NYC Progressive Caucus

Our Priority Legislation

Each City Council session, the Progressive Caucus selects 10 or more legislative packages to collectively prioritize in our work at City Hall. These priorities are guided by our progressive principles, which you can read more about here. Read about our priority legislative packages for the 2024-2025 term below.

Priorities We've Won
FARE Act

Introduction 0360

In late 2024, the New York City Council passed the FARE Act, championed by Progressive Caucus Member Chi Ossé. The FARE Act prohibits landlords from passing the fees of brokers they hire onto prospective tenants, which can double or triple the costs for tenants moving to a new apartment. Since June 11, 2025, tenants are no longer forced to pay expensive broker fees for realtors they didn’t hire!

Emil Cohen/NYC Council Media Unit

Introduction 0694, Intro. 0272

New York City has some of the best parks, shopping centers, and public spaces in the world but it’s low in one of the most important ingredients of a safe and equitable city – clean, free, and abundant public bathrooms. These bills require City departments to develop a citywide public bathroom network with 1 bathroom per 2,000 residents by 2035 and to regularly report on their progress towards increasing the number of public bathrooms.

Emil Cohen/NYC Council Media Unit

Introduction 0168Intro. 0233, Intro. 0480

The City Council passed the POST Act in 2020, requiring the NYPD to report the tools it uses to surveil New Yorkers. According to a report published by the Office of the Inspector General, the NYPD has failed to comply with the law’s requirements and to respond to public inquiries about surveillance technology use. These bills strengthen the POST Act by limiting government use of facial recognition technologies and fortifying disclosure requirements, so that New Yorkers know if and how they are being surveilled.

Gerardo Romo/NYC Council Media Unit

Introduction  0607,  Intro. 749, Intro. 750,  Resolution 307 

In recent years, there have been a number of devastating building fires and floods that have left New Yorkers traumatized and scrambling to find shelter and replace lost items. The Back Home Act requires that the City relocate displaced residents within their existing communities while they await building repairs and creates a dedicated City office to support those displaced by emergencies, among other measures to support .

Gerardo Romo/NYC Council Media Unit.
Priorities We're Fighting For
Gerardo Romo/NYC Council Media Unit.
William Alatriste/NYC Council Media Unit
Universal Childcare

Introduction 0201

New Yorkers, particularly those in the outer boroughs, pay more for child care than almost anywhere else in the county. This bill would create a New York City Office of Child Care and charge the office with improving and expanding child care across the city. The Office would be tasked with ensuring all city residents can access free and universal child care.

Introduction  0078, Intro. 0902Intro. 0782, Resolution 0374, Reso. 0327

The Community Land Act is a package of bills that would give community land trusts (CLTs) and other nonprofits tools to develop and preserve permanently-affordable housing, community and commercial spaces, and other critical needs. The package will give certain mission-driven organizations a first right to purchase multifamily buildings when landlords sell. Additionally, the package will require the City to prioritize CLTs and nonprofits when selling City-owned land.

Introduction 0798

The NYPD’s “gang” database supposedly marks certain New Yorkers as dangerous but in reality people end up on this list for totally arbitrary reasons, like using emojis, living in certain buildings, or being connected on social media to someone else in the database. Children as young as 11 have appeared in the database, with no notification to them or their parents. Further, 99% of the New Yorkers on the list are Black or Latino men and boys. This bill will abolish the database and inform the people who were on it.

Gerardo Romo/NYC Council Media Unit
Gerardo Romo/NYC Council Media Unit.
Universal Daylighting

Introduction 1138

Too often, New Yorkers just trying to cross the street get hurt by vehicles that can’t see them. Daylighting is a practice that replaces the parking spots closest to crosswalks with structures like plant beds or bike racks that improve visibility and increase safety. This bill would implement daylighting citywide and mandate that the Department of Transportation create at least 1000 new daylighting structures per year.

Introduction 0024, Intro. 0047, Intro. 0431

New York City has some of the best and most diverse street vendors in the entire world but city law makes it difficult for vendors to sell food and goods safely. There aren’t nearly enough existing street vending licenses to meet consumer demand, so talented New Yorkers wait for years and years on enormous waitlists. This bill package will increase the number of vending licenses available and includes other measures to make vending safer.

Introduction 0909

In a lot of jobs in New York City, it is still legal for an employer to fire workers with no reason at all. The Secure Jobs Act would require that employers have “just cause” or a genuine economic reason for firing their employees, in most cases. It would also require two weeks’ notice when someone is fired and limits employer’s electronic monitoring of workers.

Sex Worker Protection Act

Introduction 0149

Sex workers face some of the most dangerous working conditions of any occupation. This bill will protect New Yorkers by prohibiting housing discrimination based on employment as a sex worker, providing these workers with information on their rights, and funding organizations that provide health and social services to sex workers.

Introduction 0621, Intro. 0622, Intro. 0623, Resolution 0246

New York City has strict laws around evictions but investigations have shown that the NYPD rarely enforces these laws against landlords who illegally evict tenants. This bill package will increase penalties against landlords who illegally evict tenants, define illegal evictions as a form of tenant harassment, and call on the State legislature to pass a law speeding up housing court proceedings.

Emil Cohen/NYC Council Media Unit
Stop Shelter Evictions Act

Introduction 0210

New York City has a judicially mandated right to shelter but the Adams administration has circumvented this requirement at a time of increased homelessness, leaving more and more New Yorkers with nowhere to go but the streets. The Stop Shelter Evictions Act would prevent City agencies from limiting the length of shelter stays so that New Yorkers in need can have more stability while they get back on their feet.

Introduction 1063

The Third Party Transfer program allows the City to give certain foreclosed, physically distressed properties to third parties for rehabilitation. Historically, these properties have often gone to private developers. This bill will create additional notification requirements to property owners and building residents before a transfer occurs, provide opportunities for building owners to avoid the transfer in some circumstances, and require the city to prioritize community ownership when transferring properties in order to help break the cycle of disinvestment, speculation, and displacement.

NYC Public Advocate
Emil Cohen/NYC Council Media Unit