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MAYOR ADAMS LAYS OUT AMBITIOUS AGENDA TO MAKE NEW YORK CITY BEST PLACE TO RAISE A FAMILY IN FOURTH STATE OF THE CITY ADDRESS 

 Editor’s note: We previously covered some of the Mayor’s announcements with regard to the wins that this administration has celebrated in the past year.  Record numbers of homeless people helped, the 400th anniversary of the founding of New York City and some of the events planned for this time, and changes to the involuntary commitment laws.  We also covered Chalkbeat’s perspective on the educational proposals. 

Speech Outlines Multi-Year Initiatives to Tackle Street Homelessness,  Keep Young People Safe, Build More Housing and Family-Friendly Neighborhoods Through New “City of Yes for Families” Plan, Teach Students How to Save and Spend Money,  Expand Access to Playgrounds, and Save Working-Class Families Millions of Dollars 

 

Advances Mayor Adams’ Vision for Safer, More Affordable New York City for Families 

Follows Landmark Year of Safer Streets and Subways; Record Amounts of Jobs, Small Businesses, Housing Construction; Passage of Most Pro-Housing Zoning Proposal in City History; and Expansion of Early Childhood Education System 

NEW YORK – New York City Mayor Eric Adams outlined a bold vision to make New York City the best place to raise a family in his fourth State of the City address, delivered at The Apollo Theater in Harlem, Manhattan. After driving crime down, passing historic housing legislation, and helping New Yorkers save billions of dollars through tax relief, child care, free internet, and more in 2024, Mayor Adams used today’s address to unveil new initiatives that will create a safer, more affordable city for working-class people, especially those raising a family, all across the five boroughs. 

 

“In the past year alone, our administration passed historic housing legislation, shattered the record for the most jobs in city history, drove major crimes down, and did so much more to build a family-friendly city. As a result of all these efforts, the state of our city is strong,” said Mayor Adams. “But there is no denying that many New Yorkers — especially our families — are still anxious about the future. We have to make sure that the greatest city in the world is also the greatest place to raise a family. From keeping young people safe to tackling street homelessness, from building more family-friendly neighborhoods to saving New Yorkers millions of dollars, the initiatives we laid out today will make New York City the safest place to raise a family, the most affordable place to raise a family, and the best place to raise a family. My mother never stopped fighting to provide her family with a better life, and that is why I will never stop fighting to do the same for you.” 

 

Keeping New York the Safest Big City in America to Raise a Family 

 

Under Mayor Adams’ leadership, America’s safest big city has gotten even safer. Overall crime continued to fall in 2024, including a 7.3 percent drop in shootings, a 3.6 percent drop in homicides, and a 5.4 percent drop in transit crime. Since coming into office, the Adams administration has seized nearly 20,000 illegal guns and over 80,000 ghost cars and illegal motorized vehicles, like ATVs and mopeds. The administration has also successfully cracked down on illegal smoke shops, shutting down more than 1,300 illegal shops this past year; tackled car theft, helping deliver 12 straight months of declines in 2024; and reduced dangerous lithium-ion battery fires, implementing strategies that led to a 72 percent decrease in lithium-ion battery fire deaths since introduction of a new plan in 2023. The administration has remained focused on keeping families safe and improving New Yorkers’ quality of life. 

 

Additionally, the Adams administration has made smart, upstream investments to prevent crime in the first placelaunching a $485 million blueprint to keep communities safe from gun violence that invests in mentorship, mental health, and job training for young at-risk New Yorkers. In 2025, the Adams administration will build on that work and pursue new investments that engage young people. Following an expansion of the New York City Department of Youth and Community Development’s (DYCD) Saturday Night Lights program that gives families a safe place to send their children and teenagers, the Adams administration will open a $9 million transformation of the 133,000 square-foot Brigadier General Charles Young Field in Harlem. The investments will replace dirt and grass with a synthetic turf field, as well as add new dugouts, backstops, fencing, and lighting for use year-round. In addition to renovating the existing baseball, softball, and football fields, the new field will also accommodate lacrosse and soccer. The field will welcome hundreds of young people at expanded hours and host programming by Saturday Night Lights, the Harlem Children’s Zone, Youth on the Move, and more. 

 

Moreover, Mayor Adams announced that New York City will invest $163 million over five fiscal years to expand five of its most successful programs — Fair Futures, College Choice, Career Choice, GirlsJustUs, and Assertive Community Engagement & Success — that engage at-risk youth and other young people; reach a total of 8,000 participants; and help connect more New York City youth with counseling, careers, college opportunities, and more. 

 

Subways, Serious Mental Illness, Shelters: A New Commitment to Addressing Street Homelessness 

 

From day one, the Adams administration has pursued a bold, new approach to getting New Yorkers living on city streets and subways the help, health care, and housing they deserve. Since the launch of Mayor Adams’ Subway Safety Plan in 2022, the administration has moved over 8,000 New Yorkers from the subways into shelter while, in Fiscal Year (FY) 2024, the New York City Department of Social Services (DSS) helped a record 18,500 households transition from shelters into stable homes. The Adams administration has also doubled the number of outreach staff working with unhoused New Yorkers, recently launched a new Partnership Assistance for Transit Homelessness initiative, and expanded its Subway Co-Response Outreach Teams with New York state to connect more New Yorkers to care. 

 

Mayor Adams announced today that New York City will invest $650 million to bolster that work and expand support for New Yorkers living on subways, wrestling with serious mental illness, and at risk of entering city shelters. 

 

To help move more New Yorkers off subways, as well as city streets, and into shelters, the Adams administration will add 900 new Safe Haven beds that offer a more flexible, personalized option for New Yorkers experiencing unsheltered homelessness and have proven a highly-effective tool for moving New Yorkers from homelessness into permanent housing. To help break the cycle of homelessness and hospitalization, the Adams administration will open an innovative facility specifically to support unsheltered New Yorkers with serious mental illness, offer psychiatric care and substance use treatment, and help secure permanent housing. 

Finally, Mayor Adams set a new goal: No child should ever be born into New York City’s shelter system. To make this goal a reality, the Adams administration will launch a pilot program to connect soon-to-be parents applying for shelter with services that help them find permanent housing and prevent homelessness before their child is born, moving new families into stable homes more quickly and preventing lifelong cycles of poverty and housing instability before they begin. 

 

These new investments — which will take place over several fiscal years — will help New York City tackle street homelessness by supporting New Yorkers living on subways, helping connect individuals with serious mental illness to care, and keeping families out of city shelters. 

 

Additionally, Mayor Adams reiterated his calls for Albany to pass the Supportive Interventions Act in an effort to give those experiencing severe mental illness the care they deserve and provide assistance to those who can no longer care for themselves, potentially posing a danger to themselves or others. 

 

Helping More Families Find Homes in the Five Boroughs by Turning New York Into a “City of Yes for Families” 

 

Since 2022, the Adams administration has made historic progress creating new affordable housing, connecting New Yorkers to affordable housing, and keeping New Yorkers in the homes they already have. The Adams administration has shattered affordable housing records two fiscal years in a row; financed the construction and preservation of over 79,300 housing units since 2022; and connected a record number of New Yorkers to affordable housing through City Fighting Homelessness and Eviction Prevention Supplement and the city’s housing lottery.  

 

Additionally, to bring long-overdue change to New York City’s zoning code and build a little more housing in every neighborhood, the Adams administration introduced and passed “City of Yes for Housing Opportunity,” the most pro-housing zoning proposal in city history. This historic legislation will create up to 80,000 new homes and invest $5 billion in housing and infrastructure over the next 15 years. Coupled with significant new housing production tools secured in Albany in 2024, the administration has focused on building more housing to address the decades-long crisis. To further tackle the city’s historically low housing stock, this year, Mayor Adams announced New York City’s first-ever Charter Revision Commission focused specifically on solving the city’s generational housing crisis and tasked the commission with examining the City Charter to determine how to create and preserve more affordable housing. 

 

Despite these landmark achievements, too many families still struggle to make rent or purchase a home in New York City. Mayor Adams today unveiled “City of Yes for Families,” a multi-pronged approach to housing, zoning, and public space that will create more family-friendly neighborhoods and build new housing. Under City of Yes for Families, the Adams administration will work within agencies to build more family-sized housing units and multi-generational homes, as well as work with its partners in the New York City Council to introduce new tools to build more housing alongside schools, playgrounds, grocery stores, accessible transit stations, and libraries. 

 

As part of City of Yes for Families, the Adams administration and the New York Public Library will move forward with the largest co-located library project in New York City history, bringing over 800 units of mixed-income housing and a new facility to the Bloomingdale Library location in Manhattan Valley. City of Yes for Families will also include new tools to support homeownership, help families make a downpayment on a home, add an additional dwelling unit to their property, and count rental payments towards credit history.  

 

At last year’s State of the City, Mayor Adams launched “24 in 24,” an ambitious initiative to advance 24 housing projects on public sites in 2024 that will build 12,000 housing units. Last year, Mayor Adams surpassed his goal and advanced 26 housing projects on public sites. This past summer, Mayor Adams also issued executive order 43, requiring city agencies to review city-owned and controlled land for potential housing development. In 2025, the Adams administration will continue that work and advance the first sites for development, including 100 Gold Street, where over 2,000 new homes will be created just steps away from City Hall. The Adams administration will also advance housing projects at 395 Flatbush in Downtown Brooklyn, on the waterfront at Coney Island West, and in St. George on Staten Island. Collectively, these housing projects and others are expected to produce over 8,700 units, with additional public sites to be announced later this year. 

 

In 2024, the Adams administration not only passed its Bronx Metro-North plan, but also advanced four other additional neighborhood-specific plans to create 50,000 housing units over the next 15 years. Mayor Adams today announced that his administration will unveil additional neighborhood plans throughout 2025 and — as part of City of Yes for Families — launched “The Manhattan Plan,” an initiative to review zoning across the whole of Manhattan, unlock potential housing sites for development from Inwood to the Financial District, and add 100,000 new homes to the borough, bringing Manhattan to a total of 1 million homes over the next decade. The Manhattan Plan will include the Adams administration’s Midtown South Mixed-Use Plan, public sites, and more. 

 

Finally, Mayor Adams announced today that the New York City Department of Veterans’ Services (DVS) has begun collaboration with DSS to enhance housing support and resources available to veterans. DVS and DSS will work together to streamline the use of data systems and improve the overall experience for veterans across the city. This partnership will help veterans and their families receive seamless assistance and create a stronger safety net for those who have served the nation.  

 

By implementing new rules within city government that encourage more family-sized units and multi-generational homes, working with the City Council to create new tools that build more family-friendly neighborhoods and foster homeownership, creating more housing across New York City, and more, Mayor Adams’ City of Yes for Families initiative will help more families find and afford a home in the five boroughs. 

 

Putting Money Back Into Families’ Pockets 

 

From day one, the Adams administration has focused on creating a more affordable city for working-class families, saving New Yorkers more than $30 billion through city, state, and federal programs as part of its “Money in Your Pocket” work. After successfully expanding the “New York City Earned Income Tax Credit” and returning more than $345 million to over 1.7 million New Yorkers in tax season 2023, Mayor Adams is now calling on Albany to pass his “Axe the Tax for the Working Class” proposal that will eliminate or cut city income taxes for working-class families and put $63 million back into the pockets of over 582,000 New Yorkers.  

 

The Adams administration has already helped more than 25,000 New Yorkers reduce their debt by over $37 million through the city’s financial support services, but too many families and young New Yorkers still struggle with student loan debt. To help even more New Yorkers, Mayor Adams today announced that the city will partner with a leading private-sector firm to enroll public servants in the federal government’s Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program and help wipe out nearly $360 million in student loan debt for 100,000 city employees and their families. As part of the initiative, public servants will be able to extend invitations to family members who independently qualify for PSLF to use the service as well and help get their student loan debt forgiven too. 

 

In 2022, the Adams administration launched Big Apple Connect to bring free internet and cable to 150,000 households across 220 NYCHA facilities, save working-class families hundreds of dollars, and close New York City’s digital divide. To build on that work and help connect more families to jobs, housing, and health care, the Adams administration will partner with the New York Public Library and launch “Neighborhood Internet,” an innovative program to bring free internet to over 2,000 Section 8 households and other low-income homes in the Bronx and Upper Manhattan starting in 2025. 

 

Additionallyto make child care more affordable for working-class families, the Adams administration lowered the cost of child care for a family of four earning $55,000 from $55 per week in 2022 to just $5 per week today, increased the number of children enrolled with a low-income voucher from fewer than 8,000 in 2022 to over 50,000 in 2024, and saved New Yorkers more than $1.9 billion through child care vouchers since the start of the administration. Finally, in 2024, for the first time in New York City history, every family who applied for a 3-K seat on time received an offer, while the Adams administration enrolled over 150,000 children across the entire early childhood education system. In partnership with the New York City Council, Mayor Adams also launched a $100 million, 10-point plan to address systemic issues, boost enrollment, and connect families with more pre-K and 3-K seats.  

 

Delivering a First-Rate Education for New York City’s Students 

 

As a proud graduate of New York City’s public schools, Mayor Adams has committed to making sure every single student gets the first-rate education they deserve. In 2024, Mayor Adams expanded his signature ‘NYC Reads’ initiative to every K-5 school in the five boroughs and New York City’s early childhood education program, as well as launched both ‘NYC Solves’ to overhaul how students learn mathematics and a new Division of Inclusive and Accessible Learning in New York City Public Schools.  

 

The Adams administration also opened up 24 new school buildings and added over 11,000 new seats in 2024 — the most new seats added by the New York City School Construction Authority since 2003 — and, again, secured an extension of mayoral accountability in Albany for another two years. Additionally, the Adams administration has connected New Yorkers to over 15,000 apprenticeships since 2022 and launched FutureReadyNYC to give thousands of students work experience in 21st-century industries like decarbonization and finance. Today, Mayor Adams announced that Memorial Sloan Kettering will join FutureReadyNYC as an anchor partner and offer hundreds of New York City Public Schools students work-based experience in health care every year. 

 

To lay the foundation for a lifetime of healthy financial and consumer practices, Mayor Adams today set a critical new goal: New York City will ensure that every public school student can learn how to save and spend money by 2030. The Adams administration will deploy financial educators in every single school district to provide counseling, lead workshops, and help develop curricula; open 15 innovative bank branch pilots in underserved schools to give students real-world exposure to safe banking; and build a bold new initiative to incentivize financial education and give students hands-on experience learning about saving and investing. Mayor Adams called on financial institutions — from banks to credit unions to philanthropic organizations — to join the city in this cause and ensure the financial success for New York City youth for the decades to come. 

 

Outside of the classroom, the Adams administration has continued to keep families safe at city pools and beaches, hiring 930 lifeguards last year alone and announcing a historic $1 billion investment in city pools. To lay the foundation for a lifetime of water safety, New York City Public Schools and the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation currently offer free swim classes to over 13,000 young people. Mayor Adams announced today that New York City will expand those programs to reach another 4,800 second graders — bringing the total youth served to nearly 18,000 — in underserved communities, teaching more students how to swim, and saving working-class families $1.3 million with this expansion alone. 

 

Finally, DYCD’s Fatherhood Initiative helps fathers reconnect and build stronger relationships with their children through counseling, conflict resolution training, mediation, and mentoring. It can help fathers develop an individual service plan focused on parenting and co-parenting skills. To help strengthen more families and support more children’s emotional and economic futures, Mayor Adams today announced that New York City will double the size of the program to reach 3,000 fathers in the coming years. 

 

Creating Good-Paying Jobs for Parents and Young People 

 

Thanks to investments in public safety, working families, and 21st-century industries like life sciences and artificial intelligence, New York City’s economy has made a powerful comeback. In 2024, the Adams administration broke the record for the most jobs and small businesses in city history while welcoming nearly 65 million tourists to the five boroughs — the second most in city history. Additionally, Black and Latino unemployment has dropped by over 20 percent since the start of the Adams administration while storefront vacancy rates have dropped for four consecutive quarters.  

 

Following last year’s State of the City address, the Adams administration continued to unveil and advance generational projects to turn New York City’s waterfront into a “Harbor of the Future,” including a Science Park and Research Campus in Kips Bay in Manhattan, a $700 million climate research facility on Governors Island, the country’s largest offshore wind port at the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal, a modern maritime port and vibrant mixed-use community hub at the Brooklyn Marine Terminal in Red Hook, a revitalized North Shore of Staten Island, the Willets Point Transformation in Queens, and a cleaner, greener Hunts Point Terminal Produce Market in the Bronx. 

 

Additionally, to bolster the city’s cultural economy, the Adams administration invested a record $254 million in the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs through the FY25 Adopted Budget to support thousands of cultural organizations across the city. Today, Mayor Adams announced that New York City will invest more resources into the Cultural Institutions Group (CIG), adding up to five additional organizations in order to ensure that the CIG network reflects the rich diversity of the city’s creative sector. 

 

Creating Cleaner, Greener Streets for Families to Enjoy 

 

Public spaces are an essential part of New York City’s fabric, providing families with a fun, accessible place to take children and build community. Mayor Adams has made transforming the city’s public spaces a central focus of his administration, creating over 85 football fields of new public spaces since 2022 for families to enjoy. The Adams administration has also issued rules to move 70 percent of trash bags off the streets and into containers through its “War on Trash,” torn down over 310 long-standing scaffolding sheds through its “Get Sheds Down” initiative, and expanded curbside composting to the entire city — fulfilling a 2023 State of the City commitment.    

 

To ensure that more families have safe, supportive places to play in their own neighborhood, Mayor Adams today announced New York City will open more schoolyards in underserved neighborhoods for use during the summer, after school, and on the weekends, and put another 20,000 individuals within a 10-minute walk of a park.  

 

Additionally, to keep New York City parks cleaner, Mayor Adams announced that New York City will add a second cleaning shift to 100 new hot spots across 64 parks throughout the city, ensuring they are cleaned each afternoon between Thursday and Monday. As part of the second shift, New York City Department of Parks and Recreation staff will also keep restrooms open, on average, for another two hours each day, five days a week. This investment builds on the 62 parks that received a second cleaning shift earlier this year as part of the FY 2025 Adopted Budget,  and will help allow more families to enjoy safe, clean, accessible parks. 

 

Finally, Mayor Adams touted El Centro Kingsbridge, a sweeping plan for the future of the Kingsbridge Armory unveiled earlier this week by Mayor Adams, New York Governor Kathy Hochul, and U.S. Representative Adriano Espaillat. Following a request for proposal process launched in the summer of 2023, the winning proposal will include event space, sports fields, and affordable housing, as well as cultural, commercial, and community spaces. 

 

The full text of Mayor Adams’ remarks, as prepared for delivery, is provided below: 

 

My fellow New Yorkers: thank you. And welcome to the heart of Harlem. 

 

If we could stand on these streets exactly one century ago, we would see a new community of New Yorkers building their lives all around us: Black Americans from deep in the South who loaded their lives into suitcases and rode the railways north.  

 

They came for their freedom, for their families, for their children, for their future. 

 

New York City was the promised land; it did not promise them an easy life, but it promised them a better one.  

 

In time, Harlem came into its own: a place where the Black community grew strong, Black businesses opened, and Black culture took center stage. 

 

Families went to Abyssinian to hear Adam Clayton Powell; strolled on what was then Seventh Avenue to shop for clothing; and, eventually, flocked to a theater on 125th Street to hear the blues, jazz, and more: The Apollo. 

 

They heard legends like Duke, Billie, and Smokey perform and witnessed stars being born on the world-famous Amateur Night.  

 

But here at The Apollo, it was not just about the performers. It was about the audience who held their fate: couples on first dates, grandmothers dressed up in their finest, and families out for a night on the town. 

 

At The Apollo, you don’t just watch the show. 

 

Like New York City itself, you are part of it. There is no Apollo Theater without the Apollo audience. We are joined in that audience today by so many leaders who are working hard for our families and our city.

 

[INSERT ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS]

 

All of us — elected officials, labor leaders, public servants — owe a debt to the leaders who came before us. 

 

Today, we mourn and honor one of those leaders: President Jimmy Carter. 

 

President Carter was a true public servant, a leader and humanitarian full of hope and compassion for his fellow man. We send prayers to all who knew and loved him and salute his dedication to serving others across our nation and around the world. 

 

Thank you, President Carter, for your service and leadership. 

 

Three years ago, I took the oath of office at a time when our city was facing serious setbacks and tough challenges. COVID and chaos had thrown New York into uncertainty and pushed too many families away.  

 

Crime was surging, our economy was tanking, and our housing crisis was growing worse by the year. 

 

I told you then that there was no easy solution to these challenges, but with steady hands and bold leadership, we wouldn’t just bring New York City back; we would make it better than ever. 

 

We started with public safety, the cornerstone of our city’s success. To keep New Yorkers safe, we put thousands of new officers onto our streets and took nearly 20,000 illegal guns off them; supported law enforcement with new training and benefits; and unveiled a $485 million action plan to prevent gun violence. 

 

These efforts have paid off. Over the past three years, we have driven murders and shootings down by double digits; padlocked more than 1,300 illegal smoke shops; and seized over 80,000 ghost cars and illegal vehicles like mopeds and ATVs. 

 

But we have not just driven crime down; we drove jobs up. When I think about our administration, the word that comes to mind is “record.” That means record jobs, record small businesses, record investments in minority- and women-owned businesses. 

 

We opened the country’s largest outdoor dining program, tore down hundreds of scaffolding sheds, and launched the ‘Trash Revolution’ to move every single trash bag off our sidewalks and into containers.  

 

We brought home $2.3 billion in federal money to transform our infrastructure and created a record amount of public space for pedestrians across the five boroughs. 

 

We put over $30 billion back in your pockets; delivered hundreds of millions of dollars in tax relief; and unveiled our “Axe the Tax for the Working Class” proposal to tear up city income taxes for the working-class families who need it most. 

 

For the first time in city history, we extended a 3-K offer to every single family who applied on time and enrolled a record 150,000 young people in our early childhood education system last year alone.  

 

We transformed the way our students learn to read and do math, connected 15,000 New Yorkers to apprenticeships, and opened up the most new school seats in over two decades. 

 

We shattered affordable housing records for the second year in a row; unlocked billions of dollars for public housing; and after decades of inaction, passed the most pro-housing zoning proposal in city history.  

 

Thanks to our administration and our partners in the City Council, New York is finally becoming a “City of Yes.” 

 

My fellow New Yorkers, the state of our city is strong. 

 

I always say there are two kinds of Americans: those who live in New York and those who wish they could. 

 

Where else can you find thousands of parks, hundreds of museums, and food from every culture all just a train ride away? Where else can you catch a parade, watch a baseball game, and ride a free ferry all in the same day?  

 

Where else can you raise such smart, savvy, global citizens? 

 

The freedom and opportunity that drew families to this neighborhood and this city have kept New York going strong over the years and still define our city today. 

 

But there is no denying that New Yorkers are anxious about the future. Extreme costs are forcing too many people, especially working-class families, to make hard choices: between groceries or child care, medicine or clothing, making the rent or moving out. 

 

I know because I have been there. 

 

My mother worked several jobs just to raise six kids by herself. Too often, we had to eat one meal a day because we could not afford three. 

 

But even though the odds were stacked against us, Dorothy Mae Adams never stopped fighting to provide her family with a better life, and that is why I will never stop fighting to do the same for you and your families. 

 

But, despite all we have accomplished, I won’t stand here and try to tell you our work is complete. Now is the time for renewed dedication and continued action, because no matter what challenges we face, I promise you this: No one will fight harder for your family than I will. 

 

It’s what you elected me to do. When others wanted to defund the police, we defended them, putting more officers on our streets to keep New Yorkers safe. When too many places pushed back on new housing, we stood up for working-class New Yorkers; never letting the voices of NO drown out the voices of need.  

 

When it was clear that people on our streets and subways needed help, we stood up to get them the support they deserved, making their lives and our subways safer. And when Washington refused to take action on a broken immigration system; I stood up for our city and pushed back while still caring for hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers.  

 

But we know we still have more work to do and more people to help. Too many families are still facing the same struggles my family did. 

 

So today, I want to talk about how we can make New York City the best place to raise a family: the safest place to raise a family, the most affordable place to raise a family, the most welcoming place to raise a family. 

 

Our city must go further to get you the health care and housing you need; the parks and playgrounds you deserve; the education that sets your child up for success; and the chance to make the best possible life for yourself and your family. 

 

How can we make sure that the greatest city in the world is also the greatest place to raise a family? 

 

That starts with keeping families safe. 

 

I patrolled New York City as a police officer in the 80s and 90s and saw firsthand what crime and chaos can do to a city. 

 

When we came into office, we made it clear that we would not slide back into those decades, and we would not tolerate an atmosphere where anything goes on our streets. From putting more officers on the beat to tackling the quality-of-life issues that families care about, we have stayed true to that mission and driven down crime. 

 

The good news is that these strategies are working. Last year saw the lowest amount of gun violence in the history of Brooklyn, while overall crime plummeted by 15 percent in December across the entire city. 

 

But we all know safety is about more than just crime stats; it is about being comfortable riding the subway; knowing you can send your kid to play in the park; and feeling safe walking home at night. 

 

People need to be safe, and they need to feel safe. 

 

In the last few weeks, we have seen random acts of violence that have shaken many New Yorkers. That is why I am tasking the police commissioner to work across our city agencies to double down on our commitment to keep riders safe and help ensure more New Yorkers feel comfortable riding our subways. 

 

We’re starting by adding hundreds of new police officers into our subway system later this month and getting our officers out on patrol to tackle crime wherever it occurs. 

 

But it also means continuing to make the smart, upstream investments that prevent crime in the first place; that includes mediators who resolve conflicts on the street before they escalate into violence and programs that give young people a place to play sports and build trust with law enforcement. 

 

This spring, we will build on that work and cut the ribbon on the new Brigadier General Charles Young Field, or, as Deputy Mayor Chauncey Parker likes to call it, the “Harlem Field of Dreams.” 

 

What was once a dilapidated field will reopen as a vibrant place for young people to play baseball, football, soccer, and lacrosse. It will host programming by Saturday Night Lights, the Harlem Children’s Zone, Youth on the Move, and more; and it will help tell the story of Brigadier General Young. 

 

Born into slavery in 1864, Charles Young rose up to become the first Black colonel in the U.S. Army. One hundred years later, Charles Young was finally promoted to brigadier general. 

 

With this $9 million investment in Harlem, we will honor his legacy and give hundreds of families a safe place to send their children to play. 

 

All across New York City, we’ve brought a new approach to public safety by investing in our young people. We know that if we do not educate, we will incarcerate. 

 

That is why we’ve connected thousands of at-risk youth with counseling and mentorship and helped set them on the path to college and careers. 

 

This year, we will begin a $163 million expansion of five of our most successful programs that engage young people who need extra help — programs like Fair Futures and College Choice. 

 

This investment will help us reach 8,000 young New Yorkers, and build a safer, more equitable city for all. 

 

Our entire administration — from our police officers to our youth counselors, from our firefighters to our health care workers — will never stop fighting to keep New Yorkers safe.   

 

Building a better city also means addressing the housing crisis that affects our entire nation and has led to far too many people living on our streets.  

 

I have seen both sides of this issue, from living on the verge of homelessness as a child to patrolling our subways as a transit officer.  

 

When we came into office, we said the days of letting people languish on our streets and subways were over. It was not safe; it was not humane; and it was not going to continue on our watch. 

 

Thanks to the dedication and drive of Deputy Mayor Anne Williams-Isom, we doubled the number of outreach staff working with unhoused New Yorkers and created new teams that brought together law enforcement and nurses. 

 

We helped more than 8,000 New Yorkers move from our subways into shelter and committed to helping those who could not care for themselves. 

 

These efforts were not always popular. But they were the right thing to do. Three years later, they are working.  

 

Ask Antonio Durham. Antonio first entered our city’s shelter system when he was just 14 years old. Unfortunately, it was not a good fit for him, and he slipped into chronic homelessness and drug use, sleeping in subway stations in the Bronx for several years. 

 

After connecting with our outreach teams in December of 2022, Antonio agreed to try a Safe Haven bed, one that offered him his own room, personalized support, and more flexibility than a traditional shelter. 

 

It worked. 

 

Six months later, Antonio moved into a supportive housing apartment in the Bronx.  

 

We will not walk away from New Yorkers like Antonio; and we will not give up on keeping our subways safe. Instead, we are going to double down.  

 

This year, we’ll begin an ambitious $650 million investment to tackle street homelessness in New York City and answer three crucial questions: how can we help people on our subways? How can we help people with serious mental illness? And how can we keep families out of our shelters? 

 

When it comes to our subways, we know what works: Safe Haven beds. Safe Haven beds like the kind that supported Antonio are one of the most effective tools we have for helping people on our subways and streets. So, we are going to add 900 new Safe Haven beds and get more New Yorkers the help they deserve. 

 

Second, we must do more to help people struggling with serious mental illness. We know that too many New Yorkers cycle between the hospital and homelessness, so we are going to build a new housing facility just for unsheltered New Yorkers with serious mental illness to give them the health care and specialized support they need. 

 

And finally, how can we keep families out of shelters in the first place? 

 

Having a child should be the greatest day of your life; it was for me. 

 

You should not have to worry about where you and your baby will sleep after leaving the hospital. You should not have to worry about whether your child will grow up on the verge of homelessness. 

 

Right now, we have too many expecting parents entering our shelter system. 

 

So today, we are making a new commitment to our families: No child should ever be born into our shelter system. 

 

This year, we will launch a new program to connect soon-to-be parents applying for shelter with services that help people find permanent housing before their child is born. 

 

We must stop the cycle of poverty and housing instability before it ever begins and ensure mothers and babies do not go to a shelter after leaving the hospital. 

 

Subways, serious mental illness, and shelters: that is how we make a renewed commitment to tackling street homelessness. 

 

We can do this, New York City. But we need Albany’s help as well. We have seen the tragic consequences when severe mental illness on our streets and subways goes unchecked, which is why we must pass the Supportive Interventions Act. 

 

This crucial legislation will help us get those in need the care they deserve, provide assistance to those who can no longer care for themselves, and keep all New Yorkers safe. 

 

I want to thank Governor Hochul and all our elected partners who are fighting to get this done. 

 

The housing crisis is real, and we know how to solve it: by building more homes. This will help New Yorkers from all walks of life, from those who need a second chance to families who need a place to grow. 

 

Making New York City the best place to raise a family means helping even more people find and afford a home. When I was young, there were days when my siblings and I had to carry our clothes to school in trash bags because we were worried that we might be evicted before the day was over. 

 

My mother worked job after job to save up enough money and move us from a tenement building to a small house in Queens, but the struggle to keep a roof over our heads continued.  

 

My mother was afraid she would lose everything she had worked for. Too many families still feel that way today. 

 

Our administration brought an ambitious new approach to housing right from the start. First Deputy Mayor Maria Torres-Springer describes it well: “Everything, Everywhere, All at Once.” 

 

That means building on every block and every borough; working with every agency and every office; and using every tool, at every level of government, to give families the homes they deserve. 

 

Since the start of this administration, we have created, financed, and preserved nearly 80,000 units of housing, and connected New Yorkers to record amounts of affordable homes as well — not just one, but two years in a row. 

 

Thanks to the partnership between the Department of Veterans’ Services and the Department of Social Services, we are breaking down silos within government to share data so we can make it easier for veterans to find housing and create a stronger safety net for those who have bravely served our country.  

 

But we knew that tackling our housing crisis meant going deeper and finally revitalizing our outdated zoning code. 

 

Thanks to an unprecedented coalition of advocates, councilmembers, and city agencies, we passed landmark changes to unlock new housing and finally turned New York City into a “City of Yes.” 

 

Previous administrations talked about it. This administration got it done. 

 

We said “yes” to 80,000 new homes, “yes” to $5 billion for housing and infrastructure, and “yes” to making sure more families can afford to live all across New York City. 

 

These are already historic achievements, but we want to go even bigger. 

 

We’ve seen too many families leave for the suburbs once children are on the way. So today, we are launching “City of Yes for Families,” an expansive new approach to housing, zoning, and public space that will change the way we build across the five boroughs and create more family-friendly neighborhoods. 

 

We will work across our housing agencies to build more family-sized units and more homes for multi-generational families so that parents, grandparents, and grandchildren can stay together. We will also work with the City Council to build more housing alongside schools, playgrounds, grocery stores, and libraries. 

 

With “City of Yes for Families,” we’ll build 800 units of housing alongside a brand-new library on the Upper West Side, creating what is known as a “Living Library,” the largest in city history. 

 

We will also roll out new initiatives to help more people buy a home in the five boroughs. If you are paying rent every month, it should count towards your credit score; with our new initiative, it will. 

 

We will help more New Yorkers build up credit and eventually secure a mortgage for their first home. 

 

From top to bottom, we are rethinking how we use land and how we build housing in our city.  

 

That’s why for the first time ever, we called a Charter Revision Commission to focus on housing and propose changes to our city charter that will help create more homes for families for generations to come. 

 

When I spoke to you last year, I promised to advance 24 housing projects on public sites that would build up to 12,000 new units. But in 2024, we went even further, advancing 26 sites to build the homes families need.  

 

We also issued a landmark executive order requiring every agency to see where we can build new housing on city-owned land, and, this year, with City of Yes for Families, we’ll move forward with the first sites, including over 2,000 new mixed-income homes at 100 Gold Street, where many of our City Hall staff work today. 

 

We’ve already introduced five neighborhood plans to build up to 50,000 new homes from Brooklyn to the Bronx, and this year, we will go even bigger and start bringing a new generation of housing to Manhattan. 

 

Over the decades, housing prices in Manhattan have gone up while working-class families have been pushed out. 

 

So, we’ll start to use the new zoning tools we secured from Albany and our City of Yes plan to add 100,000 new homes in Manhattan and reach a total of 1 million homes in the next decade.  

 

We call it “The Manhattan Plan,” a tribute to this borough’s long history as a place where families from all over the world could come to start their American Dream. 

 

From the brownstones in Harlem to the high rises in Midtown, we will say “yes” to more housing and “yes” to a more family-friendly city. 

 

Helping families make rent or buy their first homes means helping them save money — and we are determined to do just that. 

 

Our city’s economy may be booming, but the cost of living here is still too high, especially for our working-class families. 

 

That is why we launched our “Money in Your Pocket” initiative, an all-out, across-the-board effort to make sure the dollars you earn can be the dollars you spend. 

 

We passed a first-in-the-nation minimum pay rate for our delivery workers, boosted pay for 80,000 human service workers, and reached contracts with 100 percent of our city’s uniformed workforce. Good job, Chief Counsel Allison Stoddart. 

 

And thanks to the leadership of Intergovernmental Affairs Director Tiffany Raspberry, we went to Albany and successfully expanded the New York City Earned Income Tax Credit for the first time in two decades to give more than $345 million back to 1.7 million New Yorkers this past tax season. 

 

But we know that working families need more relief, and they need it now. 

 

That is why we put forward an ambitious proposal to eliminate city income taxes for working-class families making 150 percent of the federal poverty line or less. 

 

It is time to get rid of city income taxes for a single mother making $31,000, a family of four making $46,000, and other New Yorkers making do with less. 

 

It is time to “Axe the Tax.” Our “Axe the Tax for the Working Class” proposal would eliminate and lower city income tax bills for over 582,000 New Yorkers and their dependents, 

 

And give over $63 million back to families to help them afford rent, groceries, child care, and more. 

 

So, let’s get it done, New York. Axe the Tax. 

 

Good job, Budget Director Jacques Jiha. 

 

We are cutting taxes, raising wages, and helping New Yorkers eliminate burdensome debt. 

 

Our city’s financial counselors have already helped more than 25,000 New Yorkers reduce their debt by over $37 million, but one in four New Yorkers are still saddled with student loan debt, including many of our public servants; that is why we are launching a new program to help public servants enroll in the federal government’s Public Service Loan Forgiveness program. 

 

We will help wipe out nearly $360 million in student loan debt for 100,000 city employees and family members who qualify. 

 

They give their time and their career to their fellow New Yorkers, and now, we are going to give some money back to them. 

 

From our financial counselors to our free tax prep specialists, New York City’s public servants fight every day to make life more affordable for working-class families. 

 

Through our Money in Your Pocket initiative, we have saved New Yorkers billions of dollars in free summer programming, free transportation, and free internet. In the 21st century, the internet is essential for finding a job, filling a prescription, and applying for child care. 

 

But when we came into office, the digital divide was leaving too many New Yorkers behind. 

 

We launched Big Apple Connect to bring free internet and cable to 150,000 households across 220 NYCHA facilities and help New Yorkers like Karen Davis, the secretary of the Marlboro Houses Tenant Association. 

 

Karen is a proud member of the South Brooklyn Royals Drumline and Dance Team, and she is a Big Apple Connect user. The money Karen saves on high-speed internet goes towards rent, supplies, and food. 

 

She uses the internet to promote her small business making centerpieces for weddings and baby showers and to share photos of her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. 

 

Karen, we are proud to help you save money, stay connected, and keep dancing. 

 

Big Apple Connect has been a resounding success, but we want to go further. 

 

This summer, in partnership with the New York Public Library, we will launch “Neighborhood Internet,” a new program to bring free internet to 2,000 Section 8 and other low-income homes in the Bronx and Upper Manhattan and save families hundreds of dollars. 

 

New York City is already a great place to raise a family, but as every parent knows, it’s not always easy. 

 

Working families sacrifice every day for their children, and our city must be there to help them meet their needs, especially when it comes to child care; that is why we extended thousands of new offers for early childhood education and lowered the cost of subsidized child care. 

 

What once cost working-class families $55 a week when we came into office now just costs $5 today. These are big savings for our hard-working families. 

 

We have also worked with the City Council to unveil a $100 million investment in our early childhood education system. 

 

Because of Deputy Mayor Ana Almanzar’s leadership and vision, more kids have a safe place to spend the day, and fewer parents have to choose between using the iPad as a babysitter or earning a living. 

 

Child care is an essential part of our education system, a place for our children to learn and grow. 

 

Our children make us proud every day with their energy, creativity, and ambition, and we need an education system that helps them succeed every step of the way. 

 

Growing up in Queens, I was left behind at school. I suffered from a learning disability and the support I needed did not exist. I was called the D student, the dumb student, and dreaded going to school most mornings. 

 

I didn’t discover that I suffered from dyslexia until I was in college. 

 

But the experience of seeing how government can fail our students stayed with me; it never left. That is why from day one, we focused on making sure our public schools worked for every student, in every district. 

 

We launched new programs like New York City Solves and New York City Reads to bring science-backed curricula into our classrooms and created the Division of Inclusive and Accessible Learning to support our multilingual students, students with disabilities, and other young people who have too often been left behind. 

 

The Department of Education’s FutureReadyNYC program has given thousands of students work experience in everything from building trades to finance, putting more young people on the path to good-paying careers. 

 

Today, we are proud to announce that we are adding the Memorial Sloan Kettering Hospital to the FutureReadyNYC network, offering hundreds of high school students work experience in health care. 

 

Preparing our students for success is about more than just the ABCs; it’s about the 123s. 

 

Terms like interest, credit, and debt will determine our students’ success in the 21st century — but too many young people still don’t know what they mean. 

 

It is time to change that. 

 

Today, I am setting an important new goal: We will make sure that every single New York City student can learn how to save and spend money by 2030. 

 

We are going to put a financial educator in every single school district to provide workshops, counseling, and curriculum; open up 15 bank branches in our city schools to give students real-world experience opening accounts, saving, and investing; and begin work on a new program to teach students how to manage real money and encourage them to build financial skills. 

 

But we cannot do this alone. I’m calling on everyone — our banks, our credit unions, our private sector partners, and more — to join us in this cause and help set our children up for a lifetime of financial freedom. 

 

There’s no more exciting, adventurous place to be young than New York City, and we want to make sure our children can be both safe and successful here. 

 

We are working to keep our kids safe on our streets and at our world-class pools and beaches, too. 

 

That is why we will expand our free water safety and swim classes to reach nearly 18,000 students, saving families over $1 million on swim lessons with this expansion alone. 

 

We want to make sure more families can spend safe, quality time together and give more parents the chance to watch their children swim a lap across the pool without floaties. 

 

As a father myself, I know the importance of teaching and uplifting the next generation. I want to make sure every family has a chance to build those strong bonds.  

 

Our Fatherhood Initiative helps fathers do just that with free parenting programs, mediation, and mentorship. Today, I am proud to announce that we are going to double the size of our Fatherhood Initiative and help us reach another 1,500 fathers and families. 

 

From our Fatherhood Initiative to programs that help reconnect LGBTQ+ youth with their parents, we are keeping families strong, and we are keeping families together. 

 

A robust economy is one of the best ways to support families, which is why we are fighting to ensure that every New Yorker can find a job and share in our city’s success; that means jobs that help families buy a home, pay for college, and save for retirement.  

 

By investing in public safety, supporting working people, and bolstering 21st century industries like life science, health care, and artificial intelligence, our economy has seen a comeback like no other. 

 

Let’s look at the numbers: a record 4.7 million jobs and a record 183,000 small businesses. We cut Black and Latino unemployment by more than 20 percent since the start of our administration; brought nearly 65 million tourists to New York City last year alone; and can’t wait to welcome the world for the FIFA World Cup next year. 

 

And we are helping people find good-paying jobs in their community with “Jobs NYC.” We held hiring halls all across the city, created a new website, and connected nearly 8,500 New Yorkers to jobs and job training last year alone, New Yorkers like Kevin Cordova. 

 

After working as a summer camp counselor through our Summer Youth Employment Program and graduating college, Kevin visited one of our JobsNYC Hiring Halls and accepted a position with a home health firm. 

 

Today, he uses the teamwork skills he learned at camp to help patients schedule appointments, get medicine, and stay healthy. 

 

Thank you, Kevin, for all you do for your fellow New Yorkers. 

 

Our hiring halls are just one of the ways we are ensuring more New Yorkers can find jobs. 

 

Last August, we were proud to announce that we also expanded services in our Workforce1 Centers to help even more New Yorkers with a disability connect with a career. 

 

Making New York City the best place to raise a family also means supporting our city’s rich cultural community that offers them the best of art, music, and theater right in their backyards. 

 

From free days at our museums to world-class performances at our theaters, our cultural institutions bring families together and power our economy. 

 

To strengthen our cultural sector even further, this year we will designate five more organizations as “Cultural Institution Groups” to ensure they get the support they need to thrive. 

 

When we talk about helping families, we must talk about strengthening our health care system, too. Keeping families healthy is essential to keeping families in the five boroughs. 

 

I remember worrying about my mother as she injected herself with insulin and worrying about myself when I could no longer see the numbers on my alarm clock due to vision loss and started to lose feeling in my fingers and toes. 

 

My doctor diagnosed me with Type 2 diabetes, but I was lucky. I was able to reverse my diabetes through healthy eating and lifestyle changes, but too many New Yorkers have not been as fortunate. 

 

We know that health care costs and chronic disease have put an unsustainable burden on working people, with prescriptions, paperwork, and bills piling up. 

 

When we took office, we were clear: we didn’t want to keep feeding the health crisis in our city; we wanted to change it. 

 

So we launched a landmark campaign to raise New Yorkers’ life expectancy to 83 years by 2030; signed more than 16,000 teenagers up for free virtual therapy; and took on distributors for illegally selling flavored vapes and hooking young people on nicotine and tobacco. 

 

Thank you, Corporation Counsel Muriel Goode-Trufant, for working to protect our children’s health. 

 

Our health care system has expanded in other ways, too: helping more families access doula and midwifery services and becoming the first public health system in the country to help people access abortion care through telehealth, because here in New York City, we will always defend reproductive rights. 

 

Our public health agencies have also helped us address another major issue over the past three years: the arrival of thousands of asylum seekers. 

 

Thanks to our Asylum Application Help Center and our dedicated public servants, we have helped more than 178,000 asylum seekers take the next step in their journey; that is nearly 78 percent of the people who have arrived here since the spring of 2022, a major achievement. 

 

Good job, Chief of Staff Camille Joseph Varlack. 

 

The health of our people also depends on the health of our public spaces.  

 

When we came into office, we knew that it was not enough to just reopen our city; we had to remake it as well. 

 

We brought curbside composting to the entire city; expanded our Summer Streets program to all five boroughs; and invested $1.2 billion in infrastructure and resiliency initiatives to protect against the next Superstorm Sandy. 

 

Thanks to the vision of Deputy Mayor Meera Joshi, we are creating a more vibrant and open New York City for families to enjoy. 

 

From Central Park to Flushing Meadows, our city’s parks are household names across the globe. They are where we come together, build community, and take our children to play. We have to make sure every New Yorker has that opportunity. 

 

This year, we are going to put another 20,000 New Yorkers within a 10-minute walk of a park by opening more schoolyards in underserved neighborhoods for use during the summer, after school, and on the weekends. 

 

But we are not just giving families more parks; we are giving them cleaner ones too. 

 

Starting this year, we will add an extra afternoon cleaning shift to 100 more hot spots in our parks throughout the city to make them even cleaner and safer for our children. 

 

From public spaces to public safety, from health care to housing, these initiatives will uplift working-class families in the years ahead. 

 

But in New York City, we do not just measure our work in months or years; we think in terms of decades and build for generations to come. 

 

One day, when our children look around, they will see our work all across New York City. 

 

They will learn at a world-class research center on Governors Island; work at a modern maritime port in Red Hook; live on a new North Shore along Staten Island; cheer at a soccer stadium at Willets Point; and come together at a brand-new Kingsbridge Armory in the Bronx, soon to be known as El Centro Kingsbridge. 

 

From training troops during World War I to distributing supplies after Hurricane Sandy, the Armory has served our city for more than a century. 

 

With the $215 million vision we unveiled this week, we will begin work on the next great chapter in its long history. 

 

Out of empty caverns, we’ll build sports fields for our children, spaces for our cultural institutions, and opportunities for local businesses. We will create new jobs and affordable homes and give families a place to come together. 

 

After decades of disrepair, we will finally bring a powerful vision for the Armory to life. 

 

Possibility and perseverance: That is the story of the Kingsbridge Armory, and it is the story of New York City. 

 

As we celebrate over 400 years of New York City history, and the Lenape people who were here long before, we must look forward to the future as well: a city where hope and ambition create new industries and opportunities; a city that is safer and more affordable; a city has space for our families to flourish and grow. 

 

I am determined to make life a little easier for every Dorothy Mae Adams that’s out there, year after year, generation after generation.  

 

Let’s keep this a city for families: for our families who are here and for those who are on the way; for our working families, our immigrant families, our extended families. 

 

The greatest city in the world must also be the best place to raise a family: The City of New York. 

 

Thank you. 

 

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING: NEW YORKERS PRAISE MAYOR ADAMS’ FAMILY-FOCUSED FOURTH STATE OF THE CITY ADDRESS  

  

Speech Outlined Multi-Year Initiatives to Solve Street Homelessness, Keep Young People Safe, Build More Housing and Family-Friendly Neighborhoods, Teach Students How to Save and Spend Money, Expand Access to Playgrounds, and Save Working-Class Families Millions of Dollars  

  

Advanced Mayor Adams’ Vision for Safer, More Affordable New York City for FamiliesFollows Landmark Year of Safer Streets and Subways; Record Amounts of Jobs, Small Businesses, Housing Construction; Passage of Most Pro-Housing Zoning Proposal in City History; and Expansion of Early Childhood Education System 

NEW YORK – New York City Mayor Eric Adams today outlined a bold vision to make New York City the best place to raise a family in his fourth State of the City address, delivered at The Apollo theater in Harlem, Manhattan. After driving crime down, passing historic housing legislation, and helping New Yorkers save billions of dollars through tax relief, child care, free internet, and more in 2024, Mayor Adams used today’s address to unveil new initiatives that will create a safer, more affordable city for working-class families, especially those trying to raise a family, all across the five boroughs.  

  

Here’s what New Yorkers are saying:  

  

“Thank you, Mayor Adams, for choosing the Apollo Theater in my district as the site of this year’s State of the City address,” said United States Representative Adriano Espaillat. “This is an exciting way to kickstart 2025 by highlighting the historic contributions and impact of Harlem to New York City and the fabric of our nation. Together, we are working to make our city a better place where families not only live, but where they thrive.”   

 

“Mayor Adams showed his strength, focus, and resilience in today’s State of the City address,” said New York State Assemblymember Jenifer Rajkumar. “He highlighted the record achievements of this administration and a bold vision to uplift all New Yorkers. The mayor presented concrete, common sense solutions to the issues facing our city: mental health, public safety, housing, homelessness, healthcare, and education. I have been proud to work with the mayor to make our government more efficient and solution-driven, tackling New Yorkers’ biggest quality of life concerns. As a new session begins in Albany, I look forward to collaborating with the mayor to continue to bring down crime, provide mental health treatment, build affordable housing, drive down the cost of living, address homelessness, and create opportunities for all.” 

  

“Equitable access to clean, safe public spaces has long been a priority for Southeast Queens, and these investments reflect a long-overdue commitment to our communities,” said New York City Council Majority Whip Selvena Brooks-Powers. “Initiatives like Schoolyards to Playgrounds and expanded Parks Second Shifts are critical to ensuring all New Yorkers can enjoy quality public spaces and build upon the work we’ve done collectively with our community-based organizations. The expansion of free swim safety classes is another essential investment, serving thousands of young people in neighborhoods where water safety is vital. I thank the administration for recognizing the needs of Southeast Queens and taking steps to address them with these impactful programs.”  

  

“Harlem has always been a community of dreams and the announcement of the ‘Harlem Field of Dreams,’ at the historic Charles Young Playground, is another step toward making those dreams a reality for our young people,” said New York City Councilmember Yusef Salaam. “This investment into a multi-sports field will provide a safe, vibrant space for baseball, football, and community programming like Saturday Night Lights — helping to inspire and uplift our youth. I want to thank Mayor Adams for recognizing the importance of investing in Harlem and for his commitment to empowering our future generations.”  

  

“As Mayor Adams has outlined his vision for 2025, I look forward to our continued work with the administration to ensure that the residents and families of the Bronx are not forgotten. From economic development to employment access, environmental justice, health, and public safety, it is critical that we work with our partners at City Hall to address these issues,” said Bronx Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson. “Together, we will continue to tackle these challenges and build a stronger, more prosperous Bronx for everyone who calls our borough home.”  

  

“Our kids only get one chance at a good education, and the Schoolyards to Playgrounds initiative is a great way to ensure our city’s public school students are able to combine learning with much-needed recreation year-round,” said New York City Councilmember Lynn Schulman. “I am grateful to Mayor Adams for selecting the kids in my district to be among the first to enjoy this new program.”  

  

“The unequal access to internet has had detrimental effects on low-income communities. Students are not able to research and complete homework, families lack access to work-from-home employment opportunities, and more,” said New York City Councilmember Oswald Feliz. “I applaud Mayor Adams on taking steps to resolve this well-documented digital divide that continues to affect the Bronx.”  

  

“Our parks see hundreds of thousands of visitors every week. Keeping them clean and free of litter isn’t just about maintaining appearances—it’s about ensuring they remain safe, welcoming, and enjoyable spaces for everyone in our community,” said New York City Councilmember Sandra Ung. “This additional investment in cleanliness complements our shared commitment to making sure our green spaces remain pristine and accessible. By expanding this program, we’re taking a critical step toward ensuring that these vital resources remain a source of pride for our community. I want to thank Mayor Adams and the Parks Department for recognizing the unique needs of our parks and for taking action to address them.”   

  

“I look forward to working closely with the Department of City Planning as they move forward with their neighborhood study of the Coney Island Avenue corridor, an area that has experienced displacement and where many residents are rent-burdened,” said New York City Councilmember Shahana Hanif. “I’m also thrilled that several parks in District 39 will benefit from an additional Parks Department cleaning shift. Clean, well-maintained public spaces are vital to the safety and well-being of our communities, and this investment will help ensure our parks remain welcoming for all.”  

  

“I applaud Mayor Eric Adams for his leadership in announcing programs that address the real needs of New Yorkers. Two of the initiatives announced by Mayor Adams will make a significant and tangible impact for many New Yorkers in my district and beyond,” said New York City Councilmember Farah N. Louis. “The Second Parks Shift will enhance the quality of our cherished public spaces in District 45, ensuring cleaner and more welcoming environments for our community’s residents to gather and thrive. The shelter diversion program represents a transformative step in reducing the burden on women and mothers by prioritizing their pathways to stable living environments, creating better outcomes for their families and children. These initiatives reflect a deep commitment to uplifting our communities, and I look forward to working alongside the administration to bring these vital programs to life in my district and across Brooklyn.”  

  

“Employers share Mayor Adams’ concern about the challenges that families face because of the rising cost of living in the city and I applaud his proposals for making New York more family friendly,” said Kathryn Wylde, president and CEO, Partnership for New York City.  

  

“The Adams administration is proposing a number of measures which have the potential to make New York City more inclusive and vibrant,” said Michelle de la Uz, executive director, Fifth Avenue Committee. “Fifth Avenue Committee looks forward to ensuring that the proposals are well informed by the needs of low- and moderate-income New Yorkers and communities as they advance over the next several months.”  

  

“Mayor Adams has laid out a clear vision and plan for making New York City safer, healthier, and more affordable for working families,” said Henry D. Rubio, president, Council of School Supervisors and Administrators. “Our city’s school leaders are encouraged by the investments in youth safety programs and financial literacy curriculum, which will directly improve the lives and futures of students. We have been particularly concerned with our children’s safety, and these initiatives reflect a shared commitment to protecting and empowering them. We look forward to partnering with the mayor and his team to ensure our schools remain safe and provide the high-quality programs our families depend on.”  

  

“Today, the mayor outlined his vision for continuing to address the city’s affordable housing crisis, building on a strong foundation established by last year’s passage of the City of Yes initiative,” said Jolie Milstein, president and CEO, New York State Association for Affordable Housing. “People across the five boroughs and throughout the state are demanding relief from the steady rise in out-of-control housing prices that shows no sign of slowing. The zoning changes recently adopted by the city – combined with the charter revision process and the start of the state legislative session in Albany – are an important part of the effort to address the issues that make New York City one of the most challenging places in the world to build. We applaud the mayor for his commitment to using all tools available – including building on city-owned land and being resourceful in repurposing underutilized commercial real estate – to make progress toward the twin goals of preserving existing affordable housing and developing new units.”  

 

“Under Mayor Adams’ leadership, New York is finally becoming a ‘City of Yes,’” said Manny Pastreich, president, 32BJ Service Employees International Union. “After decades of inaction, Mayor Adams’ administration passed the most pro-housing zoning proposal in our city’s history and said ‘yes’ to building a new generation of affordable homes across the five boroughs. This is housing that we need for our membership and all New Yorkers. Mayor Adams’ administration has shattered affordable housing records, unlocked billions of dollars for public housing, and helped thousands of the city’s homeless population transition from shelter into stable homes.”  

  

“Today’s announcement makes it clear: whether it’s northeast Staten Island, central Manhattan, or south Brooklyn, this Administration is committed to creating homes for New Yorkers all across the five boroughs,” said Carlo A. Scissura, Esq., president and CEO, New York Building Congress. “Building upon the historic success of ‘City of Yes,’ this new housing agenda will allow us to use neighborhood rezonings, publicly owned sites, and underutilized areas to make housing more available and more affordable for New York’s families. Our members have been waiting for the opportunity to tackle our city’s housing crisis head on, and we look forward to building these units and hitting our goal!”   

  

“2024 was a turning point year for pro-housing momentum in New York City and showed what’s possible when leaders step up to build more homes,” said Annemarie Gray, executive director, Open New York. “At the city and state level, 2025 must be the year we build on the momentum from ‘City of Yes for Housing Opportunity’ to ensure every borough and every community contributes to building the homes we so urgently need.”  

  

“The mayor and his team should be commended for putting forth a series of ideas that will further the goal of addressing the city’s housing supply crisis and continues the work of modernizing our local zoning,” said James Whelan, president, Real Estate Board of New York.  

  

“Entering the year with massive momentum on housing – from billions in funding from the city and state to the passage of monumental reforms like ‘City of Yes,’ which will bring 80,000 desperately needed homes to New York City – it’s crucial that we set our sights even higher to create more housing for New Yorkers of all income levels,” said Rachel Fee, executive director, New York Housing Conference. “The mayor’s proposal to convert the city housing agency’s decades-long headquarters into housing is symbolic of the extent of the need for housing supply and the depth of our crisis. ‘City of Yes for Families’ is an obvious next step, which will go a long way toward mitigating outmigration, including by expanding the Down Payment Assistance Program, a critically important tool to increase homeownership. We commend the administration for their leadership on housing, and we look forward to continuing to work with them and the New York City Council to make our city more affordable and accessible for all New Yorkers.”  

  

“Last year, the city made some great strides toward making our way out of our severe housing crunch, but this will be a marathon, not a sprint,” said Howard Slatkin, executive director, Citizens Housing and Planning Council. “This means not only ramping up implementation to deliver results from the ‘City of Yes’ zoning changes and investments but also launching the next round of projects to build more housing and strengthen neighborhoods. We are pleased to see the administration continuing the forward momentum toward meeting our housing needs and look forward to helping turn productive ideas into beneficial change.”  

  

“I applaud the mayor and administration for — among many priorities — continuing to advance an ambitious housing agenda that puts the unique needs of our communities and New Yorkers at the forefront,” said Rafael E. Cestero, CEO, Community Preservation Corporation. “Repurposing public land and buildings, utilizing new ‘City of Yes’ tools to improve neighborhoods, and building new housing near schools and transit hubs will open up our housing supply and fuel our local economies. This is the type of innovative thinking we need to ease our housing crisis and make New York City a much more affordable and equitable place to live for hardworking families.”  

 

   “If New York City wants to continue to bolster its economy and grow the middle class, we must set forth initiatives that have the potential to generate family-sustaining careers for hardworking New Yorkers. This is why the Building and Construction Trades Council applauds Mayor Adams for the bold agenda laid out during today’s State of the City,” said Gary LaBarbera, president, Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York. “The newly introduced plan to build 100,000 new units on the island of Manhattan must result in the creation of affordable housing and accessible career opportunities for union construction workers. As we commence a new year, our tradesmen and tradeswomen are ready and eager to continue their ongoing work toward building a greater New York City.”  

 

    “Owning a piece of our great city and neighborhoods is a core desire for so many working-class New York families and is critical for building a fairer, more equitable housing landscape,” said Sabrina Lippman, CEO, Habitat for Humanity New York City and Westchester County. “We are grateful for Mayor Adams’ housing proposals, building on the foundation established by ‘City of Yes,’ to invest in creating and preserving more affordable homeownership opportunities for New York families across all five boroughs. We look forward to partnering with the administration and New York City Council to further innovative policies and programs that will see more hard-working New Yorkers realize the dream to own their own homes.”   

   

“Expanding and preserving affordable homeownership is critical to ensuring that New Yorkers can afford to stay in their communities, and we are encouraged by the mayor’s commitment to affordable homeownership this year,” said Christie Peale, CEO and executive director, Center for NYC Neighborhoods. “In particular, doubling funding for HomeFirst will help put homeownership in reach for more New Yorkers by increasing access to down payment funds, breaking down one of the biggest barriers Black and Brown New Yorkers face when trying to purchase a home. We also commend the mayor for taking a necessary, long-term approach, including a five-year commitment to creating and preserving affordable homeownership. We’re excited to partner with the city to deliver a more affordable New York through these efforts along with the other home preservation programs that not only help to stabilize families today but also contribute to thriving communities in the future.”   

   

“Making sure families can afford to live in New York is vitally important to the continuing success of our city,” said Moses Gates, vice president, housing and neighborhood planning, Regional Plan Association. “We’re excited by New York’s ongoing commitment to build much-needed new housing for families, including leading by example by continuing to redevelop its own housing department’s headquarters.”   

   

“Union Square has a long history of being an essential live-work-visit neighborhood that welcomes all New Yorkers, and we applaud Mayor Adams’ focus on making New York City the best place to raise a family,” said Julie Stein, executive director, Union Square Partnership. “We look forward to collaborating with the administration to learn more about ‘City of Yes for Families,’ how the plan to increase housing supply in Manhattan could help combat the city’s housing affordability crisis and ensure that New York remains a desirable place for residents and businesses.”   

   

“The proposal by Mayor Adams to accelerate housing development that builds on the tools created in Albany last year and the adoption of ‘City of Yes’ zoning changes, in conjunction with construction labor standards in the 485-x program to create union jobs that pay good wages with family health care and retirement security, will be welcomed by members of our industry,” said Paul Capurso, president, New York City District Council of Carpenters. “We look forward to working with his administration, and other city and state officials to advance housing and other economic development that creates union construction jobs and the opportunity that comes with them.”   

    

“Midtown Manhattan’s Garment District Alliance applauds Mayor Adams’ commitment to addressing the city’s dire dearth of housing,” said Barbara Blair, president, Garment District Alliance. “The seriousness of our housing shortfall cannot be overstated, nor can the need for solutions to office vacancies. The mayor’s thoughtful plan addresses both pressing issues. The Garment District offers the most convenient transportation in the region, as well as easy access to theater, shopping, dining, and culture. However, its future depends on its long-overdue evolution into a 24/7, mixed-use district, which can only be achieved by encouraging residential conversions. We embrace the mayor’s efforts and look forward to working with New York City Department of City Planning to ensure the city’s goals are met.”    

   

“One way for businesses to attract talent and keep their headquarters in New York City is to create more housing for all,” said Madelyn Wils, president, The Fifth Avenue Association. “Our city has become too expensive for people to realize their dreams here. I applaud Mayor Adams’ bold plan to create more housing in all five boroughs, including 100,000 units in Manhattan.”    

   

“We commend Mayor Adams and the New York City Department of City Planning for their ambitious Midtown South Mixed-Use Plan, a bold and visionary step to address New York City’s housing needs and revitalize our neighborhoods for a vibrant, 24/7 mixed-use future,” said James Mettham, president, Flatiron NoMad Partnership. “By introducing dynamic new zoning districts and prioritizing housing, this plan creates opportunities for New Yorkers to live closer to their jobs while fostering a diverse mix of commercial spaces, enhanced public realms, and improved transit connectivity. The Flatiron NoMad Partnership proudly supports this transformative initiative and looks forward to collaborating with the city to bring it to fruition. Together, we will ensure that Flatiron, NoMad, and the greater Midtown South community thrive with expanded housing options, increased job opportunities, and a resilient, vibrant post-COVID economy.”   

    

“We applaud the mayor for using his State of the City address to highlight the critical importance of funding arts and culture, which we know is paramount to a strong and vibrant city,” said Coco Killingsworth, chair, Cultural Institutions Group, chief experience and impact officer, Brooklyn Academy of Music. “We look forward to partnering with the administration to ensure that our diverse and amazing cultural institutions have the resources it needs to thrive for all New Yorkers and visitors alike.”  

  

“Mayor Adams’ goal of providing financial literacy education to every New York City public school student by 2030 will be transformative for the students, their families, and the community,” said Ray Martinez, president and co-founder, EverFi. “Having a solid understanding of financial topics as well as access to tools, accounts, and opportunities is crucial for building a secure and prosperous future.”  

  

“Generation wealth fully supports Mayor Adams’ goal of prioritizing personal finance education for all New York City Public School students by 2030,” Jonelle Rock, CEO and founder, Generation Wealth. “Financial literacy is a powerful tool for promoting social justice, particularly in underserved communities, by equipping students with the skills to successfully manage their money and plan for their future. We’re proud to collaborate with the city’s dedicated educators to expand access to personal finance curricula and resources for students and families across the city.”   

  

Financial education is a cornerstone of preparing young people to lead successful, fulfilling lives,” said Melanie Mortimer, president, SIFMA Foundation. “Equipping students with the knowledge and skills to make informed financial decisions empowers them to secure meaningful employment, manage their resources, and contribute to our economy and democracy. The future of New York City depends on the financial capability of the next generation. Together, we can ensure they have the tools to thrive.”  

  

Here at Ariva in the South Bronx, we are very pleased at the expansion of financial empowerment services to all New York City students,” said Irene Baldwin, executive director, Ariva. “Everyone, regardless of age, should have the tools and resources to ensure their financial health and plan for their future. This will have a tremendously positive impact on Bronx residents and our neighborhoods.”  

  

Thank you to Mayor Adams, Commissioner Mayuga, and Chancellor Aviles-Ramos for their vision and this important investment in the financial education and empowerment infrastructure for students and families across New York City,” said Debra-Ellen Glickstein, founding executive, NYC Kids RISE and former executive director, New York City Office of Financial Empowerment. “It is critical that our students understand personal finance, and our financial system at large, to make good financial decisions and in the longer-term to contribute to building a financial system that works for all of us. Today, thanks to this administration, nearly every kindergarten, first, second and third grader in NYC Public Schools has an NYC Scholarship Account for college and career training. We look forward to continuing to work with the city, financial empowerment partners, and schools in expanding access to financial education and making it possible for more New Yorkers to build generational wealth across all our neighborhoods.”  

  

“Building strong, self-sufficient communities mostly depends on financial literacy, especially in a city as diverse and dynamic as New York,” said Makeela Brathwaite, executive director, Grow Brooklyn and virtual services director, NYC Free Tax Prep. “Every day at Grow Brooklyn, we see how empowering people with financial knowledge changes their life and provides families and individuals with means to interrupt poverty cycles and create roads toward financial security. This extension of financial empowerment tools to NYC Public Schools isn’t just relevant, it’s necessary! For young people who represent the future of our wonderful city, especially those from long-marginalized areas, this bold initiative offers hope and opportunity.”  

  

Economic, racial, and social justice for New Yorkers demand systemic change on all fronts, and expanding financial empowerment services for public school students and families plays a critical part in that,” said Damara Parra, director, financial empowerment and advocacy unit, New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG). “At NYLAG, we firmly believe in providing financial literacy and empowerment for youth in the city and partner with programs in this pursuit. This expansion of access to financial education in the community is crucial in our fight to reduce not just income inequality, but wealth inequality. By providing essential information and knowledge from a young age, we can address the growing racial wealth gap and empower the next generation.”  

  

Empowering our students and families with financial knowledge is an investment in their future and the future of our city, especially for the borough of the Bronx,” said Rita Santelia, LMSW, chief executive officer, Mosholu Montefiore Community Center. “By expanding financial empowerment services within our public school system, we are equipping every student with tools to make informed decisions, save wisely, and build a secure financial future. This is such an incredible initiative the aim for every student to have access to comprehensive financial and consumer protection education, fostering a generation that is not only informed but empowered to thrive is a dream!”  

  

“Applying for free application for Federal Student Aid, establishing credit, saving for that first apartment; these are just a few of the challenges that young New Yorkers face,” said Bishop Mitchell Taylor, co-founder and CEO, Urban Upbound. “All young people deserve access to the financial literacy necessary to face challenges such as these with confidence. Urban Upbound has been at the forefront of this work for years, providing one-on-one financial counseling to youth on both vocational and college tracks. I am encouraged to see this worthy cause receiving the attention that it deserves and look forward to continuing this work in an expanded capacity.”  

  

Neighborhood Trust Financial Partners is thrilled that the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection is expanding financial education for the city’s youth,” said Justine Zinkin, CEO, Neighborhood Trust Financial Partners. “We have been a leading provider of financial coaching for the city’s Financial Empowerment Centers since the program’s inception over 15 years ago. We’ve helped thousands of New Yorkers eliminate their debt and build a more secure financial future. We aim to eradicate predatory debt in all its forms, and we believe that empowerment starts when New Yorkers have access to quality, affordable financial services, and are equipped to navigate the system so they can avoid exploitation. We applaud the agency’s investment to ensure that young people are armed with the knowledge they need to get a strong start in their financial lives by avoiding harmful debt, saving for the future, and making their money work for them.”  

  

Personal finance educators inspire New York City students and their communities by teaching useful real world money skills to thrive after graduation,” said Christian Sherrill, director, partnerships and advocacy, Next Gen Personal Finance. “Next Gen Personal Finance, the world’s leading nonprofit provider of financial literacy curriculum and teacher professional development, is proud to partner with the New York City Public Schools’s Office of Student Pathways on their existing financial literacy efforts and applauds the administration’s efforts to grow these efforts.”  

  

“At Robin Hood, we work to make New York City a place where every family, regardless of income, has the tools they need not just to get by, but to thrive,” said Pam Davis, senior program officer, Robin Hood. “Financial security plays a huge role in a family’s ability to weather economic shocks, such as an unexpected major expense or illness. As longtime funders of economic security support that range from tax prep to one-on-one financial counseling, we know that financial empowerment programs can help put New Yorkers on a pathway out of poverty. We are thrilled that more parents, caregivers, and students will have access to critical financial education as part of the New York City Public Schools curriculum. Equipped with a deeper understanding of budgeting, banking, and investing, today’s announcement will allow more New Yorkers to make empowered decisions that help them, and their loved ones disrupt the generational cycle of poverty and disadvantage.”  

  

Council of Jewish Organizations Flatbush commends Mayor Adams for this ambitious and visionary initiative that is certain to empower our city’s young people – the communal, business, and political leaders of tomorrow – by providing them the financial and consumer protection education necessary to becoming fiscally responsible adults,” said Louis P. Welz, CEO, Council of Jewish Organizations (COJO) Flatbush.  

  

“We look forward to enhancing our already productive partnership with the Office of Financial Empowerment at the New York City Department of Consumer and Worker Protection as we move forward on this vital new program,” said Shulamis Shapiro, director, COJO Flatbush Social Services. “Learning how to save and spend money is so important for students on the cusp of adulthood. This initiative deserves the enthusiastic support of all New Yorkers.”     

 

“Student debt drives shortages in critical professions, including teachers, nurses, and other public servants who make our cities work.” said Mike Pierce, executive director, Student Borrower Protection Center. “Cities are uniquely positioned to help employees who are struggling with their student loans and I’m excited that New York City is standing up for its workers and their families, especially at this chaotic time for student loan borrowers.”  

  

“We regularly see a need for more student loan debt support and resources among our city workforce, so we are glad to see this investment in the people who keep New York City running,” said Shanna Tallarico, director, Consumer Protection Project, New York Legal Assistance Group. “This student loan assistance program for city employees and their families is a critical step towards alleviating thousands of New Yorkers’ debt struggles and proactively mitigating further financial crises.” 

  

“Community schoolyards give people spaces to gather and connect with each other and nature. Increasing the number of open schoolyards is a cost-effective way to make access to park space more equitable without buying any more land,” said Mary Alice Lee, director, NYC Playgrounds Program, Trust for Public Land. “Schools are places where communities come together. When you visit a schoolyard after school or stop by on the weekend, you might see teens playing basketball, kids playing on playground equipment while their grandparents watch, or friends playing a pick-up soccer game. These spaces become the heart of the community with neighbors organizing sports leagues, movie nights, and exercise classes. Trust for Public Land is proud to work with Mayor Adams to create more community schoolyards and give more NYC residents access to the outdoors.”  

  

“Increasing access to green and open spaces in our densely packed city is critical for our physical and mental health. We at City Parks Foundation are extremely supportive of Mayor Adams’ efforts to expand the Schoolyards to Playgrounds program,” said Heather Lubov, executive director, City Parks Foundation. “We will continue to work with the administration to advocate for robust funding for our entire park system, which brings vital social and environmental benefits to all New Yorkers.”  

  

“I commend Mayor Adams for prioritizing the quality of life of every New Yorker through these investments in our city’s parks. Adding 230 positions for desperately-needed second shifts, which have proven to be a success in keeping parks clean and green, is a welcome step in the right direction. The administration’s investment in the ‘Swim for Life’ program will equip thousands of 8th graders with vital swim safety skills, a life-saving initiative that also fosters health and recreation.We are equally encouraged by the baselined $770,000 for the ‘Schoolyards to Playgrounds’ program, which will transform playgrounds in underserved communities at 11 sites,” said Adam Ganser, executive director, New Yorkers for Parks. “While these are important victories, there is still more to do to fully restore funding and critical positions in the Parks Department. We look forward to working with the mayor, the City Council, and our partners to ensure that every New Yorker has access to safe, clean, and green parks, playgrounds, recreation centers, and natural areas.”  

  

Mayor Adams’ commitment to increasing permanent second shift workers and opening up recreation spaces in neighborhoods that lack park access is a positive step forward for the city,” said Julie Tighe, president, New York League of Conservation Voters. “We look forward to seeing these efforts brought to fruition and expanded to ensure all New Yorkers have access to quality green spaces in their neighborhoods.”  

  

We applaud the administration for prioritizing aquatics safety and ensuring that more children have access to critical life-saving skills,” said Sharon Greenberger, president and CEO, YMCA of Greater New York and co-chair, New York City’s Lifeguard and Aquatics Task Force. “As a city surrounded by water, we have a collective obligation to protect our families and children and increase access to swim instruction. We look forward to expanding our great partnership with the city, the Parks Department, and New York City Public Schools to implement ‘Swim To Life’ services and empower our communities.”  

  

“Swim Strong Foundation is so happy to hear that $5 million of funding will be available via the city budget this month to support the ‘Swim For Life’ initiative spearheaded by the NYC Parks Department and partners,” said Shawn Slevin, executive director, Swim Strong Foundation. “This funding will help them teach another 5,000 or so second graders fundamental aquatic skills and knowledge needed to help them understand and respect the water.”  

  

“The expansion of swim programs in our city is an important step toward addressing the critical need for water safety education and accessibility, particularly in underserved communities where drowning risks are highest. Rising Tide Effect stands in solidarity with this initiative, reflecting our shared commitment to equipping communities with the skills and knowledge to stay safe in and around water,” said Kaitlin Krause, founder and executive director, Rising Tide Effect. “We applaud the mayor and his administration for bringing attention to this urgent issue and look forward to continued collaboration to ensure no one is left behind in building a safer, more inclusive future for all New Yorkers.”  

  

Asphalt Green applauds Mayor Adams’ commitment to water safety and this bold investment in the Swim for Life program. We are grateful to partner with the NYC Parks Department to help deliver Swim for Life instruction through our groundbreaking Wave Makers initiative, which is helping pave the way to free swim instruction for every second grader in the city,” said Jordan Brackett, CEO, Asphalt Green. “This announcement is another critical step toward that goal. We look forward to helping expand those efforts, ensuring that every swimmer is equipped with the skills for a lifetime of safety and enjoyment in the water.”  

  

“We are incredibly grateful to Mayor Adams for making this vital investment in teaching children how to swim,” said Dennis M. Walcott, president and CEO, Queens Public Library and co-chair, NYC Citywide Lifeguard & Aquatics Task Force. “As a result, thousands of kids will have free access to learning a lifelong skill that is as essential as it is enjoyable.”  

  

“The American Red Cross is proud to support the NYC swim initiative, which aims to expand swim safety and offer free swim lessons to 18,000 New York City youth,” said Doreen Thomann Howe, regional CEO, American Red Cross in Greater New York. “Our goal is to work with our partners to help provide children with the opportunity to become water competent, learn how to be safer in, on and around water, and foster a lifelong love for swimming and its many benefits.”  

  

“The New York Public Library is proud to be involved in two major initiatives addressing some of the city’s biggest challenges,” said Anthony W. Marx, president, The New York Public Library. “As an institution dedicated to free access to knowledge, we are committed to closing the digital divide and are thrilled to work with Department of Housing Preservation and Development on a pioneering program that will provide free at-home WiFi to New Yorkers living in Section 8 housing. We are also excited that Bloomingdale Library will be redeveloped into a new, state-of-the-art branch as part of Mayor Adams’ efforts to increase the city’s housing supply.”    

  

As an organization dedicated to equitable housing and community development in New York City, ANHD appreciates Mayor Adams’ focus on making New York City affordable for all families,” said Barika X Williams, executive director, Association for Neighborhood & Housing Development (ANHD). “We believe strongly that every New Yorker, regardless of income or status, should have the opportunity to thrive here. We commend the announcement of the next Living Libraries site and highlight the pioneering efforts of ANHD’s nonprofit, mission-oriented developer members in demonstrating the value of collocating affordable housing with libraries, setting a precedent for innovative urban development.”  

  

I’m glad to see this administration taking steps to prevent family homelessness. This program will give babies a stronger foundation for their future,” said Kadisha Davis, member, Impacted Advocates and owner, Kadisha Cares.  

   “It’s a great idea that we are going to help our babies not be born into shelter. They’re our responsibility too, not just their parents. Babies need a community to thrive, and I’m glad that the city is supporting parents in this way,” said Rhonda Jackson, Family Homelessness Coalition Fellow and member of the Impacted Advocates.  

  

“Every New Yorker needs a safe and stable home, especially our newborn children. The NYC Fund to End Youth & Family Homelessness celebrates the city’s downpayment on a future where every baby born in our city begins their lives with a home,” said John Kimble, senior advisor, NYC Fund to End Youth & Family Homelessness. “We know the first few years of life shape how our youngest New Yorkers grow into healthy and strong children and adults, and that’s why they need a solid foundation. Investing in these critical first moments of life is one of the wisest and most successful investment choices we can make as a city, creating a measurable return — of more than seven times what we invest — in better outcomes for these children and our community.  The NYC Fund to End Youth & Family Homelessness stands with the city in building a future where all babies, and all New Yorkers, have a home. We urge everyone who shares that vision to join us.”   

  

“It is very encouraging that the city is focused on ensuring expecting mothers find stable, permanent, housing prior to giving birth,” said Shambhavi Manglik, senior program officer, Housing and Homelessness at Robin Hood. “Robin Hood learned during our prior Babies in Shelter Initiative that virtually all new mothers in the shelter system experience symptoms of depression. The consequences of untreated depression are profound: having a depressed mother is the single greatest predictor of adverse outcomes among children. Further, data from Robin Hood and Columba University’s Poverty Tracker show that having a child can be an impoverishing event in and of itself. By connecting families to housing vouchers and permanent housing prior to the birth of a child, the city will help break the cycle of homelessness for thousands of children and families.”  

  

“Mayor Adams’ State of the City address makes it clear that his administration is committed to providing real, proactive solutions to tackle our city’s housing and homelessness crisis,” said Shams DaBaron, Da Housing Hero. “His focus on creating opportunities for working-class New Yorkers, while investing in holistic care for our most vulnerable brothers and sisters, demonstrates the kind of bold leadership that will transform lives. The mayor’s commitment to ending street homelessness is a gamechanger that will literally save and improve the lives of countless New Yorkers, setting a new standard for how cities should care for their people. The transformation of Brigadier General Charles Young Field is especially personal to me. As someone who, as a teenager and young adult, slept in that park, my dream of stability and success seemed to be a dream deferred. But now, that same park will become Harlem’s own Field of Dreams — a place where mentorship, mental health support, and job training will ensure that no one has to sleep there again. It will also ensure that the community is able to enjoy a safe and beautiful family friendly environment where they’ll have the chance to pursue their dreams, empower their communities, and rise and thrive.”  

  

We believe that the pathway to a stronger New York for everyone is investing in people to strengthen the New York community,” said Roderick L. Jones, Ed.D, president, Goddard Riverside. “The mayor’s investments in services that help the unhoused address the root issues that contribute to homelessness, with supportive housing as a foundation, form the right formula. We remain confident that fully funding services such as homeless outreach and psychosocial programming is essential to winning the battle against street homelessness.”  

  

“I am thrilled by the mayor’s announcement today to expand Safe Haven capacity,” said Muzzy Rosenblatt, CEO and president, Bowery Residents’ Committee. “As one of the city’s homeless outreach partners, and as the organization that first developed this innovative model 20 years ago, we know that safe havens are what unsheltered people need and want, and that they are a pathway from the streets and subways to housing and independence.”  

  

“We applaud Mayor Adams’ commitment to providing additional services, support, and housing for our most vulnerable: unhoused, mentally ill, and substance abusers who suffer on our streets.” said Tom Harris, president, Times Square Alliance. “Additionally, the Manhattan Housing plan will add much needed inventory and help create more ‘live, work, play’ communities in our city.”  

  

“Individuals and families in crisis need resources in order to stabilize their situation and be on solid footing to secure permanent housing,” said Baaba Halm, senior vice president of programs, Enterprise Community Partners. “Today’s announcement of additional funding for those experiencing homelessness will be a lifeline for those in emergency situations, particularly those with mental health or substance use challenges. We look forward to working productively with the city to ensure the effective execution of these needed resources.”  

  

The Institute of Community Living commends the Adams administration for putting forward bold investments to support New Yorkers experiencing homelessness,” said Jody Rudin, president & CEO, The Institute of Community Living (ICL). “We are encouraged by the innovative proposed models’ focus on expanding behavioral health facilities with private rooms, increased clinical staffing, and scaled centers—key elements of dignified, person-centered care that fosters stability, recovery, and long-term success. ICL is proud to support this vision, which paves the way for a broader transformation of New York’s behavioral health care system. We look forward to collaborating with NYC Health + Hospitals and city leaders to ensure these initiatives drive meaningful change in the lives of the New Yorkers who need them most.”   

  

BronxWorks is in support of the mayor’s initiative to improve mental health services available to those experiencing homelessness,” said Eileen Torres, CEO, BronxWorks. “There continues to be a need for more short and long-term psychiatric beds in hospitals and treatment facilities. Additional safe haven beds are also needed to provide clinical services to this extremely vulnerable population. While there has been improvement in accessing inpatient care, additional options upon discharge are crucial. Specialized longer-term inpatient treatment beds have proven successful as it is difficult to properly address some of the serious mental health conditions street homeless individuals are facing without a longer recovery period and other support. BronxWorks is also in support of greater financial literacy resources and education for teens and young adults. These life skills prove invaluable, especially to underserved and at-risk groups. Together, with our community partners, we will strive to continue our work to help break the cycle of poverty.”  

  

“I am deeply grateful to the Adams administration for its steadfast commitment to expanding access to vital services for young people in New York City’s foster care and juvenile justice systems,” said Tracy Jenkins, executive director, The Center for Fair Futures. “The decision to bring Fair Futures to scale is a monumental achievement that will have a lasting impact on thousands of young lives. This enhanced funding allows us to provide the support every young person in care deserves — across all 25 foster care providers and nine juvenile justice providers. This expansion ensures that all young people in these systems have the tools they need to succeed. By offering high-quality, individualized coaching and tutoring, we’re helping them unlock not just academic success, but also career opportunities and personal development. We remain committed to working with Administration for Children’s Services and the 34 foster care and juvenile justice provider agency partners to ensure that every young person — from 6th grade through age 26 — has access to a coach and tutor, should they choose, empowering them to reach their fullest potential. We are proud of the progress we’ve made and excited to continue working with the administration, our partners, and the community to create a future where every young person has the opportunity to thrive.”   

   

“I commend Mayor Adams and his team for the innovative investments announced today to address the needs of some of our most vulnerable New Yorkers,” said Grace Bonilla, president and CEO, United Way of New York City. “This sets us further along the path to ensuring that young people aging out of the foster care system have the best possible safety net with the expansion of Fair Futures. Further, by addressing the needs of new mothers and those facing mental health challenges who are also housing insecure, and by creating a loan forgiveness program for our college graduates that want to make New York their home, Mayor Adams is building a thriving city, safe communities, and the promise that this city can be affordable for all.”  

   

“Good internet access is essential for everyone, but the market has left millions of people disadvantaged without a good connection in their home,” said Christopher Mitchell, program director, community broadband networks, Institute for Local Self-Reliance. “Public libraries have played a crucial role in expanding knowledge to everyone across the United States and we are thrilled to see the New York Public Library pioneering this solution to expanding knowledge and opportunity to those who have been left behind in the internet age.”    

   

“The Neighborhood Internet initiative is a groundbreaking step toward closing the digital divide and ensuring that every household has the tools to thrive in a connected world,” said Clayton Banks, CEO, Silicon Harlem. “By partnering with the New York Public Library, Mayor Adams is championing equity, access, and opportunity for underserved communities. This program will expand more providers for New York City, and will be able to close the divide finally, and represents the power of collaboration in transforming lives through technology.”  

MAYOR ADAMS CELEBRATES SURPASSING 2024 STATE OF THE CITY COMMITMENT TO ADVANCE 24 AFFORDABLE HOUSING PROJECTS ON 24 PUBLIC SITES IN 2024 

  

Adams Administration Creates and Preserves Over 13,000 Units of Critically-Needed Affordable Housing by Fulfilling Pledge to Advance 24 Projects in 2024

NEW YORK – New York City Mayor Eric Adams today celebrated surpassing the city’s ambitious “24 in 24” plan to advance 24 affordable housing projects on public sites in 2024, ultimately creating or preserving over 13,000 units of housing. Delivering on a key promise in Mayor Adams’ 2024 State of the City address, the city advanced 26 projects across all five boroughs in 2024 as the city continues to face a generational housing crisis and 1.4 percent rental vacancy rate. Today’s announcement comes after the passage of Mayor Adams’ “City of Yes for Housing Opportunity” plan, the most pro-housing zoning proposal in New York City history. The City of Yes proposal alone exceeds all the housing created from rezonings during any mayoral administration of the last 50 years, including all 12 years of the Bloomberg administration and all eight years of the de Blasio administration.  

“Last year in our State of the City, we made a pledge to New Yorkers to use every tool in our toolbox to build the affordable housing that our city deserves. Since then, we have passed the most pro-housing zoning proposal in city history, committed a record $26 billion in housing capital, broke records again in building and connecting New Yorkers to affordable housing, and, today, we fulfilled another pledge. We surpassed our ambitious ‘24 in 24’ plan, delivering 26 projects across all five boroughs to face this generational housing crisis head on,” said Mayor Adams. “While today we celebrate, tomorrow we continue the work. For this upcoming State of the City, we look forward to going even bigger and bolder to deliver the housing relief that New Yorkers need and deserve.” 

“Mayor Adams empowered us to use every tool in our toolbox to build housing everywhere, and a major piece of this strategynow fulfilled and surpassed was ‘24 in 24’,” said First Deputy Mayor Maria Torres-Springer. “Less than a year after the mayor announced the project in his State of the City, we have exceeded our promise to advance 24 projects on public land and surpassed our goal for housing units created or preserved. As we look to the 2025 State of the City, the mayor will show that our momentum on housing will only continue.”

The Adams administration advanced housing on 26 other public sites over 2024. Below are the projects:

Bronx:

  • 351 Powers Avenue: The New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) selected a development team to build approximately 90 units. 
  • 1388-1400 Stebbins Avenue: HPD released a Request for Proposals (RFP) to build approximately 120 units. 
  • Boston Secor, Boston Road Plaza, and Middletown Plaza PACT: The New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) closed on financing to preserve 951 units though the Permanent Affordability Commitment Together (PACT) program.
  • Bronx River Addition: (NYCHA) completed resident voting on preserving 226 units.
  • Grand Concourse New York Public Library: HPD started resident engagement on a development to build approximately 100 units.
  • Murphy Private: NYCHA designated a PACT partner team to preserve 850 units.

Brooklyn:

  • 516 Bergen Street: HPD selected a development team to build approximately 116 units. 
  • Bay View Houses: NYCHA designated a PACT partner team to preserve 1,610 units. 
  • Coney Island Houses: NYCHA completed resident voting on preserving 530 units.
  • Gowanus Houses/Wyckoff Gardens: NYCHA designated a construction team to complete the comprehensive modernization of 1,668 units.
  • Hylan Houses: NYCHA completed resident voting on preserving 209 units.
  • Nevins and 3rd: HPD released an RFP to build approximately 125 units. 
  • Nostrand Houses Trust: NYCHA released an RFP to renovate approximately 1,150 units.
  • Unity Towers: NYCHA completed resident voting on preserving 192 units.

Manhattan:

  • 324 East 5th Street: HPD started resident engagement on a development to build approximately 80 units.
  • 2460-2478 Second Avenue: The New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) selected a lead consultant for the education and engagement campaign for the Harlem African Burial Ground Memorial where the city is advancing approximately 730 units.
  • 4095 9th Avenue: HPD released an RFP to over 500 units.
  • Campos Plaza II: NYCHA designated a PACT partner team to preserve 224 units.
  • Frederick Samuel PACT: NYCHA closed on financing to preserve 664 units though the PACT program. 
  • Hernandez, Meltzer, and Seward Park PACT: NYCHA designated a PACT partner team to preserve 740 units.
  • Manhattanville Houses: NYCHA closed on financing to preserve 1,272 units through the PACT program.
  • Whitney Museum: NYCEDC started resident engagement on a development that would approximately build 600 units. 

Queens:

  • Hunters Point South Parcel E: HPD started resident engagement on a development to build approximately 800 to 900 units.

Staten Island:

  • 30 Canal Street: NYCEDC released an RFP seeking proposals to build approximately 550 units.
  • Jersey Street: HPD selected a development team to build approximately 233 units.
  • West Brighton PACT: NYCHA closed on financing for comprehensive renovations for over 1,300 residents living in 16 buildings.

Mayor Adams had made historic investments toward creating affordable housing over the last three years. In June 2024, City Hall and the City Council agreed on an on-time, balanced, and fiscally-responsible $112.4 billion Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 Adopted Budget that invests $2 billion in capital funds across FY25 and FY26 to HPD and NYCHA’s capital budgets. In total, the Adams administration has committed a record $26 billion in housing capital in the current 10-year plan as the city faces a generational housing crisis. In July 2024, Mayor Adams announced back-to-back record breaking years in both creating and connecting New Yorkers to affordable housing. This past spring, the city celebrated the largest 100 percent affordable housing project in 40 years with the Willets Point transformation

Further, the Adams administration is using every tool available to address the city’s housing crisis. Mayor Adams announced multiple new tools, including a $4 million state grant, to help New York City homeowners create accessory dwelling units that will not only help them to afford to remain in the communities they call home, but also to build generational wealth for families.  

Last year, Mayor Adams and members of his administration successfully advocated for new tools in the 2024 New York state budget that will spur the creation of urgently needed housing. These tools include a new tax incentive for multifamily rental construction, a tax incentive program to encourage office conversions to create more affordable units, lifting the arbitrary “floor-to-area ratio” cap that held back affordable housing production in certain high-demand areas of the city, and the ability to create a pilot program to legalize and make safe basement apartments.   

Additionally, under Mayor Adams’ leadership, the city is fulfilling its 2024 State of the City commitment to build more affordable housing, including reopening the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher program waitlist after being closed to general applications for nearly 15 years and creating the Tenant Protection Cabinet to coordinate across agencies to better serve tenants. The city has also taken several steps to cut red tape and speed up the delivery of much-needed housing, including through the “Green Fast Track for Housing,” a streamlined environmental review process for qualifying small- and medium-sized housing projects; the “Office Conversion Accelerator,” an interagency effort to guide buildings that wish to convert through city bureaucracy; and other initiatives of the Building and Land Use Approval Streamlining Taskforce.  

“This achievement not only fulfills a critical promise to New Yorkers, but also sets a bold precedent in addressing the city’s housing crisis,” said New YorkState Senator and Committee on Social Services Chair Roxanne J. Persaud. “I commend the Adams administration for taking this crucial step in creating thousands of much-needed units across all five boroughs.”

“In a city where half of renters are rent-burdened and construction is not keeping pace with demand, we must be creative and utilize every square inch of available space to build more affordable housing,” said New York State Assemblymember Jenifer Rajkumar.“The ‘24 in 24’ campaign was a huge success, exceeding its goal by advancing 25 affordable housing projects on public sites in 2024. This will create and preserve over 12,000 units of housing, part of the record-breaking affordable housing production in this administration. That is thousands more New Yorkers living with safety, dignity, and stability without breaking the bank. I am proud of my work to expedite housing production, passing legislation to bring the procurement process online and helping pass the progressive design build bill, as well as authoring bills to provide access to adjoining lots and construct 3D-printed housing. Together, we will do everything in our power to give New Yorkers the dignified housing they deserve.”

“Creating and preserving affordable housing is critical for the future of Manhattan and the entire city,” said New York CityCouncilmember Carlina Rivera. “As we continue advancing strategies to tackle our persistent housing crisis, initiatives like ‘24 in 24’ help prevent displacement and provide an opportunity for safe, inexpensive places to live. Our efforts to expand and preserve affordable housing will ensure that all New Yorkers can remain in their communities, and that new residents can contribute to the vibrancy of our city.”

 

 

 

TRANSCRIPT: MAYOR ADAMS DELIVERS REMARKS AT NYPD RECRUIT GRADUATION CEREMONY 

 

Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch: Good morning, officers. And good morning to everyone, especially the family and the friends of our newest police officers. Today’s graduation is a moment of great pride. You’ve completed an academy which will prepare you to step into the ranks of the greatest law enforcement agency in the world.

The NYPD has earned that honor over generations, and in our 180 years safeguarding the people of New York City, this department’s greatness has never come from its executive ranks or from offices at One Police Plaza. It has always stemmed from the cops out on the front lines, doing the difficult, often dangerous work of policing our city. Cops like you. It’s not an easy job by any means, but you are ready.

Because that pull that brought you to the academy to pursue this career stems from an understanding that policing is not just a job, it’s a calling, a noble undertaking. And it is the choice you made to serve that sets you apart. New Yorkers will call for you when they are in distress. They will seek you out when they are fearful and when they are worried. They will look for you when they are in danger. And when they see you pulling up to them in a squad car or patrolling a subway platform or train or walking a beat in their neighborhood, they’ll breathe a little easier. And they will feel safer. Because they will know that help has arrived. This is what you’ve trained for over the past six months. Now you’ll put that training to use in service to the people of New York City. And let me tell you, New Yorkers are thrilled to have you.

What’s more, more than 70 percent of you are New Yorkers yourselves. You come from the same neighborhoods you are protecting, and you represent the diversity of this city more than ever before. You speak 39 different languages, 145 of you were born in 35 different countries, and 58 of you either served or continue to serve in our country’s armed forces. God bless you. You are a snapshot of our city, a reflection of all the people who make New York great. And through your choice to serve, you make it even greater.

There is no work that is more important, but as you know, you won’t do it alone. Your families sitting here today are your greatest supporters. They too are part of this journey. Parents, spouses, children, siblings, neighbors, who are no doubt bursting with pride today. But they also may be a bit nervous about the risks and the unknowns. So I deeply thank all of the family members and the friends of these new police officers for sharing their loved ones with the NYPD and with the City of New York. And I promise each of you that I will do everything in my power to support these new officers and to keep them safe, as I do for every NYPD officer in every command.

It’s fitting that we honor the sacrifice of the families of our cops because family tradition is woven into the fabric of your profession. For many on this job, an unbroken line of service across generations is a point of great pride. Children looked up to their parents and law enforcement as heroes and wanted to follow in their footsteps. And parents dreamt of passing their policing legacy on to their children, their grandchildren, and so on. These storied histories of service are central to this department. Stories like that of Police Officer Gabriella Kelly. Officer Kelly’s great-great-grandfather joined the NYPD in 1896. He served the city with honor, and today, nearly 130 years later, his shield number has been passed down to another generation, pinned to the uniform of the newest member of the Kelly family to proudly serve New Yorkers.

These are the stories that remind us of what makes our work so unique, the legacy of service that connects us all. You are all now the future of the NYPD and of this city, and I could not be prouder to welcome you to the greatest job in the greatest police department in the world. Thank you for answering the noble call to serve, for taking the solemn oath, and for choosing to make this city and this department stronger. Like the mayor, I am a person of great faith, so I would like to mark this consequential moment in your lives by offering each of you what in the Jewish tradition we call the Priestly Blessing. Y’varech’cha Adonai v’yeesh’m’reicha. May the Lord bless you and keep you. Yaer Adonai panav eleicha veechooneka. May the Lord make his face shine upon you and be gracious to you. Yeesa Adonai panav eleicha v’yasem l’cha shalom. May the Lord lift up his countenance upon you and grant you peace. Please stay safe and congratulations again. Thank you very much.

Lieutenant Jack Conway, Ceremonial Unit, Police Department: Thank you, Commissioner Tisch. It’s now my pleasure to introduce the mayor of the City of New York, the Honorable Eric Adams.

Mayor Eric Adams: Where’s David? So, you were standing in the audience. And raising the flag, and when I saw you, I thought of mommy. Back in 1984, when I was like David, and I walked in here and became a member of the New York City Police Department, and mommy worried about me as a child because I had a learning disability. And she used to tell me, baby, you’re going to be all right. And when I became a member of this department, she sat there beaming with excitement, tears rolling down her eyes, and she realized that I was going to contribute to the City of New York. And this is just what it’s all about, right here. Mommy and the country, folks. Mommy and the country. I love you.

All the 36 different languages, 39 different countries, 625 of you. It doesn’t matter what your country of origin [is], when you come to this country, you’re part of the American experience. And that famous line, rockets red glare, bombs burst in the air, gave proof through the night that our flag was still there. Our flag is going to be here because of you. It’s because you have an obligation and responsibility to protect the land of the free and the home of the brave.

You have now become the home of the brave. It’s your obligation to ensure that no matter who’s the mayor, no matter who’s the governor, no matter who’s the president, that this flag continues to be here. And as long as we have mommies like you that will allow their sons to commit their lives to protecting us, we will always be a great country.

There are days I wake up with a question mark, are we going to be alright? But when I saw you raising that flag, that question mark became an exclamation point. You’re damn right we’re going to be alright, because we’re America. United States of America, and that’s what we represent. So I thank you. I look forward to a promising career that your son will go from police officer to sergeant to lieutenant to captain to chief, and then one day becoming the mayor of the City of New York. Congratulations class. Let’s make sure we continue to be the greatest city on the globe. Thank you.

Banner Image: Mayor Eric Adams unveils details of the administration’s historic investment to help New York City’s most vulnerable populations and support those with severe mental illness. Bellevue Hospital, Manhattan. Wednesday, January 15, 2025. Image Credit – Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office.


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