Eric Adams vetoes City Council’s bid to decriminalize illegal vending in NYC
Mayor Eric Adams vetoed the City Council’s bid to decriminalize illegal vending — arguing the bill sends the wrong message as New York City tries to clean up its streets.
Adams’ veto sets up a confrontation over a potential override by the Council, which voted to eliminate criminal charges for illicit street vendors.
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Opponents said council members pushed the measure — Intro 47-B — in part to help protect migrants operating as unlicensed vendors at a time when President Trump is ramping up deportation of illegal aliens.
Adams, in a statement, said it was a quality of life issue, arguing the Council’s bill comes as the city is attempting to rein in out of control illegal vending along the infamous “Market of Sweethearts” — Roosevelt Avenue in Queens — and other locations.
“Since day one, our administration has been committed not just to making New Yorkers safe, but to making them feel safe, too — and that includes addressing persistent quality-of-life issues like illegal street vending. Our law enforcement officers play a vital role in keeping our streets clear of unlicensed vendors and protecting small business owners who follow the rules from being undercut by those who don’t,” Adams said.
“We cannot be so idealistic that we’re not realistic — preventing the brave men and women of the NYPD from intervening, even in the most egregious cases, is unfair to law-abiding business owners and poses real public health and safety risks.”
But council members said they were heeding the advice of a street advisory task force set up in 2021 that recommended the elimination of misdemeanor criminal charges and instead impose a range of civil fines and penalties on unlicensed food and merchandise vendors.
Last year, the NYPD issued 1,688 criminal summonses for illegal vending.
The bill passed the Council with 42 votes.
Queens Councilman Robert Holden, one of the naysayers, said concerns about exposing migrants to immigration enforcement came up during the debate by supporters of the bill.
“Should we exempt people from the law because they’re illegal immigrants? That’s ridiculous,” he said.
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