure applicant privacy and prevent against fraud and identity theft. The administration also announced the official name and logo of this historic initiative: IDNYC.

“A great deal of analysis and care went into ensuring our IDNYC card is strong on privacy and security, while providing access to as many people as possible,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “We want New Yorkers to feel proud to carry this card in their wallet, but also to feel confident knowing that their information is safe and secure. I am pleased to announce today that we are truly delivering on the most ambitious municipal ID card program in the country, built with the best technology, secured with thoughtful privacy protections, and accessible to the widest cross-section of individuals.”

“HRA is proud to have been selected as the IDNYC program administrator based on our experience and expertise in serving millions of New Yorkers, while protecting against fraud,” said HRA Commissioner Steven Banks. “After listening closely to the feedback provided at the public hearing and in other forums, we developed Executive Orders that detail our commitment to applicant privacy, general program integrity, identity theft prevention and the creation of a customer-friendly appeals process. Through IDNYC, HRA will offer New Yorkers exemplary customer service on the front end and robust quality assurance and integrity procedures on the back end.”

“Thanks to the feedback we received from advocates, focus groups, immigrants, and the public hearings process, the IDNYC card reflects the needs and concerns of our communities,” said NYC Commissioner of Immigrant Affairs Nisha Agarwal. “We are going to continue to develop the program, working with businesses and our community partners to make new benefits available to cardholders as the program grows. Today’s announcement underscores our commitment to delivering to New Yorkers the best possible and most robust municipal ID card program in the country.”

“The City Council is proud to have spearheaded IDNYC, a groundbreaking program that will provide all New Yorkers with a safe, secure form of identification,” said City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito. “We are strongly committed to helping residents take full advantage of what the City offers so they can contribute to the economic vibrancy of New York. The eligibility policies established by the Administration will ensure that no person will be excluded from applying for the largest municipal ID program in the nation.”

“New York City continues to push the boundaries that have historically kept government and community disconnected from one another,” said Councilmember Carlos Menchaca. “The launch of IDNYC addresses the growing concern that because of a lack of proper identification, New York City residents are missing out on some of the key resources that make New York both a world class cultural destination, and a City with resources available to help secure dignified life for hardworking families and individuals. This ID program represents the way that government can ensure that residents are enfranchised, empowered, and able to be fully a part of our diverse communities. I look forward to working with the Administration, my colleagues in the Council, and with community groups to ensure the success of this program in my district, and across the five boroughs.”

“The New York Immigration Coalition applauds the de Blasio Administration for creating a safe, secure, and accessible Municipal ID Program,” said Steve Choi, Executive Director of NYIC. The rules and executive orders announced today for IDNYC represent a program that will allow the fullest eligibility possible, the most privacy permissible under current law, and critical protections for our communities against fraud. We stand confidently behind IDNYC and thank the Administration for listening to and acting upon the concerns of immigrant and other communities. We look forward to continuing to work alongside the City to ensure successful implementation of IDNYC.”

“I am very excited for the launch of the Municipal ID program and commend the Mayor and his staff for listening to our concerns, taking them to heart and ensuring that New Yorkers get the best quality service and protections as they go through the process,” said Linda Sarsour, Executive Director, Arab American Association of New York.

On July 10, 2014, Mayor de Blasio signed Local Law No. 35, establishing the New York City Identification Card Program to ensure that every New Yorker is provided with the opportunity and peace of mind that comes with possessing a government issued photo identification. On August 4th, Mayor de Blasio signed Executive Order 6 of 2014 designating the Human Resources Administration as the administering agency of IDNYC.

The newly published rules provide that:
         The IDNYC Card will be provided to applicants free of charge (the de Blasio Administration has committed to making IDNYC available free of charge for the first year of the program throughDecember 31, 2015)
         The IDNYC Card will expire after five years
         The minimum age to apply for the card will be 14 years of age
         Applicants will be required to present proof of identity and proof of residency in New York City
         Homeless New Yorkers without a permanent address will have the ability to obtain a card
         The card will provide address confidentiality protections to survivors of domestic violence

Additionally, the rules establish which documents may be used to demonstrate identity and residency.  The rule sets forth over 40 categories of documents that may be used to establish identity, including foreign passports and consular identification cards, foreign birth certificates, military identification, U.S. high school diplomas, and U.S. voter registration cards. Applicants will be able to demonstrate residency in New York City with cable, phone or utility bills, bank statements, and residential leases, among other documents. The documents will be accepted on a point-based system that weighs document value, similar to the one used by the New York State DMV.

Applicants without a home address will be able to list a Care Of address on their card. Passports that are machine-readable will be accepted up to three years after expiration, but all other documents must be current. There will be a 30-day window for applicants to appeal IDNYC denials.

The need for the City of New York to create an additional form of government-issued photo identification is significant, as approximately half of New York City residents age 16 and over do not have a New York State Driver’s License. The IDNYC Card will connect New Yorkers in all five boroughs – regardless of immigration status, homeless status, or gender identity – to public and private sector services, including one-year free membership packages at 33 of the City’s leading cultural institutions.

On October 8, 2014, HRA held a public hearing on the proposed IDNYC rules, receiving feedback from advocates and members of the public on how this card should reflect the needs of all New Yorkers, and address concerns about privacy and security.

As a result of the feedback received at the hearing, Commissioners Banks and Agarwal formed a workgroup to develop three executive orders, mandating high levels of protection for cardholder information and stringent processes for dealing with third party requests for IDNYC cardholder information. The HRA Executive Orders establish that only HRA staff designated by the IDNYC Executive Director and the HRA General Counsel will have access to the IDNYC applicant database, and all access to databases and servers will be tracked through audit logs.  A fourth executive order sets forth details concerning the administrative appeals process for applicants who have been denied a card. Commissioner Banks signed and issued the executive orders in conjunction with the publication of the rules.

Read the full HRA Executive Orders Here: http://www1.nyc.gov/site/muniid/about/executive-orders.page

The technology firms Prutech and MorphoTrust were chosen through a competitive bid process to develop the card enrollment system. MorphoTrust is an internationally renowned company that works with 42 state DMVs to provide highly secure driver license and state identification cards. The firm has established itself as a leader in developing topline security systems that protect against fraud and offer among the most advanced security protections in the world. Prutech has a breadth of experience delivering complex technology projects for the City of New York.

The enrollment system will feature ID verification scanning technology and high-tech cameras. Additionally, nearly two dozen experienced HRA investigators have been hired by the IDNYC Program as Integrity Specialists to protect against fraud and verify applicant identity. IDNYC cards will be printed by 3M, which has established a reputation for its extensive experience printing fraud-resistant identification cards for states and national governments. The cards will be printed on polycarbonate cardstock and features will include an embedded hologram, applicant signature, an engraved City seal and a secondary, black and white ghost photo of the applicant.

IDNYC cards will be available to the public in January 2015. The full list of enrollment center locations will be announced in advance of the launch.

For more information and program updates, please visit: nyc.gov/idnyc.