"Official Journal of The City of New York" | |
Type | Daily official journal |
---|---|
Publisher | New York City Department of Citywide Administrative Services |
Editor | Janae C. Ferreira[1] |
Founded | June 24, 1873[2] |
Language | English |
Headquarters | Lower Manhattan 1 Centre Street |
Circulation | 379 daily[2] (print; as of April 2019[update]) |
OCLC number | 6185968 |
Website | a856-cityrecord |
The City Record is the official journal of New York City.[3][4] It is published each weekday (except legal holidays) and contains legal notices produced by city agencies, including notices of proposed and adopted rules, procurement solicitations and awards, upcoming public hearings and meetings, public auctions and property dispositions, and selected court decisions.[5] Despite the publication's importance, long history, and influence—many city projects are required to be announced in the paper—the existence of the Record is not well known.[6][2]
The codified local laws of NYC are contained in the New York City Administrative Code,[7][8] and the regulations promulgated by city agencies are compiled in the Rules of the City of New York.[9] Historical issues of The City Record are being digitized by the City Record Project at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering; as of April 2019[update] the database contains searchable PDFs of issues from the founding of the Record in 1873 through 1947, resulting in a historical source that records every payment and contract of the city, election returns, periodic reports of city agencies, and much more.
The paper was founded in the wake of multiple scandals involving the city government and Tammany Hall; its publication is required by city law (New York City Charter §1066) and ensures that city business meets state law transparency requirements (Consolidated Laws GMU §103 (2)). Eli Blachman has been the paper's editor since 1995. The City Record has been published online (known as CROL) since 2004.[2]
As for the move to 66 John Street, residents said they only learned of it in a meeting that addressed concerns about 71 Thomas Street. But the city responded that it held two public hearings about the John Street site, announced in the City Record, the official government journal. When a community board member asked the overcapacity crowd on Wednesday how many had heard of the City Record, not one hand went up.