Intro 1303 Hearing Testimony 102616
Intro 1303 Hearing Testimony 102616
Intro 1303 Hearing Testimony 102616
BIG Impact
Expanding
opportunity
for Manhattans
storefronters
Gale A. Brewer
March, 2015
MANHATTAN
BOROUGH
PRESIDENT
Executive Summary
The Manhattan Borough Presidents Office (MBPO) produced this
report to help more small businesses thrive and grow, because small
businesses have historically provided the majority of jobs for New Yorkers
and a gateway to the middle class, especially for immigrants and ethnic
communities.1
Over the past few years, however, the future of the citys small businessesand specifically street-level
retail stores and restaurantshas begun to look murky. High rents, corporate competition, and real estate
development deals are creating challenges over and above the ones small businesses typically face.
Activists have cited the speed with which commercial landlords move to evict small businesses to make
space available for a corporate franchise or a bank, which can and do pay substantially higher rents. These
evictions are having an impact on Manhattans commercial landscape. Vast stretches where mom-and-pops
once prevailed have disappeared from Clinton and Chelsea to Little Italy and the Bowery. Empty storefronts
persist for weeks, months, and even years, and more and more streetcorners are claimed by major banks and
corporate chains.
Launching a small business in New York City has never been easy. Of the thousands that open every
year, many close that same year. Landlords evict commercial tenants for a variety of reasons. Tenants close
up shop not just because of escalating rents but
also because of back taxes, damages or losses for
HOW BIG IS SMALL?
which they havent carried enough insurance, and
demographic changes among clientele. Regardless
Finding the data to help analyze the small busiof why small businesses close, when they do,
nesses targeted in this report was difficult because
everyone loses, because small businesses hire
there is no standard definition of small. We looked
locally, contract out services locally, make local
at how federal, state, and city agencies set the maxipurchases, and give New York City streets their
mum number of employees a business can have to
character.
qualify as a small business:
Based on what the MBPO heard from
Federal: Depending on industry sector, the U.S.
small business stakeholders, weve made
Small Business Administration (SBA) measures
recommendations under four categories: (1) help
business size by either the companys dollar value or
small businesses cope in the current real estate
the number of employees. The Small Business Act
market, (2) improve government interaction with
defines small business as generally one with fewer
small businesses, (3) reform the citys Commercial
than 500 employees.
Rent Tax, and (4) maximize resources among
The SBA further recognizes microbusiness as
government agencies.
an organization with fewer than five employees and
small enough to require little capital ($35,000 or
less) to get started.
State: New York defines small business as a
shop that employs fewer than 100 people.
Local: New York Citys Small Business Services
doesnt give a hard number; rather, it encourages
any business to inquire about its services.
Clearly theres a need for better integration of
benchmarks and criteria between different levels
of government when it comes to smaller shops. It
would be great to have common thresholds. We
believe that the majority of storefronters our recommendations will help are businesses with 15 or
Special thanks to Lucian Reynolds of the MBPO Land Use
fewer employees.
Division for his extensive work on this report.
Although New York is one of the worlds most expensive and competitive places to
do business, entrepreneurs with one or only a handful of employees are undeterred from
entering the ring. According to an October 2014 report by the Center for an Urban
Future, firms with fewer than five employees constituted the bulk of growth in new
businesses in New York City between 2000 and 2013, providing a net gain of 31,421 jobs.2
These numbers, of course, reflect the meteoric growth in digital and tech
startups, buoyed by an array of Silicon Alley co-working spaces like New Work City
and AlleyNYC.3 In addition, according to U.S. Census data compiled by the Center for
an Urban Future, 7.9% of Manhattan residents were self-employed (meaning in own
not-incorporated
businesses)
inemployee
2012, a larger
Growth rate in quantity
of 100+
firms share of the workforce than in any other
4
(U.S. Census
Bureau,
Newadd
Yorkup
County
Business
borough.
When
you
these
tensPatterns)
of thousands of Manhattanites, you can see how
1%
rate
Growth
in quantity
Food
Retail
All Sectors
0.8
0.6
of 100+
employee
firms
0.4
0.2
0.0Growth rate in quantity of 99-and-under employee firms since 2002
(U.S. Census Bureau, New York County Business Patterns)
2002 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
11
12
25%
20
of under-99
All Sectors (100 + Em
employee
firms
15
10
5
0
-5
2002 03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
INTERVIEWEES
firms with fewer than 20 employees constitute over 90% of the businesses in the New
5
Patreinnah Acosta-Pelle, York metropolitan area.
U.S. Census data on business patterns for Manhattan (New York County)
Business Development
Advisor and Consultant,
between 2002 and 2012 reveal some interesting trends.6 For instance, the number of
Harlem Congregations for
businesses with fewer than 99 employees and more than 99 employees varied by only a
Community Improvement
few percentage points in 2010. The number of food establishments with fewer than
Curtis Archer, President,
Harlem Community
99 employees appeared to be unaffected by the 2008 recession, increasing steadily
Development Corporation
by 25% over 2002 levels. Finding success in the restaurant business is notoriously
Sean Basinski, Director,
difficult, but there seems to be no limit in the number of entrepreneurs attempting to
Street Vendor Project
do so in Manhattan.
Wellington Chen, Exec.
Dir., Chinatown BID
The focus of this report is what we call storefrontersretail stores/services
Kerri Culhane, Associate
and food purveyors/restaurants that rely on street-level customer activity for their
Director, Two Bridges
successand therein lies the challenge. In a booming commercial real estate market,
Neighborhood Council
Alexandra Hanson, Policy chain stores dont need to be profitable to afford their lease, because the street-level
Director, NYS Assn for
location may be more useful as an advertisement than as a means to profitably move
Affordable Housing
merchandise. Storefronters, on the other hand, struggle mightily to pay $65.14
William Kelley, Exec. Dir.,
per square footthe average Manhattan asking rent in the fourth quarter of 2014
Village Alliance
according to Avison Young.7
Sung Soo Kim, President
and CEO, Korean American
The types of small businesses we seek to help are independent (not part of a
Small Business Service
national chain and not franchisees), responsive to a neighborhood clientele, and
Center of New York
have often built their businesses with very little capital, using their lifes savings or
Doug Kleimann, NY Real
getting loans from friends or family. Franchisees are often similar to our targeted
Estate Sales Associate
Tim Laghlin, Exec. Dir.,
storefronters, but the nature of the franchise allows them certain economies of scale
Lower East Side BID
and advertising support that are not enjoyed by those who fit our definition.
Jamie McDonald, author
When small businesses are replaced with chain banks or chain drugstores,
of New York Originals: A
Guide to the Citys Classic
the market fails both the business owners and New Yorkers who prefer unique and
Shops and Mom and Pops
specialized services. It also fails the economy. As noted urban theorist Jane Jacobs
Danny Meyer, CEO, Union
discussed in a 2003 interview, The general idea at the time I wrote The Economy of
Sq. Hospitality Group
Scott Millstein, Exec Dir., Cities was that small businesses were . . . no longer of any importance. Its only a few
CORO New York
years ago that it became the accepted new wisdomwhich is truethat most of the
Leadership Center
jobs added in an economy are added in small businesses, not from growth in already
Ramon Murphy, Pres.,
large businesses. 8
Bodega Assn of the U.S.
Bernadette Nation,
Director, City Business
Assistance Program, NYC
Small Business Services
Angelina Ramirez, Exec.
Dir., Washington Hts. BID
Carlina Rivera, Program
Manager, Good Old Lower
East Side
Sara Romanoski, Managing Director, East Village
Community Coalition
Penny Ryan, District
Manager, Community Bd. 7
Fred Owens, Development
Dir., Project Enterprise
Nancy Ploeger, President,
Manhattan Chamber of
Commerce
Martha Soffer,
Economic Development
Specialist, Small Business
Administration
Challenges to
making it in Manhattan
This report was shaped by what we heard during
interviews with individuals from a wide spectrum of
organizations in neighborhoods in all parts of Manhattan
(see sidebar at left). These interviews gave us critical
perspective on the market, on the damage that large rent
increases are causing storefronters, and on challenges
these entrepreneurs face daily.
Rising commercial rent and changing clientele
Weve all seen businesses close under sad but recognizable circumstances.
Most often, the market just does not exist for their product or service. Even wellestablished firms can be done in by credit problems, changes in management
$200
East Side
East Side
Midtown
Midtown
West Side
Manhattan-wide
West Side
Downtown
North ofManhattan-wid
96th
150
100
Downtown
retail
Median
rents,
50
0
North of 96th
200414,
$ / foot
2004
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
Source: Real Estate Board of New York, Spring Retail Report 2014
costs, or retirement. Recently, however, New Yorkers have seen something different
happening: the closing of businesses that have stood the test of time and enjoy healthy
patronage from the neighborhood and surrounding city. The reason: large-scale
increases in commercial rents.
As more ultra-high-income individuals move into New York City, property values
and rents escalate, and owners of ground-floor retail spaces search for the new market
ceiling. Many are avoiding locking themselves into 10- or 15-year leases at a price per
square foot that may turn out to be below that of neighboring buildings. Instead, they
are keeping their stores vacant until they land a tenant who accepts a higher rate, which
establishes a new market norm.
Businesses that cant adapt their models to afford higher rents can do nothing but
close. If banks and chain drug stores are the only tenants that can afford top-market
prices, New York City will see greater numbers of storefronters going under.
With rising rents come new clientele, and a marked change in neighborhood
demographics can significantly alter shopping patterns. The dissipation of an ethnic
enclave could reduce demand for certain goods or services, even if the incoming
population has the same purchasing power.9 Many small businesses consider a shift in
strategy risky, but their failure to alter their business strategy is just as risky. A shift in
neighborhood tastes could necessitate additional investmentfor instance, a capital
investment like a new display counter or funding to cover the retraining of employees to
provide a new servicethat the owner is unable to afford.
Delaying tax payments. Many small businesses elect to pay their state sales tax annually
rather than quarterly, which gives them more time to dip into money that should be
earmarked for the state. To further complicate matters, the state may not contact the
business about unpaid sales tax until the second or third year, whereupon the owner might
not have properly accounted for the sales tax revenues and is unable to pay.
Not budgeting for utilities. New small business owners are often unaware that utilities
treat business customers differently from residential customers: if they fall behind on their
payments, Con Edison will cut off electricity and gas to the shop.
Communities can change a lot over the course of a 15-year lease. If a business
serves a neighborhood of young families with strollers, they may need to reflect on their
business plan if a decade passes and children become adolescents but young families are
no longer moving in. Consumption patterns change as well. Family bakeries and bagel
shops have had a wild ride as tastes have changed from no-carb to whole-grain bread to
gluten-free products.
Some small business owners may fear change, especially if they have been running
their business the same way for a long time. These businesses would benefit from
an organization that could help them identify the new market and make any needed
adjustments to their strategy.
Changing consumer tastes might force business owners to carry more expensive
products that would require taking out a loan. But because many small businesses have
been built from personal savings or loans from friends or family, their owners dont have
experience gathering the paperwork to successfully apply for a loan. Moreover, many fear
an application that requires them to be transparent about their businesss financial history
and future.
Both New York States Empire State Development Corporation (ESDC) and the
federal governments Small Business Administration (SBA) have loan programs for small
businesses. Independent microloan organizations like Accion and Grameen America serve
needs that are too small for traditional banks and credit unions. If more small businesses
could be connected with these services, more would succeed.
Although city, state, and federal governments all have agencies that respond to the
needs of small businesses, government can also restrict business when enforcing those
zoning codes, laws, and regulations to protect the publics interests. These inhibitors
include:
Rigid zoning codes. New York Citys Zoning Resolution dictates whether a business
can operate in any of the five boroughs. Business types are separated into groups, and each
group may be included in one or more zoning districts or commercial overlays. The citys
current zoning system distinguishes between residential, commercial, and manufacturing
uses. Exceptions can be made as some commercial districts may be built with residential
units and certain commercial establishments are allowed in some manufacturing zones.
These rigid descriptions do not leave much room for interpretation, and storefronters
need room to innovate.11 Real estate development is an incredible opportunity to add
ground-floor commercial units to the market and increase Manhattans overall supply.
Unfortunately, many new commercial spaces are built out in large dimensions that please
investors but not storefronters, who are unable to justify spacious floor plans suited to
chain pharmacies and banks.12
Uncooperative agency inspectors. Various New York City agencies interface
with small businesses to ensure that they comply with regulationsthe Department
Government agenciesNew York Citys SBS prime among themprovide very useful
resources to help small businesses. New York States ESDC and Harlem Community
Development Corporation (Harlem CDC), along with the federal governments SBA, have
offices that provide small business support. Like the regulatory agencies, these agencies
seek to improve the lives of New Yorkers, but sometimes gaps in service occur.
Department of Small Business Services. SBS helps demystify the process of getting
a business up and running and overseeing New York Citys Business Improvement Districts
(BIDs). Although SBS works hard to lower the barrier to entry for small businesses of every
class, our interviews revealed a handful of issues that reduce its effectiveness.
While SBS offers impressive services for those preparing to establish a business
that conforms to current laws and regulations,14 the same types of services are not
available for street vendors who may or may not hold a license but want to expand into
a brick-and-mortar location. Such a service is sorely needed as New York City has no
lack of entrepreneurs. This SBS service could assist them in launching informal-sector
businesses or helping legitimate microbusinesses as they grow to stay in compliance with
laws and regulations that previously did not apply to them.
SBS provides services to storefronters that could be complemented by available
state and federal services. Unfortunately, the city does not appear to be coordinating its
efforts with ESD, SBA, or other agencies. SBS is best situated to provide small businesses
with individualized assistance. Entrepreneurs would be better served if SBS coordinated
its services with those of other agencies, making referrals to clients and tracking when
this is done.
Business Improvement Districts. BIDs are credited with improving the look and
feel of commercial areas by providing additional sanitation services and beautifying the
area with plantings and tree care. Many BIDs, like that in Washington Heights, provide
an expansive slate of services to small businesses by conducting market research and
lobbying on their behalf.
Because BIDs are primarily funded by an assessment on real properties within
the districts boundaries, many of our interviewees expressed dismay that the funding
mechanism makes BIDs beholden to property owners over all other constituents. It makes
sense that BIDs seek to improve property values for the entities that dominate their boards
and from which they garner most of their budgets. But the city needs to empower BIDs to
provide more services that benefit storefronters in their catchment areas.
Recommendations
We need to pursue all possible avenues to help new
storefronters survive and existing ones strengthen their
foothold in Manhattan neighborhoods. Given the challenges
our interviewees helped us identify, the MBPO suggests the
following solutions.
Help small businesses cope in the current real estate market
To take some of the pressure off of lease renewals, we recommend institution of a mandatory negotiation and mediation period, with the option of a short-term lease extension. As
a long-term commercial lease draws to a close, these policies will aid both small business
owners and property owners alike by ensuring a frank, informed conversation takes place
while maintaining protection and flexibility for both parties. This isnt a new conceptin
1986, the Small Business Retail Study Commission (SBRSC) examined the citys retail
market and included this policy in its recommendations. Three decades later, the urgency
is only greater, and this is an idea whose time has come.
Unlike commercial rent control, this plan leaves the question of how much a tenant
will pay for the duration of their lease to the negotiation between tenant and landlord. It
does not give the city or state authority over market rates; it merely requires both parties
to talk. If an agreement is not reached, the lease is extended to give the tenant a reasonable
amount of time to move.
The landlord of a small retail business with an expiring commercial lease would have
to contact that tenant 180 days before the end of the lease to let the tenant know whether
Negotiate
or mediate
lease
renewals
they intend to offer a renewal. If they do, they will also have to provide the terms. Should
the tenant seek to negotiate with the landlord or the landlords representative, they would
have to do so within 30 days of receiving the terms.
If the negotiation does not produce an agreement, the tenant or the landlord may
invoke nonbinding mediation within 30 days. This way, landlords are not able to simply
run out the clock on their tenant without coming to the table in some way. The mediation
session must have a mediator present, and if the mediator feels that progress is being
made toward an agreement, he or she can order that the parties attend a second round
of mediation. If both parties do not agree on lease terms, the tenants current lease is
extended for one year with up to a 15% increase in rent. This gives the tenant enough time
to search for a new retail space.
We also recommend an increase in the supply of ground-floor retail space to provide
more competition between building owners and more competitive leases for small
businesses. More commercial space in the neighborhood can also give a business that is
forced to move out of its current space a way to secure a more favorable lease in the same
neighborhood. This is another good idea with roots in the 1986 SBRSC report, and there
are several ways the city might put it into practice:
Dont allow ground-floor retail to expire. Many ground-floor commercial units have
been functioning as a nonconforming use but were grandfathered as an existing use under
the 1961 zoning. When these spaces lay vacant for two or more years, they were required to
conform with the permitted use, which meant an end to the continuation of that space as
retail. The commercial overlay would allow existing businesses to expand and new small
businesses to replace those that close without the danger of losing the grandfathered retail
space forever.
Create an Urban Neighborhoods Fund. The New York State Association for Affordable
Housing has found that current subsidy programs do not adequately support the creation
of ground-floor retail. To ensure that such space is built whenever possible, it proposes an
Urban Neighborhoods Fund for the citys affordable housing developments.15 This fund
would reduce the level of debt that a developer must carry on the retail portion of their
project, which can reduce the amount of rent that that building needs to charge. Cheaper
commercial spaces providing important neighborhood services can be prioritized for
storefronters. The fund is structured to leverage federal and state resources and would be
administered by the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development.
Expand retail opportunities by expanding commercial overlay districts. Its critical
that the city allow for additional commercial retail density in places where upzonings
occur and create opportunities for commercial activity in surrounding areas. The
Department of City Planning (DCP) should match the expansion of commercial overlay
districts with additional zoning provisions requiring new buildings with a certain amount
of commercial frontage to have a minimum number of storefront establishments. In
neighborhoods like the Upper West Side, banks are assembling smaller commercial retail
units to create larger frontages, which allow them to use the space as advertising. The
Upper West Sides 2012 Neighborhood Retail Streets rezoning protected storefronters
by preventing the further loss of appropriately sized commercial spaces. Under the new
provisions, banks and formula retail could still use building cellars, space on the second
floor, and commercial space behind other smaller units to expand their usable commercial
area without having to dominate the street frontage.
Create commercial opportunities for storefronters within public housing complexes.
Commercial overlays should be added to the existing residential zones to permit retail
activity. The New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) could then remodel the bases of
some of its buildings to allow for ground-floor commercial units to replace underutilized
theExpand
supply
of retail
space
storage or workshop space. This will provide additional revenue for the cash-strapped
NYCHA as well as important eyes on the street storefronts that help create vibrant and
safe neighborhoodssomething that towers in the park-style developments often lack.16
Create an ultra-low-intensity commercial district. Zoning currently lumps together
a broad range of uses classified as retail, but more than one metric can be used to
measure building intensity. If a ground-floor retail space is strategically important to a
business and the intensity is low, parts of the city could accommodate the business even
if currently zoned as residential. Many residential zones allow for community facilities
that can be used for medical offices. A low-intensity commercial district would create
additional commercial space for other types of unobtrusive businesses. Because this class
of business would no longer compete for commercial space, demand would be reduced.
This pilot would require an agency with experience in business plans to assist the DCP in
establishing the low-intensity threshold and reviewing applications. The low-intensity
zones should be distributed near commercial areas experiencing high demand for groundfloor commercial stock.
Make it
easier to
buy the
building
One way for storefronters to avoid the need for lease negotiations is to buy the commercial
space they had been leasing. Given the current market for residential property in
Manhattan, however, it is unlikely that many owners could manage this.
One solution is to separate residential and commercial units into condominiums. The
SBAs 504 Loan allows businesses to purchase properties valued at up to $5 million if they
can provide at least 10% of the purchase amount and if 51% of the building is used as part
of the business.17 A program that promotes condo-ization for compliance would make
the purchase of ground-floor retail space possible for storefronters. A procedure with New
York States Real Estate Finance Bureau would allow building owners to easily separate
the uses if the split has no effect on residential tenants.18 Once the commercial units are
legally separate, the commercial tenant is far more likely to use 51% of the condominium.
To incentivize this process, the city could implement a program by which buildings
that have accumulated heavy Buildings Department fines or are in arrears in Department
of Environmental Protection sewer payments can get these debts reduced by using the
earnings from the sale of their commercial condominium to pay for the necessary capital
improvements. The property owner would have to agree to not apply for a Major Capital
Improvement by New York States Department of Homes and Community Renewal,
which would allow them to increase the tenants rent in return for fixing the serious,
longstanding issues.
As noted in the previous section, improving interactions with DCA, DSNY, DOT, DOHMH,
and other regulatory agencies can make small businesses more sustainable.
Combine overlapping inspections. Agencies with complementary goals can combine
efforts to provide more comprehensive oversight. An ideal combination would be NYPDs
Traffic Enforcement Agents and Department of Sanitation inspectors. Combining
inspections would give owners fewer interruptions from tending to their business and
allow sanitation and traffic laws to be dealt with simultaneously. The city might pilot
this process by recruiting experienced inspectors for the new position or by creating
interagency teams to go into the field.
Transform inspectors into educators. Inspectors have the potential to become the citys
greatest asset for connecting with storefronters. While inspecting retail establishments
is important for consumer protection, DCA should reform and expand this position to
make it a Small Business Education Specialist to assist small businesses in achieving
compliance. Education Specialists would engage in outreach on behalf of SBS, nonprofit
Maximize
city
inspector
efficiencies
10
partners, and local BIDs when applicable. They would connect the city to the needs of the
storefronter and respond with a menu of available city services.
Provide language services for Cure Law participants. The 2013 Cure Lawwhich
the MBP co-sponsored as a City Council Member19listed 84 DCA violations that can
be corrected by submitting certification that the condition has been fixed. It also allows
businesses to avoid DCA fines by expanding the list to include over 100 types of violations
that can be corrected. We need to ensure that storefrontersregardless of their fluency
in Englishhave enough language support to properly submit their paperwork to cure
first-time DCA violations. Otherwise, those with limited fluency might be unable to benefit
from this law, which helps small business owners by reducing the number and cost of fines,
increasing transparency and fairness, and improving business education.
The persistence of street vendors in the face of adversity confirms their entrepreneurial
spirit. New York City should help these sidewalk storefronters grow their businesses.
Create a ladder of entrepreneurship. SBS can strengthen the pipeline to fill brick-andmortar retail spaces by helping fledgling entrepreneurs learn stronger business practices.
Because every vendor has different needs, SBS could build out multilevel, multi-language
curricula beginning with the basics (building and using credit) and finishing with classes
on commercial lease negotiation.
Raise the cap on vendor licenses and permits. The current limit has not been raised since
1981. Allow new entrepreneurs to go into business for themselves. New York City should
think of every new business as a startup, not just those seeking venture capital funding.
Issue temporary license papers to replace lost or stolen licenses. DCA does not
currently issue temporary cards for vendors to use until their replacement card arrives.
So if a street vendor loses his or her license card for any reason, he or she is unable to work
until receipt of a replacement, which can take up to a month.
Empower
street
vendors
City government should improve how the Commercial Rent Tax deals with store-fronters. In
particular, the base gross annual rent should be raised from $250,000 to exclude the majority
of storefronters from qualifying for the tax. All retail tenants should also be allowed to ignore
any property tax pass-throughs when calculating gross annual rent.
New York City has the potential to give small businesses access to a full line of free
or low-cost business services. SBSs Business Express is a fantastic tool to jumpstart
new businesses.20 The states ESD has a Business Mentorship Program.21 The federal
governments SBA has impressive loan programs and conducts free seminars.22 To
get businesses the support they need, we recommend an integrated system in which
each level of government takes in new clients and passes them off to the agency providing those services.
Publish enhanced SBS open data. Before the city, state, and federal governments
begin sharing their caseloads, SBS must develop a way to track and tally the number of
businesses it takes in and subsequently hands off to state or federal partners. These data
will enter the citys Open Data Portal (created by Local Law 11 of 2012, co-sponsored by
the MBP as a Council Member),23 where they can be analyzed by external organizations to
better target the needs of storefronters.
Co-locate agencies from different levels of government. Each of the government
agencies should share an office space for overlapping and complementary programs where
employees who cover intake, handoffs, and strategic planning can work, communicate,
and build partnerships. If developed jointly, future programs could reduce administration
city,
Integrate
state,
and federal
services
11
costs across all levels of government, with the savings applied to help small businesses.
Expand 311 to cover state and federal programs. The citys 311 operators are trained to
ask the right questions and navigate the caller through a special knowledge base to narrow
the list of possible services. While city services and agencies are well represented, state
and federal programs should also be included, especially if a similar service is not offered
by the city. For example, if a minority or woman who owns a business wants to become
certified as an M/WBE and do business with the state, a call to 311 would connect the
client with Harlem CDC to start the certification process.
Few organizations know the current commercial climate of an area like the local BID.
Moreover, BID staffers often have very close relationships with the businesses in their
catchment areas. BIDs pay to collect important data, and their staff have the training to
identify trends that would help local businesses strengthen their products and services in
light of changing consumer tastes.
Partner with SBS to identify and help struggling businesses. BIDs can help identify
storefronters who need SBS assistance and refer them to the closest center. For example,
because the Washington Heights BID and SBS share office space, they work very closely
together to target needed services. SBS should explore how this model can be replicated
throughout the city and give BIDs more power to directly help small businesses.
Develop the capacity to provide microloans. Once the local BID has identified ways
to strengthen a business, the owner may need a small loan to begin selling a new line of
products or update a sign. SBS should start a pilot program to give BIDs with a large share
of storefronters the ability to provide microloans of less than $25,000. These loans can
help to build a businesss credit rating and expose entrepreneurs to the loan procurement
process. Organizations with experience in providing microloans are in turn eligible for
assistance from the SBA.24
Leverage
BID
resources
Government can help small businesses achieve economies of scale. As with the Affordable
Care Act, action by the state or federal governments to unify the buying power of
individuals or small organizations brings economies of scale to everyday people.
Create a New York State commercial insurance exchange platform. Commercial
insurance comes in many forms. Depending on the nature of a business and where it is
located, it could have at least four types of commercial insurance. While many commercial
leases require fire and theft insurance, other types of insurance (like business interruption
insurance and flood insurance) are often not required but no less important. When leases
do require fire and theft insurance, storefronters sometimes buy cheap plans with poor
coverage. A commercial insurance exchange would allow them to input important aspects
of their business such as risk factors, size of shop, and approximate value of capital
investmentand then allow them to shop between the various plans according to monthly
cost or payout.
Launch an annual SBS competition for small business apps. Small businesses have a
great deal to gain from the proliferation of smartphones. Well-written apps can help them
work together and build their own scale without having to be part of a chain. Mind My
Business by Vizalytics Technology allows business owners to subscribe to a feed about
what is happening in their neighborhood and what people are saying about their shop.25
CUPS by Urban CUPS Inc. creates a single customer loyalty program for independent
coffee shops to share, freeing consumers to reward themselves by drinking coffee
regardless of where they are in Manhattan.26
Encourage
government
innovation
12
Next steps
As a follow-up to this report, we will convene a series of
roundtables with small business stakeholders, elected officials,
and city, state, and federal agency representativesincluding
all individuals we interviewed for this report.
The first two roundtablesone for Upper Manhattan and another for Lowerwill
focus on first-year pitfalls among new storefronters. From these discussions, we will
gather information from city, state, and federal agencies to produce a menu of the most
common pitfalls that can doom a business in its infancy. Such a comprehensive publication
does not currently exist and would be indispensable to new and existing businesses.
The second series of roundtables will focus on three of our recommendation areas:
(1) Help small businesses cope in the current real estate market (2) Improve government
interaction with small businesses (3) Maximize resources among government agencies.
Our goal is to learn which of our recommendations will best serve a particular
neighborhood or community and tailor strategies to varying needs across the borough.
With this targeted feedback, we will be better prepared to move ahead on all fronts
to increase the social mobility that small businesses have always provided New Yorkers,
especially lower-income families and immigrants. Storefronters and small businesses
more generally are essential to preserving the character of our neighborhoods and
maintaining the livability of New York City for the middle and working class.
13
Endnotes
1. See the U.S. Small Business Associations article The Role of Small Business in Economic Development of the United
States: From the End of the Korean War (1953) to the Present, https://www.sba.gov/advocacy/role-small-businesseconomic-development-united-states-end-korean-war-1953-present.
2. Center for an Urban Future, Small Business Success: A Blueprint for Turning More of New York Citys Small
Businesses into Medium-Sized and Large Businesses, October 2014.
3. Symmetry50.com, The Top 15 Coworking Spaces in Manhattan, October 20, 2014, http://www.symmetry50.com/
blog/2014/10/18/the-top-coworking-spaces-in-manhattan.
4. U.S. Census Bureau, 2008-2012, American Community Survey & 2000 US Census. Cited by Center for an Urban
Future, NYCs Growing Self-Employed Population, November 2014, https://nycfuture.org/data/info/nycs-growingself-employed-population.
5. Center for an Urban Future, Small Business Success.
6. County Business Patterns, U.S. Census Bureau 2002-2012.
7. Avison Young Media Release, Manhattan Office Vacancy Rate at Lowest since 2012, January 8, 2015.
8. Eleanor Wachtel, A Conversation with Jane Jacobs, Brick Magazine 70, Winter 2002, http://brickmag.com/
conversation-jane-jacobs.
9. NYC2010 results from the 2010 U.S. Census, Population Growth and Race/Hispanic Composition, Population
Division, New York City Department of City Planning, March 2011.
10. Meeting with Bernadette Nation, July, 2014.
11. Data from Zoning Resolution of the City of New York, Article III, Chapter 2, Sections 32-10 through 32-25; Chapter 4,
Section 34-11; Chapter 2, Sections 32-10 through 32-25.
12. City Planning Commission report, Establishing an Enhanced Commercial District in Manhattans Upper West
Side (C 120145 ZMM), May 9, 2012, p. 4.
13. Street Vending, New York City Business Solutions, New York City Department of Small Business Services, (http://
www.nyc.gov/html/sbs/nycbiz/downloads/pdf/educational/sector_guides/street_vending.pdf); Do I need a license
or permit? How do I get one? Street Vendor Project, http://streetvendor.org/faq/#2.
14. New York City Business Express, New York City Department of Small Business Services, http://www.nyc.gov/
portal/site/businessexpress/.
15. Urban Neighborhoods Fund Proposal, New York State Association for Affordable Housing, August 1, 2014. Available
by request: http://nysafah.org/contact.php.
16. Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great American Cities (New York: Random House, 1961).
17. Real Estate & Equipment Loans: CDC/504 Loan Program, United States Small Business Administration (http://
www.sba.gov/category/navigation-structure/loans-grants/small-business-loans/sba-loan-programs/real-estateand-eq/).
18. Memorandum: Mixed Use Buildings Expanded No-Action Treatment, Real Estate Finance Bureau, New York State
Department of Law, January 29, 2009.
19. A Local Law to Amend the Administrative Code of the City of New York, in Relation to Replacing Certain Fines with
Opportunities to Cure, Legislative Research Center, New York City Council.
20. New York City Business Express, New York City Department of Small Business Services, http://www.nyc.gov/
portal/site/businessexpress.
21. Business Mentor NY, Empire State Development, http://businessmentor.ny.gov.
22. The U.S. Small Business Administration, United States Small Business Administration, www.sba.gov.
23. Local Law 11 of 2012Publishing Open Data, New York City Department of Information Technology &
Telecommunications, http://www.nyc.gov/html/doitt/html/open/local_law_11_2012.shtml.
24. Microloan Program, United States Small Business Administration, http://www.sba.gov/content/microloanprogram.
25. Mind My Business app, Vizalytics Technology, http://www.mindmybusinessapp.com.
26. CUPS Brings the Power Back to Independent Coffee Shops, Urban CUPS Inc., http://coffeeshop.cupsapp.com.
14
Gale A. Brewer
MANHATTAN BOROUGH PRESIDENT
www.manhattanbp.nyc.gov
galeabrewer
16
Barbara Livenstein
50 East 89th Street
New York, New York 10128
I became aware of the vendor in June, 2014, after days and days of
smelling grilled meat at 8:30 every weekday morning. This unwanted odor
seeped into my apartment. Frequently, the odor suffused the lobby of my
building, and there were days, in the hot summer, when the block reeked.
I lodged complaints with the three city agencies mentioned above. After
months and months of being shuffled from one city agency to another, I
finally learned that the Department of Mental Health and Hygiene was the
managing agency. I contacted them almost daily.
The odor persisted. I called 311 routinely. I contacted Gale Brewers
office, Dan Garodnicks office, and e-mailed the Mayors office. I continued
to lodge complaints with the Department of Health and Hygiene.
In trying to solve my problem, I learned that really, no one is in charge of
street vendors. No one really knows whats happening on the street. The
vendors obtain permits and disappear into the fabric of the city, operating
off the radar of any governing body.
The odor on my block has diminished to some extent, but even beyond the
odor, what is a vendor doing on a purely residential block in a noncommercial area, on a quiet, tree-lined block of apartment buildings?
I would like to know if vendors pay sales tax or any other taxes related to
their operations? Are they asked to submit bookkeeping records that
document their activities?
I have worked in NYC for the past forty years and paid city, state, and
federal taxes. I would not want to think that I am paying taxes for the
privilege of living on my block while a street vendor who has established
himself on the sidewalk conducts business in spite of regulations and with
no accountability.
I am not the only resident with complaints. I attended a task force meeting
last week and heard from residents along East 68th Street, whose
windows face a wall of vendors who advertise with brilliant, moving LED
lights that remain on late into the night. A resident who lives near the
Second Avenue subway project lamented the fact that the moment the
years-long construction project ended and the crews cleaned up, a vendor
moved onto her block. A man who invested his familys life savings into a
small restaurant, with employees for whom he provides health insurance,
now has to compete with a food truck owner who, recognizing the
customer base of the small restaurant, parked directly in front and is now
2
Last: this bill creates opportunity for a very small segment of the
populationless than 1%. Many of the people who receive permits will
turn out to be non-NYC residents. A much larger group of New Yorkers
will be affected: residents; those who have invested life savings into cafes
and bistros that employ New Yorks parents, students, and entry-level
workers (while also providing health insurance); and thousands more who
seek to preserve a quieter, uncluttered spot in the metropolis and
pedestrians who simply want to get where theyre going.
Until better planning and management of this situation is possible, the new
legislation guarantees an increase in already-existing problems that have
not been solved. This is why I oppose it.
Please do not hesitate to contact me should you have any questions or
suggestions for me.
Sincerely,
Barbara Livenstein
50 East 89th Street
New York, New York
10128
Michele Birnbaum
1035 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10028
Tel & Fax: (212)427-8250
TESTIMONY ON INTROS 72,78, 432, 1303
OCTOBER 26, 2016
Speaker Mark-Viverito, Chair Espinal, Council Member Levine, the Committee and all
Council Members, thank you for hearing my testimony today.
I am testifying as a co-founder and part of the coalition of New Yorkers for Street
Vending Reform and as Co-Chair of the Vendor Task Force Committee of Community
Board 8 in Manhattan.
I will submit a written narrative, but because of time constraints, I will give you the
following bullet points:
Michele Birnbaum
A founder of New Yorkers for Street Vending Reform
and
Co-chair of the Vendor Task Force Committee of Community Board 8 Manhattan
Michele Birnbaum
1035 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10028
Tel & Fax: (212)427-8250
TESTIMONY ON INTROS 72,78, 432, 1303
OCTOBER 26, 2016
Speaker Mark-Viverito, Chair Espinal, Council Member Levine, the Committee and all
Council Members, thank you for hearing my testimony today.
I am testifying as a co-founder and part of the coalition of New Yorkers for Street
Vending Reform and as Co-Chair of the Vendor Task Force Committee of Community
Board 8 in Manhattan.
We are opposed to lifting the cap on food vendors to 635 per year from 2018 through
2025 and to giving power to the Department of Transportation in consultation with
other city agencies to remove all caps after 2025, as called for in Intro #1303. It is not
explained anywhere in this bill as to how you arrived at the 635 number.
After carefully reading Intro # 1303, I also have many concerns. While I am pleased that
you have included a vendor enforcement force, something for which Ive advocated for
many years, you have not addressed the size of the force which I believe you should
define by explaining its ratio to the number of vendors on the street. You have said that it
will be active in area adjacent to retail, congested areas and areas included in the
designated vending locations pilot program, but to be successful, it needs to be
substantially active throughout the city just as the parking meter compliance force is.
While you have addressed the issue of location by assigning permits to each of the five
boroughs, you have not addressed the street and sidewalk crowding in both commercial
and residential areas that the proposed increase in licenses would cause, nor have you
addressed the illegality of all food truck parking. At this moment, there is no legal
parking spot for a food truck. They park at meters, in No Standing Zones, Commercial
Loading and Unloading Zones, Ambulance Parking and Access-A-Ride only spots, etc.
To even consider an increase in the number of licenses without considering a program of
assigned vendor locations using something like a bidding or medallion system, is asking
for chaos on our streets. There have been many reports of violence over disputed vending
location spots and reports of carts being left on the streets round the clock so as not to
lose their vending space. This is a breach of the health code which requires the carts to be
cleaned every 24 hours, lures rats to the location, causes visual blight and gives the
businesses and residents no relief from vending on their streets.
Violations should be issued to both the permit holder and the licensed vendor who is
manning the cart of the permittee, as both are contributing to the non-compliant act.
The Environmental Impact Statement or study that you are proposing should not
take place after the additional vendors are on the streets, but before and should
include analysis of the effect of street vendors on the quality of life of residents
as well as businesses and bricks and mortar food establishments. An EIS for a building is
done prior to its construction.
The EIS will look at the impact on job opportunities for vendors, the diversity of food
options available, sidewalk congestion, the health of the restaurant industry and the health
of the food retail industry while the quality of life of a resident who lives with the
cooking odors, fumes, generator noise and oil spills is not considered.
Also, it is not the responsibility of government to make sure that there is diversity of food
options in the city. The free market will do that, and any type of food could be
accommodated within a bricks and mortar location. These locations could be shared by
those who might otherwise have individual trucks or carts on the street, and sharing
storefronts should be encouraged and incentivized. There is precedent for that in the city,
i.e. Chinatown and Baskin Robins and Dunkin Donoughts. Parking lots could be
converted to accommodate multiple food trucks, and areas such as La Marqueta on Park
@ 125th should be encouraged.
Increasing the caps without addressing location will empty store fronts by promoting
and incentivizing food businesses to expand, not to other store locations, but to the
street where their expenses will be minimal. This is already happening and has been
going on for many years. It is a puzzle how this happens when the law supposedly calls
for one license/one cart.
Your proposed Street Vendor Advisory Board consists of the Commissioners of the
Department of Consumer Affairs, the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, the
Department of Small Business Services, the Department of Transportation, and the
Police Department, with three members appointed by the Speaker, one of whom
represents street vendors, one of whom represents the small business community and one
of whom who represents a community organization, and two members appointed by the
Mayor, one of whom represents street vendors and one of whom represents the small
business community. But, missing from this panel and should be included, is the City
Planning Commission who should be the ultimate arbiter of what happens on our streets.
Also, one member from a community group is wholly inadequate, as most of the other
members are appointed by city government and will reflect the beliefs of their appointees.
Communities should have a multiple of their own representatives.
The Advisory Board should not be proposing locations. The communities should be the
voices of whether or not vending should be increased or decreased in their neighborhoods
and where these locations, if any, should be. Also, there is no mechanism for an
individual or community group to request that a street be restricted to vending, as there
was with the now defunct Vendor Review Panel. The individual has no place to bring
complaints and expect arbitration. He/she should be able to come to this panel.
If the Advisory Board does suggest locations, they should be subject to an open hearing.
Community based planning is lauded by many of our elected officials, and it should be
utilized for decisions on street vending locations, as well.
School kitchens should not be used for food preparation by anyone not affiliated with the
parent or student body of that school, as security in our schools should be paramount.
The training, mapping and web-site that you refer to should be implemented immediately,
even if there is no increase in licenses.
With respect to Intros # 72, 78 and 432, I believe they have merit.
Thank you for your kind attention.
Sincerely,
Michele Birnbaum
A Co-founder of New Yorkers for Street Vending Reform
and
Co-Chair of the Vendor Task Force Committee of Community Board 8 in Manhattan.
1
Testimony before the Committee on Consumer Affairs
of the New York City Council
By John Doyle, Senior Vice President
Real Estate Board of New York
October 26th, 2016
Good afternoon Chairperson Espinal Jr. and members of the committee on Consumer
Affairs. The Real Estate Board of New York, representing over 17,000 owners, developers,
managers, and brokers of real property in New York City, thanks you for the opportunity to
testify on the proposals relating to street vending in New York City.
These bills Intros. 1061 and 1303 as well as T2016-5114 and T2016-5115 aim to amend and
expand the existing regulations pertaining to food vendors. REBNY and its members fully
support efforts to improve employment and business opportunities for all New Yorkers,
particularly those in our citys immigrant community, whom these pieces of legislation would
largely affect. Although the bills in question are well-intentioned, we believe that there are areas
in which they must be amended to ensure that achieving their goals does not come at the expense
of other small businesses, pedestrian and public safety, and sustainability.
On the subject of safety, T2016-5114 and T2016-5115 raise a number of concerns. The former
would allow pushcarts to be placed within three feet of the curb, and the latter would modify
clearance requirements near driveways, subway exits, and crosswalks. A location must currently
have a 12-foot clear path to the curb before vending is permitted to ensure a safe walking path
for pedestrians. Permitting a vending cart to be located three feet from the curb, as opposed to
the current one-foot maximum, would result in five-foot-wide carts protruding eight feet into the
sidewalk, leaving a four-foot space for pedestrians to pass through assuming the vendor does
not have a line of customers. This amount of space only one foot wider than the legally
required size of a doorway for pedestrian path is inadequate and will likely result in pedestrians
walking behind the cart and possibly, into vehicular to avoid the line of customers.
Concerning T2016-5115, reducing the minimum clearance requirements in highly trafficked
areas would add to congestion around public areas like subway stations and taxi stands, which
already lend themselves to overcrowding during peak hours. This could create hazards for and
potentially endanger both pedestrians and the vendors themselves, who may be situated too
closely to areas such as driveways used for deliveries.
The Real Estate Board of New York, Inc., 570 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10022 Tel. (212) 532-3120 FAX (212) 779-8774
To address these issues of pedestrian safety, the City should conduct a study to establish a
pedestrian congestion standard so that vending will only be permitted at those times and in those
places where it does not pose a threat to pedestrian safety. Vendor clustering should also be
reviewed as part of this study.
Intro. 1303 would gradually expand the number of street vending permits and create a vending
law enforcement unit to enforce these proposed laws. REBNY understands the desire to curtail
the black market in permits and provide affordable business opportunities for a broad portion of
the population. However, at each phase of granting additional vending permits, a periodic and
meaningful review of the current issued licenses should be pursued. Furthermore, this bill might
run counter to current sustainability efforts.
As we know, NYC is making great strides to reduce its carbon footprint. This legislation will
likely lead to a significant increase in the number of idling food trucks throughout the city. Not
only will these new trucks impact air pollution themselves, but they are likely to cause increased
traffic congestion, further contributing to decreased air quality. REBNY and its members have
been highly committed to the Citys One New York plan, which cites vehicle idling as a
major source of pollution, and states that people who live near heavily-trafficked roadways
face significantly higher risks of suffering from asthma and heart diseases, among other
conditions.1 The increased number of food trucks necessitates a provision for these vendors to
comply with rigorous standards that reduce both pollution and noise levels.
Intro 1061 raises also safety concerns. This bill would allow individuals to sell flowers and
plants without a license for the seven days leading up to Asian Lunar New Year, including the
holiday itself. In addition to requiring potential license holders to demonstrate that they can
collect sales tax, the more important goal of the licensing process is to vet applicants for prior
misconduct. Without undergoing the requisite training or first taking a test in accordance with
the provisions of the proposed Int. 1303, individuals would be exempt from the collection of any
fines they may incur, and there would be no way to ascertain any history of violations of
temporary vendors during this eight day period.
1
One New York: The Plan for a Strong and Just City, pp193
http://www.nyc.gov/html/onenyc/downloads/pdf/publications/OneNYC.pdf
The Real Estate Board of New York, Inc., 570 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10022 Tel. (212) 532-3120 FAX (212) 779-8774
3
This bill also fails to establish the Office of Street Vendor Enforcement as a meaningful
oversight body regarding the issuance of the first increment of additional permits. In fact, the bill
provides that additional permits will be issued every March 1st regardless of the contents of the
Street Vendor review Panels annual reports to the City Council, or if no report is issued at all.
This is not a meaningful standard of enforcement. The first issuance of permits should be
contingent on the full implementation of a fully-funded Street Vendor Enforcement Unit. The
issuance of subsequent allocations should require an affirmative vote by the Council following
the issuance of the Review Panels report, which should contain detailed analyses, and a public
hearing. Additionally, REBNY believes that it would be fair and just for property owners to be
allocated seats on this Review Panel at the same level as street vendors.
Thank you again for the opportunity to comment, and we look forward to continuing our
conversations with the Council to continue improving these pieces of legislation.
The Real Estate Board of New York, Inc., 570 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10022 Tel. (212) 532-3120 FAX (212) 779-8774
Street Eats,
Safe Eats:
How Food Trucks and Carts Stack Up
to Restaurants on Sanitation
By Angela C. Erickson
June 2014
June 2014
Executive Summary
than restaurants.
Introduction
Waves of
Thats funny.2
Methods
mobile vendors.9
Results
Across the seven cities, findings were consistent: Food trucks and carts are every
bit as clean and safe as restaurants and other types of brick-and-mortar food establishments. As Figure 1 shows, in recent years, violations per establishment were few,
regardless of the category of food service. In six of the seven cities, violations by food
trucks and carts ranged from just one to four violations per truck or cart, while restaurants averaged just four to eight. The exception, Seattle, appears to have had more
frequent violations for both mobile vendors (nearly 14 per vendor) and restaurants
(almost 17 per restaurant), because the citys inspection regime weights each violation
more than the other cities.
18
16
14
12
10
Boston
(11-July 13)
Las Vegas
(09-July 12)
Food Carts
Los Angeles
(09-July 12)
Food Trucks
Louisville
(10-July 13)
Miami
(08-July 12)
Restaurants
Seattle
Washington, D.C.
(09-July 12)
(11-12)
Other
Hotels
Notes: In Louisville, Miami, Seattle and Washington, D.C., the food truck category includes both
trucks and carts. Due to differing inspection regimes, comparisons across cities are not valid.
Not only were violations infrequent, but mobile vendors compared well to their
brick-and-mortar counterparts, as shown in Figure 1, and this was confirmed by
statistical analysis. In analyses for six of seven cities, food trucks and carts had
fewer violations than restaurants, and the differences were statistically significant.
In Seattle, even though mobile vendors had fewer violations on average than restaurants, upon statistical analysis, the difference was not statistically significant. This
means mobile vendors and restaurants in Seattle performed about the same.
Boston
The Boston Inspectional Services
restaurants 4.6.
10
Standard
Deviation
Minimum
Maximum
Total Violations
Food Trucks
2.68
2.90
18
Restaurants
4.56
4.46
41
Carts
0.98
1.53
10
Other
2.67
3.36
30
Food Trucks
0.87
1.25
Restaurants
0.84
1.33
12
Carts
0.36
0.75
Other
0.47
0.93
Food Trucks
0.11
0.32
Restaurants
0.30
0.55
Carts
0.04
0.21
Other
0.17
0.43
1.70
1.94
11
Critical Violations
Non-critical Violations
Food Trucks
Restaurants
3.42
3.37
30
Carts
0.57
1.08
Other
2.03
2.60
23
*Data provided by Boston Inspectional Services Department and based on 296 inspections of 76 food
trucks, 17,634 inspections of 2,813 restaurants, 1,447 inspections of 497 carts and 10,521 inspections
of other food establishments.
11
Average
Violations
Compared to
Food Trucks
Rate of
Violations
Compared to
Food Trucks
Average
Violations
Compared to
Food Carts
Rate of
Violations
Compared to
Food Carts
Total Violations
Restaurants
1.87 more
69% more
3.39 more
386% more
Other
0.19 fewer
2% fewer
1.33 more
181% more
0.03 more
4% fewer
0.45 more
136% more
Other
0.37 fewer
48% fewer
0.06 more
28% more
Restaurants
0.18 more
156% more
0.25 more
568% more
Other
0.03 more
37% more
0.10 more
258% more
Restaurants
1.65 more
101% more
2.70 more
535% more
Other
0.14 more
19% more
1.19 more
275% more
Critical Violations
Non-critical Violations
*Results listed derived from OLS and Poisson regressions. Because of the use of two different statistical
analyses, the direction and significance for average violations and rate of violations may differ where the
differences between trucks or carts and restaurants are small. Full regression results for total violations can
be found in Appendix B. 11
12
13
Las Vegas
12
As
Standard
Deviation
Minimum
Maximum
Food Trucks
3.27
4.88
31
Restaurants
6.99
6.78
89
Carts
2.05
3.62
46
Other
4.39
5.08
100
*Data provided by the Southern Nevada Health District and based on 494 inspections of 163 food trucks, 42,611
inspections of 8,670 restaurants, 1,993 inspections of 602 carts and 39,718 inspections of other food establishments.
Average
Violations
Compared to
Food Trucks
Rate of Violations
Compared to
Food Trucks
Average
Violations
Compared to
Food Carts
Rate of Violations
Compared to
Food Carts
Restaurants
3.58 more
108% more
4.71 more
237% more
Other
1.09 more
31% more
2.22 more
111% more
*Results listed derived from OLS and Poisson regressions. Full regression results can be found in Appendix B.
14
15
Los Angeles
restaurants.
Standard Deviation
Minimum
Maximum
Food Trucks
3.59
6.40
100
Restaurants
7.82
5.25
100
Carts
2.37
5.74
36
*Data provided by Los Angeles County Department of Public Health and based on 2,928 inspections of 601 food
trucks, 42,089 inspections of 7,542 restaurants and 594 inspections of 236 carts.
Average Restaurant
Violations
Compared to Food Trucks
4.48 more
Rate of Restaurant
Violations
Compared to
Food Trucks
120% more
Average Restaurant
Violations
Compared to
Food Carts
5.65 more
Rate of Restaurant
Violations
Compared to
Food Carts
237% more
*Results listed derived from OLS and Poisson regressions. Full regression results can be found in Appendix B.
17
Louisville
The Metro Health and Wellness
18
cally significant.
Standard Deviation
Minimum
Maximum
Mobile Vendors
1.87
3.11
35
Restaurants
4.39
4.51
42
Other
3.44
4.08
40
*Data provided by Metro Health and Wellness Department and based on 648 inspections of 117 mobile vendors,
16,958 inspections of 2,540 restaurants and 16,894 inspections of other food establishments.
Average Violations
Compared to Mobile Vendors
Rate of Violations
Compared to Mobile Vendors
Restaurants
2.44 more
128% more
Other
1.35 more
82% more
*Results listed derived from OLS and Poisson regressions. Full regression results can be found in Appendix B.
19
Miami
The Florida Department of Busi-
restaurants.
20
Average (Mean)
Violations
Standard
Deviation
Minimum
Maximum
Total Violations
Mobile Vendors
3.71
3.62
31
Restaurants
8.15
7.97
69
Mobile Vendors
3.31
3.15
26
Restaurants
5.43
5.39
47
.40
.94
10
2.72
3.25
36
Critical Violations
Non-Critical Violations
Mobile Vendors
Restaurants
*Data provided by Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation and based on 1,627 inspections of
730 mobile vendors and 23,836 inspections of 3,959 restaurants.
Total Violations
4.19 more
117% more
Critical Violations
1.96 more
61% more
Non-critical Violations
2.24 more
597% more
*Results listed derived from OLS and Poisson regressions. Full regression results for total violations can be found
in Appendix B. 15
21
Seattle
the same.
22
16
Standard Deviation
Minimum
Maximum
Mobile Vendors
13.59
21.05
95
Restaurants
16.91
20.37
155
7.06
11.47
65
Hotels
*Data provided by King County Board of Health and based on 1,143 inspections of 139 mobile vendors, 32,230
inspections of 2,762 restaurants and 749 inspections of 63 hotels.
Rate of Violations
Compared to Mobile Vendors
Restaurants
1.51 fewer
9% fewer
Hotels
6.89 fewer
60% fewer
*Results listed derived from OLS and Poisson regressions. Full regression results can be found in Appendix B.
23
Washington, D.C.
The Washington, D.C., Department of
24
Average (Mean)
Violations
Standard
Deviation
Minimum
Maximum
Total Violations
Mobile Vendors
1.81
1.31
Restaurants
4.27
4.74
40
Other
3.83
3.84
22
0.12
0.41
Critical Violations
Mobile Vendors
Restaurants
1.80
1.97
14
Other
1.45
1.63
10
Non-Critical Violations
Mobile Vendors
1.69
1.14
Restaurants
2.47
3.26
26
Other
2.38
2.75
16
*Data provided by Washington, D.C., Department of Health and based on 133 inspections of 102 mobile vendors,
7,749 inspections of 2,762 restaurants and 1,103 inspections of other food establishments.
Rate of Violations
Compared to
Mobile Vendors
Total Violations
Restaurants
1.63 more
94% more
Other
1.55 more
89% more
Restaurants
1.30 more
1,066% more
Other
1.12 more
934% more
Restaurants
.34 more
23% more
Other
.44 more
28% more
Critical Violations
Non-critical Violations
*Results listed derived from OLS and Poisson regressions. Full regression results for total violations can be found in
Appendix B. 17
25
Conclusion
or grocery stores.
products.
26
18
growth to thrive.
27
Appendix A: Methods
To isolate the influence of establishment types () on the inspection scores (Y)
received, these analyses measured differences using OLS regression with fixed-effects. Inspection scores were regressed on establishment types and dummy variables
representing day of the week (), month (X) and year (). Weekday, month and year
reveal variability of inspections across time.
Seattle and Washington, D.C., include a risk variable (), which those cities use to
identify the potential risk associated with an establishment dependent on the manner in
which it prepares and serves food. For example, high-risk categories include establishments that handle raw ingredients extensively, like most sit-down restaurants; moderate-risk categories include establishments that have limited preparation, like a deli or
coffee shop; and low-risk categories include establishments such as hot dog stands and
convenience stores that primarily serve prepackaged or limited preparation foods.
An establishment can be inspected once or multiple times in one year with little
consistency across establishments. Additionally, the type of food served at or from an
establishment determines the level of detail required during a health inspection, which
means not all the inspection categories apply to every establishment. The establishment fixed effect () isolates and eliminates the individual specific differences.20
Because sanitation scores are a count of the number of violations during an
inspection and most inspections have few violations, a Poisson regression was also
used. As with the OLS, inspection scores were regressed on establishment types
and the time dummy variables. Standard errors were clustered by establishment to
account for multiple inspections per business.
The following is the OLS model for Boston:
Y=0+1 (restaurants)+2 (other)++X+++
The Poisson model is:
ln (Y)=0+1 (restaurants)+2 (other)++X+
Y represents inspection demerits with zero or no demerits being the best score. The
28
reference year is 2011 with the analysis covering 2011 through July 2013. 1 represents
the coefficient for restaurants, and 2 represents the coefficient for grocery stores, cafeterias, caterers, etc. The models were run separately for food trucks and carts.
The OLS model for Las Vegas is:
Y=0+1 (restaurants)+2 (other)++X+++
The Poisson model is:
ln (Y)=0+1 (restaurants)+2 (other)++X+
Y represents inspection demerits with zero or no demerits being the best score
and up to 100 demerits being the worst score. The reference year is 2009 with the
analysis covering 2009 through July 2012. 1 represents the coefficient for restaurants, and 2 represents the coefficient for grocery stores, processors, cafeterias, etc.
The models were run separately for food trucks and carts.
The OLS model for Los Angeles is:
Y=0+1 (restaurants)++X+++
The Poisson model is:
ln (Y)=0+1 (restaurants)++X+
Y represents inspection demerits where zero is the best possible score.21 The
analysis is from 2009 (the reference year) through July 2012. 1 represents the coefficient for restaurants. The models were run separately for food trucks and carts.
The following is the OLS model for Louisville:
Y=0+1 (restaurants)+2 (other)++X+++
The Poisson model is:
ln (Y)=0+1 (restaurants)+2 (other)++X+
Y represents inspection demerits.22 The reference year is 2010 with the analysis
covering 2010 through July 2013. 1 represents the coefficient for restaurants, and 2
29
30
Y is the number of inspection demerits with zero being the best possible score.
The reference year is 2009 with the analysis covering 2009 through July 2012. 1
represents the coefficient for restaurants, and 2 represents the coefficient for hotels.
Seattle also has a risk rank fixed effect (). Seattle ranks establishments that sell
pre-packaged food with limited preparation as the lowest, one, and establishments
with complex food preparation and storage as the highest, three.
The OLS model for Washington, D.C. is:
Y=0+1 (restaurants)+2 (other)++X++++
The Poisson model is:
ln (Y)=0+1 (restaurants)+2 (other)++X++
Y is the number of violations. The analysis was run for 2011 and 2012. 1
represents the coefficient for restaurants, caterers, cafeterias and hotels, and 2 represents the coefficient for grocery stores, corner stores and wholesalers. Like Seattle,
Washington, D.C. has a risk rank fixed effect () based on the Districts ranking of
establishments, where one is the least risky and five is the riskiest.
31
Coefficient
Poisson
Robust SE
Coefficient
Robust SE
Restaurants
1.872
0.253
0.00
0.527
0.107
0.00
Other
-0.187
0.251
0.46
-0.020
0.109
0.86
Tuesday
-1.399
0.909
0.12
-0.261
0.287
0.36
Wednesday
-1.514
0.906
0.10
-0.284
0.287
0.32
Weekday
Thursday
-1.523
0.907
0.09
-0.298
0.287
0.30
Friday
-1.413
0.908
0.12
-0.240
0.287
0.40
Saturday
-1.447
0.907
0.11
-0.253
0.287
0.38
Sunday
-2.507
0.944
0.01
-0.867
0.324
0.01
February
-0.046
0.117
0.69
-0.094
0.040
0.02
March
0.329
0.126
0.01
0.095
0.039
0.02
Month
April
0.088
0.135
0.51
0.058
0.041
0.16
May
0.284
0.126
0.02
0.138
0.037
0.00
June
-0.077
0.133
0.57
0.006
0.040
0.89
July
-0.517
0.130
0.00
-0.111
0.042
0.01
August
-0.140
0.132
0.29
-0.021
0.042
0.62
September
-0.402
0.123
0.00
-0.151
0.043
0.00
October
-0.153
0.128
0.23
-0.027
0.041
0.51
November
-0.341
0.141
0.02
-0.027
0.044
0.54
December
-0.273
0.152
0.07
0.009
0.048
0.85
0.148
0.028
0.00
Year
2012
32
0.461
0.095
0.00
2013
0.335
0.116
0.00
0.129
0.034
0.00
Intercept
3.529
0.978
0.00
1.178
0.315
0.00
sigma_u
2.471
sigma_e
3.012
rho
0.402
Table 16.
Boston Carts
OLS
Coefficient
Poisson
Robust SE
Coefficient
Robust SE
Restaurants
3.391
0.092
0.00
1.580
0.079
0.00
Other
1.334
0.087
0.00
1.033
0.082
0.00
Tuesday
0.231
0.149
0.12
0.438
0.171
0.01
Wednesday
0.123
0.147
0.40
0.415
0.171
0.02
Thursday
0.118
0.147
0.42
0.404
0.171
0.02
Weekday
Friday
0.226
0.147
0.13
0.462
0.171
0.01
Saturday
0.181
0.148
0.22
0.447
0.171
0.01
Sunday
-0.353
0.222
0.11
-0.099
0.235
0.67
February
-0.032
0.115
0.78
-0.090
0.040
0.03
March
0.358
0.126
0.00
0.101
0.039
0.01
April
0.102
0.131
0.44
0.058
0.041
0.16
Month
May
0.269
0.122
0.03
0.135
0.037
0.00
June
-0.058
0.129
0.65
0.012
0.040
0.76
July
-0.492
0.126
0.00
-0.111
0.042
0.01
August
-0.145
0.127
0.25
-0.031
0.042
0.47
September
-0.393
0.122
0.00
-0.150
0.043
0.00
October
-0.160
0.127
0.21
-0.027
0.041
0.50
November
-0.330
0.138
0.02
-0.033
0.044
0.45
December
-0.231
0.150
0.12
0.017
0.048
0.73
0.145
0.028
0.00
Year
2012
0.450
0.092
0.00
2013
0.318
0.113
0.01
0.124
0.034
0.00
Intercept
0.387
0.182
0.03
-0.573
0.165
0.00
sigma_u
2.324
sigma_e
2.970
rho
0.380
33
Table 17.
Las Vegas Food Trucks
OLS
Coefficient
Poisson
Robust SE
Coefficient
Robust SE
Restaurants
3.575
0.287
0.00
0.732
0.096
0.00
Other
1.085
0.286
0.00
0.267
0.096
0.01
Tuesday
0.375
0.291
0.20
0.113
0.055
0.04
Wednesday
0.191
0.291
0.51
0.078
0.055
0.15
Thursday
0.123
0.290
0.67
0.064
0.055
0.24
Weekday
Friday
0.048
0.290
0.87
0.051
0.055
0.35
Saturday
-0.371
0.289
0.20
-0.026
0.055
0.63
Sunday
-0.239
0.310
0.44
-0.051
0.060
0.39
Month
February
-0.064
0.079
0.42
-0.006
0.015
0.68
March
-0.161
0.079
0.04
-0.022
0.015
0.15
April
-0.105
0.085
0.22
-0.015
0.016
0.37
May
0.030
0.088
0.74
0.015
0.016
0.36
June
-0.055
0.082
0.50
0.003
0.016
0.83
July
0.166
0.087
0.06
0.040
0.016
0.01
August
0.322
0.095
0.00
0.076
0.018
0.00
September
0.028
0.086
0.74
0.013
0.017
0.44
October
-0.176
0.087
0.04
-0.020
0.017
0.25
November
0.100
0.102
0.33
0.035
0.019
0.07
December
-0.124
0.104
0.23
-0.007
0.020
0.72
Year
34
2010
0.107
0.039
0.01
0.021
0.008
0.01
2011
0.544
0.045
0.00
0.100
0.009
0.00
2012
1.306
0.060
0.00
0.231
0.011
0.00
Intercept
2.758
0.409
0.00
1.073
0.111
0.00
sigma_u
1.578
sigma_e
5.558
rho
0.075
Table 18.
Las Vegas Carts
OLS
Coefficient
Poisson
Robust SE
Coefficient
Robust SE
Restaurants
4.711
0.112
0.00
1.214
0.054
0.00
Other
2.221
0.110
0.00
0.748
0.055
0.00
Tuesday
0.359
0.276
0.19
0.110
0.054
0.04
Wednesday
0.181
0.275
0.51
0.076
0.054
0.16
Thursday
0.118
0.275
0.67
0.063
0.054
0.24
Weekday
Friday
0.038
0.275
0.89
0.049
0.054
0.36
Saturday
-0.362
0.274
0.19
-0.026
0.054
0.62
Sunday
-0.204
0.295
0.49
-0.044
0.059
0.46
February
-0.061
0.078
0.43
-0.005
0.015
0.71
March
-0.160
0.078
0.04
-0.022
0.015
0.14
April
-0.106
0.084
0.20
-0.015
0.016
0.34
Month
May
0.038
0.087
0.67
0.016
0.016
0.32
June
-0.049
0.081
0.54
0.004
0.015
0.82
July
0.176
0.086
0.04
0.042
0.016
0.01
August
0.340
0.094
0.00
0.080
0.018
0.00
September
0.059
0.085
0.49
0.019
0.017
0.25
October
-0.170
0.087
0.05
-0.019
0.017
0.26
November
0.130
0.100
0.19
0.041
0.019
0.03
December
-0.107
0.103
0.30
-0.003
0.020
0.88
0.021
0.008
0.01
Year
2010
0.107
0.038
0.01
2011
0.549
0.044
0.00
0.103
0.009
0.00
2012
1.300
0.059
0.00
0.233
0.011
0.00
Intercept
1.618
0.294
0.00
0.591
0.076
0.00
sigma_u
1.569
sigma_e
5.524
rho
0.075
35
Table 19.
Los Angeles Food Trucks
OLS
Restaurants
Coefficient
4.484
Poisson
Robust SE
0.143
Weekday
Tuesday
Coefficient
0.00
Robust SE
0.786
0.049
0.00
0.145
0.074
0.05
-0.313
0.424
0.46
Wednesday
-0.233
0.421
0.58
0.145
0.074
0.05
Thursday
-0.187
0.420
0.66
0.144
0.074
0.05
Friday
-0.242
0.421
0.57
0.133
0.074
0.07
Saturday
-0.206
0.426
0.63
0.122
0.074
0.10
Sunday
1.110
0.516
0.03
0.248
0.089
0.01
0.012
0.017
0.45
Month
February
0.124
0.115
0.28
March
0.101
0.097
0.30
0.018
0.015
0.23
April
0.041
0.102
0.69
0.006
0.015
0.71
May
-0.021
0.097
0.83
-0.006
0.014
0.70
June
0.081
0.110
0.46
0.018
0.016
0.26
July
0.251
0.128
0.05
0.030
0.018
0.10
August
0.326
0.123
0.01
0.033
0.018
0.06
September
0.533
0.121
0.00
0.069
0.017
0.00
October
0.282
0.135
0.04
0.025
0.019
0.19
November
0.104
0.132
0.43
0.011
0.019
0.55
December
-0.141
0.120
0.24
-0.004
0.018
0.81
Year
36
2010
-0.402
0.067
0.00
-0.056
0.009
0.00
2011
-0.701
0.070
0.00
-0.094
0.010
0.00
2012
-0.829
0.090
0.00
-0.102
0.013
0.00
Intercept
3.721
0.450
0.00
1.178
0.091
0.00
sigma_u
2.430
sigma_e
4.633
rho
0.216
Table 20.
Los Angeles Carts
OLS
Restaurants
Coefficient
5.648
Poisson
Robust SE
0.237
Weekday
Tuesday
Coefficient
0.00
Robust SE
1.214
0.105
0.00
0.264
0.074
0.00
0.254
0.393
0.52
Wednesday
0.440
0.391
0.26
0.275
0.073
0.00
Thursday
0.436
0.391
0.26
0.268
0.073
0.00
Friday
0.443
0.390
0.26
0.265
0.073
0.00
Saturday
0.402
0.394
0.31
0.245
0.074
0.00
Sunday
0.843
0.492
0.09
0.265
0.091
0.00
0.013
0.016
0.43
Month
February
0.130
0.116
0.26
March
0.131
0.097
0.18
0.020
0.015
0.16
April
0.040
0.101
0.69
0.005
0.015
0.74
May
0.024
0.097
0.80
0.000
0.014
0.98
June
0.232
0.111
0.04
0.037
0.016
0.02
July
0.321
0.132
0.02
0.036
0.018
0.05
August
0.342
0.126
0.01
0.032
0.018
0.07
September
0.452
0.119
0.00
0.058
0.017
0.00
October
0.289
0.138
0.04
0.025
0.019
0.20
November
0.034
0.123
0.79
0.003
0.017
0.85
December
-0.155
0.121
0.20
-0.004
0.018
0.84
Year
2010
-0.468
0.069
0.00
-0.064
0.009
0.00
2011
-0.849
0.070
0.00
-0.113
0.010
0.00
2012
-0.958
0.091
0.00
-0.118
0.012
0.00
Intercept
1.996
0.458
0.00
0.635
0.127
0.00
sigma_u
2.454
sigma_e
4.520
rho
0.228
37
Table 21.
Louisville Mobile Vendors (Trucks and Carts)
OLS
Coefficient
Poisson
Robust SE
Coefficient
Robust SE
Restaurants
2.441
0.164
0.00
0.826
0.076
0.00
Other
1.354
0.166
0.00
0.596
0.077
0.00
Tuesday
0.200
0.243
0.41
0.030
0.112
0.79
Wednesday
0.177
0.247
0.47
0.024
0.113
0.83
Thursday
0.102
0.246
0.68
0.016
0.112
0.89
Weekday
Friday
0.095
0.256
0.71
-0.017
0.114
0.88
Saturday
-0.019
0.273
0.94
-0.051
0.117
0.67
Sunday
-0.044
0.215
0.84
-0.101
0.116
0.39
February
0.000
0.101
1.00
0.023
0.032
0.46
March
-0.158
0.095
0.10
-0.058
0.032
0.07
April
0.151
0.141
0.28
0.069
0.035
0.05
Month
May
0.208
0.188
0.27
0.067
0.043
0.12
June
0.060
0.113
0.60
0.027
0.030
0.37
July
0.009
0.097
0.93
0.009
0.029
0.75
August
-0.356
0.222
0.11
-0.090
0.079
0.26
September
0.201
0.117
0.09
0.107
0.033
0.00
October
0.070
0.112
0.53
-0.009
0.034
0.80
November
-0.099
0.103
0.34
-0.040
0.032
0.21
December
-0.060
0.106
0.58
0.005
0.033
0.88
0.719
0.073
0.00
0.201
0.026
0.00
Year
2010
38
2011
0.606
0.113
0.00
0.160
0.037
0.00
2012
0.282
0.068
0.00
0.062
0.025
0.01
Intercept
1.352
0.346
0.00
0.523
0.137
0.00
sigma_u
1.913
sigma_e
3.729
rho
0.208
Table 22.
Miami Mobile Vendors (Trucks and Carts)
OLS
Restaurants
Coefficient
Poisson
Robust SE
4.191
0.126
0.00
Coefficient
Robust SE
0.773
0.032
0.00
Weekday
Tuesday
2.922
0.378
0.00
0.868
0.105
0.00
Wednesday
2.524
0.371
0.00
0.826
0.105
0.00
Thursday
2.606
0.372
0.00
0.841
0.105
0.00
Friday
2.529
0.377
0.00
0.826
0.105
0.00
Saturday
2.205
0.374
0.00
0.775
0.105
0.00
Sunday
0.732
0.515
0.16
0.354
0.136
0.01
Month
February
0.308
0.211
0.15
0.060
0.029
0.04
March
0.228
0.218
0.29
0.052
0.029
0.07
April
-0.482
0.212
0.02
-0.042
0.031
0.18
May
-1.080
0.213
0.00
-0.106
0.031
0.00
June
-1.730
0.201
0.00
-0.255
0.031
0.00
July
-0.215
0.231
0.35
-0.011
0.030
0.72
August
-0.391
0.241
0.11
-0.023
0.032
0.47
September
-0.565
0.239
0.02
-0.054
0.032
0.09
October
-0.522
0.242
0.03
-0.053
0.032
0.10
November
-0.598
0.272
0.03
-0.049
0.036
0.17
December
-0.852
0.257
0.00
-0.107
0.035
0.00
2009
-1.368
0.151
0.00
-0.154
0.017
0.00
2010
-1.487
0.225
0.00
-0.175
0.027
0.00
Year
2011
-3.323
0.150
0.00
-0.435
0.019
0.00
2012
-3.495
0.213
0.00
-0.466
0.027
0.00
Intercept
3.533
0.438
0.00
0.761
0.112
0.00
sigma_u
2.877
sigma_e
6.570
rho
0.161
39
Table 23.
Seattle Mobile Vendors (Trucks and Carts)
OLS
Coefficient
Poisson
Robust SE
Coefficient
Robust SE
Restaurants
-1.505
1.368
0.27
-0.094
0.111
0.40
Hotels
-6.893
1.589
0.00
-0.915
0.191
0.00
Tuesday
0.103
2.951
0.97
0.292
0.256
0.25
Wednesday
-0.849
2.963
0.77
0.264
0.256
0.30
Thursday
-0.251
2.980
0.93
0.270
0.257
0.29
Weekday
Friday
0.741
2.964
0.80
0.387
0.257
0.13
Saturday
-0.596
3.003
0.84
0.279
0.257
0.28
Sunday
-0.315
3.358
0.93
0.120
0.283
0.67
February
-1.626
0.934
0.08
-0.085
0.070
0.22
March
0.898
0.932
0.34
0.102
0.078
0.19
April
-2.009
0.894
0.03
-0.113
0.067
0.09
Month
May
-3.274
0.893
0.00
-0.286
0.072
0.00
June
-2.652
1.026
0.01
-0.158
0.073
0.03
July
-0.298
1.232
0.81
0.011
0.099
0.92
August
-1.090
1.257
0.39
-0.028
0.090
0.76
September
-5.733
1.042
0.00
-0.400
0.083
0.00
October
-6.436
1.009
0.00
-0.522
0.093
0.00
November
-5.098
0.976
0.00
-0.428
0.083
0.00
December
-5.743
0.982
0.00
-0.409
0.084
0.00
-0.135
0.621
0.83
0.007
0.056
0.90
Year
2010
2011
-0.801
0.585
0.17
-0.006
0.054
0.91
2012
-0.318
0.745
0.67
0.061
0.060
0.31
-3.243
0.822
0.00
-0.567
0.140
0.00
2/3
-8.459
1.727
0.00
-1.243
0.347
0.00
5.419
0.760
0.00
0.506
0.104
0.00
Intercept
12.828
3.140
0.00
2.313
0.267
0.00
sigma_u
8.730
sigma_e
15.340
Risk Rank
rho
40
0.245
Table 24.
Washington, D.C., Mobile Vendors (Trucks and Carts)
OLS
Coefficient
Poisson
Robust SE
Coefficient
Robust SE
Restaurants
1.630
0.151
0.00
0.661
0.088
0.00
Other
1.550
0.169
0.00
0.636
0.092
0.00
Tuesday
0.732
0.918
0.43
0.224
0.305
0.46
Wednesday
0.837
0.913
0.36
0.325
0.148
0.03
Thursday
0.641
0.912
0.48
0.370
0.148
0.01
Weekday
Friday
0.945
0.917
0.30
0.329
0.148
0.03
Saturday
0.739
0.919
0.42
0.399
0.148
0.01
Sunday
0.859
1.575
0.59
0.327
0.148
0.03
February
0.113
0.258
0.66
0.248
0.182
0.17
March
-0.024
0.248
0.92
-0.006
0.059
0.93
April
0.021
0.255
0.94
0.025
0.034
0.45
Month
May
0.061
0.233
0.79
-0.013
0.032
0.67
June
-0.142
0.241
0.56
-0.017
0.033
0.60
July
0.337
0.263
0.20
-0.006
0.032
0.85
August
0.396
0.246
0.11
-0.021
0.034
0.53
September
-0.287
0.243
0.24
0.069
0.033
0.04
October
-0.349
0.230
0.13
0.065
0.031
0.04
November
-0.418
0.230
0.07
-0.089
0.033
0.01
December
-0.524
0.252
0.04
-0.104
0.032
0.00
-0.586
0.088
0.00
-0.147
0.033
0.00
0.489
0.192
0.01
-0.174
0.035
0.00
1.344
0.193
0.00
0.374
0.063
0.00
2.051
0.273
0.00
-0.164
0.012
0.00
Year
2012
Risk Rank
-0.162
0.472
0.73
-0.046
0.168
0.78
Intercept
1.110
0.934
0.23
0.168
0.055
0.00
sigma_u
0.000
sigma_e
4.719
rho
0.000
41
Endnotes
pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/fea-
tures/timeline/rails-timeline/.
2 http://www.wave3.com/
story/22818583/health-department-
worried-about-food-truck-saniation-
safety.
3 http://www.wave3.com/
story/22818583/health-department-
worried-about-food-truck-saniation-
safety.
42
upon request.
more demerits.
more demerits.
regression tend to be easier to understand and are included here for ease of
interpretation.
more demerits.
43
18 http://fatlip.leoweekly.
com/2013/07/26/inspection-scores-
suggest-louisville-food-trucks-arent-as-
upon request.
scary-as-wave3-thinks/.
44
from 100.
ANGELA C. ERICKSON
Angela C. Erickson is a research analyst at the Institute for Justice, where she works with the strategic
research team conducting original social science research.
Before joining IJ, Erickson was a research assistant at
the Cato Institute. She holds a Masters in Public Policy from
the University of Chicago and received a Bachelors degree
in economics and political science from Beloit College.
About IJ
The Institute for Justice is a nonprofit, public interest law firm that litigates
to secure economic liberty, school choice, private property rights, freedom
of speech and other vital individual liberties and to restore constitutional
limits on the power of government. Founded in 1991, IJ is the nations
only libertarian public interest law firm, pursuing cutting-edge litigation in
the courts of law and in the court of public opinion on behalf of individuals
whose most basic rights are denied by the government. The Institutes
strategic research program produces high-quality research to inform public
policy debates on issues central to IJs mission.
Upwardly
Mobile
$
September 2015
Upwardly
Mobile
Street Vending and the American Dream
By Dick M. Carpenter II, Ph.D.
Table of Contents
Executive Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Vendor Profiles
Laura Pekarik and Greg Burke, Chicago 8
Y
. vonne Castaneda, El Paso, Texas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
12
L
. arry Miller, Atlanta. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
15
.Jeri
18
.Silvio
D
. oris Yao, New York City. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Upwardly Mobile
Executive Summary
Upwardly Mobile
Upwardly Mobile
Introduction
billion by 2017.5
work elsewhere.11
Upwardly Mobile
13
www.ij.org/upwardly-mobile
Upwardly Mobile
Laura Pekarik
Chicago
of Chicago.
sistercancer.
food trucks. The fine for violating the 200-foot rule goes
every move.
18
requested more.
After Kathryn recovered, Laura considered return-
Small-Business
Ownership
Street vendors are overwhelmingly
small-business owners: 96% of large-city
vendors own their own business, and
90% of those also own the truck, cart,
stand or other structure from which
they sell.a Most vendors own only one
structure, but some have grown into
larger businesses with 10, 20 or even 50
vending units.
Upwardly Mobile
Job Creation
Employ workers
Street vending creates jobs not only for vendors but often
also for others: 39% of vendors employ full- or part-time
workers. The average vendor-employer has 2.3 full-time
and 2.7 part-time workers.b
Upwardly Mobile
Greg Burke
Chicago
Unique (i.e.,
online, overseas)
4% 9%
23%
Brick and
Mortar
Expand
63%
Figure 3: Aspirations of Large-City Vending
Business Owners Who Plan to Expand
10
Upwardly Mobile
11
Upwardly Mobile
Yvonne Castaneda
El Paso, Texas
From there, she loads the burritos into her food truck and
Before the end of the day, shell sell more than 50 burritos
p.m., her workday wont end until about 6:00 p.m., when
immediately.28
35
30
28%
30%
Other Workers
25
20
33%
Vendors
23%
18%
24%
26%
18%
15
10
5
0
Less Than
High School
High School
Graduate
Some College
College Graduate
12
Upwardly Mobile
29
the new law, but, facing the real prospect of losing the
tionism by city leaders did not cast her out of work, but
Schooling,
9% Voluntary
On-the-Job Training,etc.
Training
Required for
License
28%
Nearly two-thirds (63%) of vendors completed no specialized training prior to opening shop. Most vendors who
did undergo training did so to meet municipal licensing
requirements. These programs, which typically include
hygiene classes, took, according to the vendors surveyed,
an average of five months to complete.
No Training
63%
13
Upwardly Mobile
14
Upwardly Mobile
Larry Miller
Atlanta
with the judge ordering Reed to fulfill his duties,41 but the
upward mobility.
Vending
5% 1% General
15%
Social welfare
Government
Service
28%
Professional
29%
8%
Manual
14%
15
Upwardly Mobile
Full-Time, Part-Time
& Seasonal Work
16
Full time
Year round
Part time
Seasonal
Figure 8: Year-Round
vs. Seasonal Vending
in Large U.S. Cities
Upwardly Mobile
Modest Earnings
Street vendors in Americas largest cities are bootstraps entrepreneurs,
running modest businesses that average about $145,000 in annual receipts
for those operating full time and year round and considerably less for those
operating part time and seasonally. After paying for fuel, supplies, wages,
insurance, taxes, fees and other costs, full-time and year-round vendors generate profits of about $35,000 per business and take home less than $18,000 in
personal income.
Table 1: Average (Mean) Annual Sales, Profit and Income for LargeCity Vending Businesses, 2012
Full time
Part time
Year round
Seasonal
Sales
$146,896
$23,578
$144,620
$26,535
Profit
$36,044
$5,891
$34,794
$9,462
Income
$14,408
$15,768*
$17,796
$10,355*
Long Workdays
Full-time vendors work five and a half days a week, on average,h and put in
long hours, averaging 11 to 12 hours a day spent preparing to sell (food prep,
packaging, etc.), serving customers and performing general business tasks
such as bookkeeping and purchasing.i
Sun
Mon
Tues
Wed
Thurs
Fri
Sat
General
Business
Figure 10: Average Work Day
for Full-Time Street Vendors in
Large U.S. Cities
12
hours
Preparing
to Sell
3 hours
Serving Customers
7 hours
17
Upwardly Mobile
Jeri Wingo
Los Angeles
nessed first-hand.
her wares and drive to Leimert Plaza Park, where she sets
Beverages
3%
Sweets
Most large-city street vendors sell food (78%) or merchandise (21%); about 1% offer services such as cutting
hair. Vendors offerings are quite diverse and include a
wide variety of ethnic foodsMexican, Korean, Thai,
Lebanese, Greek, Philippine, German, Peruvian, Columbian, Ecuadorian and many moreas well as all sorts of
merchandise, such as apparel, cosmetics, crafts, artwork,
glass light fixtures and even emu oil.
18
16%
Specialty
8%
Produce 11%
Mixed
20%
Ethnic
18%
General
24%
Upwardly Mobile
19
Upwardly Mobile
Mostly Mobile
Most large-city vendors are mobile: 83% sell from trucks,
carts or temporary stands such as tables. Only 7% work
at permanent stands like kiosks, market booths or designated areas at sporting venues.j
Other
Permanent
Stand
10%
7%
Truck
Temporary
Stand
37%
21%
Cart
25%
20
Figure 12:
Structures
Used by
Street
Vendors in
Large U.S.
Cities
Upwardly Mobile
Popular in Business
Districts
Business districts are the most popular location for mobile vendors, the
top choice for 43%.k For the rest, location preferences vary widely: 24%
of large-city mobile vendors fall into
the other category, which includes
festivals, craft shows, universities,
amusement parks, construction
sites and more. More than one-fifth
of mobile vendors primarily work
street fairs and events.l
Other
Subway
Entrances
24%
1%
43%
Street Fairs
and Events
22%
8%
Restaurant and
Bar Districts
2%
Business
Districts
Sporting or
Event Venues
37.6%
38.4%
34.6%
35
White
Non-white
62.4%
37.6%
Vendors
30
25
21.3%
20
14.8%
15
9.4% 8.6%
10
5
0
Figure 14: Vendor Race
and Ethnicity in Large
U.S. Cities
28.5%
Other Workers
3.7% 3.2%
White
Black
Asian
Something Hispanic
Else
21
Upwardly Mobile
Silvio Membreno
Hialeah, FLa.
22
Upwardly Mobile
Upwardly Mobile
bouquet goes for $5, the dozen for $10. By 7:00 a.m., he
inated, but all other rules were left in place. The council
a vending ordinance, later amending it to protect brickand-mortar businesses from competition. The centerpiece
field away from any store with which they might com-
Immigrant Entrepreneurs
60
Street vending is especially attractive to immigrant entrepreneurs: 51% of vendors are immigrants, compared to
23% of other workers in large cities. The average immigrant vendor has lived in the United States for 22 years.
40
50
51%
30
23%
20
10
0
Vendors
Other Workers
23
Upwardly Mobile
Doris Yao
80
Older Entrepreneurs
Street vendors tend to be older than other
workers in large cities: Nearly two-thirds
of vendors are ages 25 to 54, and onethird are older than 55.
70
60
Vendors
Other Workers
66%
55%
50
40
33%
27%
30
18%
20
10
0
1%
1524
2554
55+
24
Upwardly Mobile
her native Taiwan.66 Before she bought it, the cart was
68
And although the city keeps waiting lists for its various
were a hit.
69
A-Pous Taste has since expanded into three locations throughout Manhattan, and Doris now employs a
dozen people. She insists that they all have vendor and
food preparation licenses. She also pushes employees to
Other Demographic
Characteristics
Compared to other workers in large U.S. cities, street
vendors are substantially more likely to be veterans. And
those veterans are more likely to be disabled: 32% of vendor veterans are disabled, compared to 17% of veterans
in large-city workforces. This is likely because many state
and municipal vending laws make special accommodations for them.m Vendors are also substantially more
likely to be married and male.
80
70
68%
65%
60
Vendors
50
Other Workers
40
49%
41%
30
20
10
0
10%
6%
Veterans
Married
Male
25
Upwardly Mobile
9:15 AM
7:00 AM
9:15 AM
7:45 AM
9:45 AM
7:45 AM
10:20 AM
8:00 AM
10:30 AM
8:15 AM
26
An employee guides
Doris as she backs the
cart onto the sidewalk,
and they unhitch it.
Upwardly Mobile
12:00 PM
Doris purchases
more ingredients and
supplies. One of her
employees calls to ask
for more bread for the
halal cart, so she stops
to buy some.
3:30 PM
4:30 PM
7:00 PM
Doris arrives at the halal cart as her employee is serving the last
dinner customers and
closing. They hitch the
cart to her van.
12:30 PM
7:45 PM
1:00 PM
10:00 PM
2:00 PM
27
Upwardly Mobile
next page. First are direct effects, the most visible fruits
they hire and the products and services they offer. In one
purchase.
workers can easily buy it. That includes the labor of Doris
fees and taxes (like sales taxes) she pays on the business.
79
80
28
Upwardly Mobile
Street Vendors
Vendors
spe
ndi
ng
on
su
p
16,332 jobs
$78.5 million wages
$82 million value added
s
ie
pl
by
Ho
rs
ye
e
us p
sup
li e
ho
di
plo
ld
en
sp e
n ding
by
em
ployee
s
Household sp
Total
Effects
em
478 jobs
$33.5 million wages
$55.7 million value added
v e n d o rs
17,960 jobs
$192.3 million
wages
$292.7 million
value added
$71.2 million
taxes
29
Upwardly Mobile
30
$35.5 million
Federal
$35.7 million
Total
$71.2 million
Upwardly Mobile
31
Upwardly Mobile
Conclusion
and found that nearly all large cities had erected major
84
32
Upwardly Mobile
86
87
Such hurdles to street vending can close off an otherwise accessible avenue to entrepreneurship. The survey
33
Upwardly Mobile
the blocks where the vendors were set up. She wasnt
gap in the local market and built his own food truck to fill
the employees hired to run the new food truck will be in-
89
34
Upwardly Mobile
35
Upwardly Mobile
Appendix:
Study Methods
The study of street vendors has largely been dominated by ethnographic research, although at least one
92
Albuquerque, N.M.
Louisville, Ky.
Arlington, Texas
Memphis, Tenn.
Atlanta
Mesa, Ariz.
Austin, Texas
Miami
Baltimore
Milwaukee
Boston
Minneapolis
Charlotte, N.C.
Nashville, Tenn.
Chicago
New York
Cleveland
Oakland, Calif.
Oklahoma City
Columbus, Ohio
Omaha, Neb.
Dallas
Philadelphia
Denver
Phoenix
Detroit
Portland, Ore.
El Paso, Texas
Raleigh, N.C.
Sacramento, Calif.
Fresno, Calif.
San Antonio
Honolulu
San Diego
Houston
San Francisco
Indianapolis
Jacksonville, Fla.
Seattle
Tucson, Ariz.
Las Vegas
Tulsa, Okla.
Los Angeles
Washington, D.C.
Survey
Sample
The survey sample included 763 street vendors
licensed vendors. There are, of course, an unknown number of people who vend in these cities illegally. There are
36
Upwardly Mobile
Data Collection
Survey data collection by Technometrica, a New Jer-
www.ij.org/upwardly-mobile.
Analyses
The analysis of all closed-ended variables, except
primary activities involved in the industry and estimating expenditures for those activities.104 One of the most
Economic Contribution
sector or industry.
Most often, this type of analysis is used to measure
New York City was used as the study area for several reasons. First, it has a long tradition of street vendors.
37
Upwardly Mobile
Each of the categories, except for taxes, is a summation of direct, indirect and induced contributions
38
Upwardly Mobile
39
Upwardly Mobile
Endnotes
11
nycbiz/downloads/pdf/educational/sector_guides/
www.cookingchanneltv.com/shows/eat-st.html) and
shows/food-paradise/episodes/food-truck-paradise).
new-york/uptown/crackdown-illegal-vendors-
from http://www.ocala.com/article/20100416/
article-1.1993786.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704
http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2009-12-02/
758904576188523780657688.
www.salon.com/2015/01/18/los_angeles_food_
truck_renaissance_why_the_rise_of_street_vending_
com/2014/1/9/6299755/anthony-bourdain-is-
planning-a-massive-nyc-food-market.
economicrt.org/blog/impact-of-street-vendors-on-
Business/2013/0824/Restaurants-reinvent-the-
food-truck.
www.latimes.com/local/cityhall/la-me-street-
vending-20141203-story.html.
org/city/en/depts/bacp/supp_info/mobile_food_
vendorlicenses.html.
fojol-bros.
news/36921704_1_food-truck-farmers-markets-
articles/4161007.
chicago/legalize-it/Content?oid=1141442.
cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/29/street-
vending-as-a-way-to-eae-joblessness.
from http://www.lymphoma.org/site/
pp.asp?c=bkLTKaOQLmK8E&b=6300139.
40
Upwardly Mobile
31 Manning, 2011.
32 Bracamontes, R. (2011b, April 27). Rules on mobile
com/illinois/elmhurst/cupcakes-for-courage-new-
http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_17934184; Schladen,
elmhurst-store-is-all-about-ffccf598d9.
21 Chadra, 2012.
22 Institute for Justice. (n.d.). Sweet home Chicago? Food
trucks get the cold shoulder in the Windy City [Litigation
backgrounder]. Retrieved from http://ij.org/
chicagofoodtrucks-background.
35 Ewing, 2011.
36 Morris, M. (2013, March 29). City curbing vendors. The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, p. 2B.
file suit against the city over right to sell. The Atlanta
com/news/news/local/turner-field-vendors-file-suit-
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/hilary-gowins/city-
against-the-city-ov/nQJ5B/.
rules-lure-push-away-food-trucks_b_5600872.html.
http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_17210476.
28 Bracamontes, 2011a.
29 Manning, P. (2011, February 14). El Paso food vendors
biting at city laws. Fox Business. Retrieved from http://
smallbusiness.foxbusiness.com/legal-hr/2011/02/14/
el-paso-food-vendors-biting-city-laws/.
30 Manning, 2011.
41
Upwardly Mobile
50 Smith, 2014.
51 Kim, 2014; Uranga, R. (2005, March 6). Pushed to the
Kim, 2014.
http://streetvendorcampaign.blogspot.com/
Kim, 2014.
Kim, 2014; Rojas, 2014.
Rojas, 2014.
Affidavit of Silvio Membreno in Support of Plaintiffs
scpr.org/blogs/multiamerican/2014/12/02/17625/
street-vendor-legalization-proposal-moving-forward/;
ladowntownnews.com/news/downtown-leaders-
critical-as-sidewalk-vending-effort-moves-forward/
article_ad124784-71cc-11e4-9e27-b30a93146cb4.html.
onlinedocs/2013/13-1493_rpt_cla_11-26-14.pdf.
47 Liu, 2015.
48 Frommer, R., & Gall, B. (2012). Food-truck freedom: How
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB100014241278873
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-
park-beach-vending-20150729-story.html. Despite
www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/
miami-dade/hialeah/article1966630.html.
marcussamuelsson.com/what-to-eat-and-drink-2/
bringing-taiwanese-food-to-the-financial-district-a-
conversation-with-a-pou-tastes-doris-yao.
42
52
53
54
55
56
57
Upwardly Mobile
greenpointers.com/tag/moultrie-street/.
65 Chan, 2012.
66 Chan, 2012.
67 New York Street Food. (2012, March 23). Got your tix
blogs.villagevoice.com/forkintheroad/2015/02/
vendy_winning_vegan_truck_cinnamon_snail_
closing_for_business_on_february_28th.php; Reddy,
http://newyorkstreetfood.com/blog/2012/03/23/
got-your-tix-yet-for-the-street-vendor-project-10th-
html/doh/downloads/pdf/inspect/mobile-vendor-
anniv-party-heres-the-menu/.
waitlist-instructs.pdf.
from http://www.eventmarketer.com/article/vendy-
awards-oscars-street-food/.
article/20130505/TRANSPORTATION/305059983/
69 Chan, 2012.
70 Bischof, J. (2014, September 12). The Vendys at 10. The
Wall Street Journal, p. A16.
gearing-up-for-citi-bike.
10(1), 5365.
article/20150320/OPINION/150329998/lift-the-cap-
on-nycs-street-vendors.
84 Robb, 2015.
85 Norman et al., 2011.
86 Ban on downtown food trucks imminent? (2014,
com/article/20150529/BLOGS04/150529888/city-
turlockcitynews.com/news/item/1634-ban-on-
council-aiming-to-revolutionize-street-vending.
43
Upwardly Mobile
fees-in-northern-suburbs-repel-food-trucks.
University.
97 Crompton, (2006).
98 Bangsund and Leistritz, 1995.
99 Bangsund, D. A., & Hodur, N. M. (2013). Petroleum
industrys economic contribution to North Dakota in 2011.
Fargo, ND: North Dakota State University.
news/region-polk/lakeland/food-truck-rallies-
25(1), 4653.
in-lakeland-continue-to-draw-crowds-despite-theskeptical-restaurant-owners.
91 Raiche, 2013.
92 Gaber, J. (1994). Manhattans 14th street vendors
44
Upwardly Mobile
103 Day, n. d.
104 Bangsund and Leistritz, 1995.
105 Bangsund and Leistritz, 1995; Bangsund and Hodur,
2013; Chhabra et al., 2003; Delpy, L., & Li, M. (1998).
The art and science of conducting economic impact
studies. Journal of Vacation Marketing, 4(3), 230254;
Gentner and Steinback, 2008; Grado, S. C., Strauss,
C. H., & Lord, B. E. (1997). Economic impacts of
conferences and conventions. Journal of Convention
& Exhibition Management, 1(1), 1933; Tyrrell, B. J.,
113 Day, n. d.
114 Bangsund and Leistritz, 1995; Bangsund and Hodur,
115 Kim, C., Scott, D., Thigpen, J. F., & Kim, S.-S. (1998).
45
Upwardly Mobile
Survey Endnotes
a
b
c
d
employees.
www.ij.org/upwardly-mobile.
lessons) or friends.
h
i
see www.ij.org/upwardly-mobile.
immigrant ones.
html/sbs/nycbiz/downloads/pdf/educational/
compared to non-owners.
46
Upwardly Mobile
47
Upwardly Mobile
48
About IJ
www.ij.org
p 703.682.9320
f 703.682.9321
Boots Whitlock
Veteran: United States Marine Corps
E-Mail: Boots_Whitlock@Yahoo.com
Zachary W. Carter, Corporation Counsel, New York (Michael J. Pastor of counsel), for
appellant.
Danny Rossi, respondent pro se.
Elizabeth Rossi, respondent pro se.
[*2]
Order and judgment (one paper), Supreme Court, New York County (Joan B. Lobis, J.),
entered March 25, 2013, granting petitioner Danny Rossi's petition to annul the
determination of ECB, dated May 31, 2012, which sustained three notices of violation of
56 RCNY 1-03(c)(1), affirmed, without costs. Order and judgment (one paper), same
court and Justice, entered March 25, 2013, granting petitioner Elizabeth A. Rossi's
petition to annul the determination of ECB, dated May 31, 2012, which sustained two
notices of violation of 56 RCNY 1-03(c)(1), modified, on the law, to deny the petition
with respect to the notice of violation premised upon GBL 35-a (7)(i), and otherwise
affirmed, without costs. Order and judgment (one paper), same court and Justice, entered
March 25, 2013, granting petitioner Rabah Belkebir's petition to annul the determination
of ECB, dated May 31, 2012, which sustained one notice of violation of 56 RCNY 103(c)(1), affirmed, without costs. Order and judgment (one paper), same court and Justice,
entered March 25, 2013, granting petitioner Martin Diaz's petition to annul the
determination of the New York City Environmental Control Board (ECB), dated May 31,
2012, which sustained 11 notices of violation of Rules of City of New York Department
of Parks and Recreation (56 RCNY) 1-03(c)(1), modified, on the law, to deny the
petition with respect to the two notices of violation premised upon General Business Law
(GBL) 35-a(7)(i), and otherwise affirmed, without costs.
In these related article 78 proceedings, petitioners, who are disabled veterans holding
mobile food vending licenses, challenge notices of violation issued by respondent New
York City Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) for failure to comply with Parks
Department officers' directives to move their food carts. Most of the notices of violation
allege that petitioners were asked to move their carts because GBL 35-a(3) provides that
only two street vendors holding "specialized vending licenses" (SVLs) may vend on each
"block face." SVLs are issued to disabled veterans by way of a priority system based
upon the veteran's date of application (GBL 35-a[1][a], [b]). When three or more SVL
holders attempt to vend on the same "block face," the two SVL holders with higher
priority have the exclusive right to vend, and any other SVL holder vending on that
"block face" is deemed to be vending without having obtained a license (GBL 35-a[3]).
Since other SVL holders with higher priority were vending on the dates in question, the
Parks Department officers asked petitioners to move, and issued the notices of violation
when they refused. Separate from the "block face" issue, two of the notices of violation
issued to petitioner Diaz, and one issued to petitioner Elizabeth A. Rossi, allege that they
refused to move after being told that their food carts violated certain footage restrictions
contained in GBL 35-a(7)(i).
GBL 35-a governs the issuance of SVLs to disabled veterans who "hawk, peddle, vend
and sell goods, wares or merchandise or solicit trade" (GBL 35-a[1][a]). Petitioners argue
that this statute does not apply to food vendors. The central issue presented in this appeal
is whether the phrase "goods, wares or merchandise" encompasses food. We conclude
that it does. "It is fundamental that a court, in interpreting a statute, should attempt to
effectuate the intent of the Legislature" (Matter of State of New York v John S., 23 NY3d
326, 340 [2014] [internal quotation marks omitted]). "As the clearest indicator of
legislative intent is the statutory text, the starting point in any case of interpretation must
always be the language itself, giving effect to the plain meaning thereof" (Majewski v
Broadalbin-Perth Cent. School Dist., 91 NY2d 577, 583 [1998]). Because the terms
"goods" and "merchandise" are not defined in GBL 35-a, they should be construed in
accordance with their common, everyday meaning (Matter of New York Skyline, Inc. v
City of New York, 94 AD3d 23, 27 [1st Dept 2012], lv denied 19 NY3d 809 [2012]).
The word "goods" is broadly defined as "something manufactured or produced for sale"
(Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 539 [11th ed 2003]). Likewise, "merchandise"
is defined as "the commodities or goods that are bought and sold in business" (id. at 776).
As a matter of common parlance, the term "goods" plainly includes food. For example,
one often refers to canned foods as "canned goods," and baked items as "baked goods."
Thus, food products such as those sold by petitioners fall within the common, everyday
meaning of "goods" and "merchandise" (see Monroy v City of New York, 95 AD3d 535
[1st Dept 2012] [food is "merchandise" as that term is used in city regulation governing
the sale of merchandise]). If the legislature had intended to exclude food from the
purview of GBL 35-a, it could have expressly [*3]done so, as it did, for example, in
General Municipal Law 85-a [explicitly excepting "food products" from the phrase
"goods, wares or merchandise"]). Its failure to have made such an exclusion in GBL 35-a
indicates an intention to include food within the broad reach of the statute.[FN1]
The phrase "goods, wares or merchandise" is drawn verbatim from GBL 35-a's
companion statute, GBL 32, which governs the rights of veterans to vend. That statute,
from its inception, has been understood to apply to all categories of vendors, including
food vendors (see e.g. City of Buffalo v Linsman, 113 App Div 584 [4th Dept 1906] [sale
of vegetables]; Matter of Sharpe v New York City Dept. Of Health & Mental Hygiene,
2008 NY Slip Op 32094[U] [Sup Ct, NY County 2008] [mobile food vending]; People v
Mann, 113 Misc 2d 980 [Dist Ct, Suffolk County 1982] [sale of hot dogs]; People v
Gilbert, 68 Misc 48 [County Ct, Otsego County 1910] [sale of peanuts and popcorn]; see
also Good Humor Corp. v City of New York, 290 NY 312 [1943] [involving sale of ice
cream and local law regulating sale of "goods, wares or merchandise"]). It would be
incongruous for the legislature to have viewed food as "goods, wares or merchandise" for
purposes of GBL 32, but not for GBL 35-a.
It is axiomatic that "a statute . . . must be construed as a whole and that its various
sections must be considered together and with reference to each other" (People v Mobil
Oil Corp., 48 NY2d 192, 199 [1979]). A review of the myriad provisions in GBL 35-a
makes clear that the statute was intended to, inter alia, combat sidewalk congestion and
promote public safety in areas where vending is taking place. For example, vending is
prohibited on sidewalks where the pedestrian path is less than 10 feet wide (GBL 35-a[3]).
There are also restrictions on, inter alia, vending within bus stops and taxi stands, and
near subway entrances, driveways, disabled access ramps and entrances to stores (GBL
35-a[7][h], [l][i], [l][viii]). Other parts of the statute prohibit interference with fire
hydrants and traffic barriers, use of oil and gas powered equipment, and vending over
subway grates, ventilation grills and manholes (GBL 35-a [7][g], [l][iii], [l][v]). The
congestion and safety concerns underlying these provisions pertain to all vendors
regardless of what they are selling, and there is no rational reason why the legislature
would intend for these restrictions to apply to general vendors but not food vendors.
The passing reference to food vendors in GBL 35-a(11) fails to demonstrate that the
legislature did not intend food vending to be covered under the statute. That subdivision,
which provides for certain caps on vending by disabled veterans, is merely an
acknowledgment that there are different types of vendors namely "food, general [and]
vendors of written matter" (GBL 35-a[11]), and sheds no light on the central question of
whether food is "goods" or "merchandise." Likewise, the fact that two different agencies
regulate street vending in New York City does not mean that the State Legislature
intended to carve out food vending from GBL 35-a.
Having concluded that the vending limitations contained in GBL 35-a apply to the sale of
food, we turn to the remaining issues presented in this proceeding. Petitioners were
vending in front of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which is abutted by a five-block
span of sidewalk on the west side of Fifth Avenue extending from the side streets of East
79th Street through East 84th Street. On the east side of Fifth Avenue, this span
comprises five distinct blocks separated by the above side streets, each of which forms a
T-junction with Fifth Avenue. Most of the notices of violation were issued because
petitioners had allegedly violated the provision in GBL 35-a(3) allowing no more than
two SVL holders to vend on a given "block face."
DPR and ECB take the position that the entire span of sidewalk in front of the museum
comprises a single "block face" for purposes of GBL 35-a(3). We disagree. The
regulations enacted with respect to this statute define "block face" as "the area of
sidewalk spanning from one intersection to the next" (Rules of City of New York
Department of Consumer Affairs [6 RCNY] 2-315[a][1]). The term "intersection" is
defined in the Vehicle and Traffic Law (VTL) as, inter alia, "[t]he area embraced within
the prolongation or connection of the lateral curb lines . [*4]. . of two highways which
join one another at, or approximately at, right angles" (VTL 120[a]). Likewise, the New
York City Department of Transportation's regulations define "intersection" as "the area
contained within the grid created by extending the curblines of two or more streets at the
point at which they cross each other" (Rules of City of New York Department of
Transportation [34 RCNY] 2-01). Because the T-junctions formed where Fifth Avenue
meets each of the streets from East 79th through East 84th Streets are all separate
intersections, the multi-block sidewalk span in front of the museum is not a single "block
face." Thus, in light of the provisions of the VTL and RCNY, ECB's interpretation of the
term "block face" was an error of law. Accordingly, ECB erroneously sustained those
notices of violation based on the restriction of two SVL holders per "block face."[FN2]
Contrary to the dissent's view, the "block face" issue, which was fully briefed in the
article 78 proceedings below, is properly before us. CPLR 7804(g) provides, in relevant
part, that "when the [article 78] proceeding comes before it, whether by appeal or transfer,
the appellate division shall dispose of all issues in the proceeding" (emphasis added).
Thus, we are empowered to resolve all issues raised in the article 78 petitions, including
the "block face" issue (see Matter of 125 Bar Corp. v State Liq. Auth. of State of N.Y., 24
NY2d 174 [1969]; see also Alexander, Practice Commentaries, McKinney's Cons Laws
of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C7804:8 ["To preserve judicial economy, . . . 7804(g) has been
interpreted as a direction to the Appellate Division to consider all of the questions that are
presented in an Article 78 proceeding no matter how the case arrived at its doorstep"]).
We disagree with the dissent's position that we should defer to ECB's construction of the
term "block face." The issue before us turns solely on statutory interpretation, and no
such deference is owed since we are not interpreting a statute "where specialized
knowledge and understanding of underlying operational practices" or "an evaluation of
factual data and inferences to be drawn therefrom is at stake" (Matter of RAM I LLC v
New York State Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal, 123 AD3d 102, 105 [1st Dept
2014] [internal quotation marks omitted]).
ECB properly upheld those notices of violation issued to petitioners Diaz and Elizabeth A.
Rossi premised upon GBL 35-a(7)(i). Under that provision, SVL holders are prohibited
from "occupy[ing] more than eight linear feet of public space parallel to the curb" and
"more than three linear feet to be measured from the curb to the property line."[FN3] The
sole defense raised in the administrative proceedings to these notices of violation, which
have nothing to do with the "block face" issue, was that GBL 35-a does not apply to food
vending [FN4]. In light of our rejection of this defense, no basis exists to vacate these
notices of violation.
All concur except Tom, J.P. who dissents in part in a memorandum as follows:
upheld by the Environmental Control Board (ECB or the City) for refusing to leave the
sidewalk area fronting the museum to comply with the statutory limit of two such
vendors per restricted block face. These density restrictions are prescribed by General
Business Law 35-a, which provides for the issuance of a specialized vending license
(SVL) to any honorably discharged veteran who, like petitioners, has a service-related
physical disability.
Each petitioner holds a Mobile Food Vendor Full Term License issued by the New York
City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH), which enables the holder to
conduct operations as a food vendor. Petitioner Danny Rossi owns and operates his own
food vending cart, which meets the agency's specifications and requirements. Since 2007,
he has been operating his food cart in front of the Metropolitan Museum of Art on the
west side of Fifth Avenue in the vicinity of East 82nd Street. In addition to the cart which
he personally operates, Mr. Rossi owns at least two other food vending carts. He employs
his adult daughter, petitioner Elizabeth A. Rossi, to operate one and petitioner Martin
Diaz to operate the other. The final petitioner, Rabah Belkebir, owns and operates his
own food cart at East 79th Street and Fifth Avenue. For each cart owned, Mr. Rossi and
Mr. Belkebir hold a Citywide Full Term Mobile Food Vending Permit, also issued by
DOHMH, which certifies that a particular cart or vehicle is authorized for use in food
vending.
Petitioners were directed to move their food carts because state law provides that only
two street vendors holding "specialized vending licenses" may vend on each "block face"
(General Business Law 35-a [3])[FN5]. DPR construes the five-block uninterrupted
stretch of sidewalk on Fifth Avenue fronting the Metropolitan Museum of Art to
constitute a single "block face" for purposes of General Business Law 35-a, subdivision
3. Since other, more senior (higher priority number) SVL holders were present on each of
the dates in question, the Parks Department officers asked the petitioners to move, and
issued them notices of violation when they refused.
A brief historical analysis of the relevant statutes is instructive. Article 4 of the General
Business Law confers on honorably discharged veterans of this state who procure the
necessary license the right to "sell goods, wares or merchandise or solicit trade upon the
streets and highways within the county of his or her residence" or within the city wholly
embracing that county (General Business Law 32 [1]). Moreover, municipalities are
forbidden to promulgate any local law or regulation that prohibits or interferes with the
exercise of such right by licensed veterans who are physically disabled as a result of
injuries received during military service [*5](General Business Law 35). In Kaswan v
Aponte (160 AD2d 324 [1st Dept 1990], affg 142 Misc 2d 298 [Sup Ct, NY County
1989]), this Court upheld the right conferred by section 35, which supersedes and
proscribes any local law restricting the right of disabled veterans to engage in hawking or
peddling specifically, in Kaswan, a local regulation intended to abate congestion. In
response to our ruling, section 35 was amended to exempt cities with a population of one
million or more to permit the exercise of some degree of local regulatory authority over
the activities of such vendors (L 1991, ch 687, 1). Thereafter, the legislature enacted
section 35-a, which originally provided for the issuance of restricted location permits to
qualifying disabled veterans (L 1995, ch 115, 3). The statute was re-enacted in 2004 to
implement the present licensing system, expressly subjecting licensees to local
restrictions on the number of vendors who may operate at a given location under certain
specified conditions (L 2004, ch 11, 1).
The statute subjects the SVL holder to local restrictions on the number of vending carts,
vehicles or stands imposed by the locality "[i]n areas where general vending is
authorized" (General Business Law 35-a [2]). It further confers upon the SVL holder
the right to vend at times and in locations where vending is otherwise prohibited, with the
proviso that no more than two SVL holders may vend on such a "restricted block face"
(General Business Law 35-a [3]). The statute provides for a priority system, based on
seniority, to establish which vendors have the right to continue operating when the
density limit on the number of vendors per block face is exceeded.
DPR officers issued violations to petitioners for failing to obey directives to move their
food carts. In each case, the officers asserted that they instructed the petitioner to move
his or her cart because the respective petitioner did not have "priority" on that "block
face" (General Business Law 35-a [1] [b]). The summonses issued to petitioners were
the subject of four administrative hearings conducted before the same Administrative
Law Judge. Danny Rossi appeared pro se and also acted as the representative of the other
three petitioners. The agency was represented by Parks Department Enforcement
personnel, Sergeant Asha Harris and Officer Travis Herman.
Mr. Rossi began by noting that the issue of whether an enforcement officer's direction to
move a food cart was lawfully issued had been the subject of several prior hearings. He
submitted a number of determinations that dismissed the charge of failing to comply with
a lawful order of a Parks Department officer, including one concerning Martin Diaz, all
of which found that General Business Law 35-a is inapplicable to food vendors. Mr.
Rossi argued that the statute only "applies to general vending" and that "the priority
system isn't used in this case." As to any restriction on the number of vendors, Mr. Rossi
contended that the location where the carts were being operated is not a restricted area for
food vendors. In support of his argument, he referred to title 17 of the Administrative
Code (regulating food vending)[FN6] and a listing of streets restricted under that title,
which does not include the subject location. He further noted that under Parks
Department regulations, the only restriction on the placement of carts is that they be
located at least 30 feet from a park entrance, a rule with which he fully complied. In
response, Sergeant Harris reminded the ALJ that the violations were issued to petitioners
under section 35-a, not the Administrative Code. She then proceeded to explain the
priority licensing system.
The ALJ issued four substantially identical decisions dismissing all of the violations
against each of the four petitioners and finding that General Business Law 35-a is
inapplicable to food vendors. Thus, the ALJ concluded, petitioners were not subject to the
limit of two SVL holders per block face contained in subdivision (3), the directive given
to petitioners by DPR officers to remove their food carts from the sidewalk in front of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art was unlawful, and it could not serve as a basis for issuance
of a violation for failure to comply with the officer's "lawful direction or command" (56
RCNY 1-03 [c] [1]).
The DPR pursued an administrative appeal before the ECB, which reversed the ALJ's
[*6]findings. In four determinations essentially identical in substance and issued on the
same day, the Board found that the restriction on the number of vendors contained in
General Business Law section 35-a applies to food vendors and general vendors alike.
While no definition of the terms "goods, wares or merchandise" appears in section 35-a
or elsewhere in the New York State Consolidated Laws, the Board observed that the
dictionary definition of "goods" includes "food products," such as "baked goods" (citing
Webster's Third New International Dictionary [1986]), and that food products are among
the goods subject to regulation under article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code. The
Board also rejected petitioners' contention that they did not violate the statutory
prohibition against more than two SVL holders "vend[ing] simultaneously on the same
block face" because, as Danny Rossi had argued, the list of restricted areas issued by
DOHMH includes only the east side of Fifth Avenue, not the west side in front of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Board instead invoked the local requirement to obtain
written permission from the Parks Commissioner to vend in areas subject to his
supervision (Administrative Code 17-315 [i]) to find that the area fronting the museum
from East 79th to East 86th Street constitutes a "restricted block face." Finally, the Board
refused to consider Mr. Rossi's argument that an SVL may be used only for general
vending, that it requires a general vending license and is labeled "disabled veteran
general vendor" as "factual assertions made for the first time on appeal." In reversing the
ALJ's determinations, the Board sustained all of the violations against petitioners.
The subject article 78 proceedings were commenced by notices of petition and petitions
verified September 14, 2012. As on the administrative appeal, petitioners argued that
food vendors are not regulated by the state statute but, rather, are subject to city
regulation by DOHMH under article 17 of the Administrative Code. They further argued
that the ECB's finding that the area between East 79th and East 86th Street is a single
restricted block face for purposes of the statute is arbitrary and capricious. The City
responded that while its licensing provisions have distinguished between general vendors
and vendors of food since 1977, state law has never made any such distinction.
In granting the petitions, Supreme Court issued four substantially identical decisions
reasoning that only general (non-food) vendors are subject to General Business Law
35-a, while food vendors are regulated by Administrative Code 17-301 et seq. The
court further noted that "[t]he Department of Consumer Affairs, which is charged with
issuing general vendor licenses, explicitly excludes food vending from the purview of
general vendor licenses" (citing Administrative Code 20-452 [b]). Because it found
section 35-a to be inapplicable to food vendors, the court held that the DPR officers had
unlawfully directed petitioners to move their food carts and, thus, petitioners could not be
charged with failing to comply with a lawful direction of a Parks Department officer. The
court did not reach the question of whether the entire sidewalk area fronting the museum
constitutes a single block face for purposes of restricting vending to two specialized
vending licensees.
On appeal, the City, argues that while regulation of food vendors is the province of
DOHMH, General Business Law 35-a is not confined to general vendors but applies to
all vendors, including food vendors.
In support of their opposing position that the numerical restrictions of section 35-a do not
apply to them, petitioners, appearing pro se, respond first, as they argued before the ALJ,
that the Department of Consumer Affairs (DCA) has no authority to regulate their
operations, which fall under the aegis of DOHMH. Second, they point out that none of
them has been required to obtain an SVL in order to conduct operations as a food vendor
and that a general vending license does not permit the vending of food [FN7]. Finally,
since food is not mentioned among the wares covered by General Business Law 35-a,
they contend that the statute does not apply to vendors [*7]of food.
As the City frames it, the issue before us is whether the statutory reference to those
holding a "license to hawk, peddle, vend and sell goods, wares or merchandise or solicit
trade upon the streets and highways" (General Business Law 35-a [1][a]) includes food
vendors within its purview or, more particularly, whether the statute includes food among
the categories of "goods, wares or merchandise" sold by SVL holders. The City argues
that the dictionary definition of "goods" is particularly broad and that article 2 of the
Uniform Commercial Code, which applies to transactions in goods, is construed to
include food items (see e.g. Frigaliment Importing Co. v B.N.S. Intl. Sales Co., 190 F
Supp 116 [SD NY 1960] [chicken]; Feld v Levy & Sons, 37 NY2d 466 [1975] [bread
crumbs]).
It may well be that, as the City contends, General Business Law section 35-a can be read
to encompass food vendors. It is broadly drafted and nowhere expressly exempts the
vending of food from its ambit (see Majewski v Broadalbin-Perth Cent. School Dist., 91
NY2d 577, 583 [1998] [legislative intent is best reflected by the statutory language]. For
the purpose of this appeal, it may be assumed, without deciding, that the statute's scope is
as broad as the City suggests. It is unnecessary to decide the issue because, even
accepting the City's interpretation, the statute does not afford a predicate for issuance of
the subject violations to petitioners under the particular facts of this case.
Preoccupation with state law detracts from the purpose of article 78 review. The narrower
question to be decided by this Court is whether Supreme Court correctly found that the
ECB's administrative order overturning the ALJ's hearing determination was " arbitrary
and capricious, affected by error of law or an abuse of discretion'" under CPLR 7803 (3)
(Matter of Castanon v Franco, 290 AD2d 293, 293 [1st Dept 2002], quoting Matter of
Kaphan v DeBuono, 268 AD2d 909, 911 [3d Dept 2000])[FN8]. The subject violations
were issued pursuant to General Business Law 35-a (3), which provides in relevant
part:
"Specialized vending licenses issued pursuant to this section shall authorize the holders
thereof to vend on block faces . . . on the days and at the times when other vending
businesses have been prohibited on such block faces pursuant to any local law, ordinance,
by-law, rule or regulation. Not more than two such specialized vending licenses shall be
authorized pursuant to this subdivision per restricted block face . . ."
Where, as here, a question of pure statutory interpretation is presented, the courts are not
obliged to accord deference to the construction of the law espoused by the agency (see
Matter of KSLM Columbus Apts., Inc. v New York State Div. of Hous. & Community
Renewal, 5 NY3d 303, 312 [2005]).
Whether or not General Business Law 35-a applies to petitioners, the ECB identified no
local provision that otherwise prohibited vending in front of the Metropolitan Museum of
Art, thereby implicating the statutory limit of two vendors per block face. Subdivision (2)
of the statute subjects qualifying disabled veterans holding SVLs to local restrictions on
the placement of vending carts. Subdivision (3) permits such SVL holders to vend "on the
days and at the times when other vending businesses have been prohibited on such block
faces pursuant to any local law, ordinance, by-law, rule or regulation," with the proviso
that "[n]ot more than two such specialized vending licensees shall be authorized pursuant
to this subdivision per restricted block face" (General Business Law 35-a [3]). Thus,
even assuming that petitioners are bound by the statute, as the City contends, they must
be shown to have been using the status of SVL holder to vend at a time and place "when
other vending businesses have been prohibited." Once again, the City identifies no such
local prohibition in effect at this location, and the restriction of "not more than two . . .
specialized vending licenses per restricted block face" under 35-a (3) is not
[*8]implicated.
As the basis for finding the location where petitioners were issued violations to be a
restricted block face, the ECB invoked section 17-315 (i) of the Administrative Code,
which prohibits vending in areas subject to Parks Department jurisdiction "unless written
authorization therefor has been obtained from the commissioner." This provision is
inapposite. As the ALJ noted, petitioners were not cited for vending without a permit.
Nor does this provision impose the type of restriction contemplated by section 3 of the
statute by prohibiting the operation of "other vending businesses" on the block face on
particular days and at specified times. Absent a showing that, pursuant to statute,
petitioners were allowed to vend at their location when the locality prohibited other
vendors from conducting business, they are not subject to the statutory limit of two such
authorized vendors (General Business Law 35-a [3]).
Whether other regulations, such as those issued by DCA, restrict vending on the block
face at the subject times is immaterial. "It is settled that a court's review of the propriety
of an agency's determination is confined to the particular grounds invoked by the agency
in support of its action" (Matter of L & M Bus Corp. v New York City Dept. of Educ., 71
AD3d 127, 136 [1st Dept 2009], mod on other grounds 17 NY3d 149 [2011], citing
Matter of Yarborough v Franco, 95 NY2d 342, 347 [2000]; Matter of Montauk
Improvement v Proccacino, 41 NY2d 913, 913-914 [1977]). Thus, on this record, there is
no basis for finding petitioners in violation of the statutory limit of two SVL holders per
block face pusuant to section 35-a, subdivision 3. Furthermore, since the applicability of
section 35-a is the issue contested by the parties on appeal, there is no question that it has
been preserved for review.
As an alternative basis for annulment of the ECB determination, in the verified answer to
the individual petitions, it is conceded that "the City has separated vendors into general
vendors and food vendors for the purposes of licensing since 1977." The ECB's
determinations represent an inexplicable departure from administrative precedent and
conflict with these longstanding regulatory distinctions. As pointed out by Mr. Rossi at
the start of the administrative hearing before the ALJ, a number of prior determinations
found General Business Law 35-a to be inapplicable to food vendors. The ECB
acknowledged its break with agency precedent in its determination of the administrative
appeal in the Martin Diaz case. Referring specifically to an October 5, 2011
determination dismissing an identical violation issued to Mr. Diaz for failing to comply
with an order of a DPR officer, the Board stated, in a footnote, that "res judicata" is
inapplicable due to an "intervening change in the applicable legal context. . . . The
Board's finding that GBL 35-a applies to food vendors is such a change in context."
An agency, like a court, is not inexorably bound by the doctrine of stare decisis to
conform to an incorrect application of a statute, but it is required to provide the reason for
a change in its established position (Matter of Charles A. Field Delivery Serv., [Roberts]
66 NY2d 516, 519, 520 [1985]). Having stated that its finding that General Business Law
35-a is applicable to food vendors constitutes a change in position, the ECB's failure to
provide any explanation renders the instant determinations arbitrary as a matter of law.
As the Court of Appeals noted:
"when an agency determines to alter its prior stated course it must set forth its reasons for
doing so. Unless such an explanation is furnished, a reviewing court will be unable to
determine whether the agency has changed its prior interpretation of the law for valid
reasons, or has simply overlooked or ignored its prior decision. Absent such an
explanation, failure to conform to agency precedent will, therefore, require reversal on
the law as arbitrary, even though there is in the record substantial evidence to support the
determination made" (id. at 520 [internal citation omitted).
The ECB determination sets forth various reasons why the agency thinks section 35-a
should apply to food vendors; it does not state why the City is departing from a
regulatory system that has concededly drawn a clear distinction between food and nonfood vendors for nearly four decades. Although the issue was placed before it, the ECB
has not explained why, or by what [*9]means, regulations aimed at general vendors are to
be applied to food vendors, essentially by treating them as specialized vending licensees.
An agency, as a general matter, is required to adopt a rational interpretation of the law
under which it operates (see Matter of Howard v Wyman, 28 NY2d 434, 438 [1971]), and
particularly so where, as here, the agency proposes to reverse its position with respect to
the law's application.
ECB's determination does not demonstrate that its interpretation of General Business Law
section 35-a is consistent with the City's existing regulatory structure. As Supreme Court
noted, the definition of "general vendor" specifically provides that it "shall not include a
food vendor" (Administrative Code 20-452 [b], citing Administrative Code 17-306
[c]). Furthermore, as Mr. Rossi observed, the specialized vending licensee is designated
on the license itself as "a disabled veteran general vendor." In addition, qualification for
an SVL requires proof that the applicant "holds a general vending license" (6 RCNY 2315 [b][3][iii]). Thus, under the City's licensing system, a general vendor is not permitted
to sell food; only a general vendor can apply for an SVL; the SVL is expressly
denominated a "specialized license," held by a "general vendor"; and SVL holders are
only restricted by General Business Law 35-a (2) "[i]n areas where general vending is
authorized." Taken together, these various provisions amply support Supreme Court's
conclusion that the City's restrictions on the number of qualifying disabled veterans who
may vend on a restricted block face apply exclusively to those persons it licenses as
general vendors [FN9]. The provisions also illustrate the extent to which ECB's proposal
to subject food vendors to statutory restrictions placed on SVL holders is at variance with
the established regulatory scheme.
As this matter illustrates, application of general vending restrictions to food vendors
presents some practical inconsistencies. The evidence presented to the ALJ by Mr. Rossi
demonstrates that the areas where food vending is restricted by DCA regulations differ
from those areas restricted by DOHMH regulations. The policy reasons behind the
requirement of consistent results particularly "guidance for those governed by the
determination made" and "stability in the law" are not advanced by requiring the food
vendor, regulated by DOHMH, to anticipate being subjected to vending restrictions
directed at the general vendor and promulgated by DCA (Matter of Charles A. Field
Delivery Serv., [Roberts] 66 NY2d at 519). Nor are impartiality and the appearance of
justice promoted by issuing a food vendor a general vending license, which does not
permit the vending of food, for the apparent purpose of subjecting the food vendor to
general vending restrictions (id.).
The majority questions the City's position that the five-block stretch of sidewalk fronting
the Metropolitan Museum of Art from 79th to 84th Streets constitutes a single "block
face." Agency regulations define the term as "the area of sidewalk spanning from one
intersection to the next" (6 RCNY 2-315 [a][I]). Meanwhile, Vehicle and Traffic Law
120, subdivision (a) defines the term "intersection" as, inter alia, "the lateral boundary
lines of the roadways of two highways which join one another at, or approximately at,
right angles." It is beyond dispute that the T-junction formed by each intervening street
from 80th to 83rd Street constitutes an intersection under the statute, and ECB has
offered no explanation for its contrary interpretation. The significance of the omission in
the present context appears to be minimal, however, in view of Sergeant Harris's
testimony that, due to the prohibition against vending in bus stops and the profusion of
bus stops along the entire length of sidewalk fronting the museum, there are only
[*10]two areas where vendors can legally position their carts. Thus, it may be that
petitioners and the competing food vendors who outranked them were operating not only
on the same block face, as construed by the ECB, but on the same block, as delineated by
bounding intersections, rendering the point moot for the purpose of determining whether
statutory density restrictions were exceeded.
In any event, Supreme Court did not reach the question of whether the ECB's definition
of block face is arbitrary and capricious, the City is not aggrieved by any adverse
decision on the matter (CPLR 5511), the subject has not been briefed by the parties, and
the issue is not before this Court. Even if the question were properly presented for review,
the pertinent inquiry is whether the ECB has a rational basis for construing the sidewalk
fronting the Metropolitan Museum as a single block face, not merely, as the majority
decides, whether the agency's construction of the term intersection varies from that of the
Vehicle and Traffic Law. "It is well settled that the construction given statutes and
regulations by the agency responsible for their administration, if not irrational or
unreasonable, should be upheld" (Matter of Howard v Wyman, 28 NY2d at 438 [1971];
see Matter of Tommy & Tina, Inc. v Department of Consumer Affairs of City of N.Y., 95
AD2d 724 [1st Dept 1983], affd for reasons stated below 62 NY2d 671 [1984]). In the
absence of any briefing by the City concerning the reason for designating the subject
location as a restricted block face, this issue is not reviewable.
Finally, a determination of whether petitioners were in violation of statutory density
restrictions under the criterion established by the majority would first require a
determination as to whether petitioners were vending on the same block as competing
food vendors, a question unanswerable on the present record. We do not know where
these food carts were located at the time the violations were issued. All the food carts
could have been clustered within a single block directly in front of the museum entrance,
which would subject petitioners to the restriction of section 35-a (3) even if the stretch of
sidewalks fronting the museum are deemed separate block faces. Thus, simply finding
that "the multi-block sidewalk span in front of the museum is not a single block face"
does not, as the majority presumes, automatically resolve the issue in favor of petitioners.
Accordingly, the respective judgments (each denominated order and judgment) should be
affirmed.
THIS CONSTITUTES THE DECISION AND ORDER
OF THE SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION, FIRST DEPARTMENT.
ENTERED: APRIL 9, 2015
DEPUTY CLERK
Footnotes
Footnote 1: There is nothing in the legislative history to indicate that the legislature
intended to exclude food vending.
Footnote 2: The dissent's reference to the number of bus stops in front of the museum, an
issue not fully developed in the administrative record, has no bearing on the legal issue of
whether the sidewalk area in front of the museum constitutes a single "block face."
Footnote 3: Although, in general, the provisions of GBL 35-a(7) are not applicable to the
area where petitioners were vending, the specific prohibitions contained in GBL 35a(7)(i) apply to all SVL holders, regardless of where they vend (see GBL 35-a[3]).
Footnote 4: In the article 78 petitions, petitioners argued that these size limitations create
a disadvantage for disabled veteran food vendors since they purportedly conflict with
certain city regulations. We do not reach this issue because it was not raised in the ECB
proceedings (see 72A Realty Assoc. v New York City Envtl. Control Bd., 275 AD2d 284,
286 [1st Dept 2000]).
Footnote 5: The term "block face" is not defined in General Business Law article 4.
Footnote 6: Presumably Administrative Code 17-315 (i) requiring written authorization
from the Commissioner of Parks to vend within areas under Parks Department
jurisdiction.
Footnote 7: General Business Law 35-a (5) provides for a color coded identification to
accompany an SVL, which shall be displayed by the SVL holder, and current DCA rules
provide for the assignment of a priority rank to the vendor.
Footnote 8: The City concedes that since petitioners do not challenge any factual finding
(CPLR 7803 [4]; 7804 [g]), this is the appropriate standard of review.
Footnote 9: The City, at oral argument, informed this Court that it does indeed issue
SVL's to food vendors, and there are indications in the record that some, if not all of the
petitioners have obtained them. Presumably, to qualify, petitioners first obtained general
vending licenses. The City does not explain its rationale for issuing a general vending
license to a vendor who cannot use it to sell food, and neither party has provided any
guidance concerning the actual use of the SVL by food vendors within the existing
regulatory framework.
Search N.Y. GBS. LAW 32 : NY Code - Section 32: Licenses to veterans of the armed
forces of the United States
1. Every honorably discharged member of the armed forces of the United States, who is a
resident of this state and a veteran of any war, or who shall have served in the armed
forces of the United States overseas, and the surviving spouse of any such veteran, if a
resident of the state, shall have the right to hawk, peddle, vend and sell goods, wares or
merchandise or solicit trade upon the streets and highways within the county of his or her
residence, as the case may be, or if such county is embraced wholly by a city, within such
city, by procuring a license for that purpose to be issued as herein provided. No part of
the lands or premises under the jurisdiction of the division of the state fair in the
department of agriculture and markets, shall be deemed a street or highway within the
meaning of this section.
2. Any such former member of the armed forces of the United States may present to the
clerk of any county in which he has resided for a period of at least six months, his
original certificate of honorable discharge, or a copy thereof duly certified by the
recording officer or a certificate in lieu of lost discharge issued by a department of the
armed forces of the United States which shall show that the person presenting it is a
veteran of any war, or that he has served overseas in the armed forces of the United States.
He shall also fill out a blank which shall when filled out state his name, residence at the
time of application, nature of goods to be sold, and if the applicant is working on
commission or percentage for any person, firm or corporation, the name and business
address of such person, firm or corporation. This statement shall be signed by the
applicant in the presence of the county clerk, or a deputy designated by him, and the
name on this application and on the original certificate of honorable discharge shall be
compared by the county clerk to ascertain if the person so applying is the same person
named in the original certificate of honorable discharge. Such county clerk when so
satisfied shall issue, without cost, to such former member of the armed forces of the
United States, a license certifying him to be entitled to the benefits of this section.
3. A copy of this statement shall be attached to the license granted by the county clerk
and shall remain attached thereto. On presentation to such clerk of the affidavit of such
surviving spouse and two other residents of the county, that he or she is such surviving
spouse, accompanied by such original certificate of honorable discharge of his or her
deceased spouse, and the filing of the statement hereinabove required, such county clerk
shall issue, without cost to the surviving spouse, a license certifying the surviving spouse
to be entitled to the benefits of this section.
4. The license provided for by this section shall be used and valid only for use in the
county in which it was issued, except that if issued in a county embraced wholly by a city,
it may be used within such city.
5. The application for the license herein provided shall be accompanied by a photograph
of the applicant taken within thirty days prior to such application and upon the issuance
of such license shall be attached thereto.
6. A license issued without cost, under the provisions of this section, shall be personal to
the licensee and any assignment or transfer thereof shall be absolutely void. Upon
satisfactory proof by affidavit of the loss or destruction of any license issued as herein
provided, the county clerk shall issue a duplicate license for the one so lost or destroyed
and in which event the word "duplicate" shall be legibly written in ink across the face
thereof.
7. A person assigning or transferring, or attempting to assign or transfer any such license
or using or attempting to use such license contrary to the provisions of this section shall
be guilty of a misdemeanor.
8. Any provisions of this section to the contrary notwithstanding, any city, village or
town may, by local law or ordinance, require a person holding a license issued pursuant
to the provisions of this section by the clerk of the county in which such city, village or
town is located, to file a further application with such official of the city, village or town
as is designated in such local law or ordinance, for the issuance of a local license and may
prescribe the terms and conditions under which such local license may be issued and may
prohibit the right to hawk, peddle, vend and sell goods, wares or merchandise or solicit
trade upon the streets and highways within any such city, village or town under the
provisions of this section unless such local license has been issued. - See more at:
http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/nycode/GBS/4/32#sthash.6kd3xEHG.dpuf
adult child if the child assumes the duty to support the veteran.
The license shall revert to the licensing agency when:
(1) the veteran who held the license immediately before
the transfer dies;
(2) the spouse dies or divorces the veteran who held
the license immediately before the transfer; or
(3) the child to whom the license is transferred dies or
renounces the obligation to support the veteran who
held the license immediately before the transfer.
measured as a
entranceway;
radius
extending
from
(iv) sell or offer for sale any item directly from any
parked or double-parked motor vehicle;
(v) use electricity or oil or gasoline powered equipment
devices or machinery of any kind; provided, however, that
such specialized vending license holder shall be authorized
to use self-contained battery packs not exceeding sixteen
volts in total solely to provide lighting for their
vending business;
(vi) vend within thirty feet of an entrance to a park or
within a park under the jurisdiction of the agency in such
city that is responsible for such city's parks and
recreational areas unless written authorization therefore
has been obtained from such agency;
(vii) vend within twenty feet of a sidewalk cafe;
(viii) vend within five feet from bus shelters, news stands,
public telephones, or disabled access ramps; and
(ix) vend within ten feet from entrances or exits to
buildings which are exclusively residential at street
level.
7-a. In the borough of Manhattan in the city of New York, the following
additional provisions shall apply to the issuance of specialized
vending licenses to disabled veteran vendors pursuant to this section:
(a) such specialized vending license holders shall additionally
be prohibited from vending on Broadway between Murray Street and
Battery Place and on Park Row between Ann Street and Spruce
Street;
(b) such specialized vending license holders shall additionally
be prohibited from vending in the area including and bounded on
the east by the easterly side of Broadway, on the south by the
southerly side of Liberty Street, on the west by the westerly
side of West Street and on the north by the northerly side of
Vesey Street.
KASWAN v. APONTE
142 Misc.2d 298 (1989)
Joseph Kaswan, petitioner pro se. Peter L. Zimroth, Corporation Counsel (Terri Feinstein
Sasanow of counsel), for respondents.
EDWARD H. LEHNER, J.
The issue raised in this case is whether the New York City regulation restricting the areas
where street peddling is authorized
[142 Misc.2d 299]
is applicable to one who holds a disabled veterans preferential vendors license pursuant
to article 4 of the General Business Law.
This proceeding, which was commenced by petitioner acting pro se, seeks to enjoin the
city "from violating the provisions" of General Business Law 35. Petitioner asserts that
he is physically disabled as a result of military combat and holds a "Veterans License to
Hawk, Peddle and Vend Merchandise" issued pursuant to General Business Law 32,
subdivision (1) of which provides in part that: "Every honorably discharged member of
the armed forces of the United States, who is a resident of this state and a veteran of any
war, or who shall have served in the armed forces of the United States overseas * * *
shall have the right to hawk, peddle, vend and sell goods, wares or merchandise or solicit
trade upon the streets and highways within the county of his or her residence * * * or if
such county is embraced wholly by a city, within such city, by procuring a license for that
purpose to be issued as herein provided".
Subdivision (2) provides that such licenses shall be issued, without cost, and subdivision
(8) provides that: "Any provisions of this section to the contrary notwithstanding, any
city, village or town may, by local law or ordinance, require a person holding a license
issued pursuant to the provisions of this section * * * to file a further application * * * as
is designated in such local law or ordinance, for the issuance of a local license and may
prescribe the terms and conditions under which such local license may be issued".
Pursuant to authority granted by the City Council, the Department of Consumer Affairs
adopted Regulation 11 which restricts general and food vendors from peddling at
hundreds of specified locations in the city during designated hours. Petitioner, who
received a summons for selling in violation of the regulation, asserts that it is inapplicable
to him in light of the fact that he holds a physically disabled veterans license pursuant to
article 4 of the General Business Law.
The city contends that the regulation applies to all as "the interest of the City in
protecting pedestrians from being forced off the sidewalks in highly congested areas far
outweighs petitioner's singular interest in peddling wherever he wants". Further, it argues
that petitioner, in effect, seeks a writ of prohibition which "does not lie to prevent
administrative action such as enforcement of municipal regulations".
[142 Misc.2d 300]
DISCUSSION
On the procedural issue, the court will convert the proceeding, pursuant to CPLR 103 (c),
into an action for a declaratory judgment, and since the issue is clearly one solely of
statutory construction, will treat the papers as cross motions for summary judgment.
A form of this statute has been in effect since 1896, the basic advantage granted to
nondisabled veterans being the right to obtain a vendor's license without requiring the
payment of a fee. As noted above, General Business Law 32 (8) permits localities to
require an additional license, and to "prescribe the terms and conditions under which such
local license may be issued".
The key section, insofar as this case is concerned, is General Business Law 35, which
provides in part that: "no such bylaw, ordinance or regulation shall prevent or in any
manner interfere with the hawking or peddling, without the use of any but a hand driven
vehicle, in any street, avenue, alley, lane or park of a municipal corporation, by any
honorably discharged member of the armed forces of the United States who is physically
disabled as a result of injuries received while in the service of said armed forces and the
holder of a license granted pursuant to section thirty-two".
The most recent amendment of section 35 occurred in 1978 when by Laws of 1978 (ch
550, 27) the term "physically disabled" replaced the word "cripple". The amendment
was part of an omnibus measure to eliminate anachronistic terms from the law that were
"demeaning to the physically handicapped". (See, 1978 McKinney's Session Laws of NY,
at 1737.)
Clearly then, under section 35 a locality cannot by local law restrict the right of a person
granted a license as a physically disabled veteran under section 32 to sell goods on the
streets. This is not to say that a local law or regulation of general applicability relating to
public safety can be violated by the holder of such a license. But the regulation here is
essentially directed to avoiding a congestion of peddlers at certain heavily traveled
locations. (See, Huggins v City of New York, 126 Misc.2d 908 [Sup Ct, NY County],
which upheld the validity of Regulation 11.)
Since apparently the number of persons holding physically disabled veterans peddlers
licenses is not large, there is no reasonable fear of congestion, and the potential for injury
to
[142 Misc.2d 301]
Michele Birnbaum
1035 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10028
Tel & Fax: (212)427-8250
TESTIMONY ON INTROS 72,78, 432, 1303
OCTOBER 26, 2016
Speaker Mark-Viverito, Chair Espinal, Council Member Levine, the Committee and all
Council Members, thank you for hearing my testimony today.
I am testifying as a co-founder and part of the coalition of New Yorkers for Street
Vending Reform and as Co-Chair of the Vendor Task Force Committee of Community
Board 8 in Manhattan.
We are opposed to lifting the cap on food vendors to 635 per year from 2018 through
2025 and to giving power to the Department of Transportation in consultation with
other city agencies to remove all caps after 2025, as called for in Intro #1303. It is not
explained anywhere in this bill as to how you arrived at the 635 number.
After carefully reading Intro # 1303, I also have many concerns. While I am pleased that
you have included a vendor enforcement force, something for which Ive advocated for
many years, you have not addressed the size of the force which I believe you should
define by explaining its ratio to the number of vendors on the street. You have said that it
will be active in area adjacent to retail, congested areas and areas included in the
designated vending locations pilot program, but to be successful, it needs to be
substantially active throughout the city just as the parking meter compliance force is.
While you have addressed the issue of location by assigning permits to each of the five
boroughs, you have not addressed the street and sidewalk crowding in both commercial
and residential areas that the proposed increase in licenses would cause, nor have you
addressed the illegality of all food truck parking. At this moment, there is no legal
parking spot for a food truck. They park at meters, in No Standing Zones, Commercial
Loading and Unloading Zones, Ambulance Parking and Access-A-Ride only spots, etc.
To even consider an increase in the number of licenses without considering a program of
assigned vendor locations using something like a bidding or medallion system, is asking
for chaos on our streets. There have been many reports of violence over disputed vending
location spots and reports of carts being left on the streets round the clock so as not to
lose their vending space. This is a breach of the health code which requires the carts to be
cleaned every 24 hours, lures rats to the location, causes visual blight and gives the
businesses and residents no relief from vending on their streets.
Violations should be issued to both the permit holder and the licensed vendor who is
manning the cart of the permittee, as both are contributing to the non-compliant act.
The Environmental Impact Statement or study that you are proposing should not
take place after the additional vendors are on the streets, but before and should
include analysis of the effect of street vendors on the quality of life of residents
as well as businesses and bricks and mortar food establishments. An EIS for a building is
done prior to its construction.
The EIS will look at the impact on job opportunities for vendors, the diversity of food
options available, sidewalk congestion, the health of the restaurant industry and the health
of the food retail industry while the quality of life of a resident who lives with the
cooking odors, fumes, generator noise and oil spills is not considered.
Also, it is not the responsibility of government to make sure that there is diversity of food
options in the city. The free market will do that, and any type of food could be
accommodated within a bricks and mortar location. These locations could be shared by
those who might otherwise have individual trucks or carts on the street, and sharing
storefronts should be encouraged and incentivized. There is precedent for that in the city,
i.e. Chinatown and Baskin Robins and Dunkin Donoughts. Parking lots could be
converted to accommodate multiple food trucks, and areas such as La Marqueta on Park
@ 125th should be encouraged.
Increasing the caps without addressing location will empty store fronts by promoting
and incentivizing food businesses to expand, not to other store locations, but to the
street where their expenses will be minimal. This is already happening and has been
going on for many years. It is a puzzle how this happens when the law supposedly calls
for one license/one cart.
Your proposed Street Vendor Advisory Board consists of the Commissioners of the
Department of Consumer Affairs, the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, the
Department of Small Business Services, the Department of Transportation, and the
Police Department, with three members appointed by the Speaker, one of whom
represents street vendors, one of whom represents the small business community and one
of whom who represents a community organization, and two members appointed by the
Mayor, one of whom represents street vendors and one of whom represents the small
business community. But, missing from this panel and should be included, is the City
Planning Commission who should be the ultimate arbiter of what happens on our streets.
Also, one member from a community group is wholly inadequate, as most of the other
members are appointed by city government and will reflect the beliefs of their appointees.
Communities should have a multiple of their own representatives.
The Advisory Board should not be proposing locations. The communities should be the
voices of whether or not vending should be increased or decreased in their neighborhoods
and where these locations, if any, should be. Also, there is no mechanism for an
individual or community group to request that a street be restricted to vending, as there
was with the now defunct Vendor Review Panel. The individual has no place to bring
complaints and expect arbitration. He/she should be able to come to this panel.
If the Advisory Board does suggest locations, they should be subject to an open hearing.
Community based planning is lauded by many of our elected officials, and it should be
utilized for decisions on street vending locations, as well.
School kitchens should not be used for food preparation by anyone not affiliated with the
parent or student body of that school, as security in our schools should be paramount.
The training, mapping and web-site that you refer to should be implemented immediately,
even if there is no increase in licenses.
With respect to Intros # 72, 78 and 432, I believe they have merit.
Thank you for your kind attention.
Sincerely,
Michele Birnbaum
A Co-founder of New Yorkers for Street Vending Reform
and
Co-Chair of the Vendor Task Force Committee of Community Board 8 in Manhattan.
- first set up a Citizens Advisory Board of local residents, business and community
groups to address the many flaws already present in the current vending
system before issuing thousands of more permits
- implement a Street Vendors Enforcement Unit, specially trained in the complex
vending laws
- offer more details on where the new food carts can locate, with input from the
Citizens Advisory Board
- table this at committee until more community and business input is heard
Best regards.
Anne Palmer
NY 10012
Marna Lawrence
19 Cleveland Place, #1D
New York, NY 10012
October 24, 2016
Melissa Mark-Viverito, Speaker
New York City Council
250 Broadway Suite 1856
New York, NY 10007
Re: Vendor Legislation: Concerns & Opposition
Dear Speaker Viverito:
I am writing in regard to the Street Vending Modernization Act, and other related
legislation recently proposed in the City Council, which will make comprehensive reforms
to the rules that govern mobile food vendors on our sidewalks. For a number of years
many of us who live in SoHo and NoHo and the surrounding neighborhoods such as Little
Italy (Nolita) have been focused on improving the overwhelming situation regarding food
vendors, and we all know that much work still needs to be done to adequately address the
problems before us.
However, this current vendor legislation particularly specific proposals that would
reduce many of the placement restrictions now in place would not be good for our local
community. Therefore I cannot support the bills as presented.
This new legislation will add 4,200 new food vendor permits before any good study is
done that would help everyone to better understand the vending situation. The
proposed bills do not address the black market for mobile food vendor permits, or the
thousands of summonses that are issued and dismissed each year because of vagueness in
the rules. Further, the bills fail to address the noise and exhaust pollution created by food
carts, or the use of non-compliant and often dangerous gasoline powered generators.
The legislation continues the one size fits all approach, and is being put forward without
adequate community input. I urge you and your colleagues on the Council to rethink the
current legislation, and to open the discussion to include the Community Boards along with
a wider range of the local stakeholders, most particularly local residents..
This is a complicated topic that will impact communities for years to come. Reform is
welcome, but it must be done in way that allows meaningful input. As currently drafted, I
cannot support this legislation and I urge you to slow down the process, so that a better
result can be achieved.
Sincerely,
Marna Lawrence
Enforcement Unit is only part of the solution and is not a magic potion
that will cure all of the problems of the current system.
I welcome a pilot designated vending locations program to test innovative approaches to
the placement of vendors in our City. As currently drafted, a designated location could
be an entire borough and DOT could rewrite all of the rules without meaningful oversite.
Significantly more detail is needed to define the goals, scale and scope of
the designated vending locations to ensure that it is successful and makes
improvements to the system.
This is a complicated topic that will impact communities for years to come. Reform is
welcome, but it must be done in way that allows meaningful input from impacted
stakeholders-from small business owners, local residents, civic groups, property owners
and vendors. Forming an advisory board with meaningful opportunities for
input and dialogue must be the first step in that process.
As currently drafted, I cannot support this legislation and I urge you to take the
approach Ive outlined above in tackling this much needed reform of the street vending
system.
Most Sincerely,
Jared Epstein
Vice President
Aurora Capital Associates
Michele Varian
496 Broadway
NYC, NY 10012
October 25, 2016
Melissa Mark-Viverito, Speaker
New York City Council
250 Broadway Suite 1856
New York, NY 10007
Re: Vendor Legislation: Concerns & Opposition
Dear Speaker Viverito:
I am writing in regard to the Street Vending Modernization Act, and other related
legislation recently proposed in the City Council, which will make comprehensive reforms
to the rules that govern mobile food vendors on our sidewalks. For a number of years
many of us who live in SoHo and NoHo have been focused on improving the overwhelming
situation regarding food vendors, and we all know that much work still needs to be done to
adequately address the problems before us.
However, this current vendor legislation particularly specific proposals that would
reduce many of the placement restrictions now in place would not be good for our local
community. Therefore I cannot support the bills as presented.
This new legislation will add 4,200 new food vendor permits before any good study is done
that would help everyone to better understand the vending situation. The proposed bills do
not address the black market for mobile food vendor permits, or the thousands of
summonses that are issued and dismissed each year because of vagueness in the rules.
Further, the bills fail to address the noise and exhaust pollution created by food carts, or
the use of non-compliant and often dangerous gasoline powered generators.
The legislation continues the one size fits all approach, and is being put forward without
adequate community input. I urge you and your colleagues on the Council to rethink the
current legislation, and to open the discussion to include the Community Boards along with
a wider range of the local stakeholders, most particularly local residents..
This is a complicated topic that will impact communities for years to come. Reform is
welcome, but it must be done in way that allows meaningful input. As currently drafted, I
cannot support this legislation and I urge you to slow down the process, so that a better
result can be achieved.
Sincerely,
In our neighborhood alone, due to the growth of Lenox Hill Hospital, Sloan Kettering, Cornell
New York Hospital, and the addition of many new high rise residential buildings, and last but not
least, the construction and the soon to be open Second Avenue Subway, our sidewalks are
overwhelmed by people going to and from work and the ordinary hustle and bustle of a vibrant
residential community.
Our neighborhood sidewalks cannot handle more street vendors, let alone the ones that are out
there today. Take a walk down York Avenue along the hospital corridor, even with wide
sidewalks, you can barely make it down the sidewalk (imagine you are elderly or in a wheel
chair) with the multiple vendors all along the sidewalks right up to the crosswalks, and take a
walk down the same corridor at night, when you can see the rat population at play as a result of
the residue of all the on sidewalk cooking and the refuse left by patrons in trash cans that were
not meant to handle restaurant refuse.
Exit the subway at 68th Street and Lexington Avenue near Hunter College, and see the
congestion on the sidewalk caused by more than 5 huge food vendor trucks and carts on a daily
basis -- again the debris, greased sidewalks, and trash is, frankly disgusting. And the only means
of enforcement of what little rules there are, the police do what they can, and what is that? Give
tickets, and those are meaningless. Ask the police yourselves, did you know, they can only issue
a maximum of 3 tickets a day to each cart? And the dollar amounts of the tickets themselves do
not act as a deterrent to bad behavior either. Did you know since many of the vendors are not the
actual holders of the permits, the tickets go to some other source and wind up never being paid?
Try and turn the corner at Lexington Avenue and 72nd Street to walk towards the bus or the
subway at 68th street, where the coffee vendor cart and his customers block pedestrians from
crossing the street on a regular basis.
While the bill proposes setting up an enforcement mechanism with an Advisory Board, which we
absolutely applaud, it contemplates that the Advisory Board will only have one member of a
community organization. This is not enough because every community is different. We
believe it is the Community Boards that should have the ultimate jurisdiction for determining
placement of vendors, following whatever the law and rules are regarding street vending, in
collaboration with the stakeholders in their communities.
In that regard, based on the experience of our neighborhood, we believe the bill should include
the following:
There should be at least 20 feet from the doorway of any residential building or any entry way to
a doctors office (be it classified as a residential or commercial building) to any vending cart.
There should be at least 10 feet from any hydrant or any crosswalk to any vending cart;
Pedestrians should not be forced to cross 2X2 because a coffee vendor is wedged right between
the edge of a crosswalk and a tree pit.
A vendor that is grilling meat should not be closer than 10 feet to any tree pit. After the
Department of Health Commissioner Schiffs testimony this morning regarding the air
4584325.1
particulate that one meat griller spews into the air in one day (being the equivalent of the amount
of pollution sent into the air by a diesel truck driving 3500 miles), we dont believe that any
future licenses should be given for this type of street vendor.
There should be no carts permitted within 6 blocks (in every direction) of any entry to any
subway station the priority should be to maximize the pedestrian ingress and egress to the
subways. Just take a walk down East 77th Street and see what that it looks like during rush hour,
as pedestrians need to make their way around a coffee cart on the corner of Second Avenue and
77th Street.
There should be no carts permitted within 40 feet of any sign denoting a bus stop, 20 feet is not
enough, the buses are too long, and the vending carts wind up block egress from the buses, or
entry to the buses, when two buses are in the bus stop simultaneously, as often happens.
There should be no vendor carts of the same type of merchandise within 20 feet of a storefront
that sells the same type of merchandise, i.e., no coffee vendor near any Dunkin Donuts or diner.
Each vendor should be required to carry at least $1million of liability insurance. What if the
propane tank they use explodes? Again, this was not an issue 100 years ago, but it certainly is
today.
Vendors should only be permitted on Avenues, not a residential side and cross streets.
Vendors should not be permitted to have neon and advertisements on their carts.
Vendors should be required to clean-up the sidewalk they occupy at the end of every day before
they leave.
Vendors need to be as close to the curb as possible, the new legislation says they have to be at
least 3 feet from the curb into the sidewalk (we believe the current rule is that they have to abut
the curb). To move them further onto the sidewalk, again impedes, on what the sidewalks are
really meant for, pedestrians from being able to move freely and without fear of getting hurt.
Whatever agency will ultimately be in charge of enforcement, its budget has to be robust, and
there cant just be 4 enforcement officers per borough.
Inspection of the cleanliness of vending carts cant just be done at the commissaries, just like
restaurants get surprise inspections, the same must be done by the agents while the vendors are
on the street.
While New York City has a tradition of street vendors, it is first and foremost a city of
pedestrians, and we need to respect our pedestrians and keep their space as safe and clean as we
can.
Thank you.
4584325.1
10/28/2016
Nutrition
Great strides have been made in improving public health across New York City in recent years,
notably reducing the number of both obese1 and severely obese2 public school children. However,
the statistics are still grim, and New York remains in the midst of an epidemic of diet-related
diseases that are disproportionately impacting racial/ethnic minorities and those with lower
incomes:
More than half of adult New Yorkers are overweight (34 percent) or obese (25 percent),3
and obesity is associated with poorer mental health outcomes, reduced quality of life and
some of the leading causes of death in this country: diabetes, heart disease, stroke and
certain cancers.4
More than one in ten New Yorkers are living with diabetes, putting them at increased risk
of heart attack, stroke, blindness, kidney failure, nerve damage and amputations.5
More than one in three adults lives with cardiovascular disease.6 Heart disease and stroke
are among the leading causes of death in New York City.7
Only 10 percent of New Yorkers are consuming the recommended daily servings of fruits
and vegetables.3
While many laudable initiatives have significantly improved the citys food landscape across the
five boroughs (e.g., Green Carts, Shop Healthy, Farmers Markets/Health Bucks, and FRESH),
there is more that can be done and street vendors can play a critical role in increasing access to
either healthy or unhealthy foods. Studies show the negative impact of street vendors selling
unhealthy products:
A 2014 study of mobile food vendors in the Bronx showed that unhealthy food
vendors outnumbered healthy ones, and the former can negatively impact the overall
healthfulness of a neighborhoods food environment with researchers adding the
important caveat that it need not.8
Research on urban food vending indicates that mobile food vendors contribute to
after-school snacking among children, a consideration that should be given due
concern,9 considering the number of our citys public school children who walk by
vendors on their way to/from school or transit to school.
To address nutritional concerns, we propose adding an incentive for vendors to: display calorie
and/or nutritional information for the products they are selling (as well as ingredients lists, upon
request), who sell only fruits and vegetables, and/or who locate their carts in areas designated as
in need of additional healthy food outlets. These recommendations are aligned with previous city
regulations (i.e., menu labeling in chain restaurants and Green Carts requirements) and would
further the citys efforts to promote healthy eating, address disparities in access to nutritious food
and improve the overall food environment.
Global health and wellness sales are expected to hit a high of $1 trillion in the U.S. in the coming
year.10 Research has shown that customers increasingly want and seek healthy options,11 and are
willing to pay more for them (if their income allows).12 Stands that sold healthier items fared just
as well economically as those vending unhealthy products.13 Corner stores that sold produce
made a higher profit from fruits and vegetables than from energy-dense snacks.14 Restaurant
chains that increased their lower-calorie food and beverage offerings had increased sales and
customer traffic.15 In NYC, we can point to the success of restaurants offering healthy food and
beverages such as Dig Inn, Roast Kitchen, The Butchers Daughter, Fresh & Co., Chopt,
Sweetgreen, Liquiteria and Hu.
While the research on calorie menu labeling and/or nutrient labeling has shown mixed
results,16,17,18,19 in addition to the studies that show a positive impact there is also anecdotal
evidence that it creates conversation and awareness around healthy food choice and
consumption and still has significant value as a base to improve healthy food policy.
Food Safety
The city has taken steps to improve food safety for those who eat out, including the 2010
legislation that introduced restaurant letter grading, which informs consumers at point-of-entry of
every establishments sanitary status. While NYCs mobile food vendors are required to take the
Food Protection Course for Mobile Vendors,20 food safety in mobile vending (with inherent
challenges such as lack of access to running water) remains a grave concern.
A study of NYC food vendors published in Public Health Reports (the official journal of
the U.S. Public Health Service and the U.S. Surgeon General) documented risks to public
health, including unsanitary food handling, food contamination, and meat storage at
potentially improper temperatures.21
A 2015 study of Manhattan food vendors found that the majority (57 percent) of vendors
did not change gloves after handling money, a requirement of the NYC Health Code to
prevent foodborne illnesses.22
To address food safety considerations, we propose that vendors undergo supplementary training
that includes education covering the most common violations that put the public at risk for
foodborne illness. We understand that food vendors are obligated to take a food safety course,
however, based on the research cited above, we believe that street food vendors need additional
specialized food safety training, including information on how they can avoid expensive
violations. Opening up more than 600 new permits is a unique opportunity to continue the
narrative and discussion regarding a higher level of training for new food vendors.
We propose these amendments to be included in the form of an incentive to the vendors, to
encourage adoption rather than as yet another requirement subject to a fine if not met (as a
study shows that the majority of street vendor fines go unpaid23 and the goal is not to place
undue burden on vendors).
Selling Healthy Food by Vendors and Assistance from the New York City Food Policy
Center at Hunter College
To help vendors receive incentives, we at the NYC Food Policy Center at Hunter College, who
work with more than 100 nutrition students each year at Hunter College, would like to offer our
resources to provide a sustainable program, utilizing our students to analyze recipes from
vendors who need assistance with providing nutrition information on a voluntary, cost-free basis
to the vendor.
We would also like to offer to create website materials and conduct trainings for these food
vendors to demonstrate the value, both from an economic and public health standpoint, in selling
healthier food options. Education can include simple behavioral economic strategies that have
been shown to increase sales of high-margin, healthy foods.24
For example, prominently displaying healthy food and beverage options can increase their
sales.25,26 The citys Shop Healthy program27 has successfully trained corner store and
supermarket managers about the importance of stocking, placing, and promoting healthier food
products and this training could be expanded and tailored to street vendors, with assistance and
support from the Center.
As a food policy center, we believe that there should be a discussion around healthy food and
beverage options; calorie, nutrient and ingredient labeling and transparency; and improving food
safety training and understanding of food safety issues among food vendors. The proposed
legislation to expand the number of food applications would greatly benefit the citys diverse and
lively streets, increasing jobs and food options for passersby. By including the amendments as
proposed herein to promote the sale of healthy foods in high-need neighborhoods and to
increase food safety training the law would help protect the health of New Yorkers and its
visitors, highlighting New York City Councils dedication to the health and welfare of all people.
We at the New York City Food Policy Center at Hunter College stand ready to help in any way
we can to realize the vision of a New York City that is without hunger, with healthy food access,
food justice and with an elimination of food related chronic disease and that is not only the food
capital of the world, but the healthy food capital of the world.
For more information about the NYC Food Policy Center at Hunter College, visit our website at
www.nycfoodpolicy.org or e-mail Dr. Charles Platkin at info@nycfoodpolicy.org.
Thank you again for the opportunity to provide written testimony.
1
Berger M, Konty K, Day S, Silver LD, Nonas C, Kerker BD, et al. Obesity in K8 students New York City,
200607 to 201011 school years. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2011;60(49):16731678.
2
Day SE, Konty KJ, Leventer-Roberts M, Nonas C, Harris TG. Severe obesity among children in New York City
public elementary and middle schools, school years 2006-07 through 2010-11. Prev Chron Dis. 2014; Jul
10;11:E118. doi: 10.5888/pcd11.130439.
3
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Epiquery: NYC Interactive Health Data System Community Health Survey 2014. Accessed October 27, 2016. http://nyc.gov/health/epiquery.
4
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Adult Obesity Causes and Consequences.
https://www.cdc.gov/obesity/adult/causes.html. Accessed October 27, 2016.
5
Gupta L, Olson C. Diabetes in New York City. New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene: Epi
Data Brief 25; April 2013.
6
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Heart Disease.
https://www1.nyc.gov/site/doh/health/health-topics/heart-disease.page. Accessed October 27, 2016.
7
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Epiquery: NYC Interactive Health Data System
Mortality Module. https://a816-healthpsi.nyc.gov/epiquery/sasresults.jsp. Accessed October 27, 2016.
8
Lucan SC, Maroko AR, Bumol J, et al. Mobile food vendors in urban neighborhoodsimplications for diet and
diet-related health by weather and season. Health Place. 2014;27:171-175.
9
Tester JM, Yen IH, Laraia B. Mobile food vending and the after-school food environment. Am J Prev Med.
2010;38;70-73.
10
Hudson E. Health and wellness: the trillion dollar industry in 2017: key research highlights. Euromonitor
International. November 29, 2012. http://blog.euromonitor.com/2012/11/health-and-wellness-the-trillion-dollarindustry-in-2017-key-research-highlights.html. Accessed October 27, 2016.
11
Nielsen. We are what we eat: healthy eating trends around the world. January 2015.
https://www.nielsen.com/content/dam/nielsenglobal/eu/nielseninsights/pdfs/Nielsen%20Global%20Health%20and%
20Wellness%20Report%20-%20January%202015.pdf. Accessed October 27, 2016.
12
Gagliardi N. Consumers want healthy foodsand will pay more for them. Forbes.com. February 18, 2015.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/nancygagliardi/2015/02/18/consumers-want-healthy-foods-and-will-pay-more-forthem/#78282948144f. Accessed October 27, 2016.
13
Laroche HH, Ford C, Hansen K, et al. Concession stand makeovers: a pilot study of offering healthy foods at high
school concession stands. J Public Health (Oxf). 2015 Mar;37(1):116-24. doi: 10.1093/pubmed/fdu015.
14
Dunaway LF, Mundorf AR, Rose D. Fresh fruit and vegetable profitability: insights from a corner store
intervention in New Orleans, Louisiana. J Hunger Env Nutr. 2016;11,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19320248.2016.1227746.
15
Hudson Institute. Lower calorie foods: its just good business. Obesity Solutions Initiative. February 2013.
http://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/reports/2013/rwjf404136. Accessed October 27, 2016.
16
Vadiveloo MK, Dixon LB, Elbel B. Consumer purchasing patterns in response to calorie labeling legislation in
New York City. Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2011;8:51. doi: 10.1186/1479-5868-8-51.
17
Elbel B, Kersh R, Brescoll VL, Dixon LB. Calorie labeling and food choices: a first look at the effects on lowincome people in New York City. Health Aff (Millwood). 2009 Nov-Dec;28(6):w1110-21. doi:
10.1377/hlthaff.28.6.w1110. Epub 2009 Oct 6.
18
Dumanovsky T1, Huang CY, Bassett MT, Silver LD. Consumer awareness of fast-food calorie information in
New York City after implementation of a menu labeling regulation. Am J Public Health. 2010;100:2520-2525. doi:
10.2105/AJPH.2010.191908. Epub 2010 Oct 21.
19
Dumanovsky T, Huang CY, Nonas CA, Matte TD, Bassett MT, Silver LD. Changes in energy content of
lunchtime purchases from fast food restaurants after introduction of calorie labelling: cross sectional customer
surveys. BMJ. 2011;343:d4464. doi: 10.1136/bmj.d4464.
20
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Mobile & Temporary Food Vendors.
https://www1.nyc.gov/site/doh/business/food-operators/mobile-and-temporary-food-vendors.page. Accessed
October 27, 2016.
21
Burt MB, Volel C, Finkel M. Safety of vendor-prepared foods: evaluation of 10 processing mobile food vendors
in Manhattan. Public Health Rep. 2003 Sep-Oct;118(5):470-476.
22
Basch CH, Guerra LA, MacDonald Z, Marte M, Basch CE. Glove changing habits in mobile food vendors in New
York City. J Community Health. 2015;40: 699. doi:10.1007/s10900-014-9987-7.
23
Carroll KA, Basinsky S, Morales A. Fining the hand that feeds you: situational and violation-specific factors
influencing New York street vendor default in payment. Cityscape: J Pol Devp Res. 2016;18;89-107.
24
Wanskin B, Love K. Slim by design: Menu strategies for promoting high-margin, healthy foods. Int J Hospital
Manage. 2014;42:137-143.
25
Foster GD, Karpyn A, Wojtanowski AC. Placement and promotion strategies to increase sales of healthier
products in supermarkets in low-income, ethnically diverse neighborhoods: a randomized controlled trial. Am J Clin
Nutr. 2014;99:1359-1368.
26
Wansink B. Change their choice! Changing behavior using the CAN approach and activism research. Psych
Marketing. 2015;32;486-500.
27
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Adopt a Shop.
http://www1.nyc.gov/assets/doh/downloads/pdf/pan/adopt-a-shop-guide.pdf. Accessed October 27, 2016.
Mi nombre es Marco Reynoso y soy miembro de la organizacin Se Hace Camino Nueva York por ms de
10 aos. Estoy aqui para dar mi apoyo a la Ley de Modernizacin de la Venta Ambulante. Para comenzar,
quiero agradecer especialmente a los concejales patrocinadores y co-patrocinadores de este proyecto de Ley
por haberlo introducido como propuesta para reformar la ley a favor de nuestras comunidades, a las dems
organizaciones locales que han estado en la cabeza de esta campaa y todos los vendedores ambulantes
porque su lucha incansable. Ms que un miembro de Se Hace Camino, tambin me permito identificarme
como un pequeo negociante de la ciudad de Nueva York. Por 30 aos le he servido a la comunidad en un
Deli & Grocery ubicado en el 204 de Irving Avenue, Brooklyn. Soy inmigrante del Ecuador y por ms de
treinta aos he sido testigo de la contribucin que los vendedores ambulantes le han dado a la comunidad de
Bushwick y de su integracin dentro del desarrollo econmico de la ciudad.
Hoy he venido a exponer mi testimonio porque conozco muy de cerca este tema y su dinmica en el rea en
el que vivo y debo decir que hay muchas cosas que deben ser ordenadas y modificadas para el beneficio de
nuestras comunidades. La poblacin aumenta, la ciudad se transforma y desde hace ms de tres dcadas los
vendedores ambulantes han estado sujetos a la misma realidad: No hay permisos.
Considero que la implementacin de esta nueva ley no afectar negativamente a los pequeos negocios
establecidos, puesto que hay una gran diferencia entre el tipo de servicio que ambos prestan. Por el
contrario, la implementacin de esta nueva ley aliviar a miles de familias y nios que dependen
directamente del dinero que da a da se produce por la venta ambulante. Al mismo tiempo, la posibilidad de
que se modernice la venta ambulante le permitir a la ciudad incluir el aporte de los vendedores ambulantes
a la economa local por medio de los impuestos correspondientes. Legalizar la venta ambulante creara
miles de trabajos necesarios. Estos trabajadores nuevos usaran su dinero en pequeos negocios como yo y
seguirn invirtiendo en nuestra comunidad. . Desde mi experiencia como negociante, he experimentado la
lucha de los vendedores ambulantes en nuestras comunidades por no tener un permiso que legalice su
trabajo; tambin he experimentado el hostigamiento y la discriminacin de las autoridades, y ya que se ha
tomado un gran paso en este proceso, yo quisiera que el acoso y la persecucin a los vendedores ambulantes
se detengan como una medida de proteccin inmediata,
Adems, aunque la ley de modernizacin de la venta ambulante es un primer paso clave, me preocupa que
no ofrecezca una cantidad de permisos suficientes para la cantidad de vendedores ambulantes que hay en
nuestra ciudad. Quisiera que ustedes analizaran la posibilidad de expedir una cantidad de permisos
suficiente con base a la estadsticas de la poblacin ya que ninguno de nosotros quiere que dejemos a las
familias son como alimentarlas. .
Pido que, la ciudad abre sus puerta para que los empresarios inmigrantes pueden salir adelante
My name is Marco Reynoso. I have been a member of Make The Road New York for over 10 years and I
am the proud owner of a Deli & Grocery in Bushwick, Brooklyn. I have served my community as a
business owner for more than 30 years. I am here today to support the Street Vending Modernization Act. I
want to thank specially Council Members sponsors and cosponsors on this bill, local organizations that have
been at the top of this campaign and all street vendors in New York City for their tireless fight.
I am an immigrant from Ecuador and for over 30 years Ive witness of the cultural and economical
contribution that street vendors have given to Bushwick as well as their contribution to the local economic
development of the city.
But, as the city has transformed and more families struggle to survive, street vendors have been tied up in
the same reality: No permits.Although, I think that the implementation of this new law will not affect
negatively operating small businesses, since theres a big difference between the types of service that both
provide.
The implementation of this new law will support thousands of families and children that are currently
depending directly on the money that street vending produces.. At the same time, the Street Vending
Modernization Act would allow the city to count the input of street vendors to the local economy through
taxation. By legalizing street vendors, thousands of badly needed jobs will be created. These newly
employed workers will then go on to support small businesses like myself.
The harassment and persecution that I have seen of street vendors in my community pains me. They are
struggling small business owners like me and they deserve to be treated with respect.
While this legislation is a great first step, I am worried that doubling the current number of permits wont be
sufficient to cover the true number of street vendors in our city. I am deeply concerned that even after this
legislation, there would still be struggling vendors left out. In short, I ask that New York City open the
doors for immigrant entrepreneurs to flourish.
Mi nombre es Oscar Vivar, soy miembro de Se Hace Camino Nueva York, originariamente de Mxico y he
vendedor ambulante desde hace mas o menos 15 aos. Vendo elotes, pinchos y me encuentro ubicado en la
Avenida Roosevelt con Junction Blvd en Queens. Es una rea con alta participacin de vendedores
ambulantes que urgentemente necesitamos permisos. Quisiera darle mis agradecimientos especiales a la
concejal Melissa Mark-Viverito, al concejal Mark Levin, a la concejal y representante de nuestro distrito
Julissa Ferreras-Copeland y a todos los dems miembros del concejo que han sido aliados en la introduccin
de este proyecto de ley que busca resolver una parte del problema que enfrentamos los vendedores
ambulantes.
Hace 25 aos tom la decisin de emigrar a la ciudad de Nueva York desde mi ciudad natal en Mjico,
en bsqueda de un mejor futuro y con la esperanza de hacer realidad mis sueos y poderle brindar apoyo a
mi familia. Hace 16 aos y despus de haber hecho diferentes trabajos difciles en los cuales era explotado,
decid convertirme en un vendedor ambulante para ser el dueo de mi propio negocio y tener flexibilidad
con el horario de trabajo para as poder compartir con mi esposa y mis hijas. Durante estos 16 aos he
pagado por el alquiler de un permiso para poder trabajar tranquilamente, y hoy por hoy, la cantidad que
pago por dicho alquiler asciende a US 16.000 mientras que la ciudad slo le cobra US 200 a los dueos de
los permisos por la renovacin cada dos aos.
Si desde que comenc a trabajar como vendedor ambulante hubiera tenido un permiso, seguramente
todo el dinero que he gastado en el alquiler, lo hubiera podido invertir en la compra de una casa. Pudiera
ofrecerles mejor calidad de vida a mi esposa y a mis hijas.Pudiera ofrecerles una mejor educacin. Durante
todo este tiempo de experiencia como vendedor ambulante he aprendido que nosotros los vendedores
ambulantes somos parte activa de la cadena productiva.Vendemos nuestros productos, tambin compramos
a otros comerciantes los materiales que necesitamos para prepararlos. y le aportamos a la ciudad con el pago
de nuestros impuestos.
Es el momento de acabar con el mercado negro y de demostrar que somos muchos los vendedores
ambulantes que estamos organizados y que queremos trabajar sin incumplir la ley. Este proyecto de ley es
una gran oportunidad para que la venta ambulante deje de ser ilegal y comience a verse como parte de la
esencia cultural e histrica de la ciudad de Nueva York.
Quisiera que este proyecto de ley se pusiera en marcha pronto con la ayuda de los dems concejales y la
administracin del alcalde De Blasio para que as mi sueo y el del resto de vendedores ambulantes de
poder tener un permiso para trabajar dignamente sea una realidad.