Campaign 2017 Fact Check
Fact Check: Did Mayor de Blasio ‘Refer to Our Cops as Bigots’?
Jarrett Murphy |
Such was the claim made by public advocate candidate JC Polanco at this week’s debate.
Mayoral Photography Office
Such was the claim made by public advocate candidate JC Polanco at this week’s debate.
The documents, released ahead of a public meeting planned for Thursday, describe in what ways city agencies agree and disagree with community recommendations.
It is possible that as few as one in every 275 city voters tuned in to this week’s televised debates for the offices of public advocate and comptroller. Those who did turn it on saw exactly what a debate is supposed to show.
A Bronx church is both a place of worship and a community center that draws people of different religions and cultures in by providing resources that are inaccessible to them in traditional clinical facilities.
Where did it come from? Is there a way out?
New statistics reveal the extent to which the de Blasio administration has favored for-profit developers, as well as evidence that non-profits build more deeply affordable housing.
Our take as the debate between Michel Faulkner and Scott Stringer played out live.
Plus: Has de Blasio’s CCRB been too soft on bad cops?
We asked the people running to be public advocate. Devin Balkind, the libertarian candidate, and Republican JC Polanco have answered.
Also, the mayor appears at yet another town hall, and City Limits webcasts a key land-use meeting.