Agency Indicators 2022: Mayor's Office of Criminal Justice (MOCJ)

The Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice (MOCJ) advises the Mayor and First Deputy Mayor on criminal justice policy, and is the Mayor’s representative to the courts, district attorneys, public defenders, and state criminal justice agencies, among others. The office designs, deploys, and evaluates citywide strategies to drive down crime and recidivism, reduce unnecessary arrests and incarceration, and improve the criminal justice system’s fairness.

Please select an agency below to see a breakdown of their FY22 procurement by method, by industry, and by size.

 


MOCJ - Procurement by Method
Method Count Contract Value
Amendment 22 $27,876,500
Amendment Extension 19 $47,356,600
Assignment
1 $2,812,400
Demonstration Project 5 $4,102,500
Emergency 2 $24,100,000
Intergovernmental
1 $1,709,800
Line-item Appropriation 79 $33,217,700
Micropurchase 81 $639,900
Negotiated Acquisition 6 $230,690,800
Negotiated Acquisition Extension
12 $35,942,300
Renewal 15 $675,434,400
Request for Proposal
10 $52,118,700
Required Source or Procurement Method 1 $1,654,300
Small Purchase 2 $193,000
Sole Source 2 $59,972,900
Task Order 4 $1,193,300
MOCJ Total 262 $1,199,015,100
MOCJ - Procurement by Industry
Industry Count Contract Value
Architecture / Engineering 3 $593,300
Construction Services 4 $19,900
Goods 56 $2,925,200
Human Services 159 $561,396,200
Professional Services 37 $633,975,300
Standardized Services 3 $105,200
MOCJ Total 262 $1,199,015,100
MOCJ - Procurement by Size
Size of Contract Count Contract Value
≤ $0 3 ($10,078,800)
> $0 and ≤ $100 thousand 127 $2,954,600
> $100 thousand and ≤ $1 million 67 $29,767,300
> $1 million and ≤ $3 million 25 $47,607,700
> $3 million and ≤ $25 million 31 $252,768,600
> $25 million 9 $875,995,700
MOCJ Total 262 $1,199,015,100