New York City Local Laws

from January 01, 2019
Last Document: January 01, 2024





Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 898

September 19, 2023

  • Law 1, Int 76 – Establishing a program to provide financial assistance for the purchase and installation of backwater valves

  • September 27, 2023

  • Law 16, Int 1592 – Transfer of land, buildings and facilities of Rikers Island to the dept of citywide administrative services

  • Law 84, Int 2353 – Trade waste industry unions

  • Law 188, Int 1682 – Prohibition of conversion therapy services

  • Law 160, Int 1332 – Office of constituent services

  • Law 59, Int 1680 – Reporting requirements regarding the production, processing, distribution and consumption of food in the city

  • Law 54, Int 1916 – COVID-19 Relief Package - Requiring the waiver and refund of certain sidewalk cafe revocable consent fees, and providing for the repeal of such provision upon the expiration thereof

  • Law 209, Int 1750 – Authorizing an increase in the amount to be expended annually in five business improvement districts and one special assessment district

  • Law 91, Int 2333 – Prohibiting the inclusion of a food service establishment's products on a third-party food delivery platform without a written agreement authorizing such inclusion, and to provide penalties

  • Law 69, Int 881 – Education and outreach regarding childhood lead poisoning prevention

  • Law 22, Int 2417 – Prohibiting the sale or distribution of materials that obscure license plates or distort images of license plates

  • Law 146, Int 2262 – Final inspections for temporary construction equipment permits and prohibiting stand-off brackets

  • Law 97, Int 1484 – Providing information about pets whose owners enter homeless shelters

  • Law 13, Int 755 – Requiring the equal employment practices commission to analyze and report annually on citywide racial and ethnic classification underutilization

  • Law 110, Int 459 – Rat mitigation zones

  • Law 31, Int 148 – Expanding the definition of victim of domestic violence to include economic abuse

  • Law 85, Int 244 – Residential curbside organics collection

  • Law 9, Int 1770 – Whistleblower protections for individuals subject to alleged adverse personnel actions

  • Law 2, Int 1415 – Wrongful discharge of fast food employees

  • Law 144, Int 1530 – Reporting on housing decisions made for transgender, gender nonconforming, and intersex individuals

  • Law 125, Int 2136 – Authorizing an increase in the amount to be expended annually in two business improvement districts

  • Law 65, Int 1681 – School food waste prevention plans

  • Law 88, Int 2054 – Fees charged by third-party food delivery services while an emergency has been declared and food service establishments are prohibited from operating at the maximum indoor occupancy, and for 90 days thereafter

  • Law 210, Int 906 – Transfer of control over Hart island from the dept of corrections to the dept of parks and recreation

  • Law 92, Int 2335 – Requiring third-party food delivery services to provide a description of the telephone numbers listed in connection with food service establishments

  • Law 18, Int 633 – Reporting of pay and employment equity data

  • Law 21, Int 2372 – Creating a two year look-back window to the gender-motivated violence act, and extending its statute of limitations

  • Law 145, Int 2168 – Creating a water account database

  • Law 96, Int 1483 – Plan to accommodate pets of families and individuals experiencing homelessness in shelter

  • Law 12, Int 752 – Create an office of diversity and inclusion within the department of citywide administrative services

  • Law 109, Int 442 – Abating rodents as a requirement for the issuance of certain construction permits

  • Law 44, Int 897 – Naming of 129 thoroughfares and public places

  • Law 89, Int 281 – Organic waste drop off sites

  • Law 10, Int 2058 – Requiring the DOE to report on remote learning attendance

  • Law 73, Int 415 – Requiring the dept for the aging to report annually on senior centers within public housing developments

  • Law 62, Int 862 – Requiring the DOB to issue stop work orders along with notices to revoke work permits

  • Law 74, Int 1266 – Pilot program for shared electric scooters

  • Law 93, Int 2356 – Extending the prohibition of certain telephone order charges by third-party food delivery services

  • Law 45, Int 1536 – Reporting on efforts to prevent and address sex- and gender-based discrimination and harassment

  • Law 181, Int 49 – Installing utility-scale energy storage systems on city buildings and conducting a feasibility study on the installation of such systems throughout the city

  • Law 5, Int 1911 – Provision of information to tenants of the NYCHA regarding the mold ombudsperson

  • Law 34, Int 1281 – Prohibiting food stores and retail establishments from refusing to accept payment in cash

  • Law 20, Int 2366 – Tree health assessments and inspections

  • Law 144, Int 1894 – Automated employment decision tools

  • Law 95, Int 1209 – Requiring the department of correction to utilize doula services

  • Law 3, Int 370 – Suspending alternate side parking regulations on Three Kings' Day

  • Law 108, Int 414 – Rat mitigation progress in rat mitigation zones

  • Law 43, Int 886 – Accessory sign violations and waiving penalties and fees for signs that are accessory to a use on the same zoning lot

  • Law 88, Int 280 – Community recycling centers and events

  • Law 33, Int 1849 – Establishing fire safety provisions for film production locations and requiring production location fire safety managers for certain rigging, filming and production activities