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November 19, 2024 At the end of fiscal year 2024, New York City's total on-board headcount was 306,248, slightly above the level at the end of fiscal year 2015 during the midpoint of the last economic recovery. Headcount is the total of full-time employees and part-time employees, which are combined into equivalents of full-time employees based on hours. After declining 23,563 (7 percent) from fiscal year 2019 to fiscal year 2023, on-board headcount increased 3,072 (1 percent) from fiscal year 2023 to fiscal year 2024. Previously, City headcount increased 33,189 (11 percent) from fiscal year 2012 to fiscal year 2019. Report Pensions & Benefits
October 09, 2024 State lawmakers should cut the sweetener habit and should stick to a healthy Tier 6 diet as enacted over a decade ago. Letter Pensions & Benefits
March 27, 2024 The proposed change to Tier 6 pension benefits, which will cost the State and local governments in New York nearly $400 million per year, is unnecessary, expensive, and should be rejected. Letter Pensions & Benefits
February 17, 2023 The tentative contract announced today provides raises that are very reasonable given recent and anticipated inflation. The great challenge is how the City will pay for them. Testimony Public Workforce
March 18, 2022 Public safety is a top issue for New Yorkers, and the New York City Police Department (NYPD) budget continues to garner attention and interest. Testimony City Budget
July 15, 2021 The more than $10 billion in planned annual spending on the NYPD continues to garner significant attention. NYC’s recently adopted FY 2022 Budget has five important takeaways. Blog City Budget
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NYC Employee Headcount
November 19, 2024 At the end of fiscal year 2024, New York City's total on-board headcount was 306,248, slightly above the level at the end of fiscal year 2015 during the midpoint of the last economic recovery. Headcount is the total of full-time employees and part-time employees, which are combined into equivalents of full-time employees based on hours. After declining 23,563 (7 percent) from fiscal year 2019 to fiscal year 2023, on-board headcount increased 3,072 (1 percent) from fiscal year 2023 to fiscal year 2024. Previously, City headcount increased 33,189 (11 percent) from fiscal year 2012 to fiscal year 2019. Report Pensions & Benefits New York State’s Sweet Tooth is Forming a Fiscal Cavity
October 09, 2024 State lawmakers should cut the sweetener habit and should stick to a healthy Tier 6 diet as enacted over a decade ago. Letter Pensions & Benefits CBC Urges Veto of 12 Benefit Sweeteners
A Letter to the Governor
October 04, 2024 CBC urges you to veto 12 bills because they enhance benefits and increase costs to New York State and local governments outside of the budget process. Statement Pensions & BenefitsStatement on Proposed Tier 6 Benefit Sweetener as Part of State’s Fiscal Year 2025 Budget
March 27, 2024 The proposed change to Tier 6 pension benefits, which will cost the State and local governments in New York nearly $400 million per year, is unnecessary, expensive, and should be rejected. Letter Pensions & Benefits CBC Urges Governor to Veto 20 Benefit Sweeteners
A Letter to the Governor
November 29, 2023 CBC urges you to veto S5027/A5208 and 19 other bills because they enhance benefits and increase costs to New York State and local governments. Blog City BudgetNot Undercover
The NYC Fiscal Year 2024 Executive Budget for the NYPD
May 17, 2023 New York City’s Fiscal Year 2024 Executive Budget allocates $10.8 billion for the NYPD in fiscal year 2024. Statement Public WorkforceStatement on the New York City–District Council 37 Tentative Contract Agreement
February 17, 2023 The tentative contract announced today provides raises that are very reasonable given recent and anticipated inflation. The great challenge is how the City will pay for them. Testimony Public Workforce Testimony on the New York City Health Insurance for Employees and Retirees
Submitted to the New York City Council Committee on Civil Service and Labor
January 09, 2023 With health insurance costs budgeted to increase at a rate of 8.5 percent between fiscal years 2023 and 2026, efforts to restrain the City’s costs are critical. Testimony Public WorkforceTestimony on the NYC Municipal Workforce
Delivered before the New York City Council Committees on Civil Service and Labor, and Oversight and Investigations
September 09, 2022 The City needs to move the existing vacancies to where they are needed, streamline the hiring process, and consider how to be more flexible given the tight labor market and modern career paths. Blog City BudgetUnnecessary Increase
Despite 18,000 Vacancies, NYC FY 2023 Executive Budget Adds 3,000 New Positions
May 04, 2022 Rather than add positions, the City should redistribute available vacancies across departments, within agencies, or across agencies. Blog City Budget18,000 Vacant City Jobs Is More Than Enough
Vacancy Reduction Should Not Impede Hiring; How NYC Manages Will
March 30, 2022 Any staffing issues are the result of management, system, and labor market challenges, not a shortage of available positions Testimony City BudgetTestimony on New York City Police Department's Fiscal Year 2023 Preliminary Budget
Submitted to the City Council Committee on Public Safety
March 18, 2022 Earlier today, CBC released an analysis of the NYPD’s budget that identified six major fiscal takeaways Blog City BudgetSix Fast Facts about the NYPD's Preliminary FY2023 Budget
March 18, 2022 Public safety is a top issue for New Yorkers, and the New York City Police Department (NYPD) budget continues to garner attention and interest. Testimony City Budget Testimony on Oversight of Changes to Municipal Retirees’ Health Care Plan
Testimony before the City Council Committee on Civil Service and Labor
October 28, 2021 This agreement starts right and then veers off course to miss the finish line because the resulting savings do not flow to the City’s bottom line. Blog City BudgetFive Fast Facts about the NYPD’s Adopted FY 2022 Budget
July 15, 2021 The more than $10 billion in planned annual spending on the NYPD continues to garner significant attention. NYC’s recently adopted FY 2022 Budget has five important takeaways. Blog City Budget Hiring Now, Attrition Later
One-Year Hiring Thaw Leaves Budgeted Staff Reduction For Next Mayor
July 13, 2021 In the Fiscal Year 2022 Adopted Budget, Mayor Bill de Blasio and the City Council temporarily reversed the City’s partial hiring freeze savings plan. Blog Public WorkforceWe Fund the Police
How Much? What Has Changed?
June 15, 2021 Few fiscal realities are the subject of as much public attention as the size of the NYPD budget. Blog Public WorkforceRising Again
City Reverses Course on Workforce Reduction
June 08, 2021 With annual budget gaps in fiscal years 2023 to 2025 nearing $5 billion (including unspecified labor savings), the City should not increase the size of its workforce. Op Ed Public WorkforceEarly Retirement Incentives for City Workers Is Foolhardy and Expensive
Crain’s New York Business
April 15, 2021 New York state has just authorized New York City to offer most civilian employees an incentive to retire early. The city should flatly reject this opportunity. Blog Public WorkforceEarly Retirement Incentives
Weighing the Risks for State and Local Governments
February 22, 2021 In light of the City’s fiscal stress and the availability of other options to balance the budget, the City should reduce its workforce through attrition and not pursue the ERI.Pagination
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