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Council advances local bills on Open Streets, newsrack maintenance, youth board reform and emergency procurement limits

New York City Council · February 25, 2026

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Summary

Council members introduced a set of local bills: Intro 257a to expand Open Streets activations (Council member Rita Joseph); a newsrack maintenance and contact‑info bill (Majority Leader Sean Abreu); youth board modernization (Intro 448b, Council member Althea Stevens); and a 90‑day default limit on emergency procurement (Speaker Menon).

A package of local measures was presented to the council during the session.

Council member Rita Joseph outlined Intro 257a to expand the Open Streets program by allowing community groups to request special activation days beyond regular hours for holidays and high‑pedestrian events. "When we open our streets, we open doors to connections, economic opportunity, and to safer, more vibrant communities," she said.

Majority Leader Sean Abreu described legislation to require newsrack owners to provide an email address to the Department of Transportation, allow electronic communications and improve DOT enforcement options to keep sidewalks clear. "Unused, falling apart or abandoned newsracks become eyesores that contribute to sidewalk clutter," he said.

Council member Althea Stevens, chair of the Council's Committee on Children and Youth, presented Intro 448b to modernize the youth board with term limits, a smaller, more focused membership, guaranteed borough and youth representation, and a 90‑day reporting requirement to DYCD for formal recommendations.

Speaker Menon described a bill to set a 90‑day default timeline for emergency procurement subject to extension only with approval by the controller and corporation counsel. She framed the reform as a response to extended no‑bid emergency contracts in recent years and said it would restore competitive bidding and accountability.

These measures were introduced and discussed; no final votes were recorded in the transcript.