Updates from District 45 in Brooklyn

Voting & How To Vote

Voting Dates & Location

Voting will take place between March 24 & April 1.  Locations and exact dates for each district will be posted as they are available.

Who Can Vote?

Any resident of the participating council districts (see map below) 18 years of age or older can vote.

Get Involved: Seven Neighborhood Assemblies The Last Week of October

Your chance to plug into your district's neighborhood assembly is this week!  All four districts are having a total of seven neighborhood assemblies between Monday 10/24 and Saturday 10/29.

Details are on the Participatory Budgeting Events Calendar!

NYC Councilman Tells Community Members to Spend $1 Million

By NBCNewYork.com    NBCNewYork.com    Tue, 2011-10-18

A New York City councilman says he has $1 million to spend -- and he wants his district members to tell him how to use it. Councilman Jumaane D. Williams, who represents the 45th Council District in Brooklyn, announced Sunday he is allocating $1 million from his capital budget for "participatory budgeting."

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Brooklyn District Discusses How to Spend $1 Million

By Katy Tur    NBC4    Mon, 2011-10-17

A Brooklyn community is trying to figure out how to spend about $1 million in capital money aimed at improving their district. Katy Tur reports.

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What Would You Do With $1 Million of the City's Money?

By Noreen Malone    New York Magazine Daily Intel    Wed, 2011-09-14

Not a totally hypothetical question! Four city council members have decided to engage in "participatory budgeting," meaning that they'll let their constituents help choose how to spend their districts' $1 million discretionary funds. So if you live in Brad Lander, Jumaane D. Williams, Melissa Mark-Viverito, or Eric Ulrich's districts, start spitballing.

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4 Council Members, Each With $1 Million, Will Let Public Decide How It’s Spent

By Kate Taylor    The New York Times    Tue, 2011-09-13

Four City Council members, intrigued by experiments begun in Brazil to let ordinary citizens determine how government uses tax dollars, say they plan to allow their constituents to decide how $4 million is spent next year. Through a process known as participatory budgeting, constituents in each of the four Council districts will be enlisted to develop and choose among proposals for local capital projects like street repairs, new parks and public artworks. The money — $1 million in each district — will come out of the council members’ discretionary funds.

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