New York City Council Finance Committee members pressed the administration on June 9, 2026, after leaders of Brooklyn nonprofit Braggs Home Care were federally indicted in April 2026, yet the city awarded Braggs two new multi‑year shelter and social‑services contracts worth $186 million starting July 1, 2026, and appointed an independent monitor overseen by the Department of Investigation. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1687
# What’s happening
– The city awarded Braggs Home Care two new multi‑year contracts worth $186 million.
– The administration appointed an independent monitor overseen by the Department of Investigation (DOI).
– Council requested monitor identity and cost information this week.
Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1687; https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1771
# Why it matters
– Shelter residents and social‑services clients will receive services under the renewed Braggs contracts.
– City agency budgets will fund monitoring; no new monitor line item was added to the budget.
Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1687; https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1771
# Key details
– Federal indictments of Braggs Home Care leaders occurred in April 2026.
– Two new multi‑year contracts with Braggs begin July 1, 2026, totaling $186 million.
– The Department of Investigation (DOI) is overseeing an independent monitor and a corrective action plan.
– The administration said it did not add new funding for the monitor; agencies fund monitoring from existing budgets.
– Council asked the administration this week to disclose the monitor’s identity, selection process, and costs.
– Administration described the shelter contracts as master or umbrella agreements to streamline site placement.
Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1687; https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1771; https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=14823
**Braggs Home Care**
– Role or jurisdiction: Brooklyn‑based nonprofit contracted for shelter and social services.
– Action taken or responsibility: Awarded two new multi‑year contracts starting July 1, 2026.
– Relevant numbers or dates: Contracts total $186 million; leaders indicted April 2026.
Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1687
**Department of Investigation (DOI)**
– Role or jurisdiction: City investigative agency that oversees corruption and contracting misconduct.
– Action taken or responsibility: Overseeing an independent monitor and monitoring the vendor’s corrective action plan.
– Relevant numbers or dates: DOI oversight discussed at June 9, 2026 Finance Committee hearing.
Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1771
City Council Finance Committee members asked why the administration continued contracts with Braggs after federal indictments in April 2026. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1687
The administration said Braggs has a corrective action plan and that the Department of Investigation is involved to ensure monitoring. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1687
Council members asked who the independent monitor is and how the monitor was selected. The administration said it would provide that information later. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1771
Council members requested the monitor’s identity, whether appointing the monitor required a new contract, and the monitor’s cost. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1771
An administration official named Patrick said no new funding was added for the monitor and that monitoring is paid from existing agency budget allocations. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1771
Council members also questioned whether the Braggs contracts were competitively bid. The administration said they would need to follow up about bidding and the contract’s origin. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=14823
Officials described the contracts as master or umbrella agreements used by the Department of Homeless Services (DHS) so the agency can quickly place sites and reduce negotiation burden for providers. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=14823
Council members asked whether the city could cease contracting with Braggs and select new providers. Administration officials responded that DOI oversight and the corrective action plan informed the decision to continue the relationship. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1687; https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1771
Council asked the administration to provide monitor identity, selection process, and monitor cost information within the week following the hearing. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1771
Earlier in the hearing, committee members raised broader concerns about contract oversight, including past indictments of shelter providers and gaps in contract monitoring. Administration witnesses said they are coordinating with DOI and agency contracting offices on corrective actions. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1845
This report is based on testimony and exchanges at the New York City Council Committee on Finance FY2027 executive budget hearing on June 9, 2026. Source: https://youtu.be/KFSfiB4j_yY&t=1687
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