Politics & Government

Help Uptown Council Members Spend $1M On Neighborhood

Participatory budgeting lets neighborhood residents decide how to spend money on schools, housing, transit and safety initiatives.

WASHINGTON HEIGHTS-INWOOD, NY — Want the chance to help spend at least $1 million to fund public improvements in your neighborhood? You're in luck, because it's time to vote in this year's New York City Council participatory budgeting cycle.

Voting opens on March 30 and end April 7 for New York City's eighth participatory budgeting cycle, city officials said. Residents of Washington Heights and Inwood will vote on whether to fund projects selected as finalists by City Council members Ydanis Rodriguez or Mark Levine, depending on whether they live within the council's 10th or seventh district.

Projects selected as finalists for participatory budgeting address community needs such as housing and school improvements, park upgrades, public safety and senior services. Most projects don't carry a funding value of $1 million, so multiple projects can win funding. If certain projects prove popular, city council members may chose to allocate even more funds.

Find out what's happening in Washington Heights-Inwoodfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

There are five finalists in Council District 10 (Rodriguez) and nine finalists in Council District 7 (Levine) this year. Residents can vote online or in person at a number of different polling places in the districts.

Here's a list of projects on the ballot for district 10:

Find out what's happening in Washington Heights-Inwoodfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

  • PS 189 gym renovations: $300,000
  • Career and technical education programs: $300,000
  • MS 528 courtyard renovation: $500,000
  • ADA access at Morris Jumel Mansion: $500,000
  • Wallenburg Basketball Court renovation: $635,000

And here are the projects on the ballot for district 7:

  • Air conditioning at Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Elementary School: $200,000
  • Sound system upgrades at MS 54: $100,000
  • AC and water fountains at PS 165: $240,000
  • Computer upgrades at Community Health Academy of the Heights: $200,000
  • Grant Houses security camera upgrades: $500,000
  • Douglass Houses lighting upgrades: $500,000
  • Seating at Jacob Schiff Playground: $675,000
  • 142nd Street Dog Run renovation: $315,000
  • Bus countdown clocks: $200,000

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