Community boards in New York City
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The community boards of the government of New York City, New York City government are the appointed advisory groups of the community districts of the five Borough (New York City), boroughs. There are currently 59 community districts: twelve in Community boards of the Bronx, the Bronx, eighteen in Community boards of Brooklyn, Brooklyn, twelve in Community boards of Manhattan, Manhattan, fourteen in Community boards of Queens, Queens, and three in Community boards of Staten Island, Staten Island. They advise on land use and zoning, participate in the city budget process, and address service delivery in their district. Regarding land use they are only advisory and mostly serve as mobilizing institutions for communities opposed to specific projects. The City Charter also allows boards to submit their own plans for the development, growth, and improvement of their communities. Community boards each have up to 50 volunteer members appointed by the local borough president, half from nominations by New York City Council, City Council members representing the community district (''i.e.'', whose council districts cover part of the community district). Non-board members may also join or work on board committees. Each community board is led by a district manager, with an office and staff, whose primary purpose is to coordinate the delivery of services to the community. Each borough also has a borough boards of New York City, borough board, composed of the borough president, council members from the borough, and the chairperson of each community board in the borough.New York City Charter § 85(a)


Responsibilities

Community Boards are defined as public bodies and governmental agencies under law, however they act in an advisory capacity, wielding no official authority to make or enforce laws.


Land use and zoning

Under the City Charter's Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP), after the New York City Department of City Planning, Department of City Planning certifies as complete an application respecting the use, development, or improvement of real property, affected community boards (along with borough boards) may hold public hearings and submit recommendations for consideration to the New York City Planning Commission, City Planning Commission before its decision. Such applications include those that involve city land or facilities, changes to zoning, and the use of public street and sidewalks. The New York City Board of Standards and Appeals, Board of Standards and Appeals generally has jurisdiction over special-use permits of a local nature (along with zoning Variance (land use), variances), such as for gas stations, clubs, camps and public utility installations, and its approval process deviates from the ULURP by allowing community and borough boards to review and recommend applications; the City Planning Commission retains jurisdiction for projects that have greater impact or involve planning issues beyond the local neighborhood. Projects that are "as-of-right" (i.e. the city has no discretion) are not subject to community review. The City Charter also allows community boards to submit their own plans for the development, growth, and improvement of their communities.New York City Charter § 197-a However, few community boards have taken advantage of this ability. Community boards serve as mobilizing institutions for communities opposed to specific projects. They allow the community to articulate their opposition, and when successful, developers or the city are forced to modify projects or negotiate with the community, sometimes through the board.


Service delivery

Each community board is led by a district manager, with an office and staff, whose primary purpose is to coordinate the delivery of services to the community. Each community district also has a district service cabinet (DSC) with representatives of agencies that deliver local services. In practice, boards serve in an outreach and complaint-handling capacity but have little substantive impact on tailoring service delivery.


City budget

Community boards assess the needs of their own neighborhoods, meet with city agencies and make recommendations in the city's budget process to address them. Although boards have at times played a role in capital budgeting, their impact has been minimal.


Structure

Each board is composed of up to 50 volunteer members, with half of the membership appointed by the local borough president each year.New York City Charter § 2800(a) One half of the appointees are chosen on the volition of the borough president, and half from nominations by New York City Council, City Council members representing the community district (''i.e.'', whose council districts cover part of the community district). Additionally, all City Council members representing the community district are non-voting, ''ex officio'' board members. Meetings occur once a month and are open to the public.


Board members

Board members are selected from among people who must reside, work, or have some other significant interest in the community district. The board members serve for two-year terms, staggered so that half of the full membership is up for appointment each year. The minimum age to become a board member was lowered to 16 years old in 2014. In November 2018 voters overwhelmingly approved term limits of 4 consecutive 2-years stints. After 2 years off the Board, members are eligible to be reappointed. Appointments to the board are usually made each spring.


Committees

Each community board has committees that do most of the planning and work on the issues that are brought to action at board meetings. Committees may be functional committees that deal with specific New York City Charter mandates (e.g., land use review and budget committees), or agency committees that relate to a particular agency (e.g. police and sanitation committees), or otherwise. Non-board members may apply to join or work on board committees, which helps provide additional expertise and manpower.


Staff

Each community district is led by a district manager, with an office and staff, whose primary purpose is to coordinate the delivery of services to the community. While the main responsibility of the district manager's office is to receive complaints from community residents, they also process permits for block parties and street fairs, organize tenants associations, and coordinate neighborhood cleanup programs.


District service cabinet

Each community district also has a district service cabinet (DSC) that coordinates city services and programs, considers interagency problems and impediments, and plans multi-agency projects, within the district.New York City Charter § 2705(b) Its members include the district manager, chairperson of the community board, representatives of the agencies that deliver local services to the community district, City Council members whose district includes any part of the community district, and a representative of the New York City Department of City Planning, Department of City Planning. DSC meetings are not subject to New York's Consolidated Laws of New York, Open Meetings Law and therefore need not be open to the public.


History

The 1898 Charter of the City of Greater New York gave the Municipal Assembly the power and duty to number and name 22 districts of local improvements, which were at that time coterminous with the senatorial districts of the city but whose boundaries the Municipal Assembly had the power to modify. Each district was under the purview of a Board of Local Improvements, also known as a "local board", which was composed of the district's Borough President and the members of the Municipal Assembly in the district, who all served without compensation. The 1901 Charter, effective January 1, 1902, increased the number of districts to 25 and gave them their numbers and names. These districts comprised various wards and senatorial districts. The local boards remained composed of the Borough President and each New York City Board of Aldermen, alderman in the district, and they continued to serve in the boards without compensation. In 1918 their number was reduced to 24 and they were thereafter based on aldermanic districts.Laws of New York 1916, c. 540 §2 The 1938 Charter imposed a City Council elected by borough-wide proportional representation; Local Improvement Boards thereafter comprised the Borough President and each member of the Council elected from the Borough, and numbered nine in Manhattan, eight in Brooklyn, four in the Bronx, two in Queens, and one in Staten Island. The 1963 revision of the New York City Charter extended the Borough of Manhattan's "Community Planning Councils" (est. 1951) to the outer boroughs as "Community Planning Boards", which are now known as "Community Boards". The 1975 revision of the New York City (NYC) Charter set the number of Community Districts/Boards to 59, established the position of the district manager for the community districts, and created the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP) (pronounced "you-lurp") which gave the community boards the authority to review land use proposals such as zoning actions, and special permits. The 1990 revision of the NYC Charter, in section 197-a, granted community boards the authority to prepare plans for development within their district, and submit them to the New York City Planning Commission, City Planning Commission and the New York City Council, city council for approval. Plans submitted under this rule are known as "197-a" plans. The 2018 NYC Charter Revision Commission proposed term limits for community board members. The term limits proposal was one of three measures pertaining to the Charter that were up for a vote as part of the November 2018 elections. It, additionally, required borough presidents to seek out persons of diverse backgrounds for appointment. NYC voters resoundingly elected to place term limits on community board members. After Governor of New York Andrew Cuomo suspended in-person government meetings in 2020 by declaring a state of emergency at the dawn of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York (state), COVID-19 pandemic in New York, the City’s 59 boards migrated to online video platforms such as Webex and Zoom. In 2021, when boards were threatened with the prospect of resuming meetings in person despite civic engagement soaring after going virtual and the ongoing health crisis, some openly declared their intent to break state law to keep meeting online, resulting in Governor Kathy Hochul signing legislation to extend virtual public meetings.


See also

* Borough boards of New York City * City Environmental Quality Review * Community boards of the Bronx * Community boards of Brooklyn * Community boards of Manhattan * Community boards of Queens * Community boards of Staten Island * Neighborhoods in New York City * Uniform Land Use Review Procedure


References


Bibliography

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External links


New York City Community Boards

BoardStat
from BetaNYC {{Uniform Land Use Review Procedure, state=autocollapse Community boards of New York City, Government of New York City Urban planning in New York City