Res 0112-2022
New York for All Act (A.2328 / S.3076)
ResolutionAdoptedCommittee on Immigrationintroduced 2022-04-14
Adopted by the full Council.
Official record · Legistar
Agenda: 2022-04-14Passed: 2022-04-28
Committee on Immigration — Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs and other matters affecting immigration.
How it compares
38% of similar bills passed
19 passed · 31 died
This bill: 12 days in committee
Similar bills: median 323 days · 47 days when passed
Compared against 50 Resolution bills in Committee on Immigration.
Ranked by how closely each matches this bill's topic — closest first:
Res 1648-2021
New York for All Act (A.2328 / S.3076)
218dFiled
Res 0714-2025
New York for All Act (A.3506/S.2235).
47dAdopted
Res 1188-2025
New York State ICE-free zones act (S.8539).
13dFiled
Res 1399-2020
Allow for state agencies, municipalities, and authorities to provide state or local public benefits regardless of immigration status. (A10433/S5167)
490dFiled
Res 0468-2024
Empire State Licensing Act (S.5964/A.8263)
181dAdopted
Res 0459-2023
Prohibiting municipalities from requiring all employers to check prospective employees’ work authorization status by using the federal electronic verification system. (A.568/S.1802)
272dAdopted
+ 44 more comparable bills
Sponsors (12)
Public Advocate Jumaane Williams
Lifecycle
IntroducedIntroduced by Council
2022-04-14 · City Council
ActionReferred to Comm by Council
2022-04-14 · City Council
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2022-04-18 · Committee on Immigration
HeldLaid Over by Committee
2022-04-18 · Committee on Immigration
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2022-04-18 · Committee on Health
HeldLaid Over by Committee
2022-04-18 · Committee on Health
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2022-04-18 · Committee on Hospitals
HeldLaid Over by Committee
2022-04-18 · Committee on Hospitals
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2022-04-18 · Subcommittee on COVID Recovery and Resiliency
HeldLaid Over by Subcommittee
2022-04-18 · Subcommittee on COVID Recovery and Resiliency
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2022-04-27 · Committee on Immigration
AdvancedApproved by Committee
2022-04-27 · Committee on Immigration
AdvancedApproved, by Council
2022-04-28 · City Council
Votes (7)
Aye (7)
Shahana K. HanifCarmen N. De La RosaRita C. JosephShekar KrishnanFrancisco P. MoyaPierina Ana SanchezSandra Ung
Heard at (6)
City Council · 2022-04-28 · 1:30 PM · HYBRID HEARING - Council Chambers - City Hall
Committee on Immigration · 2022-04-27 · 10:30 AM · REMOTE HEARING (VIRTUAL ROOM 3)
Committee on Hospitals · 2022-04-18 · 10:00 AM · REMOTE HEARING (VIRTUAL ROOM 1)
Committee on Health · 2022-04-18 · 10:00 AM · REMOTE HEARING (VIRTUAL ROOM 1)
Committee on Immigration · 2022-04-18 · 10:00 AM · REMOTE HEARING (VIRTUAL ROOM 1)
City Council · 2022-04-14 · 1:30 PM · HYBRID HEARING - Council Chambers - City Hall
Attachments (12)
- Res. No. 112
- April 14, 2022 - Stated Meeting Agenda
- Hearing Transcript - Stated Meeting 4-14-22
- Minutes of the Stated Meeting - April 14, 2022
- Committee Report 4/18/22
- Hearing Transcript 4/18/22
- Committee Report 4/27/22
- Hearing Transcript 4/27/22
- Committee Report - Stated Meeting
- April 28, 2022 - Stated Meeting Agenda
- Hearing Transcript - Stated Meeting 4-28-22
- Minutes of the Stated Meeting - April 28, 2022
Full text
Whereas, Immigrants make up almost a quarter of New York state's population and account for 37 percent of New York City's population; and
Whereas, Immigrant New Yorkers are valuable members of our communities, contributing over $61 billion in federal and state taxes in 2019; and
Whereas, Immigrants in New York City make up more than 50 percent of all individuals working on COVID-19 frontlines since the very first outbreak in 2020; and
Whereas, In recent years, New York State has made strides to be more inclusive to its foreign born residents, passing laws that extended driver's license eligibility to residents, regardless of immigration status, provided tuition assistance for undocumented New Yorkers, and investing in deportation defense programs such as the Liberty Defense Fund, mirroring similar programs in New York City; and
Whereas, State and municipal policies throughout New York that require and retain immigration status information can, however, unnecessarily expose immigrant New Yorkers to federal immigration enforcement; and
Whereas, Entanglement between federal immigration enforcement and local and state entities erodes trust between immigrant communities and local authorities, which can decrease willingness to report crimes witnessed, cooperate in investigations and access critical government services; and
Whereas, Research from the Center for American Progress published in 2017 showed that counties that restrict local interactions with ICE had lower crimes rates while experiencing higher median household incomes, lower unemployment and lower poverty rates; and
Whereas, A 2020 comparative study from the Stanford University Department of Political Science found that counties that disentangled local authorities from federal immigration enforcement; experienced decreased deportations without increases in crime and
Whereas, In 2021, New York State Assemblymember Karines Reyes and Senator Julia Salazar introduced the New York for All Act (A.2328-A / S.3076-A), which prohibits the discovery and disclosure of immigration status by state entities, including law enforcement; and
Whereas, The Act additionally directs municipalities throughout the state to prohibit the discovery and disclosure of such information; and
Whereas, The Act requires reporting to the State Attorney General's office, to be made publicly available, of every communication between federal immigration enforcement and state and local government entities; and
Whereas, The Act would require ICE to present a judicial warrant in order to access non-public areas of government property and require local jails to inform detained individuals of their rights related to ICE, including the right to decline an interview with ICE and to seek counsel; and
Whereas, In 2014 and 2017, New York City Council passed two packages of legislation that restricted the discovery and disclosure of immigration status information and the coordination with federal immigration enforcement, in an effort to end unchecked entanglement between federal immigration enforcement and local law enforcement; and
Whereas, Immigrant New Yorkers necessarily interact with State agencies and state law enforcement as residents of New York City, and deserve to be treated with dignity and respect; and
Whereas, Immigrant New Yorkers should not be held to different standards depending on the city or state agency with which they interact, regardless of immigration status; and
Whereas, Passage of the New York for All Act would distinguish New York State, joining ranks with other such states as California and Washington, in protecting all immigrant residents; now, therefore, be it
Resolved, that the Council of the City of New York calls on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, the New York for All Act (A.2328-A / S.3076-A), which would prohibit and regulate the discovery and disclosure of immigration status by New York state and local government entities.
Session 12
WJH
LS 5853
4/11/22
Session 11
EK
LS 17249/17515
Res. 1648-2021