NYC Govt. fails to contribute proportionately to the services, facilities allocated to the public: Comptroller’s audit report suggests

New York: New York City Comptroller Brad Lander has admitted that the city government has failed to contribute proportionately to the services and facilities allocated to the public.

From the analytical results of the audit report of the records covering five years by Comptroller Brad Lander, it has been revealed that the NYC administration has failed to provide uniform and equal facilities in the city.

The Comptroller has stressed that urgent reforms are necessary to implement the Fair Share Charter of 1989 and provide equal facilities to citizens.

Comptroller Brad Lander’s report on the shortcomings and deficiencies identified include the establishment of more shelters, lack of a comprehensive system to monitor the city, and neglect of the current needs in planning.

The report said that forty percent of shelters in the city are still set up in areas where shelters were already established.

The report shows that the provision of public parks, waste disposal sites, and social services in the city is not commensurate with the population of the areas. If urban planning is not done in a fair manner, it will cause distrust among the citizens.

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