You are reading

City to Hire 10,000 New Yorkers to Remove Graffiti, Clean Parks and Sidewalks

(Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office)

April 6, 2021 By Allie Griffin

The city plans to employ 10,000 New Yorkers to remove graffiti and clean city parks, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Tuesday.

The city will hire 10,000 people by July and will post the first 1,000 job openings this month as part of its new “City Cleanup Corps” initiative.

De Blasio said the effort will help New Yorkers left jobless by the COVID-19 pandemic, while also beautifying neighborhoods throughout the five boroughs.

“10,000 jobs — that that’s going to help a lot of families,” he said during a morning press briefing.

The jobs will pay $15-an-hour and the city will fund the program with money from the federal stimulus. The mayor did not provide an official price tag for the overall program.

“We want to take some of that stimulus money and do something special here in New York City, that’s going to employ 10,000 New Yorkers, give them an opportunity to get back on their feet, do something great for the city, [and] also help the city as a whole recover,” de Blasio said.

The workers will be tasked with removing graffiti, cleaning parks and maintaining streets that are part of the city’s Open Streets program.

The workers will also power-wash sidewalks, create community murals, tend to community gardens, beautify public spaces and work with community-based organizations to clean local neighborhoods.

“Having a dedicated group of New Yorkers who are going to go out there [to] make this city shine, that’s going to speed the recovery,” de Blasio said.

The clean up crews will focus on neighborhoods hit hard by the pandemic, as well as business districts and commercial corridors.

“We’re also going to focus on business districts, commercial streets, places where we depend on our economic recovery to happen,” de Blasio said. “We want to beautify them. We want to show New York City is open for business and moving forward.”

The city will also identify areas in need of cleaning via feedback from local elected officials and community leaders.

The first 500 jobs have already been posted online at nyc.gov/ccc and another 500 will be posted throughout April.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Man found stabbed to death at facility on Creedmoor campus in Queens Village Monday morning: NYPD

A 63-year-old man staying at a facility on the Creedmoor Psychiatric campus in Queens Village was found dead lying in a pool of blood Monday morning.

Police from the 105th Precinct in Queens Village responded to a 911 call at 10:36 a.m. about a man in need of medical attention at Hazel House, a 52-bed licensed residential program operated by Transitional Services of New York, at 80-45 Winchester Blvd. Officers found the victim lying face down in a pool of blood, unconscious and unresponsive, with multiple stab wounds to the back of his neck and lower back, according to a law enforcement source with knowledge of the investigation. He was found by a fellow patient.

‘It’s just a hobby’: Queens Village man tells cops during arrest for assembling ghost guns at his Hillside Avenue home: DA

A mechanic at LaGuardia Airport was arrested and criminally charged with weapons possession and other related crimes after a cache of ghost guns and the accouterments needed to assemble the illegal firearms, were found at his Queens Village home after law enforcement executed a court-ordered search warrant on Jan. 15.

Jonathan Diaz, 37, of Hillside Avenue, was arraigned in Queens Criminal Court a day after he was taken into custody after the multi-agency search of his premises, Queens District Attorney General Melinda Katz announced on Friday.