Towers of cardboard boxes run along the windows in a historic office building close to City Hall, suggesting moving trucks are not far away. Near a conference room where officials once debated solutions to the 1970s fiscal crisis, an executive desk sits empty. On a nearby shelf is a framed photo of a woman and two children.
Despite the appearance of a closed shop, city Comptroller Scott Stringer and his squad of 600 budgetary watchdogs have continued to take mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration to task. In the past three months, Stringer’s office has issued a 6,400-word report summarizing the failure of communications among city agencies during Covid-19
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