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Agency Testimony

DYCD Commissioner Highlights COMPASS RFP Awards and Modernization

New York City Council · May 28, 2026 · starts 2:38:51 · 2 min 20 sec

DYCD Commissioner Sandra Escamilla Davies details the outcomes of the COMPASS RFP, highlighting the addition of 20,000 new elementary school seats and the inclusion of 52 new community-based organizations.

Luisa Linares

First, I'll start with the COMPAS request for proposals.

Luisa Linares

COMPASS is the nation's largest afterschool system serving elementary and middle school students across New York City through COMPASS Elementary and schools out New York City.

Luisa Linares

The release of the COMPASS Center Base and School Based Awards marks the very first major reprocurement and modernization of after-school contracts in more than a decade, and that is just so exciting.

Luisa Linares

This investment reflects what families, schools, and providers have consistently called for: expanded access, stronger program, quality, workforce stability, and greater equity across the afterschool system.

Luisa Linares

For fiscal year 2027, the city committed to $727 million in COMPASS funding.

Luisa Linares

This investment supports the additional 20,000 new elementary school seats over three school years and increased the price per participant rate to better support provider stability staffing and high quality program for children and families.

Luisa Linares

DYCD announced, and I want to highlight some of the things from this RFP, 121 center-based awards representing 7,840 seats, 806 school-based awards representing 95,841 seats, expansions into 71 new elementary schools across 32 high-need community districts, 8,621 additional citywide seats, and 52 new community-based organizations joining the COMPASS portfolio, including at least one in every borough.

Luisa Linares

This RFP also introduced an updated program model designed to better reflect the evolving needs of young people and families, including strong expectations around social emotional learning, career exploration and future readiness, expanded inclusion supports, enhanced program quality standards, and greater alignment between the after school programming and broader youth development goals.

Luisa Linares

The increased investment in COMPASS represents an investment in stability for the sector by supporting stronger staffing structures, better wages, more sustainable programs, models, and expanding access for children and families across New York City.