Sunday, March 6, 2022

NYC Comptroller Lander Kicks Off NYC Open Data Week With Workshops to Open the City’s Checkbook to all New Yorkers

 

Announces series of workshops open to press and the public to explore city spending and contracts available in  Checkbook NYC.

Sign up for March 9 workshops open now.

 The NYC Comptroller’s Office is joining NYC Open Data Week (March 5-13) by hosting public demonstrations of Checkbook NYC, an award-winning online tool for financial transparency. Checkbook NYC provides unprecedented access to view and track how New York City government spends its approximately $98.5 billion annual budget. Introductory and advanced workshops on Checkbook NYC will be held on March 9, and future workshops will be held quarterly.

Wednesday, March 9th – Checkbook Workshops 9:00 AM — Getting to Know Checkbook: This session will include a broad overview of the type of data that Checkbook offers and a guided tour of the site’s functionality. Time: 9:00 – 10:00 AM [Register link 2:00 PM — Advanced Searches: This will contain an overview of the different search mechanisms within Checkbook and understanding which search technique is best suited for specific queries. Actual queries are welcome as examples. Time: 2:00 – 3:00 PM [Register link All demos will be conducted by the Checkbook NYC Team; Nicole Boone and Edward Sokolowski. Future Checkbook workshops will be held quarterly, in June, September, and December. Sign up here for updates.  This year marks the 10th anniversary of the Open Data Law and the 6th annual Open Data Week. NYC Open Data Week is an initiative organized by the NYC Mayor’s Office of Data Analytics, NYC Open Data at the Office of Technology and Innovation, BetaNYC and Data Through Design, with support from the Jacobs Urban Tech Hub at Cornell Tech. NYC Open Data Week advances open government, increases data literacy, and celebrates civic engagement. To see the full list of this year’s Open Data Week events, visit open-data.nyc. As the agency tasked with fiscal oversight and accountability, the Comptroller’s Office shares a commitment to transparency and is proud to be a resource for New Yorkers looking to understand and analyze the City’s spending and contracting.    “In my office, we believe every week is open data week,” said Comptroller Brad Lander.  “Checkbook NYC empowers the public to keep an eye on how public resources are being spent, with detailed, up-to-date information about expenditures, contracts, payroll, and revenue. I commend Comptroller Liu for the vision that brought forth the first iteration of Checkbook NYC and Comptroller Stringer for improving and expanding this unparalleled tool for municipal transparency. This week, we added a new dashboard for the public to see and track how NYC is spending $11 billion in COVID relief aid. Making this data available to the public gives us the chance to partner with New Yorkers to provide oversight, identify inefficiencies and inequities, and work together to improve how government delivers services.”  “Thank you Comptroller Lander for joining us in celebrating Open Data Week this year,” said  NYC Chief Analytics Officer  Martha Norrick. ”Through publishing robust data, creating a user-friendly tool – Checkbook NYC – to access that data, and teaching sessions this week to help users work with that data, the Comptroller’s Office is making an important contribution to the Office of Technology and Innovation’s mission of making Open Data more accessible to New Yorkers.”  “Thank you Comptroller Brad Lander for helping us kick off NYC’s School of Data and Open Data week” said Noel Hidalgo, Executive Director of BetaNYC. “When we were fighting for the City’s open data law, Checkbook NYC was near and dear to our hearts. Checkbook NYC has always been an example of an agency sharing detailed information via a simple to use website AND providing that underlying information in a machine-readable format. No paywalls nor FOIL request! Government data 24/7! We’re looking forward to your ongoing support of NYC School of Data and Open Data Week!”  In July 2010, Comptroller John Liu launched the beta version of Checkbook NYC, an online transparency tool that for the first time placed the City’s day-to-day spending in the public domain. Then in 2013 Comptroller Liu launched Checkbook 2.0, making NYC  top in the nation for financial transparency and set work in progress for Checkbook 3.0 to include apps that provide access to revenue data, sub-contracting information, agency budgetary conditions, and mapping of capital projects. During the Stringer Administration, four updates were performed to enhance the City’s Checkbook. The Checkbook NYC 2.0 website was developed in collaboration with REI Systems, a firm that worked with the Obama Administration to launch several federal transparency websites, including USAspending.gov, DATA.gov, and ITdashboard.gov.  This week, NYC Comptroller Brad Lander unveiled a Federal Stimulus Fund Tracker on CheckbookNYC to bring transparency and accountability to city spending of COVID-19 relief funds. This new dashboard tracks spending from FY 2022 onward of nearly $11 billion in Federal pandemic relief funding for New York City.    In addition to the data available on CheckbookNYCthe City’s Open Data Portal includes the following data sets relevant to the Comptroller’s work: data regarding individual claims filed and settled against the City of New York; holdings data from City Retirements Systems; Proxy Voting Records from City Retirement Systems; and data related to outstanding New York City bonds, interest rate exchange agreements, and projected debt service on those bonds. That data is available here. Many of the datasets on NYC Open Data the Open Data Portal can be filtered, downloaded, and steered as needed for deeper analysis. The Comptroller’s office also makes available online audit, policy, and budget reports (here) and documents related to Pension and Investment Management and City Bonds (here).       Sign up for the March 9 Checkbook NYC workshops, or get on the list for future workshops here: https://comptroller.nyc.gov/checkbooknyc-demos/

Governor Hochul Updates New Yorkers on State's Progress Combating COVID-19 - MARCH 6, 2022

 COVID-19 Vaccine Vials

Lowest Daily Statewide Positivity Since July 18 
 
Under 2% Positivity for Ten Consecutive Days 
 
12 COVID-19 Deaths Statewide Yesterday

 Governor Kathy Hochul today updated New Yorkers on the state's progress combating COVID-19.    

"Time and time again, New Yorkers have shown that in the face of hardship they will always do what's necessary to keep themselves and their communities safe and well," Governor Hochul said. "While we have made incredible progress against COVID-19, it is vital that those who have yet to take advantage of the vaccine do so as soon as possible. It's free, effective, and readily available. To maintain the progress we've made, get your vaccine today." 
      
Today's data is summarized briefly below:

  • Test Results Reported - 115,466 
  • Total Positive - 1,566 
  • Percent Positive - 1.36%   
  • 7-Day Average Percent Positive - 1.56% 
  • Patient Hospitalization - 1,507 (-34) 
  • Patients Newly Admitted - 184 
  • Patients in ICU - 269 (-13) 
  • Patients in ICU with Intubation - 139 (-11) 
  • Total Discharges - 287,076 (+212) 
  • New deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS - 12 
  • Total deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS - 54,832  

The Health Electronic Response Data System is a NYS DOH data source that collects confirmed daily death data as reported by hospitals, nursing homes and adult care facilities only.   

  • Total deaths reported to and compiled by the CDC - 69,418 

This daily COVID-19 provisional death certificate data reported by NYS DOH and NYC to the CDC includes those who died in any location, including hospitals, nursing homes, adult care facilities, at home, in hospice and other settings.     

  • Total vaccine doses administered - 37,125,459 
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 24 hours - 16,470 
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 7 days - 333,941 
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose - 91.8% 
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series - 83.1% 
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 95.0% 
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 85.7% 
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 12-17 with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 81.9% 
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 12-17 with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 71.8% 
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose - 81.2% 
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series - 73.4% 
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 89.1% 
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 75.7% 
Each New York City borough's 7-day average percentage of positive test results reported over the last three days is as follows:    

Borough in NYC 

Thursday, March 3, 2022 

Friday, March 4, 2022 

Saturday, March 5, 2022 

Bronx 

0.71% 

0.87% 

0.78% 

Kings 

0.94% 

1.00% 

0.96% 

New York 

1.28% 

1.33% 

1.29% 

Queens 

1.07% 

1.04% 

0.96% 

Richmond 

1.26% 

1.26% 

1.16% 


Bronx River Art Center (BRAC) - Diasporic Dysplasia exhibition opens March 11th at BRAC

 

Bronx River Art Center (BRAC) Presents:

DIASPORIC DYSPLASIA
March 11th - April 16th, 2022

With a live reception,
Friday, March 11th from 6:30 - 8:00 PM

Bronx River Art Center (BRAC) is pleased to announce the presentation of, DIASPORIC DYSPLASIA, curated by Toisha Tucker. The exhibition will open to the public with a live reception at limited capacity on Friday evening, March 11th at 6:30 pm and run through Saturday, April 16th.

The artists featured in the exhibition are: Lorena Cruz Santiago, Meital Yaniv, Sarah Tortora, Slinko, Unyimeabasi Udoh and Yasmeen Nematt Alla
Send her back. The lands we live on have never been anything to many of us other than home. Yet, it is on the soils of these countries where many of us exist as Other. The ideals that drive nationalism are not founded on notions of a full spectrum of colors, but instead a devout homogeneity to an abstracted cultural ideal. Within these borders, there are those of us who get to be Americans or Canadians or British full stop and also get to be German, French etc. and there are those of us who get to be hyphens: African-American, Mexican-American, British-Nigerian etc. Our nomenclature sets us apart as not wholly part of our birthrights-we are dashed halves. We are people who can be sent back.

Diasporic Dysplasia explores the space of living and thriving within a multiplicity of cultural identities whether as immigrant or natural born citizen on soils of diasporas, firm and figurative. The abnormalities in self-perception that can emerge in that struggle to navigate the penumbra of who we are when we are many things, but also maybe none. This exhibition delves into the way some of us deal with this tension in manners that aren’t normative to the structures of our cultures-dysphasic and displaced from ourselves, other within the Other. 

The works on display in Diasporic Dysplasia include Lorena Cruz Santiago’s intimately stark video Do You/Did YouMeital Yaniv’s burdensome concrete cast of five years of papers from their US visa application, ephemera from the 12-hour durational performance Monsters In Their Eyes and their topographic projection of assimilation bloodlines, Sarah Tortora’s romantic prop-like sculpture Yolanda and Vessel Piece made from paper pulp, resin, wood, and found geodes/mineral deposits that conflates human scale at its most essential with a scale of geological history impossible to fathom, Slinko’s winsome video Ghost Looking for its Spirit which parses failures and aspirations of communism against the backdrop of American landscape, Unyimeabasi Udoh’s series of ephemeral photographs Topographic representation of: which conflate familial Nigerian, British and American histories into a layered recounting of the punitive expedition of Arochukwu, and Yasmeen Nematt Alla’s Culture Tablets which play with the impossibility of the production of “culture pills” that allow for a daily dose of easy cultural assimilation. To learn more about the exhibition visit: https://diasporicdysplasia.tumblr.com/

Please join us on March 31st for two virtual artist talks: one at 1pm with artists Meital Yaniv and Unyimeabasi Udoh and another 6pm with artists Lorena Cruz Santiago, Sarah Tortora and Yasmeen Nematt Alla.
Please visit our eventbrite at http://bracbx.eventbrite.com/ to RSVP for the link.

About the curator:

Tucker is an interdisciplinary conceptual artist and writer. They hold a BA from Cornell University and a MFA from the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Design. They are an AIR at Andrew Freedman Home in the Bronx and will be in residence at Marble House Project this fall. Tucker was a 2021 NYC Artist Corps Grantee, 2020 Bronx Council on the Arts BRIO awardee and the 2018-2019 Alice C. Cole Fellow at Wellesley College. Tucker is an Affiliated Fellow of the American Academy in Rome, AIR Alumni of the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, ACRE, Ellis-Beauregard
Foundation. Their published work is in the Vassar Review and nonsensical. Their curated shows include Diasporic Dysplasia and Persist. They have exhibited in Rosendale, Omaha, Catskill, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Boston, Los Angeles, Chicago, New York and Verona. Tucker resides in the Bronx with their partner, their thriving aloe plant named Wednesday and a fiddle leaf fig named Newton. You can see more of their work at toishatucker.com.
COVID-19 vaccination proof requirements have expanded to include younger children and to require full vaccination:

Children: Children ages 5 to 11 are now required to have proof of vaccination for the public indoor activities. They must show they have received at least one dose of a vaccine.
Full Vaccination: People 12 and older participating in public indoor activities are now required to show proof they have received two vaccine doses, except for those who have received the one dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Starting January 29, 2022, children ages 5 to 11 must also show proof of full vaccination.

Attendees will also be required to be masked.
This program is made possible with support from the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, including the Bronx Delegation. Additional support is from Bronx Borough President Vanessa Gibson, the NYS Council on the Arts with support from Governor Kathy Hochul and the NYS Legislature including Senator Luis R.  SepĂșlveda. Foundation support is from Con Edison: The Power of Giving, BronxCare Health System, New York Community Trust and private donors.