New York City Procurement Policy Board
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Board overview | |
|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | New York City |
| Key document | |
| Website | www |
The New York City Procurement Policy Board (PPB) is an agency of the New York City government that regulates the procurement of goods, services, and construction that uses city money. The board is made up of five members, three appointed by the Mayor and two appointed by the Comptroller.[1]
The PPB was created following the Parking Violations Bureau (PVB) contracting scandal in 1986 and the Supreme Court holding that the Board of Estimate was unconstitutional in 1989.[2] The PPB's goal was to standardize citywide contracting, moving away from a model where city agencies retained discretion to independently interpret applicable procurement laws.[3]
- ↑ "New York City Charter Section 311. Procurement policy board". American Legal Publishing. Retrieved 2026-04-11.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ Iskhakov, Daniel (2026-04-02). "Assessing the effectiveness of administrative ADR: an empirical analysis of New York City's Contract Dispute Resolution Board (CDRB)". Journal of Public Procurement: 1–21. doi:10.1108/JOPP-03-2025-0026. ISSN 1535-0118.
- ↑ New York State Commission on Government Integrity (1989-12-01). "A Ship Without a Captain: The Contracting Process in New York City". Reports.
External links
This New York City–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by adding missing information. |