State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Gct > Article-2-a > 20

§ 20. Grant  of  specific  powers.  Subject  to  the  constitution and  general laws of this state, every city is empowered:    1. To contract and be contracted with and to institute,  maintain  and  defend any action or proceeding in any court.    2. To take, purchase, hold and lease real and personal property within  and  without  the  limits  of  the  city;  to  acquire  pursuant  to the  provisions of the eminent domain procedure law, real property within  or  without  the  limits  of  the city for the construction, maintenance and  operation of a sewage disposal plant, together with necessary rights  of  way  for  extending  its  sewage system to, and connecting the same with  such disposal  plant,  to  acquire  or  purchase  real  property  and/or  personal property within or without the limits of the city necessary for  the construction, maintenance and operation of a water supply system for  such  city together with necessary rights of way for extending its water  supply system to and connecting the same with a  source  or  sources  of  water  supply; to acquire by purchase, if the city is able to agree with  the owners on the terms thereof, and otherwise in the manner provided by  the eminent domain procedure law, real property within  or  without  the  limits  of  the  city for the construction, maintenance and operation of  drainage channels and structures for the purpose of flood control,  when  plans  for  such  purpose  have been approved by the state department of  environmental conservation, together with necessary rights  of  way  for  extending  such  channels  and  structures; and also to acquire real and  personal property within the limits of  the  city,  for  any  public  or  municipal  purpose, and to sell and convey the same, but the rights of a  city in and to its water front, ferries, bridges, wharf  property,  land  under  water,  public landings, wharves, docks, streets, avenues, parks,  and all other public places, are  hereby  declared  to  be  inalienable,  except in the cases provided for by subdivision seven of this section.    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, general, special or local,  cities  with  a population of one million or more inhabitants shall have  the additional power to acquire any property and the franchises  of  any  person,  firm  or corporation situated within such city, used and usable  in the operation of omnibus lines which are entirely within and  do  not  extend  beyond the boundaries of such city, the immediate acquisition of  which property and franchises is determined by the board of estimate  or  other  appropriate  governing body of such city to be necessary to serve  the  public  convenience  through  the  provision  of  adequate  omnibus  transportation,   notwithstanding   the  fact  that  such  property  and  franchises were or are devoted to a public use. The term  "property"  as  used  in this subdivision is defined to include lands, waters, rights in  lands or waters, structures, franchises and interests in land, including  lands under water and riparian rights, and any and all other things  and  rights  usually  included within the said term and includes also any and  all interests in such property less than full title, such  as  easements  permanent  or  temporary,  right-of-way,  uses, leases, licenses and all  other incorporeal hereditaments and  every  estate,  interest  or  right  legal  or  equitable, and omnibuses, rolling stock and any other form of  real or personal property. Acquisition of  such  property  shall  be  in  accordance with the provisions of the eminent domain procedure law.    Notwithstanding the provisions of any general, special or local law to  the  contrary,  such  city  may  authorize,  issue and sell obligations,  pursuant to  the  local  finance  law,  to  pay  for  the  cost  of  any  acquisition  or  acquisitions  of  such  property used and usable in the  operation of omnibus lines provided, however, that no  such  obligations  shall be authorized, issued, sold or refunded after September thirtieth,  nineteen hundred sixty-three, except, however, that such obligations may  be  authorized,  issued,  sold or refunded by such city pursuant to suchlaw after such  date,  to  pay  for  the  cost  of  any  acquisition  or  acquisitions  of such property, title to which vested in such city prior  to July  first,  nineteen  hundred  sixty-two.  The  maximum  period  of  probable   usefulness   for  each  such  object  or  purpose  for  which  obligations may be issued  hereunder  is  hereby  determined  to  be  as  follows:    a. The acquisition of real property, thirty years.    b. The acquisition of omnibuses and other necessary personal property,  five years.    c. The acquisition of franchises, five years.    Notwithstanding any general, special or local law to the contrary, the  city  of  New York is hereby required to acquire by condemnation, and to  maintain and operate, all or part  of  the  plants,  properties,  mains,  pipes,  facilities,  easements,  franchises  and  other real or personal  property of the Jamaica Water Supply Company constituting or related  to  the  water  distribution  system  located  in  the  city  of  New  York,  notwithstanding the fact that such property or part thereof  was  or  is  devoted  to  a public use. Notwithstanding any general, special or local  law to the contrary, title to the property condemned under the preceding  sentence shall vest in the city of New York and  compensation  shall  be  paid only (a) upon a decision by the supreme court that compensation for  the  property  so  condemned  shall  be  determined solely by the income  capitalization method of valuation, based on the actual  net  income  as  allowed  by  the  public  service  commission, and (b) upon such court's  determination of the amount of such compensation, based upon the  income  capitalization  method,  entry  of the final judgment, the filing of the  final decree, and the conclusion of any appeal or expiration of the time  to file an appeal related to the  condemnation  proceeding.  Should  any  court  determine  that  a  method  of compensation other than the income  capitalization method be utilized, or if the proposed award is more than  the rate base of the assets taken in condemnation  as  utilized  by  the  public  service  commission  in  setting  rates  and as certified by the  public service commission,  the  city  of  New  York  may  withdraw  the  condemnation proceeding without prejudice or costs to any party.    2-a.  To  make  and  execute  by  its local governing body, a lease or  leases of space in any building owned by the city for a term or terms of  not to exceed three years, provided that not more than one-half  of  the  space  in  any  such  building  may  be  so leased to any one person and  provided that the annual rent does not exceed the sum of  five  thousand  dollars.  Any such lease may be made without holding a public auction or  requiring the submission of sealed bids  therefor,  but  no  such  lease  shall  be  made  and  executed  unless notice of the proposed leasing is  published as required by law for three days in  any  seven  day  period.  Such  notice  shall contain a summary of the terms and conditions of the  proposed lease which shall include a statement  of  the  area  of  space  proposed  to be leased, the location of the building in which such space  is contained and the rent to be paid therefor.    3. To take  by  gift,  grant,  bequest  or  devise  and  to  hold  and  administer  real  and personal property within and without the limits of  the city, absolutely or in trust for any public  or  municipal  purpose,  upon  such  terms  and conditions as may be prescribed by the grantor or  donor and accepted by the city.    4. To levy and collect taxes on real and  personal  property  for  any  public or municipal purpose.    5.  To  spend  money  for  any  public or municipal purpose; to pay or  compromise claims equitably payable by the city, though not constituting  obligations legally binding on it, but it shall have no power  to  waivethe defense of the statute of limitations or to grant extra compensation  to any public officer, servant or contractor.    6.  To  establish  and  maintain  sinking funds for the liquidation of  principal and interest of any indebtedness.    7. To lay out, establish,  construct,  maintain,  operate,  alter  and  discontinue  streets, sewers and drainage systems, water supply systems,  and lighting systems, for lighting streets, public buildings and  public  places,  and  to  lay  out,  establish,  construct, maintain and operate  markets,  parks,  playgrounds  and   public   places,   and   upon   the  discontinuance thereof to sell and convey the same, and the city council  or  other  body  constituting the local authorities of any city having a  population of less than one million, notwithstanding the  provisions  of  any  special  or  local act, may acquire on its behalf by purchase or by  condemnation any water supply system owned and operated by a  waterworks  corporation  within the limits of such city, and where such water supply  system extends beyond the limits of such city, any such city may acquire  on its behalf by purchase or by condemnation the portion  of  the  water  supply  system  within the limits of such city, and may pay the purchase  price  or  award  therefor  wholly  or  partly  by  the  assumption   of  outstanding  bonds  of  such  waterworks  corporation,  and to cause the  necessary explorations,  investigations,  examinations,  surveys,  maps,  plans,  specifications and reports for its proposed water supply systems  or extensions thereof to be made and for such purposes by its  officers,  agents,  servants  or employees may enter at all times upon any lands or  waters, subject to liability for all damages done.    7-a. To sell and convey the water supply and  distribution  system  of  the  city,  or  any  part  thereof, to a water authority, a county water  district or a joint water works system established pursuant  to  article  five-B  of the general municipal law. The proceeds of such sale shall be  deposited in a reserve fund established  for  the  purpose  of  retiring  outstanding  obligations  issued  by the city to finance the cost of the  facilities sold and shall be expended only for such purpose,  except  as  provided  below.  If  the proceeds exceed the sum of all installments of  principal of and interest on such indebtedness due or to become due,  or  if,  when  all such outstanding obligations shall have been retired, any  moneys remain unexpended in the reserve fund, such excess moneys may  be  used for any city purpose.    8. To control and administer for any business, commercial, maritime or  public  purpose  the  waterfront  and  waterways  of  the  city  and  to  establish, maintain, operate  and  regulate  for  any  such  purpose  or  purposes   docks,  piers,  wharves,  warehouses  and  all  adjuncts  and  facilities for the utilization  of  the  waterfront  and  waterways  and  adjacent property.    8-a.  To  provide by ordinance of its local governing body for control  over the filling or diversion of streams and watercourses,  except  when  authorized  by  a state or federal agency, by requiring that any person,  firm or corporation shall secure a permit before  filling  or  diverting  any  stream  or watercourse from its natural course. The local governing  body may in its discretion deny a  permit  if  it  determines  that  the  proposed  filling or diversion is detrimental to the drainage or welfare  of the city.    9.  To  establish,  construct  and  maintain,   operate,   alter   and  discontinue  bridges,  tunnels  and  ferries,  and  approaches  thereto,  including but not limited to bridges over and across and  tunnels  under  navigable  streams,  waters, bays or arms of the sea, whether or not the  title to the bed thereof is in the state.    10. To grant franchises or rights to use the  streets,  waters,  water  front, public ways and public places of the city.11.  To  construct  and  maintain  public  buildings, public works and  public improvements, including local improvements, and assess  and  levy  upon  the  property  benefited  thereby the cost thereof, in whole or in  part.    12.  To prevent and extinguish fires and to protect the inhabitants of  the city and property within the city from loss or  damage  by  fire  or  other casualty.    12-a.  May  appropriate  moneys to a fire department to fund an annual  fireman's inspection dinner for volunteer firefighters and the  city  of  Glen  Cove may appropriate moneys to a fire department to fund an annual  dinner for installation of fire district officers.    13. To maintain order, enforce the laws, protect property and preserve  and care for the safety, health, comfort  and  general  welfare  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  city  and  visitors  thereto;  and for any of said  purposes to regulate and license occupations and businesses.    14. To create, maintain and administer a system  or  systems  for  the  enumeration,   identification   and  registration,  or  either,  of  the  inhabitants of the city and visitors thereto, or such classes thereof as  may be deemed advisable.    15.  To  establish,  maintain,  manage   and   administer   hospitals,  sanitaria,   dispensaries,   public   baths,   almshouses,   workhouses,  reformatories, jails and other charitable and correctional institutions;  to relieve, instruct and care  for  children  and  poor,  sick,  infirm,  defective,  mentally ill or inebriate persons; to provide for the burial  of  indigent  persons;  to  contribute  to  and  supervise   charitable,  eleemosynary,  correctional or reformatory institutions wholly or partly  under private control.    16. To establish and maintain such institutions and  instrumentalities  for   the   instruction,   enlightenment,   improvement,  entertainment,  recreation and welfare of its inhabitants as it may deem appropriate  or  necessary for the public interest or advantage.    17.  To determine and regulate the number, mode of selection, terms of  employment, qualifications, powers and duties and  compensation  of  all  employees of the city and the relations of all officers and employees of  the city to each other, to the city and to the inhabitants.    18.  To  create  a  municipal  civil  service;  to  make rules for the  classification of the offices and employments in the city's service, for  appointments, promotions and examinations, and for the registration  and  selection of laborers.    19.  To  regulate  the  manner  of transacting the city's business and  affairs and the reporting of and accounting for all transactions  of  or  concerning the city.    20.  Subject to the provisions in article four and section one hundred  thirteen of the retirement and social security law, to  provide  methods  and  provide, manage and administer funds for pensions and annuities for  and  retirement  of  city  officers  and  employees,  their  widows  and  dependents.    21. To investigate and inquire into all matters of concern to the city  or  its  inhabitants,  and  to  require  and  enforce  by  subpoena  the  attendance of witnesses at such investigations.    22. To regulate by ordinance or local law any matter within the powers  of the city, and to provide penalties, forfeitures and  imprisonment  to  punish  violations  thereof,  and  to  maintain  an  action  or  special  proceeding in a court of competent  jurisdiction  to  compel  compliance  with  or  restrain  by injunction the violation of any such ordinance or  local  law,  notwithstanding   that   a   penalty,   forfeiture   and/or  imprisonment may have been provided to punish violations thereof.23.  To  exercise  all  powers  necessary and proper for carrying into  execution the powers granted to the city.    24.  To  regulate and limit the height, bulk and location of buildings  hereafter erected, to regulate and determine the area of  yards,  courts  and  other open spaces, and to regulate the density of population in any  given area, and for said purposes to divide  the  city  into  districts.  Such regulations shall be uniform for each class of buildings throughout  any  district,  but  the regulations in one or more districts may differ  from those in other districts. Such regulations  shall  be  designed  to  secure  safety  from  fire,  flood  and other dangers and to promote the  public health and welfare, including, so far as conditions  may  permit,  provision  for  adequate  light,  air,  convenience  of  access, and the  accommodation of solar  energy  systems  and  equipment  and  access  to  sunlight necessary therefor, and shall be made with reasonable regard to  the  character  of buildings erected in each district, the value of land  and the use to which it may be put, to the end that such regulations may  promote public health, safety and welfare and the most desirable use for  which the land of each district may be adapted and may tend to  conserve  the  value  of  buildings  and  enhance the value of land throughout the  city.    25. To regulate and restrict the location of trades and industries and  the location of buildings, designed for specified  uses,  and  for  said  purposes  to  divide  the  city into districts and to prescribe for each  such district the trades  and  industries  that  shall  be  excluded  or  subjected to special regulation and the uses for which buildings may not  be erected or altered. Such regulations shall be designed to promote the  public  health,  safety  and  general  welfare  and  shall  be made with  reasonable consideration, among other things, to the  character  of  the  district, its peculiar suitability for particular uses, the conservation  of  property values and the direction of building development, in accord  with a well considered plan.    25-b. To acquire by purchase, gift, devise,  lease  or  otherwise,  in  accordance  with  the  provisions of any appropriate general, special or  local law, real and personal property within  the  limits  of  the  city  owned by any stock corporation organized to promote musical art and used  as an auditorium and facility for musical concerts, symphonies, recitals  and  instruction,  cultural  displays,  lectures  and  exhibits,  public  assembly  and  educational,  recreational  and  incidental   residential  purposes  and  to  maintain  and  lease or sell such property under such  terms and conditions as may be necessary or desirable to effectuate  and  promote  the  above  described  cultural and educational purposes in the  interests of the people of the city, and, at the discretion of the local  legislative body, and upon such conditions as it may  deem  appropriate,  to  provide  for  the limitation or remission of taxes on such property.  The power to remit or limit taxes pursuant  to  this  subdivision  shall  include  the  power  to remit or limit taxes on property acquired by the  city from such stock corporation and used for commercial or  residential  purposes  or  both,  including  any  building  at  any  time constructed  thereon, provided that a portion of space in  any  building  constructed  thereon for such commercial or residential purposes or both is dedicated  for the exclusive purposes of a corporation formed other than for profit  to  support  the above described cultural and educational purposes. Such  local legislative body may also require the making  of  tax  equivalency  payments  in  such  amounts  as  it may determine in its discretion with  respect to such property, and provide that a portion  of  such  payments  shall  be  made  to  and  retained  by  such  corporation,  to  be  used  exclusively for such cultural and educational purposes. The exercise  of  the  power granted to the city by this subdivision to require the makingof tax equivalency payments and the expenditure of any portion  of  such  tax  equivalency  payments  by  such corporation for the above described  cultural and educational purposes is in all  respects  for  the  general  welfare  and  benefit  of  the  people  of the state, and in making such  expenditures such corporation shall be regarded as performing  a  public  purpose.  The  exercise  of  the  powers  granted  to  the  city by this  subdivision shall, with respect to the owners of the building  used  for  commercial  or  residential  purposes  or  both, have the same effect as  though such payments were taxes as defined in the real property tax  law  which had been duly levied and imposed upon such owners by the city. The  local  legislative body shall be authorized to provide that the taxes or  tax equivalency payments with respect to the property occupied  by  such  building  shall  be  deemed  attributable  only  to the building. If any  person obligated to make tax equivalency payments with respect  to  such  property  shall fail to make such payments when due, the city shall have  a lien on such property in the same manner and at the same  time  as  if  such  payments  were  ordinary real property taxes. Such lien shall have  all the priorities of a lien for taxes on such property in favor of  the  city and shall be enforceable by the city in the manner provided for the  collection of tax liens in such city.    26.  To  establish  by  ordinance a scale of rents to be called "sewer  rents" and to prescribe the manner in which and the time at  which  such  rents  are  to be paid and to change such scale from time to time as may  be deemed advisable. Such rents may be based  upon  either  the  metered  consumption  of water on premises connected with the sewer system making  due allowances for commercial use of  water,  the  number  and  kind  of  plumbing  fixtures  connected  with  the  sewer  system or the number of  persons served by said sewer system or may be determined by  the  common  council,  or  other  local  legislative  body of the city upon any other  equitable basis. Such rents  shall  constitute  a  lien  upon  the  real  property  served  by  sewers,  and  such a lien is prior and superior to  every other lien or claim, except the lien of  an  existing  tax,  water  rent  or  local  assessment,  and  the  common  council  or  such  local  legislative body may bring and maintain an action in  the  name  of  the  city  for  the  foreclosure  of  such  liens  for  such sewer rents. The  provisions of this subdivision shall apply only to those cities in which  sewer rents have been established and are being imposed  on  May  first,  nineteen   hundred   fifty-one,  pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  this  subdivision. The provisions of this subdivision shall not prevent a city  from acting pursuant to the provisions of  subdivision  twenty-six-a  of  this section.    26-a.  To  establish  and impose sewer rents through the action of its  local legislative body pursuant to the provisions of article  fourteen-f  of the general municipal law.    27.  (a)  To  enact  ordinances:  (1) To examine, license and regulate  master and special electricians;  (2)  to  establish  a  board  for  the  examination,   licensing,   and   regulation   of   master  and  special  electricians; (3) to regulate the modification, suspension or revocation  of any such licenses for cause after a hearing.    (b) The term "master electrician" as used in  this  subdivision  shall  mean  and  include  any  person,  firm,  co-partnership,  association or  corporation having a regular place of business, who  or  which  performs  the  work of or who is engaged in the business of electrical contracting  and/or of installing, altering and repairing or contracting to  install,  alter  or  repair  any  electric wires or wiring apparatus, fixtures and  other appliances used or to be used for the transmission of  electricity  for  light,  heat  or  power,  or signaling system where more than fifty  volts is required for its operation.(c) The term "special electrician" as used in this  subdivision  shall  mean and include any person who is in the exclusive employ of the owner,  lessee  or  manager  of  a building to install, alter or repair electric  wiring or appliances for light, heat or power, or to install,  alter  or  repair  signalling  systems  where more than fifty volts is required for  operation. Such license may be limited in its scope  to  any  particular  premises  to  be specified in such license, but if so limited the holder  thereof shall be entitled to have such location  changed  from  time  to  time upon application to the board.    (d)  Such  ordinances  shall  not  apply  to  a  plant  operated  by a  municipality authorized to generate or sell electricity nor to  electric  corporations  as  defined in the transportation corporations law, nor to  any person or corporation engaged in their behalf, nor to the  employees  of any of them in performing such work in the conduct of the business of  such   corporations  in  installing,  maintaining  or  repairing  wires,  apparatus or fixtures, or other appliances used by  such  companies  and  necessary for or to their business, whether or not such wires, conduits,  apparatus,  fixtures or other appliances are on its own premises, unless  the work in connection therewith is done within a building not owned  by  such  corporation.  Such ordinances shall not apply to the installation,  maintenance or repair of elevators, dumb-waiters and escalators, nor  to  the  electrical  work  of  a telephone, telegraph, central station, of a  protective, railroad or  radio  broadcasting  company,  nor  to  persons  performing electrical work for such a company where said electrical work  is  an  integral  part  of  the plant or service used by such company in  rendering its duly authorized service to  the  public.  Such  ordinances  shall not apply to the maintenance, repairing or operation of electrical  equipment  within  a  theatre, or other place of public assemblage where  entertainment  or  exhibition  is  provided,  motion   picture   studio,  theatrical  studio,  or  motion  picture  film  laboratory,  nor  to the  installation of temporary electrical cables, assembling or  erecting  of  such  theatrical,  sound  recording, sound reproducing or motion picture  equipment where such equipment is  an  integral  part  of  the  theatre,  traveling  production,  motion  picture studio or laboratory used in the  production or exhibition of stage  or  motion  picture  attractions.  An  ordinance  adopted  hereunder shall provide that either of said licenses  shall be issued upon proof that  the  applicant  has  been  continuously  engaged  in  work  of  the character herein defined for a period of five  years  prior  to  the  enactment  of  such  ordinance,  without  further  examination, provided that such application be made to such board within  one year after the enactment of such ordinance.    (e)  Any  existing  board  for the examination and licensing of master  and/or special electricians  in  any  city  to  which  this  subdivision  applies, which has been created by the legislative body of said city, is  hereby validated and continued until otherwise provided by ordinance. No  such  board shall possess powers other than those which might be granted  to  a  board  created  pursuant  to  an  ordinance  authorized  by  this  subdivision.    (f)  The  provisions  of  this subdivision shall not apply to any city  having a population of less than four hundred thousand or more than  one  million inhabitants.    28.  (a) To contract by its local governing body, on recommendation of  the board of health or other local health officer or  agency,  with  any  non-profit  institution  organized to conduct research and investigation  into the control of diseases of importance  to  the  public  health  for  research  and  investigation by such institution into the prevention and  treatment of communicable diseases and other matters relating to  public  health.  Such  contract  shall run for a term of not less than ten yearsand may contain provisions and conditions  for  renewals  thereof,  from  time  to  time,  for  terms  of  not less than ten years each, provided,  however, that during such term or any renewal thereof the mayor or other  chief  executive  officer, the comptroller or other chief fiscal officer  and the commissioner of health or other local  health  officer  of  such  city  shall  be  ex  officio  members  of the board of directors of such  institution.    (b) The local governing body is further authorized  and  empowered  to  appropriate  the  sum  required  to be paid to the institution under the  terms of such contract and shall include the sum so appropriated in  its  budget  for  the next ensuing fiscal year. The expenditure of all moneys  appropriated to the institution shall be subject to  the  audit  of  the  comptroller or other chief fiscal officer.    29.  To  contract,  by  its board of estimate or other local governing  body, and in the case of any city with a population of  one  million  or  more inhabitants, by its board of estimate, with a non-profit membership  corporation,  organized  under  article forty-three of the insurance law  and approved by the superintendent of insurance and the state  board  of  social  welfare,  for  the  purpose  of  furnishing medical and surgical  services and hospital service as defined in such article forty-three, to  persons who contract with such corporation. Any city with  a  population  of one million or more inhabitants, acting by its board of estimate, may  make  such  a contract or contracts with one or more insurance companies  authorized to do business in this state or with  one  or  more  of  such  corporations  organized  under article forty-three of the insurance law,  and any such contract or contracts or any health insurance plan or plans  of such  city  effectuated  by  such  contract  or  contracts  shall  be  administered by the department of personnel of such city or, if there be  no  such  department therein, by a department, agency or officer thereof  designated by the board of estimate or other governing board or body  of  such  city.  Any  such  contract entered into by a city shall permit any  officer or employee or group of officers or employees of  an  agency  or  department who is paid out of the city treasury voluntarily to subscribe  to  a  plan  or  plans  providing  for medical and surgical services and  hospital service to such officers or employees and their  families.  The  comptroller  or other disbursing officer of the city shall be authorized  to deduct from the wages or salary paid by the city to such  officer  or  employee,  with  the  prior  consent  of such contracting or subscribing  officer or employee, the sums required to be paid  by  such  officer  or  employee to such corporation or company. Such board of estimate or other  local  governing  body, and in the case of any city with a population of  one million or more inhabitants, the authorities authorized  by  law  to  make  expense  budget  appropriations, if such contract or plan provides  that the employer shall contribute a share of the cost of  such  medical  and  surgical  services  and  hospital  service,  shall  have  power  to  appropriate a sum required to be paid under such contract by the city as  employer. The sum to be paid under such contract, in the  discretion  of  such  board  or  body,  may  be  a  payment  equal  to  the  sum  of the  contributions of individual officers or employees who have subscribed to  the plan or plans of such corporation or company, and in the case of any  city with a population of one million or  more  inhabitants,  may  be  a  payment  equal  to  all  or  any  part  of the sum to be paid under such  contract. The sum so appropriated shall be included in the city's budget  for the next ensuing fiscal year. The city shall be  authorized  to  pay  directly  to such corporation or company the total of such appropriation  and of such officer or employee deductions.    29-a. To contract, by its board of estimate or other  local  governing  body,  and in the case of any city having a population of one million ormore,  by  its  board  of  estimate,  with  such  non-profit  membership  corporation  organized  under  article forty-three of the insurance law,  and in the case of any city with a population of  one  million  or  more  inhabitants,  with  one  or  more  insurance  companies authorized to do  business in this  state  or  with  one  or  more  of  such  corporations  organized  under  article  forty-three  of  the  insurance  law, for the  purpose of providing and administering, as in subdivision twenty-nine of  section twenty of the general city law,  health  insurance  for  retired  officers  and employees of an agency or department and their spouses and  their dependent children and  for  the  widowed  spouses  and  dependent  children  of  employees  of  an  agency or department of such city whose  death was the natural and proximate  result  of  an  accident  sustained  while  an  employee  of  such city and while in the performance of duty.  During any period in which a retired employee voluntarily subscribes  to  such  plan  or  plans  after the date of his retirement, the comptroller  shall  be  authorized  to  deduct  from  his  retirement  allowance  the  contribution  required  to  be  paid by such officer or employee to such  corporation or company. During any period in which the widowed spouse or  dependent children of an employee of any agency or  department  of  such  city  voluntarily  subscribes  to  such plan or plans after the death of  such employee, the comptroller shall be authorized to  deduct  from  the  pension  or  other allowance payable to such widowed spouse or dependent  children the contribution required to be paid by such spouse or children  to such corporation or company. Where an authority,  created  under  the  public authorities law or defined in section three of the public housing  law,  which  performs  its  functions  wholly  within  a  city  having a  population of one million or more  inhabitants,  is  providing  for  its  former  officers  and employees, who are retirees of a retirement system  maintained by such city, a health insurance plan or plans with any  such  carrier or carriers similar to a health insurance plan or plans provided  by  such  city  for  its  retirees,  the comptroller or other disbursing  officer of such city shall be authorized to deduct from  the  retirement  allowance of any such retiree of an authority the contribution or share,  if  any,  required  to  be  paid  by such retiree who voluntarily elects  coverage under any of such plans.    29-b. To reimburse any retired officer or employee who:    (1) at the time  of  retirement  was  an  employee  of  an  agency  or  department and was paid out of the city treasury;    (2)  is  receiving a retirement allowance, pension or other retirement  benefit from a retirement or other  pension  system  maintained  by  the  city; and    (3)  is  enrolled  in  a choice of health plans program offered by the  city;  for premium charges for supplementary medical insurance  benefits  under  the  federal old-age, survivors and disability insurance benefit program  for such officer or employee, if  he  is  enrolled  under  such  federal  program,  and  for  his  spouse,  if  he  or  she  is  so enrolled. Such  reimbursement may be made monthly or at other intervals, and  shall  not  exceed the amount of premium charges paid for such supplementary medical  insurance benefits.    30.  To  enact  ordinances  creating  a  lien  for towing, storage and  incidental expenses upon vehicles found standing or parked in  violation  of  ordinances and removed and stored as an abatement of a nuisance, and  imposing a charge against the owner or persons entitled to possession of  such vehicles and providing  the  procedure  for  the  determination  of  ownership  or  right  to  possession  and the collection of such lien or  charge, including public sale of the said vehicle.31. May permit the use of any city-owned street or highway  machinery,  tools  or  equipment  by a county in which such city is wholly or partly  located or by a municipal subdivision, district, district corporation or  school district, wholly or partly within such a county, upon such  terms  as  may be agreed upon but with the payment to the city of not less than  the hourly rate as fixed by the state commissioner of transportation for  the rental or hiring of such machinery, tools or equipment by the  city.  Moneys received by a city pursuant to the provisions of this subdivision  may be applied to the payment of any existing obligations of the city or  transferred to the general fund.    32.  To  create  by  resolution  of  the local governing body a board,  commission or department of traffic control in order to more effectively  regulate and control vehicular and  pedestrian  traffic  and  better  to  serve the public convenience, promote public safety and to protect human  life,  health  and  property. Such a traffic agency shall consist of not  less than five nor more than nine members who shall be appointed by  the  mayor.  The  chairman  or  head  of  such  agency  shall  be  a licensed  professional engineer who shall have at least ten years'  experience  in  traffic  engineering.  He  shall  also  be the city traffic engineer and  shall receive an annual salary. Such agency members  shall  include  the  commissioners  of  police  and public works and the chairman of the city  planning commission or the officials occupying analogous offices and one  other qualified person and the mayor may designate other qualified  city  officers  or  employees  to  serve  as  members  ex  officio and without  additional compensation. Such traffic  agency  may  contain  within  its  departmental  structure  a  bureau  of  traffic engineering which bureau  shall be under the immediate supervision of the city traffic engineer.    Whenever such a traffic agency shall be created as in this subdivision  provided it shall, notwithstanding any other provision of  law,  possess  exclusive  power and authority within such city to (a) regulate, direct,  restrict  and  otherwise  to  control  the  movement  of  vehicular  and  pedestrian  traffic,  but  not  inconsistent  with the provisions of the  vehicle and traffic law in relation  thereto,  (b)  limit  the  carrying  capacity  of  vehicles  used  in the business of carrying passengers for  hire, except omnibuses  operated  pursuant  to  certificates  of  public  convenience  and necessity issued by commissioner of transportation, (c)  determine the location of garages, parking lots and parking meters,  (d)  determine  the  design,  type,  size,  method of erection, installation,  removal, maintenance, operation and  location  of  any  and  all  signs,  signals,  markings,  and  similar  devices  for  guiding,  directing  or  otherwise regulating and controlling such traffic and, with the approval  of the local governing board, may relinquish for transfer and assignment  to any other agency of the city government part or all of  one  or  more  such  powers  and  duties,  and  (e)  make rules and regulations for the  conduct of vehicular and pedestrian traffic in the  use  of  the  public  streets, squares and avenues as such board, commission or department may  deem  necessary. Such rules and regulations shall be filed with the city  clerk and shall become effective when published in a paper published  by  the  city  or,  if  no paper be published by such city, in not less than  three newspapers having a general daily circulation in such city, except  that in a city having a population of not  more  than  thirty  thousand,  such rules and regulations shall be published in one newspaper published  or  having  a  general  circulation  in  such city. The violation of any  provision of any such rule or regulation shall  be  triable  by  a  city  magistrate  and  punishable by imprisonment of not more than thirty days  or by a fine of not more than fifty dollars or both.    Nothing in this subdivision  contained  shall  affect  or  impair  the  powers  or  duties  of  the city planning commission or of any analogousagency of city government to  determine  the  location  of  garages  and  parking  lots  or  affect  the  power  or  duty  imposed  on  the police  department or other analogous agency to  regulate  hacks,  taxicabs  and  taxi  drivers  pursuant to the provisions of any city charter, local law  or ordinance and any such power and duty shall continue to be  exercised  and  performed  under the jurisdiction and control of such department or  agency.    Upon the adoption of a resolution creating such a traffic agency,  and  except  as in this subdivision otherwise provided, all of the functions,  powers and duties vested in such traffic agency which  theretofore  were  exercised  and  performed  by any other agency of the city government of  such city, together with all records, property and equipment used in the  exercise and performance of such functions, powers or duties  shall,  on  the  date  fixed  in  such resolution, pass to and be in addition to the  functions, powers and duties vested  in  such  traffic  agency  by  this  subdivision.    33.  By resolution of its legislative body to authorize the payment of  a reasonable mileage allowance for the miles  actually  and  necessarily  traveled on official business by any city officer or employee by the use  of his own automobile.    34.  To adopt a local law providing that every deed given by such city  pursuant to any general or special law providing for the foreclosure  of  a  tax  lien  by  action  in rem, shall be presumptive evidence that the  action and all proceedings therein and  all  proceedings  prior  thereto  from  and including the assessment of the lands affected and all notices  required by law were regular and in accordance with  all  provisions  of  law relating thereto.    After  two  years  from  the  date  of  the  record  of such deed, the  presumption shall be conclusive, unless at the time that such local  law  takes  effect  the  two  year  period  since  the record of the deed has  expired or less than six months of such  period  of  two  years  remains  unexpired,  in  which  case  the presumption shall become conclusive six  months after such local law takes effect. No action to  set  aside  such  deed  may  be  maintained  unless  the action is commenced and a note of  pendency of the action is filed in the office of the proper county clerk  prior to the time that the presumption becomes conclusive as aforesaid.    35. To adopt a local law or ordinance compelling the repair or removal  of any building or structure that, from any cause, endangers the health,  safety or welfare of the public, providing as follows:    a. For an inspection and report by the director of  buildings  of  the  city.    b.  For  the service of a notice upon the owner, and all other persons  having an interest in such property or structure, either  personally  or  by  registered mail, addressed to his last known address as shown by the  records of the officer or agency of the city charged with the assessment  of real property therein or collection of real  property  taxes  thereon  and/or  in the office of the county clerk or county register, containing  a description of the premises, a statement of the particulars  in  which  the  building  or  structure  is unsafe or dangerous and an order of the  director of buildings requiring same to be repaired or removed;  and  if  such  service  be  made by registered mail, for the posting of a copy of  such notice on the premises.    c. For the time within which the owner so served  shall  commence  the  repair or removal of such building or structure.    d. For the filing of a copy of such notice in the office of the county  clerk  of the county within which such building or structure is located,  which notice shall be filed by such clerk in the same manner as a notice  of pendency pursuant to article sixty-five of the civil practice law andrules, and shall have the same effect as a notice of pendency as therein  provided, except as otherwise hereinafter provided in this paragraph.  A  notice  so  filed  shall  be effective for a period of one year from the  date of filing, provided, however, that it may be vacated upon the order  of  a  judge  or justice of a court of record or upon the consent of the  corporation counsel. The clerk of the county where such notice is  filed  shall  mark such notice and any record or docket thereof as cancelled of  record upon the  presentation  and  filing  of  such  consent  or  of  a  certified copy of such order.    e. For a hearing before the director of buildings, notice of which and  the  time  and  place thereof to be specified in the notice to repair or  demolish, served upon the owner and such persons having an  interest  in  the property or structure as is herein prescribed.    f.  For  the  removal of such building or structure by the city in the  event such owner fails or refuses to repair or remove  the  same  within  the time provided.    g.  For  the assessment of all costs and expenses incurred by the city  in connection with the proceedings to repair or remove such building  or  structure, including the cost of actually removing the same, against the  land on which such building or structure is located.    h.  The  powers  conferred by this subdivision thirty-five shall be in  addition to all other powers conferred upon cities in  relation  to  the  same  subject  matter.  Nothing  contained  in this subdivision shall be  construed to amend, repeal, modify or affect any existing local  law  or  ordinance  or provision of any charter or administrative code pertaining  to the subject matter to which this subdivision relates, or to limit  or  restrict  the  power  of  any  city to amend or modify any such existing  local law, ordinance or provision of any charter or administrative code,  or to restrict or limit any power otherwise conferred on any city by law  with respect to the subject matter to which this subdivision relates.    36.  In  cities  having  a  population  of  fewer  than  one   million  inhabitants, to lease to any person, firm or corporation, for commercial  or  private  use,  the  air rights over or the subsurface area under any  property of the city acquired or to be acquired for  street  or  highway  puposes,  together  with easements or other rights of user necessary for  the use and development of such air rights or subsurface areas,  as  are  not   needed   for   public  purposes,  subject  to  such  reservations,  restrictions and conditions  as  the  city  deems  necessary  to  assure  adequate  protection to the safety and the adequacy of street or highway  facilities and to abutting or adjacent land users and as the city  deems  necessary  to minimize or avoid public utility facility relocation costs  which would otherwise ensue if  such  facilities  were  removed  without  regard  to  their compatability with the intended use of such air rights  or subsurface areas. Any such lease may be  for  a  term  not  exceeding  ninety-nine  years  and may be renewed for such additional term or terms  as  the  city  council   may   provide.   Any   buildings,   structures,  substructures  or  superstructures,  the  title  to which remains in the  lessee, shall be deemed to be real property for purposes of taxation  as  defined  in  subdivision  twelve  of section one hundred two of the real  property tax law. Nothing in this subdivision shall be deemed to  create  any   liability  arising  from  the  cost  of  public  utility  facility  relocation not recognized at common law or otherwise created by statute.    37. To adopt  ordinances  or  local  laws  prohibiting  and  punishing  loitering;  provided  however,  that  such  ordinance  or law shall only  prohibit loitering for a specific illegal  purpose  or  loitering  in  a  specific  place  of restricted public access and shall therein set forth  guidelines for application  of  such  prohibitions  by  law  enforcementofficers  so  as  to  prevent arbitrary or discriminatory enforcement of  such prohibitions.    38. a. A city having a population of more than one hundred twenty-five  thousand and less than one million, is authorized and empowered to enter  into  a  lease, sublease or other agreement with the dormitory authority  providing for the financing or refinancing of all or a portion of school  district capital facilities or  school  district  capital  equipment  in  accordance with section sixteen hundred eighty of the public authorities  law  and with the approval of the commissioner of education. Such lease,  sublease, or other agreement may  provide  for  the  payment  of  annual  rentals  and other payments to the dormitory authority, and contain such  other terms and conditions as may be agreed upon by the parties thereto,  including the  establishment  of  reserve  funds  and  indemnities.  For  purposes  of  this  subdivision, school district capital equipment shall  have the meaning ascribed thereto in section sixteen hundred seventy-six  of the public authorities law.    b.  Notwithstanding  any  provisions  of  law  to  the  contrary,  the  dormitory authority and the board of education are hereby authorized and  empowered  to  perform  any  and  all acts and to enter into any and all  agreements necessary or desirable to effectuate  the  purposes  of  this  subdivision.

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Gct > Article-2-a > 20

§ 20. Grant  of  specific  powers.  Subject  to  the  constitution and  general laws of this state, every city is empowered:    1. To contract and be contracted with and to institute,  maintain  and  defend any action or proceeding in any court.    2. To take, purchase, hold and lease real and personal property within  and  without  the  limits  of  the  city;  to  acquire  pursuant  to the  provisions of the eminent domain procedure law, real property within  or  without  the  limits  of  the city for the construction, maintenance and  operation of a sewage disposal plant, together with necessary rights  of  way  for  extending  its  sewage system to, and connecting the same with  such disposal  plant,  to  acquire  or  purchase  real  property  and/or  personal property within or without the limits of the city necessary for  the construction, maintenance and operation of a water supply system for  such  city together with necessary rights of way for extending its water  supply system to and connecting the same with a  source  or  sources  of  water  supply; to acquire by purchase, if the city is able to agree with  the owners on the terms thereof, and otherwise in the manner provided by  the eminent domain procedure law, real property within  or  without  the  limits  of  the  city for the construction, maintenance and operation of  drainage channels and structures for the purpose of flood control,  when  plans  for  such  purpose  have been approved by the state department of  environmental conservation, together with necessary rights  of  way  for  extending  such  channels  and  structures; and also to acquire real and  personal property within the limits of  the  city,  for  any  public  or  municipal  purpose, and to sell and convey the same, but the rights of a  city in and to its water front, ferries, bridges, wharf  property,  land  under  water,  public landings, wharves, docks, streets, avenues, parks,  and all other public places, are  hereby  declared  to  be  inalienable,  except in the cases provided for by subdivision seven of this section.    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, general, special or local,  cities  with  a population of one million or more inhabitants shall have  the additional power to acquire any property and the franchises  of  any  person,  firm  or corporation situated within such city, used and usable  in the operation of omnibus lines which are entirely within and  do  not  extend  beyond the boundaries of such city, the immediate acquisition of  which property and franchises is determined by the board of estimate  or  other  appropriate  governing body of such city to be necessary to serve  the  public  convenience  through  the  provision  of  adequate  omnibus  transportation,   notwithstanding   the  fact  that  such  property  and  franchises were or are devoted to a public use. The term  "property"  as  used  in this subdivision is defined to include lands, waters, rights in  lands or waters, structures, franchises and interests in land, including  lands under water and riparian rights, and any and all other things  and  rights  usually  included within the said term and includes also any and  all interests in such property less than full title, such  as  easements  permanent  or  temporary,  right-of-way,  uses, leases, licenses and all  other incorporeal hereditaments and  every  estate,  interest  or  right  legal  or  equitable, and omnibuses, rolling stock and any other form of  real or personal property. Acquisition of  such  property  shall  be  in  accordance with the provisions of the eminent domain procedure law.    Notwithstanding the provisions of any general, special or local law to  the  contrary,  such  city  may  authorize,  issue and sell obligations,  pursuant to  the  local  finance  law,  to  pay  for  the  cost  of  any  acquisition  or  acquisitions  of  such  property used and usable in the  operation of omnibus lines provided, however, that no  such  obligations  shall be authorized, issued, sold or refunded after September thirtieth,  nineteen hundred sixty-three, except, however, that such obligations may  be  authorized,  issued,  sold or refunded by such city pursuant to suchlaw after such  date,  to  pay  for  the  cost  of  any  acquisition  or  acquisitions  of such property, title to which vested in such city prior  to July  first,  nineteen  hundred  sixty-two.  The  maximum  period  of  probable   usefulness   for  each  such  object  or  purpose  for  which  obligations may be issued  hereunder  is  hereby  determined  to  be  as  follows:    a. The acquisition of real property, thirty years.    b. The acquisition of omnibuses and other necessary personal property,  five years.    c. The acquisition of franchises, five years.    Notwithstanding any general, special or local law to the contrary, the  city  of  New York is hereby required to acquire by condemnation, and to  maintain and operate, all or part  of  the  plants,  properties,  mains,  pipes,  facilities,  easements,  franchises  and  other real or personal  property of the Jamaica Water Supply Company constituting or related  to  the  water  distribution  system  located  in  the  city  of  New  York,  notwithstanding the fact that such property or part thereof  was  or  is  devoted  to  a public use. Notwithstanding any general, special or local  law to the contrary, title to the property condemned under the preceding  sentence shall vest in the city of New York and  compensation  shall  be  paid only (a) upon a decision by the supreme court that compensation for  the  property  so  condemned  shall  be  determined solely by the income  capitalization method of valuation, based on the actual  net  income  as  allowed  by  the  public  service  commission, and (b) upon such court's  determination of the amount of such compensation, based upon the  income  capitalization  method,  entry  of the final judgment, the filing of the  final decree, and the conclusion of any appeal or expiration of the time  to file an appeal related to the  condemnation  proceeding.  Should  any  court  determine  that  a  method  of compensation other than the income  capitalization method be utilized, or if the proposed award is more than  the rate base of the assets taken in condemnation  as  utilized  by  the  public  service  commission  in  setting  rates  and as certified by the  public service commission,  the  city  of  New  York  may  withdraw  the  condemnation proceeding without prejudice or costs to any party.    2-a.  To  make  and  execute  by  its local governing body, a lease or  leases of space in any building owned by the city for a term or terms of  not to exceed three years, provided that not more than one-half  of  the  space  in  any  such  building  may  be  so leased to any one person and  provided that the annual rent does not exceed the sum of  five  thousand  dollars.  Any such lease may be made without holding a public auction or  requiring the submission of sealed bids  therefor,  but  no  such  lease  shall  be  made  and  executed  unless notice of the proposed leasing is  published as required by law for three days in  any  seven  day  period.  Such  notice  shall contain a summary of the terms and conditions of the  proposed lease which shall include a statement  of  the  area  of  space  proposed  to be leased, the location of the building in which such space  is contained and the rent to be paid therefor.    3. To take  by  gift,  grant,  bequest  or  devise  and  to  hold  and  administer  real  and personal property within and without the limits of  the city, absolutely or in trust for any public  or  municipal  purpose,  upon  such  terms  and conditions as may be prescribed by the grantor or  donor and accepted by the city.    4. To levy and collect taxes on real and  personal  property  for  any  public or municipal purpose.    5.  To  spend  money  for  any  public or municipal purpose; to pay or  compromise claims equitably payable by the city, though not constituting  obligations legally binding on it, but it shall have no power  to  waivethe defense of the statute of limitations or to grant extra compensation  to any public officer, servant or contractor.    6.  To  establish  and  maintain  sinking funds for the liquidation of  principal and interest of any indebtedness.    7. To lay out, establish,  construct,  maintain,  operate,  alter  and  discontinue  streets, sewers and drainage systems, water supply systems,  and lighting systems, for lighting streets, public buildings and  public  places,  and  to  lay  out,  establish,  construct, maintain and operate  markets,  parks,  playgrounds  and   public   places,   and   upon   the  discontinuance thereof to sell and convey the same, and the city council  or  other  body  constituting the local authorities of any city having a  population of less than one million, notwithstanding the  provisions  of  any  special  or  local act, may acquire on its behalf by purchase or by  condemnation any water supply system owned and operated by a  waterworks  corporation  within the limits of such city, and where such water supply  system extends beyond the limits of such city, any such city may acquire  on its behalf by purchase or by condemnation the portion  of  the  water  supply  system  within the limits of such city, and may pay the purchase  price  or  award  therefor  wholly  or  partly  by  the  assumption   of  outstanding  bonds  of  such  waterworks  corporation,  and to cause the  necessary explorations,  investigations,  examinations,  surveys,  maps,  plans,  specifications and reports for its proposed water supply systems  or extensions thereof to be made and for such purposes by its  officers,  agents,  servants  or employees may enter at all times upon any lands or  waters, subject to liability for all damages done.    7-a. To sell and convey the water supply and  distribution  system  of  the  city,  or  any  part  thereof, to a water authority, a county water  district or a joint water works system established pursuant  to  article  five-B  of the general municipal law. The proceeds of such sale shall be  deposited in a reserve fund established  for  the  purpose  of  retiring  outstanding  obligations  issued  by the city to finance the cost of the  facilities sold and shall be expended only for such purpose,  except  as  provided  below.  If  the proceeds exceed the sum of all installments of  principal of and interest on such indebtedness due or to become due,  or  if,  when  all such outstanding obligations shall have been retired, any  moneys remain unexpended in the reserve fund, such excess moneys may  be  used for any city purpose.    8. To control and administer for any business, commercial, maritime or  public  purpose  the  waterfront  and  waterways  of  the  city  and  to  establish, maintain, operate  and  regulate  for  any  such  purpose  or  purposes   docks,  piers,  wharves,  warehouses  and  all  adjuncts  and  facilities for the utilization  of  the  waterfront  and  waterways  and  adjacent property.    8-a.  To  provide by ordinance of its local governing body for control  over the filling or diversion of streams and watercourses,  except  when  authorized  by  a state or federal agency, by requiring that any person,  firm or corporation shall secure a permit before  filling  or  diverting  any  stream  or watercourse from its natural course. The local governing  body may in its discretion deny a  permit  if  it  determines  that  the  proposed  filling or diversion is detrimental to the drainage or welfare  of the city.    9.  To  establish,  construct  and  maintain,   operate,   alter   and  discontinue  bridges,  tunnels  and  ferries,  and  approaches  thereto,  including but not limited to bridges over and across and  tunnels  under  navigable  streams,  waters, bays or arms of the sea, whether or not the  title to the bed thereof is in the state.    10. To grant franchises or rights to use the  streets,  waters,  water  front, public ways and public places of the city.11.  To  construct  and  maintain  public  buildings, public works and  public improvements, including local improvements, and assess  and  levy  upon  the  property  benefited  thereby the cost thereof, in whole or in  part.    12.  To prevent and extinguish fires and to protect the inhabitants of  the city and property within the city from loss or  damage  by  fire  or  other casualty.    12-a.  May  appropriate  moneys to a fire department to fund an annual  fireman's inspection dinner for volunteer firefighters and the  city  of  Glen  Cove may appropriate moneys to a fire department to fund an annual  dinner for installation of fire district officers.    13. To maintain order, enforce the laws, protect property and preserve  and care for the safety, health, comfort  and  general  welfare  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  city  and  visitors  thereto;  and for any of said  purposes to regulate and license occupations and businesses.    14. To create, maintain and administer a system  or  systems  for  the  enumeration,   identification   and  registration,  or  either,  of  the  inhabitants of the city and visitors thereto, or such classes thereof as  may be deemed advisable.    15.  To  establish,  maintain,  manage   and   administer   hospitals,  sanitaria,   dispensaries,   public   baths,   almshouses,   workhouses,  reformatories, jails and other charitable and correctional institutions;  to relieve, instruct and care  for  children  and  poor,  sick,  infirm,  defective,  mentally ill or inebriate persons; to provide for the burial  of  indigent  persons;  to  contribute  to  and  supervise   charitable,  eleemosynary,  correctional or reformatory institutions wholly or partly  under private control.    16. To establish and maintain such institutions and  instrumentalities  for   the   instruction,   enlightenment,   improvement,  entertainment,  recreation and welfare of its inhabitants as it may deem appropriate  or  necessary for the public interest or advantage.    17.  To determine and regulate the number, mode of selection, terms of  employment, qualifications, powers and duties and  compensation  of  all  employees of the city and the relations of all officers and employees of  the city to each other, to the city and to the inhabitants.    18.  To  create  a  municipal  civil  service;  to  make rules for the  classification of the offices and employments in the city's service, for  appointments, promotions and examinations, and for the registration  and  selection of laborers.    19.  To  regulate  the  manner  of transacting the city's business and  affairs and the reporting of and accounting for all transactions  of  or  concerning the city.    20.  Subject to the provisions in article four and section one hundred  thirteen of the retirement and social security law, to  provide  methods  and  provide, manage and administer funds for pensions and annuities for  and  retirement  of  city  officers  and  employees,  their  widows  and  dependents.    21. To investigate and inquire into all matters of concern to the city  or  its  inhabitants,  and  to  require  and  enforce  by  subpoena  the  attendance of witnesses at such investigations.    22. To regulate by ordinance or local law any matter within the powers  of the city, and to provide penalties, forfeitures and  imprisonment  to  punish  violations  thereof,  and  to  maintain  an  action  or  special  proceeding in a court of competent  jurisdiction  to  compel  compliance  with  or  restrain  by injunction the violation of any such ordinance or  local  law,  notwithstanding   that   a   penalty,   forfeiture   and/or  imprisonment may have been provided to punish violations thereof.23.  To  exercise  all  powers  necessary and proper for carrying into  execution the powers granted to the city.    24.  To  regulate and limit the height, bulk and location of buildings  hereafter erected, to regulate and determine the area of  yards,  courts  and  other open spaces, and to regulate the density of population in any  given area, and for said purposes to divide  the  city  into  districts.  Such regulations shall be uniform for each class of buildings throughout  any  district,  but  the regulations in one or more districts may differ  from those in other districts. Such regulations  shall  be  designed  to  secure  safety  from  fire,  flood  and other dangers and to promote the  public health and welfare, including, so far as conditions  may  permit,  provision  for  adequate  light,  air,  convenience  of  access, and the  accommodation of solar  energy  systems  and  equipment  and  access  to  sunlight necessary therefor, and shall be made with reasonable regard to  the  character  of buildings erected in each district, the value of land  and the use to which it may be put, to the end that such regulations may  promote public health, safety and welfare and the most desirable use for  which the land of each district may be adapted and may tend to  conserve  the  value  of  buildings  and  enhance the value of land throughout the  city.    25. To regulate and restrict the location of trades and industries and  the location of buildings, designed for specified  uses,  and  for  said  purposes  to  divide  the  city into districts and to prescribe for each  such district the trades  and  industries  that  shall  be  excluded  or  subjected to special regulation and the uses for which buildings may not  be erected or altered. Such regulations shall be designed to promote the  public  health,  safety  and  general  welfare  and  shall  be made with  reasonable consideration, among other things, to the  character  of  the  district, its peculiar suitability for particular uses, the conservation  of  property values and the direction of building development, in accord  with a well considered plan.    25-b. To acquire by purchase, gift, devise,  lease  or  otherwise,  in  accordance  with  the  provisions of any appropriate general, special or  local law, real and personal property within  the  limits  of  the  city  owned by any stock corporation organized to promote musical art and used  as an auditorium and facility for musical concerts, symphonies, recitals  and  instruction,  cultural  displays,  lectures  and  exhibits,  public  assembly  and  educational,  recreational  and  incidental   residential  purposes  and  to  maintain  and  lease or sell such property under such  terms and conditions as may be necessary or desirable to effectuate  and  promote  the  above  described  cultural and educational purposes in the  interests of the people of the city, and, at the discretion of the local  legislative body, and upon such conditions as it may  deem  appropriate,  to  provide  for  the limitation or remission of taxes on such property.  The power to remit or limit taxes pursuant  to  this  subdivision  shall  include  the  power  to remit or limit taxes on property acquired by the  city from such stock corporation and used for commercial or  residential  purposes  or  both,  including  any  building  at  any  time constructed  thereon, provided that a portion of space in  any  building  constructed  thereon for such commercial or residential purposes or both is dedicated  for the exclusive purposes of a corporation formed other than for profit  to  support  the above described cultural and educational purposes. Such  local legislative body may also require the making  of  tax  equivalency  payments  in  such  amounts  as  it may determine in its discretion with  respect to such property, and provide that a portion  of  such  payments  shall  be  made  to  and  retained  by  such  corporation,  to  be  used  exclusively for such cultural and educational purposes. The exercise  of  the  power granted to the city by this subdivision to require the makingof tax equivalency payments and the expenditure of any portion  of  such  tax  equivalency  payments  by  such corporation for the above described  cultural and educational purposes is in all  respects  for  the  general  welfare  and  benefit  of  the  people  of the state, and in making such  expenditures such corporation shall be regarded as performing  a  public  purpose.  The  exercise  of  the  powers  granted  to  the  city by this  subdivision shall, with respect to the owners of the building  used  for  commercial  or  residential  purposes  or  both, have the same effect as  though such payments were taxes as defined in the real property tax  law  which had been duly levied and imposed upon such owners by the city. The  local  legislative body shall be authorized to provide that the taxes or  tax equivalency payments with respect to the property occupied  by  such  building  shall  be  deemed  attributable  only  to the building. If any  person obligated to make tax equivalency payments with respect  to  such  property  shall fail to make such payments when due, the city shall have  a lien on such property in the same manner and at the same  time  as  if  such  payments  were  ordinary real property taxes. Such lien shall have  all the priorities of a lien for taxes on such property in favor of  the  city and shall be enforceable by the city in the manner provided for the  collection of tax liens in such city.    26.  To  establish  by  ordinance a scale of rents to be called "sewer  rents" and to prescribe the manner in which and the time at  which  such  rents  are  to be paid and to change such scale from time to time as may  be deemed advisable. Such rents may be based  upon  either  the  metered  consumption  of water on premises connected with the sewer system making  due allowances for commercial use of  water,  the  number  and  kind  of  plumbing  fixtures  connected  with  the  sewer  system or the number of  persons served by said sewer system or may be determined by  the  common  council,  or  other  local  legislative  body of the city upon any other  equitable basis. Such rents  shall  constitute  a  lien  upon  the  real  property  served  by  sewers,  and  such a lien is prior and superior to  every other lien or claim, except the lien of  an  existing  tax,  water  rent  or  local  assessment,  and  the  common  council  or  such  local  legislative body may bring and maintain an action in  the  name  of  the  city  for  the  foreclosure  of  such  liens  for  such sewer rents. The  provisions of this subdivision shall apply only to those cities in which  sewer rents have been established and are being imposed  on  May  first,  nineteen   hundred   fifty-one,  pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  this  subdivision. The provisions of this subdivision shall not prevent a city  from acting pursuant to the provisions of  subdivision  twenty-six-a  of  this section.    26-a.  To  establish  and impose sewer rents through the action of its  local legislative body pursuant to the provisions of article  fourteen-f  of the general municipal law.    27.  (a)  To  enact  ordinances:  (1) To examine, license and regulate  master and special electricians;  (2)  to  establish  a  board  for  the  examination,   licensing,   and   regulation   of   master  and  special  electricians; (3) to regulate the modification, suspension or revocation  of any such licenses for cause after a hearing.    (b) The term "master electrician" as used in  this  subdivision  shall  mean  and  include  any  person,  firm,  co-partnership,  association or  corporation having a regular place of business, who  or  which  performs  the  work of or who is engaged in the business of electrical contracting  and/or of installing, altering and repairing or contracting to  install,  alter  or  repair  any  electric wires or wiring apparatus, fixtures and  other appliances used or to be used for the transmission of  electricity  for  light,  heat  or  power,  or signaling system where more than fifty  volts is required for its operation.(c) The term "special electrician" as used in this  subdivision  shall  mean and include any person who is in the exclusive employ of the owner,  lessee  or  manager  of  a building to install, alter or repair electric  wiring or appliances for light, heat or power, or to install,  alter  or  repair  signalling  systems  where more than fifty volts is required for  operation. Such license may be limited in its scope  to  any  particular  premises  to  be specified in such license, but if so limited the holder  thereof shall be entitled to have such location  changed  from  time  to  time upon application to the board.    (d)  Such  ordinances  shall  not  apply  to  a  plant  operated  by a  municipality authorized to generate or sell electricity nor to  electric  corporations  as  defined in the transportation corporations law, nor to  any person or corporation engaged in their behalf, nor to the  employees  of any of them in performing such work in the conduct of the business of  such   corporations  in  installing,  maintaining  or  repairing  wires,  apparatus or fixtures, or other appliances used by  such  companies  and  necessary for or to their business, whether or not such wires, conduits,  apparatus,  fixtures or other appliances are on its own premises, unless  the work in connection therewith is done within a building not owned  by  such  corporation.  Such ordinances shall not apply to the installation,  maintenance or repair of elevators, dumb-waiters and escalators, nor  to  the  electrical  work  of  a telephone, telegraph, central station, of a  protective, railroad or  radio  broadcasting  company,  nor  to  persons  performing electrical work for such a company where said electrical work  is  an  integral  part  of  the plant or service used by such company in  rendering its duly authorized service to  the  public.  Such  ordinances  shall not apply to the maintenance, repairing or operation of electrical  equipment  within  a  theatre, or other place of public assemblage where  entertainment  or  exhibition  is  provided,  motion   picture   studio,  theatrical  studio,  or  motion  picture  film  laboratory,  nor  to the  installation of temporary electrical cables, assembling or  erecting  of  such  theatrical,  sound  recording, sound reproducing or motion picture  equipment where such equipment is  an  integral  part  of  the  theatre,  traveling  production,  motion  picture studio or laboratory used in the  production or exhibition of stage  or  motion  picture  attractions.  An  ordinance  adopted  hereunder shall provide that either of said licenses  shall be issued upon proof that  the  applicant  has  been  continuously  engaged  in  work  of  the character herein defined for a period of five  years  prior  to  the  enactment  of  such  ordinance,  without  further  examination, provided that such application be made to such board within  one year after the enactment of such ordinance.    (e)  Any  existing  board  for the examination and licensing of master  and/or special electricians  in  any  city  to  which  this  subdivision  applies, which has been created by the legislative body of said city, is  hereby validated and continued until otherwise provided by ordinance. No  such  board shall possess powers other than those which might be granted  to  a  board  created  pursuant  to  an  ordinance  authorized  by  this  subdivision.    (f)  The  provisions  of  this subdivision shall not apply to any city  having a population of less than four hundred thousand or more than  one  million inhabitants.    28.  (a) To contract by its local governing body, on recommendation of  the board of health or other local health officer or  agency,  with  any  non-profit  institution  organized to conduct research and investigation  into the control of diseases of importance  to  the  public  health  for  research  and  investigation by such institution into the prevention and  treatment of communicable diseases and other matters relating to  public  health.  Such  contract  shall run for a term of not less than ten yearsand may contain provisions and conditions  for  renewals  thereof,  from  time  to  time,  for  terms  of  not less than ten years each, provided,  however, that during such term or any renewal thereof the mayor or other  chief  executive  officer, the comptroller or other chief fiscal officer  and the commissioner of health or other local  health  officer  of  such  city  shall  be  ex  officio  members  of the board of directors of such  institution.    (b) The local governing body is further authorized  and  empowered  to  appropriate  the  sum  required  to be paid to the institution under the  terms of such contract and shall include the sum so appropriated in  its  budget  for  the next ensuing fiscal year. The expenditure of all moneys  appropriated to the institution shall be subject to  the  audit  of  the  comptroller or other chief fiscal officer.    29.  To  contract,  by  its board of estimate or other local governing  body, and in the case of any city with a population of  one  million  or  more inhabitants, by its board of estimate, with a non-profit membership  corporation,  organized  under  article forty-three of the insurance law  and approved by the superintendent of insurance and the state  board  of  social  welfare,  for  the  purpose  of  furnishing medical and surgical  services and hospital service as defined in such article forty-three, to  persons who contract with such corporation. Any city with  a  population  of one million or more inhabitants, acting by its board of estimate, may  make  such  a contract or contracts with one or more insurance companies  authorized to do business in this state or with  one  or  more  of  such  corporations  organized  under article forty-three of the insurance law,  and any such contract or contracts or any health insurance plan or plans  of such  city  effectuated  by  such  contract  or  contracts  shall  be  administered by the department of personnel of such city or, if there be  no  such  department therein, by a department, agency or officer thereof  designated by the board of estimate or other governing board or body  of  such  city.  Any  such  contract entered into by a city shall permit any  officer or employee or group of officers or employees of  an  agency  or  department who is paid out of the city treasury voluntarily to subscribe  to  a  plan  or  plans  providing  for medical and surgical services and  hospital service to such officers or employees and their  families.  The  comptroller  or other disbursing officer of the city shall be authorized  to deduct from the wages or salary paid by the city to such  officer  or  employee,  with  the  prior  consent  of such contracting or subscribing  officer or employee, the sums required to be paid  by  such  officer  or  employee to such corporation or company. Such board of estimate or other  local  governing  body, and in the case of any city with a population of  one million or more inhabitants, the authorities authorized  by  law  to  make  expense  budget  appropriations, if such contract or plan provides  that the employer shall contribute a share of the cost of  such  medical  and  surgical  services  and  hospital  service,  shall  have  power  to  appropriate a sum required to be paid under such contract by the city as  employer. The sum to be paid under such contract, in the  discretion  of  such  board  or  body,  may  be  a  payment  equal  to  the  sum  of the  contributions of individual officers or employees who have subscribed to  the plan or plans of such corporation or company, and in the case of any  city with a population of one million or  more  inhabitants,  may  be  a  payment  equal  to  all  or  any  part  of the sum to be paid under such  contract. The sum so appropriated shall be included in the city's budget  for the next ensuing fiscal year. The city shall be  authorized  to  pay  directly  to such corporation or company the total of such appropriation  and of such officer or employee deductions.    29-a. To contract, by its board of estimate or other  local  governing  body,  and in the case of any city having a population of one million ormore,  by  its  board  of  estimate,  with  such  non-profit  membership  corporation  organized  under  article forty-three of the insurance law,  and in the case of any city with a population of  one  million  or  more  inhabitants,  with  one  or  more  insurance  companies authorized to do  business in this  state  or  with  one  or  more  of  such  corporations  organized  under  article  forty-three  of  the  insurance  law, for the  purpose of providing and administering, as in subdivision twenty-nine of  section twenty of the general city law,  health  insurance  for  retired  officers  and employees of an agency or department and their spouses and  their dependent children and  for  the  widowed  spouses  and  dependent  children  of  employees  of  an  agency or department of such city whose  death was the natural and proximate  result  of  an  accident  sustained  while  an  employee  of  such city and while in the performance of duty.  During any period in which a retired employee voluntarily subscribes  to  such  plan  or  plans  after the date of his retirement, the comptroller  shall  be  authorized  to  deduct  from  his  retirement  allowance  the  contribution  required  to  be  paid by such officer or employee to such  corporation or company. During any period in which the widowed spouse or  dependent children of an employee of any agency or  department  of  such  city  voluntarily  subscribes  to  such plan or plans after the death of  such employee, the comptroller shall be authorized to  deduct  from  the  pension  or  other allowance payable to such widowed spouse or dependent  children the contribution required to be paid by such spouse or children  to such corporation or company. Where an authority,  created  under  the  public authorities law or defined in section three of the public housing  law,  which  performs  its  functions  wholly  within  a  city  having a  population of one million or more  inhabitants,  is  providing  for  its  former  officers  and employees, who are retirees of a retirement system  maintained by such city, a health insurance plan or plans with any  such  carrier or carriers similar to a health insurance plan or plans provided  by  such  city  for  its  retirees,  the comptroller or other disbursing  officer of such city shall be authorized to deduct from  the  retirement  allowance of any such retiree of an authority the contribution or share,  if  any,  required  to  be  paid  by such retiree who voluntarily elects  coverage under any of such plans.    29-b. To reimburse any retired officer or employee who:    (1) at the time  of  retirement  was  an  employee  of  an  agency  or  department and was paid out of the city treasury;    (2)  is  receiving a retirement allowance, pension or other retirement  benefit from a retirement or other  pension  system  maintained  by  the  city; and    (3)  is  enrolled  in  a choice of health plans program offered by the  city;  for premium charges for supplementary medical insurance  benefits  under  the  federal old-age, survivors and disability insurance benefit program  for such officer or employee, if  he  is  enrolled  under  such  federal  program,  and  for  his  spouse,  if  he  or  she  is  so enrolled. Such  reimbursement may be made monthly or at other intervals, and  shall  not  exceed the amount of premium charges paid for such supplementary medical  insurance benefits.    30.  To  enact  ordinances  creating  a  lien  for towing, storage and  incidental expenses upon vehicles found standing or parked in  violation  of  ordinances and removed and stored as an abatement of a nuisance, and  imposing a charge against the owner or persons entitled to possession of  such vehicles and providing  the  procedure  for  the  determination  of  ownership  or  right  to  possession  and the collection of such lien or  charge, including public sale of the said vehicle.31. May permit the use of any city-owned street or highway  machinery,  tools  or  equipment  by a county in which such city is wholly or partly  located or by a municipal subdivision, district, district corporation or  school district, wholly or partly within such a county, upon such  terms  as  may be agreed upon but with the payment to the city of not less than  the hourly rate as fixed by the state commissioner of transportation for  the rental or hiring of such machinery, tools or equipment by the  city.  Moneys received by a city pursuant to the provisions of this subdivision  may be applied to the payment of any existing obligations of the city or  transferred to the general fund.    32.  To  create  by  resolution  of  the local governing body a board,  commission or department of traffic control in order to more effectively  regulate and control vehicular and  pedestrian  traffic  and  better  to  serve the public convenience, promote public safety and to protect human  life,  health  and  property. Such a traffic agency shall consist of not  less than five nor more than nine members who shall be appointed by  the  mayor.  The  chairman  or  head  of  such  agency  shall  be  a licensed  professional engineer who shall have at least ten years'  experience  in  traffic  engineering.  He  shall  also  be the city traffic engineer and  shall receive an annual salary. Such agency members  shall  include  the  commissioners  of  police  and public works and the chairman of the city  planning commission or the officials occupying analogous offices and one  other qualified person and the mayor may designate other qualified  city  officers  or  employees  to  serve  as  members  ex  officio and without  additional compensation. Such traffic  agency  may  contain  within  its  departmental  structure  a  bureau  of  traffic engineering which bureau  shall be under the immediate supervision of the city traffic engineer.    Whenever such a traffic agency shall be created as in this subdivision  provided it shall, notwithstanding any other provision of  law,  possess  exclusive  power and authority within such city to (a) regulate, direct,  restrict  and  otherwise  to  control  the  movement  of  vehicular  and  pedestrian  traffic,  but  not  inconsistent  with the provisions of the  vehicle and traffic law in relation  thereto,  (b)  limit  the  carrying  capacity  of  vehicles  used  in the business of carrying passengers for  hire, except omnibuses  operated  pursuant  to  certificates  of  public  convenience  and necessity issued by commissioner of transportation, (c)  determine the location of garages, parking lots and parking meters,  (d)  determine  the  design,  type,  size,  method of erection, installation,  removal, maintenance, operation and  location  of  any  and  all  signs,  signals,  markings,  and  similar  devices  for  guiding,  directing  or  otherwise regulating and controlling such traffic and, with the approval  of the local governing board, may relinquish for transfer and assignment  to any other agency of the city government part or all of  one  or  more  such  powers  and  duties,  and  (e)  make rules and regulations for the  conduct of vehicular and pedestrian traffic in the  use  of  the  public  streets, squares and avenues as such board, commission or department may  deem  necessary. Such rules and regulations shall be filed with the city  clerk and shall become effective when published in a paper published  by  the  city  or,  if  no paper be published by such city, in not less than  three newspapers having a general daily circulation in such city, except  that in a city having a population of not  more  than  thirty  thousand,  such rules and regulations shall be published in one newspaper published  or  having  a  general  circulation  in  such city. The violation of any  provision of any such rule or regulation shall  be  triable  by  a  city  magistrate  and  punishable by imprisonment of not more than thirty days  or by a fine of not more than fifty dollars or both.    Nothing in this subdivision  contained  shall  affect  or  impair  the  powers  or  duties  of  the city planning commission or of any analogousagency of city government to  determine  the  location  of  garages  and  parking  lots  or  affect  the  power  or  duty  imposed  on  the police  department or other analogous agency to  regulate  hacks,  taxicabs  and  taxi  drivers  pursuant to the provisions of any city charter, local law  or ordinance and any such power and duty shall continue to be  exercised  and  performed  under the jurisdiction and control of such department or  agency.    Upon the adoption of a resolution creating such a traffic agency,  and  except  as in this subdivision otherwise provided, all of the functions,  powers and duties vested in such traffic agency which  theretofore  were  exercised  and  performed  by any other agency of the city government of  such city, together with all records, property and equipment used in the  exercise and performance of such functions, powers or duties  shall,  on  the  date  fixed  in  such resolution, pass to and be in addition to the  functions, powers and duties vested  in  such  traffic  agency  by  this  subdivision.    33.  By resolution of its legislative body to authorize the payment of  a reasonable mileage allowance for the miles  actually  and  necessarily  traveled on official business by any city officer or employee by the use  of his own automobile.    34.  To adopt a local law providing that every deed given by such city  pursuant to any general or special law providing for the foreclosure  of  a  tax  lien  by  action  in rem, shall be presumptive evidence that the  action and all proceedings therein and  all  proceedings  prior  thereto  from  and including the assessment of the lands affected and all notices  required by law were regular and in accordance with  all  provisions  of  law relating thereto.    After  two  years  from  the  date  of  the  record  of such deed, the  presumption shall be conclusive, unless at the time that such local  law  takes  effect  the  two  year  period  since  the record of the deed has  expired or less than six months of such  period  of  two  years  remains  unexpired,  in  which  case  the presumption shall become conclusive six  months after such local law takes effect. No action to  set  aside  such  deed  may  be  maintained  unless  the action is commenced and a note of  pendency of the action is filed in the office of the proper county clerk  prior to the time that the presumption becomes conclusive as aforesaid.    35. To adopt a local law or ordinance compelling the repair or removal  of any building or structure that, from any cause, endangers the health,  safety or welfare of the public, providing as follows:    a. For an inspection and report by the director of  buildings  of  the  city.    b.  For  the service of a notice upon the owner, and all other persons  having an interest in such property or structure, either  personally  or  by  registered mail, addressed to his last known address as shown by the  records of the officer or agency of the city charged with the assessment  of real property therein or collection of real  property  taxes  thereon  and/or  in the office of the county clerk or county register, containing  a description of the premises, a statement of the particulars  in  which  the  building  or  structure  is unsafe or dangerous and an order of the  director of buildings requiring same to be repaired or removed;  and  if  such  service  be  made by registered mail, for the posting of a copy of  such notice on the premises.    c. For the time within which the owner so served  shall  commence  the  repair or removal of such building or structure.    d. For the filing of a copy of such notice in the office of the county  clerk  of the county within which such building or structure is located,  which notice shall be filed by such clerk in the same manner as a notice  of pendency pursuant to article sixty-five of the civil practice law andrules, and shall have the same effect as a notice of pendency as therein  provided, except as otherwise hereinafter provided in this paragraph.  A  notice  so  filed  shall  be effective for a period of one year from the  date of filing, provided, however, that it may be vacated upon the order  of  a  judge  or justice of a court of record or upon the consent of the  corporation counsel. The clerk of the county where such notice is  filed  shall  mark such notice and any record or docket thereof as cancelled of  record upon the  presentation  and  filing  of  such  consent  or  of  a  certified copy of such order.    e. For a hearing before the director of buildings, notice of which and  the  time  and  place thereof to be specified in the notice to repair or  demolish, served upon the owner and such persons having an  interest  in  the property or structure as is herein prescribed.    f.  For  the  removal of such building or structure by the city in the  event such owner fails or refuses to repair or remove  the  same  within  the time provided.    g.  For  the assessment of all costs and expenses incurred by the city  in connection with the proceedings to repair or remove such building  or  structure, including the cost of actually removing the same, against the  land on which such building or structure is located.    h.  The  powers  conferred by this subdivision thirty-five shall be in  addition to all other powers conferred upon cities in  relation  to  the  same  subject  matter.  Nothing  contained  in this subdivision shall be  construed to amend, repeal, modify or affect any existing local  law  or  ordinance  or provision of any charter or administrative code pertaining  to the subject matter to which this subdivision relates, or to limit  or  restrict  the  power  of  any  city to amend or modify any such existing  local law, ordinance or provision of any charter or administrative code,  or to restrict or limit any power otherwise conferred on any city by law  with respect to the subject matter to which this subdivision relates.    36.  In  cities  having  a  population  of  fewer  than  one   million  inhabitants, to lease to any person, firm or corporation, for commercial  or  private  use,  the  air rights over or the subsurface area under any  property of the city acquired or to be acquired for  street  or  highway  puposes,  together  with easements or other rights of user necessary for  the use and development of such air rights or subsurface areas,  as  are  not   needed   for   public  purposes,  subject  to  such  reservations,  restrictions and conditions  as  the  city  deems  necessary  to  assure  adequate  protection to the safety and the adequacy of street or highway  facilities and to abutting or adjacent land users and as the city  deems  necessary  to minimize or avoid public utility facility relocation costs  which would otherwise ensue if  such  facilities  were  removed  without  regard  to  their compatability with the intended use of such air rights  or subsurface areas. Any such lease may be  for  a  term  not  exceeding  ninety-nine  years  and may be renewed for such additional term or terms  as  the  city  council   may   provide.   Any   buildings,   structures,  substructures  or  superstructures,  the  title  to which remains in the  lessee, shall be deemed to be real property for purposes of taxation  as  defined  in  subdivision  twelve  of section one hundred two of the real  property tax law. Nothing in this subdivision shall be deemed to  create  any   liability  arising  from  the  cost  of  public  utility  facility  relocation not recognized at common law or otherwise created by statute.    37. To adopt  ordinances  or  local  laws  prohibiting  and  punishing  loitering;  provided  however,  that  such  ordinance  or law shall only  prohibit loitering for a specific illegal  purpose  or  loitering  in  a  specific  place  of restricted public access and shall therein set forth  guidelines for application  of  such  prohibitions  by  law  enforcementofficers  so  as  to  prevent arbitrary or discriminatory enforcement of  such prohibitions.    38. a. A city having a population of more than one hundred twenty-five  thousand and less than one million, is authorized and empowered to enter  into  a  lease, sublease or other agreement with the dormitory authority  providing for the financing or refinancing of all or a portion of school  district capital facilities or  school  district  capital  equipment  in  accordance with section sixteen hundred eighty of the public authorities  law  and with the approval of the commissioner of education. Such lease,  sublease, or other agreement may  provide  for  the  payment  of  annual  rentals  and other payments to the dormitory authority, and contain such  other terms and conditions as may be agreed upon by the parties thereto,  including the  establishment  of  reserve  funds  and  indemnities.  For  purposes  of  this  subdivision, school district capital equipment shall  have the meaning ascribed thereto in section sixteen hundred seventy-six  of the public authorities law.    b.  Notwithstanding  any  provisions  of  law  to  the  contrary,  the  dormitory authority and the board of education are hereby authorized and  empowered  to  perform  any  and  all acts and to enter into any and all  agreements necessary or desirable to effectuate  the  purposes  of  this  subdivision.

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Gct > Article-2-a > 20

§ 20. Grant  of  specific  powers.  Subject  to  the  constitution and  general laws of this state, every city is empowered:    1. To contract and be contracted with and to institute,  maintain  and  defend any action or proceeding in any court.    2. To take, purchase, hold and lease real and personal property within  and  without  the  limits  of  the  city;  to  acquire  pursuant  to the  provisions of the eminent domain procedure law, real property within  or  without  the  limits  of  the city for the construction, maintenance and  operation of a sewage disposal plant, together with necessary rights  of  way  for  extending  its  sewage system to, and connecting the same with  such disposal  plant,  to  acquire  or  purchase  real  property  and/or  personal property within or without the limits of the city necessary for  the construction, maintenance and operation of a water supply system for  such  city together with necessary rights of way for extending its water  supply system to and connecting the same with a  source  or  sources  of  water  supply; to acquire by purchase, if the city is able to agree with  the owners on the terms thereof, and otherwise in the manner provided by  the eminent domain procedure law, real property within  or  without  the  limits  of  the  city for the construction, maintenance and operation of  drainage channels and structures for the purpose of flood control,  when  plans  for  such  purpose  have been approved by the state department of  environmental conservation, together with necessary rights  of  way  for  extending  such  channels  and  structures; and also to acquire real and  personal property within the limits of  the  city,  for  any  public  or  municipal  purpose, and to sell and convey the same, but the rights of a  city in and to its water front, ferries, bridges, wharf  property,  land  under  water,  public landings, wharves, docks, streets, avenues, parks,  and all other public places, are  hereby  declared  to  be  inalienable,  except in the cases provided for by subdivision seven of this section.    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, general, special or local,  cities  with  a population of one million or more inhabitants shall have  the additional power to acquire any property and the franchises  of  any  person,  firm  or corporation situated within such city, used and usable  in the operation of omnibus lines which are entirely within and  do  not  extend  beyond the boundaries of such city, the immediate acquisition of  which property and franchises is determined by the board of estimate  or  other  appropriate  governing body of such city to be necessary to serve  the  public  convenience  through  the  provision  of  adequate  omnibus  transportation,   notwithstanding   the  fact  that  such  property  and  franchises were or are devoted to a public use. The term  "property"  as  used  in this subdivision is defined to include lands, waters, rights in  lands or waters, structures, franchises and interests in land, including  lands under water and riparian rights, and any and all other things  and  rights  usually  included within the said term and includes also any and  all interests in such property less than full title, such  as  easements  permanent  or  temporary,  right-of-way,  uses, leases, licenses and all  other incorporeal hereditaments and  every  estate,  interest  or  right  legal  or  equitable, and omnibuses, rolling stock and any other form of  real or personal property. Acquisition of  such  property  shall  be  in  accordance with the provisions of the eminent domain procedure law.    Notwithstanding the provisions of any general, special or local law to  the  contrary,  such  city  may  authorize,  issue and sell obligations,  pursuant to  the  local  finance  law,  to  pay  for  the  cost  of  any  acquisition  or  acquisitions  of  such  property used and usable in the  operation of omnibus lines provided, however, that no  such  obligations  shall be authorized, issued, sold or refunded after September thirtieth,  nineteen hundred sixty-three, except, however, that such obligations may  be  authorized,  issued,  sold or refunded by such city pursuant to suchlaw after such  date,  to  pay  for  the  cost  of  any  acquisition  or  acquisitions  of such property, title to which vested in such city prior  to July  first,  nineteen  hundred  sixty-two.  The  maximum  period  of  probable   usefulness   for  each  such  object  or  purpose  for  which  obligations may be issued  hereunder  is  hereby  determined  to  be  as  follows:    a. The acquisition of real property, thirty years.    b. The acquisition of omnibuses and other necessary personal property,  five years.    c. The acquisition of franchises, five years.    Notwithstanding any general, special or local law to the contrary, the  city  of  New York is hereby required to acquire by condemnation, and to  maintain and operate, all or part  of  the  plants,  properties,  mains,  pipes,  facilities,  easements,  franchises  and  other real or personal  property of the Jamaica Water Supply Company constituting or related  to  the  water  distribution  system  located  in  the  city  of  New  York,  notwithstanding the fact that such property or part thereof  was  or  is  devoted  to  a public use. Notwithstanding any general, special or local  law to the contrary, title to the property condemned under the preceding  sentence shall vest in the city of New York and  compensation  shall  be  paid only (a) upon a decision by the supreme court that compensation for  the  property  so  condemned  shall  be  determined solely by the income  capitalization method of valuation, based on the actual  net  income  as  allowed  by  the  public  service  commission, and (b) upon such court's  determination of the amount of such compensation, based upon the  income  capitalization  method,  entry  of the final judgment, the filing of the  final decree, and the conclusion of any appeal or expiration of the time  to file an appeal related to the  condemnation  proceeding.  Should  any  court  determine  that  a  method  of compensation other than the income  capitalization method be utilized, or if the proposed award is more than  the rate base of the assets taken in condemnation  as  utilized  by  the  public  service  commission  in  setting  rates  and as certified by the  public service commission,  the  city  of  New  York  may  withdraw  the  condemnation proceeding without prejudice or costs to any party.    2-a.  To  make  and  execute  by  its local governing body, a lease or  leases of space in any building owned by the city for a term or terms of  not to exceed three years, provided that not more than one-half  of  the  space  in  any  such  building  may  be  so leased to any one person and  provided that the annual rent does not exceed the sum of  five  thousand  dollars.  Any such lease may be made without holding a public auction or  requiring the submission of sealed bids  therefor,  but  no  such  lease  shall  be  made  and  executed  unless notice of the proposed leasing is  published as required by law for three days in  any  seven  day  period.  Such  notice  shall contain a summary of the terms and conditions of the  proposed lease which shall include a statement  of  the  area  of  space  proposed  to be leased, the location of the building in which such space  is contained and the rent to be paid therefor.    3. To take  by  gift,  grant,  bequest  or  devise  and  to  hold  and  administer  real  and personal property within and without the limits of  the city, absolutely or in trust for any public  or  municipal  purpose,  upon  such  terms  and conditions as may be prescribed by the grantor or  donor and accepted by the city.    4. To levy and collect taxes on real and  personal  property  for  any  public or municipal purpose.    5.  To  spend  money  for  any  public or municipal purpose; to pay or  compromise claims equitably payable by the city, though not constituting  obligations legally binding on it, but it shall have no power  to  waivethe defense of the statute of limitations or to grant extra compensation  to any public officer, servant or contractor.    6.  To  establish  and  maintain  sinking funds for the liquidation of  principal and interest of any indebtedness.    7. To lay out, establish,  construct,  maintain,  operate,  alter  and  discontinue  streets, sewers and drainage systems, water supply systems,  and lighting systems, for lighting streets, public buildings and  public  places,  and  to  lay  out,  establish,  construct, maintain and operate  markets,  parks,  playgrounds  and   public   places,   and   upon   the  discontinuance thereof to sell and convey the same, and the city council  or  other  body  constituting the local authorities of any city having a  population of less than one million, notwithstanding the  provisions  of  any  special  or  local act, may acquire on its behalf by purchase or by  condemnation any water supply system owned and operated by a  waterworks  corporation  within the limits of such city, and where such water supply  system extends beyond the limits of such city, any such city may acquire  on its behalf by purchase or by condemnation the portion  of  the  water  supply  system  within the limits of such city, and may pay the purchase  price  or  award  therefor  wholly  or  partly  by  the  assumption   of  outstanding  bonds  of  such  waterworks  corporation,  and to cause the  necessary explorations,  investigations,  examinations,  surveys,  maps,  plans,  specifications and reports for its proposed water supply systems  or extensions thereof to be made and for such purposes by its  officers,  agents,  servants  or employees may enter at all times upon any lands or  waters, subject to liability for all damages done.    7-a. To sell and convey the water supply and  distribution  system  of  the  city,  or  any  part  thereof, to a water authority, a county water  district or a joint water works system established pursuant  to  article  five-B  of the general municipal law. The proceeds of such sale shall be  deposited in a reserve fund established  for  the  purpose  of  retiring  outstanding  obligations  issued  by the city to finance the cost of the  facilities sold and shall be expended only for such purpose,  except  as  provided  below.  If  the proceeds exceed the sum of all installments of  principal of and interest on such indebtedness due or to become due,  or  if,  when  all such outstanding obligations shall have been retired, any  moneys remain unexpended in the reserve fund, such excess moneys may  be  used for any city purpose.    8. To control and administer for any business, commercial, maritime or  public  purpose  the  waterfront  and  waterways  of  the  city  and  to  establish, maintain, operate  and  regulate  for  any  such  purpose  or  purposes   docks,  piers,  wharves,  warehouses  and  all  adjuncts  and  facilities for the utilization  of  the  waterfront  and  waterways  and  adjacent property.    8-a.  To  provide by ordinance of its local governing body for control  over the filling or diversion of streams and watercourses,  except  when  authorized  by  a state or federal agency, by requiring that any person,  firm or corporation shall secure a permit before  filling  or  diverting  any  stream  or watercourse from its natural course. The local governing  body may in its discretion deny a  permit  if  it  determines  that  the  proposed  filling or diversion is detrimental to the drainage or welfare  of the city.    9.  To  establish,  construct  and  maintain,   operate,   alter   and  discontinue  bridges,  tunnels  and  ferries,  and  approaches  thereto,  including but not limited to bridges over and across and  tunnels  under  navigable  streams,  waters, bays or arms of the sea, whether or not the  title to the bed thereof is in the state.    10. To grant franchises or rights to use the  streets,  waters,  water  front, public ways and public places of the city.11.  To  construct  and  maintain  public  buildings, public works and  public improvements, including local improvements, and assess  and  levy  upon  the  property  benefited  thereby the cost thereof, in whole or in  part.    12.  To prevent and extinguish fires and to protect the inhabitants of  the city and property within the city from loss or  damage  by  fire  or  other casualty.    12-a.  May  appropriate  moneys to a fire department to fund an annual  fireman's inspection dinner for volunteer firefighters and the  city  of  Glen  Cove may appropriate moneys to a fire department to fund an annual  dinner for installation of fire district officers.    13. To maintain order, enforce the laws, protect property and preserve  and care for the safety, health, comfort  and  general  welfare  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  city  and  visitors  thereto;  and for any of said  purposes to regulate and license occupations and businesses.    14. To create, maintain and administer a system  or  systems  for  the  enumeration,   identification   and  registration,  or  either,  of  the  inhabitants of the city and visitors thereto, or such classes thereof as  may be deemed advisable.    15.  To  establish,  maintain,  manage   and   administer   hospitals,  sanitaria,   dispensaries,   public   baths,   almshouses,   workhouses,  reformatories, jails and other charitable and correctional institutions;  to relieve, instruct and care  for  children  and  poor,  sick,  infirm,  defective,  mentally ill or inebriate persons; to provide for the burial  of  indigent  persons;  to  contribute  to  and  supervise   charitable,  eleemosynary,  correctional or reformatory institutions wholly or partly  under private control.    16. To establish and maintain such institutions and  instrumentalities  for   the   instruction,   enlightenment,   improvement,  entertainment,  recreation and welfare of its inhabitants as it may deem appropriate  or  necessary for the public interest or advantage.    17.  To determine and regulate the number, mode of selection, terms of  employment, qualifications, powers and duties and  compensation  of  all  employees of the city and the relations of all officers and employees of  the city to each other, to the city and to the inhabitants.    18.  To  create  a  municipal  civil  service;  to  make rules for the  classification of the offices and employments in the city's service, for  appointments, promotions and examinations, and for the registration  and  selection of laborers.    19.  To  regulate  the  manner  of transacting the city's business and  affairs and the reporting of and accounting for all transactions  of  or  concerning the city.    20.  Subject to the provisions in article four and section one hundred  thirteen of the retirement and social security law, to  provide  methods  and  provide, manage and administer funds for pensions and annuities for  and  retirement  of  city  officers  and  employees,  their  widows  and  dependents.    21. To investigate and inquire into all matters of concern to the city  or  its  inhabitants,  and  to  require  and  enforce  by  subpoena  the  attendance of witnesses at such investigations.    22. To regulate by ordinance or local law any matter within the powers  of the city, and to provide penalties, forfeitures and  imprisonment  to  punish  violations  thereof,  and  to  maintain  an  action  or  special  proceeding in a court of competent  jurisdiction  to  compel  compliance  with  or  restrain  by injunction the violation of any such ordinance or  local  law,  notwithstanding   that   a   penalty,   forfeiture   and/or  imprisonment may have been provided to punish violations thereof.23.  To  exercise  all  powers  necessary and proper for carrying into  execution the powers granted to the city.    24.  To  regulate and limit the height, bulk and location of buildings  hereafter erected, to regulate and determine the area of  yards,  courts  and  other open spaces, and to regulate the density of population in any  given area, and for said purposes to divide  the  city  into  districts.  Such regulations shall be uniform for each class of buildings throughout  any  district,  but  the regulations in one or more districts may differ  from those in other districts. Such regulations  shall  be  designed  to  secure  safety  from  fire,  flood  and other dangers and to promote the  public health and welfare, including, so far as conditions  may  permit,  provision  for  adequate  light,  air,  convenience  of  access, and the  accommodation of solar  energy  systems  and  equipment  and  access  to  sunlight necessary therefor, and shall be made with reasonable regard to  the  character  of buildings erected in each district, the value of land  and the use to which it may be put, to the end that such regulations may  promote public health, safety and welfare and the most desirable use for  which the land of each district may be adapted and may tend to  conserve  the  value  of  buildings  and  enhance the value of land throughout the  city.    25. To regulate and restrict the location of trades and industries and  the location of buildings, designed for specified  uses,  and  for  said  purposes  to  divide  the  city into districts and to prescribe for each  such district the trades  and  industries  that  shall  be  excluded  or  subjected to special regulation and the uses for which buildings may not  be erected or altered. Such regulations shall be designed to promote the  public  health,  safety  and  general  welfare  and  shall  be made with  reasonable consideration, among other things, to the  character  of  the  district, its peculiar suitability for particular uses, the conservation  of  property values and the direction of building development, in accord  with a well considered plan.    25-b. To acquire by purchase, gift, devise,  lease  or  otherwise,  in  accordance  with  the  provisions of any appropriate general, special or  local law, real and personal property within  the  limits  of  the  city  owned by any stock corporation organized to promote musical art and used  as an auditorium and facility for musical concerts, symphonies, recitals  and  instruction,  cultural  displays,  lectures  and  exhibits,  public  assembly  and  educational,  recreational  and  incidental   residential  purposes  and  to  maintain  and  lease or sell such property under such  terms and conditions as may be necessary or desirable to effectuate  and  promote  the  above  described  cultural and educational purposes in the  interests of the people of the city, and, at the discretion of the local  legislative body, and upon such conditions as it may  deem  appropriate,  to  provide  for  the limitation or remission of taxes on such property.  The power to remit or limit taxes pursuant  to  this  subdivision  shall  include  the  power  to remit or limit taxes on property acquired by the  city from such stock corporation and used for commercial or  residential  purposes  or  both,  including  any  building  at  any  time constructed  thereon, provided that a portion of space in  any  building  constructed  thereon for such commercial or residential purposes or both is dedicated  for the exclusive purposes of a corporation formed other than for profit  to  support  the above described cultural and educational purposes. Such  local legislative body may also require the making  of  tax  equivalency  payments  in  such  amounts  as  it may determine in its discretion with  respect to such property, and provide that a portion  of  such  payments  shall  be  made  to  and  retained  by  such  corporation,  to  be  used  exclusively for such cultural and educational purposes. The exercise  of  the  power granted to the city by this subdivision to require the makingof tax equivalency payments and the expenditure of any portion  of  such  tax  equivalency  payments  by  such corporation for the above described  cultural and educational purposes is in all  respects  for  the  general  welfare  and  benefit  of  the  people  of the state, and in making such  expenditures such corporation shall be regarded as performing  a  public  purpose.  The  exercise  of  the  powers  granted  to  the  city by this  subdivision shall, with respect to the owners of the building  used  for  commercial  or  residential  purposes  or  both, have the same effect as  though such payments were taxes as defined in the real property tax  law  which had been duly levied and imposed upon such owners by the city. The  local  legislative body shall be authorized to provide that the taxes or  tax equivalency payments with respect to the property occupied  by  such  building  shall  be  deemed  attributable  only  to the building. If any  person obligated to make tax equivalency payments with respect  to  such  property  shall fail to make such payments when due, the city shall have  a lien on such property in the same manner and at the same  time  as  if  such  payments  were  ordinary real property taxes. Such lien shall have  all the priorities of a lien for taxes on such property in favor of  the  city and shall be enforceable by the city in the manner provided for the  collection of tax liens in such city.    26.  To  establish  by  ordinance a scale of rents to be called "sewer  rents" and to prescribe the manner in which and the time at  which  such  rents  are  to be paid and to change such scale from time to time as may  be deemed advisable. Such rents may be based  upon  either  the  metered  consumption  of water on premises connected with the sewer system making  due allowances for commercial use of  water,  the  number  and  kind  of  plumbing  fixtures  connected  with  the  sewer  system or the number of  persons served by said sewer system or may be determined by  the  common  council,  or  other  local  legislative  body of the city upon any other  equitable basis. Such rents  shall  constitute  a  lien  upon  the  real  property  served  by  sewers,  and  such a lien is prior and superior to  every other lien or claim, except the lien of  an  existing  tax,  water  rent  or  local  assessment,  and  the  common  council  or  such  local  legislative body may bring and maintain an action in  the  name  of  the  city  for  the  foreclosure  of  such  liens  for  such sewer rents. The  provisions of this subdivision shall apply only to those cities in which  sewer rents have been established and are being imposed  on  May  first,  nineteen   hundred   fifty-one,  pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  this  subdivision. The provisions of this subdivision shall not prevent a city  from acting pursuant to the provisions of  subdivision  twenty-six-a  of  this section.    26-a.  To  establish  and impose sewer rents through the action of its  local legislative body pursuant to the provisions of article  fourteen-f  of the general municipal law.    27.  (a)  To  enact  ordinances:  (1) To examine, license and regulate  master and special electricians;  (2)  to  establish  a  board  for  the  examination,   licensing,   and   regulation   of   master  and  special  electricians; (3) to regulate the modification, suspension or revocation  of any such licenses for cause after a hearing.    (b) The term "master electrician" as used in  this  subdivision  shall  mean  and  include  any  person,  firm,  co-partnership,  association or  corporation having a regular place of business, who  or  which  performs  the  work of or who is engaged in the business of electrical contracting  and/or of installing, altering and repairing or contracting to  install,  alter  or  repair  any  electric wires or wiring apparatus, fixtures and  other appliances used or to be used for the transmission of  electricity  for  light,  heat  or  power,  or signaling system where more than fifty  volts is required for its operation.(c) The term "special electrician" as used in this  subdivision  shall  mean and include any person who is in the exclusive employ of the owner,  lessee  or  manager  of  a building to install, alter or repair electric  wiring or appliances for light, heat or power, or to install,  alter  or  repair  signalling  systems  where more than fifty volts is required for  operation. Such license may be limited in its scope  to  any  particular  premises  to  be specified in such license, but if so limited the holder  thereof shall be entitled to have such location  changed  from  time  to  time upon application to the board.    (d)  Such  ordinances  shall  not  apply  to  a  plant  operated  by a  municipality authorized to generate or sell electricity nor to  electric  corporations  as  defined in the transportation corporations law, nor to  any person or corporation engaged in their behalf, nor to the  employees  of any of them in performing such work in the conduct of the business of  such   corporations  in  installing,  maintaining  or  repairing  wires,  apparatus or fixtures, or other appliances used by  such  companies  and  necessary for or to their business, whether or not such wires, conduits,  apparatus,  fixtures or other appliances are on its own premises, unless  the work in connection therewith is done within a building not owned  by  such  corporation.  Such ordinances shall not apply to the installation,  maintenance or repair of elevators, dumb-waiters and escalators, nor  to  the  electrical  work  of  a telephone, telegraph, central station, of a  protective, railroad or  radio  broadcasting  company,  nor  to  persons  performing electrical work for such a company where said electrical work  is  an  integral  part  of  the plant or service used by such company in  rendering its duly authorized service to  the  public.  Such  ordinances  shall not apply to the maintenance, repairing or operation of electrical  equipment  within  a  theatre, or other place of public assemblage where  entertainment  or  exhibition  is  provided,  motion   picture   studio,  theatrical  studio,  or  motion  picture  film  laboratory,  nor  to the  installation of temporary electrical cables, assembling or  erecting  of  such  theatrical,  sound  recording, sound reproducing or motion picture  equipment where such equipment is  an  integral  part  of  the  theatre,  traveling  production,  motion  picture studio or laboratory used in the  production or exhibition of stage  or  motion  picture  attractions.  An  ordinance  adopted  hereunder shall provide that either of said licenses  shall be issued upon proof that  the  applicant  has  been  continuously  engaged  in  work  of  the character herein defined for a period of five  years  prior  to  the  enactment  of  such  ordinance,  without  further  examination, provided that such application be made to such board within  one year after the enactment of such ordinance.    (e)  Any  existing  board  for the examination and licensing of master  and/or special electricians  in  any  city  to  which  this  subdivision  applies, which has been created by the legislative body of said city, is  hereby validated and continued until otherwise provided by ordinance. No  such  board shall possess powers other than those which might be granted  to  a  board  created  pursuant  to  an  ordinance  authorized  by  this  subdivision.    (f)  The  provisions  of  this subdivision shall not apply to any city  having a population of less than four hundred thousand or more than  one  million inhabitants.    28.  (a) To contract by its local governing body, on recommendation of  the board of health or other local health officer or  agency,  with  any  non-profit  institution  organized to conduct research and investigation  into the control of diseases of importance  to  the  public  health  for  research  and  investigation by such institution into the prevention and  treatment of communicable diseases and other matters relating to  public  health.  Such  contract  shall run for a term of not less than ten yearsand may contain provisions and conditions  for  renewals  thereof,  from  time  to  time,  for  terms  of  not less than ten years each, provided,  however, that during such term or any renewal thereof the mayor or other  chief  executive  officer, the comptroller or other chief fiscal officer  and the commissioner of health or other local  health  officer  of  such  city  shall  be  ex  officio  members  of the board of directors of such  institution.    (b) The local governing body is further authorized  and  empowered  to  appropriate  the  sum  required  to be paid to the institution under the  terms of such contract and shall include the sum so appropriated in  its  budget  for  the next ensuing fiscal year. The expenditure of all moneys  appropriated to the institution shall be subject to  the  audit  of  the  comptroller or other chief fiscal officer.    29.  To  contract,  by  its board of estimate or other local governing  body, and in the case of any city with a population of  one  million  or  more inhabitants, by its board of estimate, with a non-profit membership  corporation,  organized  under  article forty-three of the insurance law  and approved by the superintendent of insurance and the state  board  of  social  welfare,  for  the  purpose  of  furnishing medical and surgical  services and hospital service as defined in such article forty-three, to  persons who contract with such corporation. Any city with  a  population  of one million or more inhabitants, acting by its board of estimate, may  make  such  a contract or contracts with one or more insurance companies  authorized to do business in this state or with  one  or  more  of  such  corporations  organized  under article forty-three of the insurance law,  and any such contract or contracts or any health insurance plan or plans  of such  city  effectuated  by  such  contract  or  contracts  shall  be  administered by the department of personnel of such city or, if there be  no  such  department therein, by a department, agency or officer thereof  designated by the board of estimate or other governing board or body  of  such  city.  Any  such  contract entered into by a city shall permit any  officer or employee or group of officers or employees of  an  agency  or  department who is paid out of the city treasury voluntarily to subscribe  to  a  plan  or  plans  providing  for medical and surgical services and  hospital service to such officers or employees and their  families.  The  comptroller  or other disbursing officer of the city shall be authorized  to deduct from the wages or salary paid by the city to such  officer  or  employee,  with  the  prior  consent  of such contracting or subscribing  officer or employee, the sums required to be paid  by  such  officer  or  employee to such corporation or company. Such board of estimate or other  local  governing  body, and in the case of any city with a population of  one million or more inhabitants, the authorities authorized  by  law  to  make  expense  budget  appropriations, if such contract or plan provides  that the employer shall contribute a share of the cost of  such  medical  and  surgical  services  and  hospital  service,  shall  have  power  to  appropriate a sum required to be paid under such contract by the city as  employer. The sum to be paid under such contract, in the  discretion  of  such  board  or  body,  may  be  a  payment  equal  to  the  sum  of the  contributions of individual officers or employees who have subscribed to  the plan or plans of such corporation or company, and in the case of any  city with a population of one million or  more  inhabitants,  may  be  a  payment  equal  to  all  or  any  part  of the sum to be paid under such  contract. The sum so appropriated shall be included in the city's budget  for the next ensuing fiscal year. The city shall be  authorized  to  pay  directly  to such corporation or company the total of such appropriation  and of such officer or employee deductions.    29-a. To contract, by its board of estimate or other  local  governing  body,  and in the case of any city having a population of one million ormore,  by  its  board  of  estimate,  with  such  non-profit  membership  corporation  organized  under  article forty-three of the insurance law,  and in the case of any city with a population of  one  million  or  more  inhabitants,  with  one  or  more  insurance  companies authorized to do  business in this  state  or  with  one  or  more  of  such  corporations  organized  under  article  forty-three  of  the  insurance  law, for the  purpose of providing and administering, as in subdivision twenty-nine of  section twenty of the general city law,  health  insurance  for  retired  officers  and employees of an agency or department and their spouses and  their dependent children and  for  the  widowed  spouses  and  dependent  children  of  employees  of  an  agency or department of such city whose  death was the natural and proximate  result  of  an  accident  sustained  while  an  employee  of  such city and while in the performance of duty.  During any period in which a retired employee voluntarily subscribes  to  such  plan  or  plans  after the date of his retirement, the comptroller  shall  be  authorized  to  deduct  from  his  retirement  allowance  the  contribution  required  to  be  paid by such officer or employee to such  corporation or company. During any period in which the widowed spouse or  dependent children of an employee of any agency or  department  of  such  city  voluntarily  subscribes  to  such plan or plans after the death of  such employee, the comptroller shall be authorized to  deduct  from  the  pension  or  other allowance payable to such widowed spouse or dependent  children the contribution required to be paid by such spouse or children  to such corporation or company. Where an authority,  created  under  the  public authorities law or defined in section three of the public housing  law,  which  performs  its  functions  wholly  within  a  city  having a  population of one million or more  inhabitants,  is  providing  for  its  former  officers  and employees, who are retirees of a retirement system  maintained by such city, a health insurance plan or plans with any  such  carrier or carriers similar to a health insurance plan or plans provided  by  such  city  for  its  retirees,  the comptroller or other disbursing  officer of such city shall be authorized to deduct from  the  retirement  allowance of any such retiree of an authority the contribution or share,  if  any,  required  to  be  paid  by such retiree who voluntarily elects  coverage under any of such plans.    29-b. To reimburse any retired officer or employee who:    (1) at the time  of  retirement  was  an  employee  of  an  agency  or  department and was paid out of the city treasury;    (2)  is  receiving a retirement allowance, pension or other retirement  benefit from a retirement or other  pension  system  maintained  by  the  city; and    (3)  is  enrolled  in  a choice of health plans program offered by the  city;  for premium charges for supplementary medical insurance  benefits  under  the  federal old-age, survivors and disability insurance benefit program  for such officer or employee, if  he  is  enrolled  under  such  federal  program,  and  for  his  spouse,  if  he  or  she  is  so enrolled. Such  reimbursement may be made monthly or at other intervals, and  shall  not  exceed the amount of premium charges paid for such supplementary medical  insurance benefits.    30.  To  enact  ordinances  creating  a  lien  for towing, storage and  incidental expenses upon vehicles found standing or parked in  violation  of  ordinances and removed and stored as an abatement of a nuisance, and  imposing a charge against the owner or persons entitled to possession of  such vehicles and providing  the  procedure  for  the  determination  of  ownership  or  right  to  possession  and the collection of such lien or  charge, including public sale of the said vehicle.31. May permit the use of any city-owned street or highway  machinery,  tools  or  equipment  by a county in which such city is wholly or partly  located or by a municipal subdivision, district, district corporation or  school district, wholly or partly within such a county, upon such  terms  as  may be agreed upon but with the payment to the city of not less than  the hourly rate as fixed by the state commissioner of transportation for  the rental or hiring of such machinery, tools or equipment by the  city.  Moneys received by a city pursuant to the provisions of this subdivision  may be applied to the payment of any existing obligations of the city or  transferred to the general fund.    32.  To  create  by  resolution  of  the local governing body a board,  commission or department of traffic control in order to more effectively  regulate and control vehicular and  pedestrian  traffic  and  better  to  serve the public convenience, promote public safety and to protect human  life,  health  and  property. Such a traffic agency shall consist of not  less than five nor more than nine members who shall be appointed by  the  mayor.  The  chairman  or  head  of  such  agency  shall  be  a licensed  professional engineer who shall have at least ten years'  experience  in  traffic  engineering.  He  shall  also  be the city traffic engineer and  shall receive an annual salary. Such agency members  shall  include  the  commissioners  of  police  and public works and the chairman of the city  planning commission or the officials occupying analogous offices and one  other qualified person and the mayor may designate other qualified  city  officers  or  employees  to  serve  as  members  ex  officio and without  additional compensation. Such traffic  agency  may  contain  within  its  departmental  structure  a  bureau  of  traffic engineering which bureau  shall be under the immediate supervision of the city traffic engineer.    Whenever such a traffic agency shall be created as in this subdivision  provided it shall, notwithstanding any other provision of  law,  possess  exclusive  power and authority within such city to (a) regulate, direct,  restrict  and  otherwise  to  control  the  movement  of  vehicular  and  pedestrian  traffic,  but  not  inconsistent  with the provisions of the  vehicle and traffic law in relation  thereto,  (b)  limit  the  carrying  capacity  of  vehicles  used  in the business of carrying passengers for  hire, except omnibuses  operated  pursuant  to  certificates  of  public  convenience  and necessity issued by commissioner of transportation, (c)  determine the location of garages, parking lots and parking meters,  (d)  determine  the  design,  type,  size,  method of erection, installation,  removal, maintenance, operation and  location  of  any  and  all  signs,  signals,  markings,  and  similar  devices  for  guiding,  directing  or  otherwise regulating and controlling such traffic and, with the approval  of the local governing board, may relinquish for transfer and assignment  to any other agency of the city government part or all of  one  or  more  such  powers  and  duties,  and  (e)  make rules and regulations for the  conduct of vehicular and pedestrian traffic in the  use  of  the  public  streets, squares and avenues as such board, commission or department may  deem  necessary. Such rules and regulations shall be filed with the city  clerk and shall become effective when published in a paper published  by  the  city  or,  if  no paper be published by such city, in not less than  three newspapers having a general daily circulation in such city, except  that in a city having a population of not  more  than  thirty  thousand,  such rules and regulations shall be published in one newspaper published  or  having  a  general  circulation  in  such city. The violation of any  provision of any such rule or regulation shall  be  triable  by  a  city  magistrate  and  punishable by imprisonment of not more than thirty days  or by a fine of not more than fifty dollars or both.    Nothing in this subdivision  contained  shall  affect  or  impair  the  powers  or  duties  of  the city planning commission or of any analogousagency of city government to  determine  the  location  of  garages  and  parking  lots  or  affect  the  power  or  duty  imposed  on  the police  department or other analogous agency to  regulate  hacks,  taxicabs  and  taxi  drivers  pursuant to the provisions of any city charter, local law  or ordinance and any such power and duty shall continue to be  exercised  and  performed  under the jurisdiction and control of such department or  agency.    Upon the adoption of a resolution creating such a traffic agency,  and  except  as in this subdivision otherwise provided, all of the functions,  powers and duties vested in such traffic agency which  theretofore  were  exercised  and  performed  by any other agency of the city government of  such city, together with all records, property and equipment used in the  exercise and performance of such functions, powers or duties  shall,  on  the  date  fixed  in  such resolution, pass to and be in addition to the  functions, powers and duties vested  in  such  traffic  agency  by  this  subdivision.    33.  By resolution of its legislative body to authorize the payment of  a reasonable mileage allowance for the miles  actually  and  necessarily  traveled on official business by any city officer or employee by the use  of his own automobile.    34.  To adopt a local law providing that every deed given by such city  pursuant to any general or special law providing for the foreclosure  of  a  tax  lien  by  action  in rem, shall be presumptive evidence that the  action and all proceedings therein and  all  proceedings  prior  thereto  from  and including the assessment of the lands affected and all notices  required by law were regular and in accordance with  all  provisions  of  law relating thereto.    After  two  years  from  the  date  of  the  record  of such deed, the  presumption shall be conclusive, unless at the time that such local  law  takes  effect  the  two  year  period  since  the record of the deed has  expired or less than six months of such  period  of  two  years  remains  unexpired,  in  which  case  the presumption shall become conclusive six  months after such local law takes effect. No action to  set  aside  such  deed  may  be  maintained  unless  the action is commenced and a note of  pendency of the action is filed in the office of the proper county clerk  prior to the time that the presumption becomes conclusive as aforesaid.    35. To adopt a local law or ordinance compelling the repair or removal  of any building or structure that, from any cause, endangers the health,  safety or welfare of the public, providing as follows:    a. For an inspection and report by the director of  buildings  of  the  city.    b.  For  the service of a notice upon the owner, and all other persons  having an interest in such property or structure, either  personally  or  by  registered mail, addressed to his last known address as shown by the  records of the officer or agency of the city charged with the assessment  of real property therein or collection of real  property  taxes  thereon  and/or  in the office of the county clerk or county register, containing  a description of the premises, a statement of the particulars  in  which  the  building  or  structure  is unsafe or dangerous and an order of the  director of buildings requiring same to be repaired or removed;  and  if  such  service  be  made by registered mail, for the posting of a copy of  such notice on the premises.    c. For the time within which the owner so served  shall  commence  the  repair or removal of such building or structure.    d. For the filing of a copy of such notice in the office of the county  clerk  of the county within which such building or structure is located,  which notice shall be filed by such clerk in the same manner as a notice  of pendency pursuant to article sixty-five of the civil practice law andrules, and shall have the same effect as a notice of pendency as therein  provided, except as otherwise hereinafter provided in this paragraph.  A  notice  so  filed  shall  be effective for a period of one year from the  date of filing, provided, however, that it may be vacated upon the order  of  a  judge  or justice of a court of record or upon the consent of the  corporation counsel. The clerk of the county where such notice is  filed  shall  mark such notice and any record or docket thereof as cancelled of  record upon the  presentation  and  filing  of  such  consent  or  of  a  certified copy of such order.    e. For a hearing before the director of buildings, notice of which and  the  time  and  place thereof to be specified in the notice to repair or  demolish, served upon the owner and such persons having an  interest  in  the property or structure as is herein prescribed.    f.  For  the  removal of such building or structure by the city in the  event such owner fails or refuses to repair or remove  the  same  within  the time provided.    g.  For  the assessment of all costs and expenses incurred by the city  in connection with the proceedings to repair or remove such building  or  structure, including the cost of actually removing the same, against the  land on which such building or structure is located.    h.  The  powers  conferred by this subdivision thirty-five shall be in  addition to all other powers conferred upon cities in  relation  to  the  same  subject  matter.  Nothing  contained  in this subdivision shall be  construed to amend, repeal, modify or affect any existing local  law  or  ordinance  or provision of any charter or administrative code pertaining  to the subject matter to which this subdivision relates, or to limit  or  restrict  the  power  of  any  city to amend or modify any such existing  local law, ordinance or provision of any charter or administrative code,  or to restrict or limit any power otherwise conferred on any city by law  with respect to the subject matter to which this subdivision relates.    36.  In  cities  having  a  population  of  fewer  than  one   million  inhabitants, to lease to any person, firm or corporation, for commercial  or  private  use,  the  air rights over or the subsurface area under any  property of the city acquired or to be acquired for  street  or  highway  puposes,  together  with easements or other rights of user necessary for  the use and development of such air rights or subsurface areas,  as  are  not   needed   for   public  purposes,  subject  to  such  reservations,  restrictions and conditions  as  the  city  deems  necessary  to  assure  adequate  protection to the safety and the adequacy of street or highway  facilities and to abutting or adjacent land users and as the city  deems  necessary  to minimize or avoid public utility facility relocation costs  which would otherwise ensue if  such  facilities  were  removed  without  regard  to  their compatability with the intended use of such air rights  or subsurface areas. Any such lease may be  for  a  term  not  exceeding  ninety-nine  years  and may be renewed for such additional term or terms  as  the  city  council   may   provide.   Any   buildings,   structures,  substructures  or  superstructures,  the  title  to which remains in the  lessee, shall be deemed to be real property for purposes of taxation  as  defined  in  subdivision  twelve  of section one hundred two of the real  property tax law. Nothing in this subdivision shall be deemed to  create  any   liability  arising  from  the  cost  of  public  utility  facility  relocation not recognized at common law or otherwise created by statute.    37. To adopt  ordinances  or  local  laws  prohibiting  and  punishing  loitering;  provided  however,  that  such  ordinance  or law shall only  prohibit loitering for a specific illegal  purpose  or  loitering  in  a  specific  place  of restricted public access and shall therein set forth  guidelines for application  of  such  prohibitions  by  law  enforcementofficers  so  as  to  prevent arbitrary or discriminatory enforcement of  such prohibitions.    38. a. A city having a population of more than one hundred twenty-five  thousand and less than one million, is authorized and empowered to enter  into  a  lease, sublease or other agreement with the dormitory authority  providing for the financing or refinancing of all or a portion of school  district capital facilities or  school  district  capital  equipment  in  accordance with section sixteen hundred eighty of the public authorities  law  and with the approval of the commissioner of education. Such lease,  sublease, or other agreement may  provide  for  the  payment  of  annual  rentals  and other payments to the dormitory authority, and contain such  other terms and conditions as may be agreed upon by the parties thereto,  including the  establishment  of  reserve  funds  and  indemnities.  For  purposes  of  this  subdivision, school district capital equipment shall  have the meaning ascribed thereto in section sixteen hundred seventy-six  of the public authorities law.    b.  Notwithstanding  any  provisions  of  law  to  the  contrary,  the  dormitory authority and the board of education are hereby authorized and  empowered  to  perform  any  and  all acts and to enter into any and all  agreements necessary or desirable to effectuate  the  purposes  of  this  subdivision.