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Each Saturday in NYC there over 1000 children picked up in school buses at their homes. [3] [4] Weekdays, special trucks provide a mobile stage at hundreds of locations. The Metro staff and trained volunteers visit the families of the children every week at their homes. Metro has also organized child sponsorship.
New York City Administrative Code § 7-201(c)(2), passed in 1979 by the New York City council and codified in 1980, bars personal injury lawsuits against the city arising from sidewalk or roadway defects, unless the city was notified of the defect at least 15 days prior to the injury. [2] The administrative code (as amended in 2006) provides:
RAD authorizes the conversion of assistance under several of these programs to project-based section 8 assistance, which may take either of two forms: Project-based rental assistance (PBRA) authorized under section 8 of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 [9] ("the Act"); or; Project-based voucher (PBV) assistance authorized under section 8(o)(13) of ...
Section 8 Housing is a term derived from Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937. The program offers financial subsidies to landlords who offer rental units to low-income people at ...
The Section 8 program, named after a section of the federal Housing Act, is one of the U.S. government’s most powerful tools to keep rental housing affordable and to fight overcrowding and ...
The city does not currently have a separately funded sidewalk maintenance program for repair of deteriorated sidewalks. ... Article I, Section 30- 1(b) declares that defective, unsafe or hazardous ...
The main Section 8 program involves the voucher program. A voucher may be either "project-based"—where its use is limited to a specific apartment complex (public housing agencies (PHAs) may reserve up to 20% of its vouchers as such [11])—or "tenant-based", where the tenant is free to choose a unit in the private sector, is not limited to specific complexes, and may reside anywhere in the ...
From November 2013 until January 2016, the NYC Housing, Preservation and Development agency, which is responsible for oversight of the city’s vast stock of multi-unit residential buildings, issued more than 10,000 violations for dangerous lead paint conditions in units with children under the age of six, the age group most at risk of ingesting lead paint.