File #: Int 0923-2023    Version: * Name: Conducting a study of the impact that truck and delivery traffic generated by last mile facilities have on local communities and infrastructure.
Type: Introduction Status: Filed (End of Session)
Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure
On agenda: 2/16/2023
Enactment date: Law number:
Title: A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to conducting a study of the impact that truck and delivery traffic generated by last mile facilities have on local communities and infrastructure
Sponsors: Alexa Avilés, Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, Jennifer Gutiérrez, Sandy Nurse, Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, Julie Won, Shahana K. Hanif, Lincoln Restler, Tiffany Cabán, Amanda Farías, Crystal Hudson, Kristin Richardson Jordan, Gale A. Brewer, Sandra Ung, Shekar Krishnan, Shaun Abreu, Keith Powers , Chi A. Ossé, Kevin C. Riley, Marjorie Velázquez, James F. Gennaro, Carmen N. De La Rosa, Julie Menin, Lynn C. Schulman, Christopher Marte, Carlina Rivera , Oswald Feliz, Justin L. Brannan, Rafael Salamanca, Jr., Robert F. Holden, Nantasha M. Williams, Diana I. Ayala, Rita C. Joseph, Farah N. Louis, Mercedes Narcisse, Pierina Ana Sanchez, Linda Lee, Eric Dinowitz, (by request of the Brooklyn Borough President)
Council Member Sponsors: 38
Summary: This bill would require the department of transportation to conduct a study on the impact of last mile facilities on the street infrastructure and communities they are situated in, including estimating the amount of delivery vehicles arriving at or departing from each facility, and the impact that additional vehicle traffic has on parking, street congestion, vehicle collisions and other traffic incidents.
Indexes: Report Required, Sunset Date Applies
Attachments: 1. Summary of Int. No. 923, 2. Int. No. 923, 3. February 16, 2023 - Stated Meeting Agenda, 4. Hearing Transcript - Stated Meeting 2-16-23, 5. Minutes of the Stated Meeting - February 16, 2023

Int. No. 923

 

By Council Members Avilés, the Public Advocate (Mr. Williams) and Council Members Gutiérrez, Nurse, Brooks-Powers, Won, Hanif, Restler, Cabán, Farías, Hudson, Richardson Jordan, Brewer, Ung, Krishnan, Abreu, Powers, Ossé, Riley, Velázquez, Gennaro, De La Rosa, Menin, Schulman, Marte, Rivera, Feliz, Brannan, Salamanca, Holden, Williams, Ayala, Joseph, Louis, Narcisse, Sanchez, Lee and Dinowitz (by request of the Brooklyn Borough President)

 

A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to conducting a  study of the impact that truck and delivery traffic generated by last mile facilities have on local communities and infrastructure

 

Be it enacted by the Council as follows:

 

Section 1. Impact of last mile facilities on local communities and infrastructure. a. Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:

Commissioner. The term “commissioner” means the commissioner of the department of transportation.

Department. The term “department” means the department of transportation.

Delivery vehicle. The term “delivery vehicle” means any vehicles, including but not limited to delivery trucks, delivery vans, passenger vehicles, and other motor vehicles, that arrive at or depart from last mile facilities.

Last mile facility. The term “last mile facility” means a warehouse, storage facility, or other location that receives goods as part of a delivery supply chain, and from which such goods are delivered to their final destination. The term does not include retail businesses where the majority of the premises are used for the purposes of the on-site sale of goods to consumers.

b. No later than 2 years after the effective date of this local law, the department shall submit to the speaker of the council, and post conspicuously on the department’s website, a report on the impact that delivery vehicle traffic generated by last mile facilities have on the communities they are situated in. Such report shall:

1. Identify the location of each last mile facility.

2. Estimate the average amount of delivery vehicles arriving at or departing from each such last mile facility on a weekly basis, disaggregated by the type of vehicle including but not limited to delivery trucks, delivery vans, and passenger vehicles.

3. Estimate the impact of such delivery vehicle traffic on the street infrastructure within one mile of each such last mile facility, including but not limited to the amount of parking spots occupied by delivery vehicles, traffic delays or congestion attributable to delivery vehicles, vehicular collisions or other traffic incidents involving delivery vehicles, pedestrian injuries or fatalities involving delivery vehicles, and any other impediment to the use of street infrastructure around each such last mile facility that the commissioner determines can be attributed to the presence of the last mile facility and its delivery vehicles when compared to the impact that would be caused by a comparable non-last mile facility business in that area.

4. Identify the streets around each last mile facility that are negatively impacted by the presence of each such last mile facility.

5. Estimate the cost imposed by such burdens, including but not limited to increased travel time for persons driving in the community in which the last mile facility is located hours of lost productivity due to such increased travel time, or property damage, on the community in which the last mile facility is located.

6. Determine what steps may be taken to mitigate such burdens, and estimate the cost to the city to implement those steps.

7. Include any other factors the commissioner determines is necessary to better understand the burden that last mile facilities impose on local infrastructure and communities.

§ 2. This local law takes effect immediately and is deemed repealed upon submission of the report required pursuant to section one of this local law.

 

 

Session 12

XC

LS #8041

1/13/2023