🚨WANTED FOR AN ASSAULT: Monday, February 16, 2026, at approximately 10:00 P.M., an unidentified individual was making a purchase inside of a commercial establishment located at 94 Avenue B, when he became irate, and began disputing with a 68-year-old male employee. The… pic.twitter.com/bKjgi6ltkI
— NYPD Crime Stoppers (@NYPDTips) February 20, 2026
Sunday, February 22, 2026
NYPD seeks suspect in alleged assault on Sunny and Annie's employee
Saturday, January 17, 2026
A 'cleanup only' operation on 11th Street and 1st Avenue
"This is a cleanup on 11th Street based upon community complaints," a police source said. "We're not doing enforcement at this time."
The source said the plan was for deliveristas to move their bicycles to allow for the cleanup.
"It's up to the NYPD if we take anything," the supervisor said. "We don't even have the tools to remove bike locks and chains. But if there's abandoned property that no one claims, we remove it."
She was on site Friday morning, along with Tyler Hefferon, executive director of EV Loves NYC, several community members, and a representative from Councilmember Harvey Epstein's office.
As for the operation itself, Stetzer said she felt "the cleanup went well," emphasizing that "it was a cleanup, not a punitive action." She said the larger issue remains unresolved: "Parking a hundred bikes on this block is not sustainable," and simply adding more bike corrals — which she said can take a year to install — "is not a solution."
She called it "a failure of government to plan and provide infrastructure," and said the community is hopeful the new administration will help resolve the situation.
Stetzer pointed to the role of delivery app companies, saying they are "making money on the work of the delivery workers without providing accommodation or benefits." She said the City needs both an infrastructure plan and legislation "that will hold companies responsible for bike storage and necessary accommodation for the workers."
Without that, she said, complaints from residents can lead to enforcement actions where "punitive actions fall on the workers who have no means to comply."
She also noted that many delivery workers are "new Americans" and said that past bike confiscations required court appearances to retrieve the bikes — something that can put some workers at risk. Stetzer said the goal is a plan that supports delivery, improves working conditions, holds app companies accountable, and gives workers a realistic way to comply.
Tuesday, September 2, 2025
Deliveristas face new enforcement in the East Village
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
Deliveristas confront new hurdles after 11th Street bike sweep
The City creates microhubs for large companies like FedEx, but why are these workers the only ones not being helped? They are lower-income, people of color, and immigrants. Why is the City not willing to accommodate them? When a restaurant operates on a sidewalk illegally, it gets a summons; when an immigrant hangs his bag there, they throw it out. Why the inequality?
There is one reason these people are here. The neighborhood orders delivery. If the community doesn't want them here, they can stop ordering everything delivered. These are businesspeople serving the needs of the community.
They have to respect the block. They have to be good neighbors. They can't leave trash. They need to be more responsible. And there is an easy answer....the delivery companies need to do more. It doesn't take a lot of money. Give them a rest station, a place to store their belongings. These are their employees; they should provide for them. Without these guys, who is going to be delivering your food? These guys need a charging station ... Until that is provided, where will they eat? Sure, the two new benches are nice, but there are hundreds of people here. Who is going to sit, and who will stand? We need to give hard-working people an opportunity, and this part is not a police matter.

























































