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   Message 344,621 of 345,374   
   davidp to All   
   Mayor Adams Loses Emergency Power to Spe   
   11 Dec 23 13:52:52   
   
   From: lessgovt@gmail.com   
      
   Mayor Adams Loses Emergency Power to Spend Freely on Migrants   
   By Jay Root, Dec. 4, 2023, NY Times   
   The New York City comptroller, Brad Lander, has restricted Mayor Eric   
   Adams’s ability to quickly spend hundreds of millions of dollars on the   
   migrant crisis — a major blow to the mayor’s emergency powers.   
      
   Mr. Adams, like several of his predecessors, has been given broad leeway to   
   enter emergency contracts in times of crisis, including the coronavirus   
   pandemic and the current crush of migrants entering New York.   
      
   But Mr. Lander had warned in September that he might rein in Mr. Adams’s   
   authority, and withdraw his office’s blanket “prior approval” of   
   emergency contracts. He cited reporting by The New York Times and others about   
   the city’s dealings with a    
   migrant services contractor, DocGo, whose $432 million no-bid contract has   
   been marked by scandal.   
      
   In a letter dated Thursday sent to all city agencies, Mr. Lander’s office   
   revealed that he “hereby revoked” his prior approval for migrant shelter   
   and services contracts awarded after Nov. 30, and that future migrant spending   
   would need to be first    
   authorized by his office on a case-by-case basis.   
      
   Such deals “will require an independent prior approval from the   
   comptroller’s office,” his office said.   
      
   The letter was previously reported by The Daily News.   
      
   An Adams administration spokesman, Charles Kretchmer Lutvak, said on Monday   
   that the comptroller was hamstringing the mayor’s ability to quickly respond   
   to the needs of the many migrants still arriving in the city from the southern   
   border.   
      
   “Thousands of new migrants are still coming to New York City every week —   
   and the comptroller tying our hands behind our back is unfair to both new   
   arrivals and longtime New Yorkers and will unquestionably slow down every step   
   in the process,” Mr.    
   Lutvak said.   
      
   He said the administration would “continue to hold our contractors to the   
   highest standards for providing care and services.”   
      
   Mr. Lander said earlier this year that restricting the mayor’s emergency   
   spending powers on migrants would not affect the city’s hospital system, a   
   public benefit corporation that has numerous emergency contracts in place to   
   handle the migrant influx.   
    It would affect all agencies directly under the mayor, although some small   
   contracts, such as those under $1.5 million, would still be exempt from   
   competitive bidding rules.   
      
   The move comes after Mr. Lander and Mr. Adams, who are both Democrats, had   
   tussled over the administration’s approval of the DocGo contract.   
      
   In early September, Mr. Lander announced that he was rejecting the deal —   
   the first time he had done so with an emergency contract — over concerns   
   about DocGo’s qualifications and the problems cited in news coverage.   
      
   The mayor, however, has the power to override a comptroller’s objections,   
   and Mr. Adams said the city would continue to honor the contract.   
      
   Two weeks later, Mr. Lander said he would begin an audit to determine how the   
   city had come to award the no-bid contract to DocGo, which describes itself as   
   a medical services firm and had no expertise in handling migrant services.   
      
   For months, city officials had refused to release the contract, giving New   
   Yorkers little insight into how the money was being spent.   
      
   The Times subsequently revealed some of the contract’s details with the   
   Department of Housing Preservation and Development. DocGo, for example, is   
   allowed to turn a tidy profit from its largest single monthly expense: the   
   hotel rooms housing the    
   migrants. Under the contract, the city is required to pay the company a flat   
   $170 per room per night, so if DocGo spends less on the hotel, it can keep the   
   difference.   
      
   The Times also reported on the company’s use of deceptive work and residency   
   documents, threats made by security guards working under its supervision, and   
   numerous complaints from migrants in DocGo’s care.   
      
   On Thursday Mr. Lander released a report criticizing what he called a lack of   
   transparency and oversight as the city has used emergency spending powers to   
   dole out $1.7 billion in fast-tracked contracts from January 2022 through   
   Sept. 30 of this year.    
   About 80 percent of the spending, or $1.4 billion, was for migrant services.   
      
   Chloe Chik, Mr. Lander’s spokeswoman, pointed to “extensive failures” in   
   the city’s contracting process as justification for revoking blanket   
   approval but said “we will continue to conduct fast and thorough reviews of   
   emergency contracts.”   
      
   https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/04/nyregion/eric-adams-migrant-contracts.html   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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