In an effort to improve the numbers, City Council is set to vote on a proposed bill aimed at decreasing litter in front of buildings. The borough with the cleanest streets was Staten Island, while Manhattan earned the title of cleanest sidewalks, with a whopping total of 98.9% found to be clean. ![]() It was the only borough below 95%, and just as with streets, the city overall had improved from the previous month and year. 2022 (88.5%).Īs for sidewalks, once again the Bronx was bringing up the rear, at 93.9% found clean. Overall, the DOS found 93.6% of city streets to be "acceptably clean" in Jan. Sign up for NBC New York newsletters.īrooklyn had the second-highest number of unclean streets, with 9.8% of streets determined to be dirty. All best, and again, my apologies to those who bore the brunt of this historic storm.Get Tri-state area news and weather forecasts to your inbox. We expect a return to normal operations tomorrow. ![]() As when we cancelled in-person classes earlier in the semester, we anticipate most classes will be conducted on Zoom instead, but individual professors may choose to cancel class and have a make-up session later in the semester. All employees can work from home, though offices will be accessible to faculty and staff who want to use them. Library study areas will be available for student use from 9–5. Accordingly, all in-person day and evening classes are suspended today, Thursday, September 2. MTA service has not been restored, and the city is still in a state of emergency. We are not going to compound this mistake. I can only apologize and say that I deeply regret this and will follow up later about what the school can do to make up for this to those who were affected. Neither we nor our fellow NYC law schools had the foresight to cancel evening classes yesterday, and many students (and teachers) paid the price for that. The intensity and impact of last night’s unprecedented weather caught us flat-footed. Faculty may decide whether to hold class remotely via Zoom or plan a make-up class later in the semester. today, in-person classes will be suspended. and be open for study until 10 p.m.ĭue to the Flash Flood Watch, starting at 3:55 p.m. Faculty will determine if classes will be conducted remotely. In light of these weather concerns, the main law school building, including the library, will be CLOSED tomorrow, Saturday, January 29, and will reopen on Sunday, January 30 at 10:00 a.m.Ĭlasses are planned to be held as scheduled and in person on Monday, January 31.ĭue to flash flood watch in NYC, all evening classes (after 6 p.m.) are suspended today, Monday, Oct. tomorrow evening, with snow accumulations of 6 to 9 inches and wind gusts as high as 45 mph expected. ![]() The greater New York area is under a National Weather Service Winter Storm Warning from 7:00 p.m. President, Joseph Crea Dean & Professor of Law Please be careful and stay safe and warm. ![]() The library will be open, but with limited services, from 6pm this evening until normal law school operations resume, effective 12:45 p.m. In light of the anticipated winter weather event this evening into tomorrow morning, we have decided that *all evening classes today (beginning after 5:30 p.m.), and all morning classes tomorrow (until 12:45 p.m.), will be offered remotely.*
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