News & Press
Read relevant news and press about SVP and the street vendors we represent- from hot dog vendors, to flower vendors, book vendors to street artists and more.
We’re working together to create a vendors movement for permanent change.
NYC Street Food Vendors Eagerly Anticipate City Expansion Of Permits
Gothamist
“This bill is way overdue, it should have passed years ago,” said Mohamed Attia, the director of the Street Vendor’s Project at the Urban Justice Center, an advocacy group for the sellers. “What’s really exciting for us is that [the board] will have four seats for street vendors in it. We have never been invited to these conversations.”New Report Outlines How COVID-19 Decimated NYC’s Street Vendor Community
Eater NY
The new study was commissioned by the nonprofit Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) — women make up a larger percentage of street vendors, yet continue to earn less than their male counterparts, according to the report — with assistance from the Urban Justice Center’s Street Vendor Project, one of the leading advocacy groups for street vendors in NYC, and is part of a global effort to study the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on the informal economy in 12 cities.Street Food Vendor Permits To Expand By Thousands As Council Readies Vote
Patch
"The Street Vendor Project had advocated for the cap on the number of permits to be eliminated. Still, the organization's director, Mohamed Attia, called the bill an improvement over the current "broken and outdated" system."The Street Vendors Who Are Fighting Against Hunger
Grub Street
"The food was part of a program that’s been organized by the Street Vendor Project, a nonprofit union and workers center that advocates for vendors rights in New York City. The meals were provided to people in need and cooked by others in need."Queens Small Business Program is Launched, Provides Grants of Up to $20K
Long Island City Post
"Mohamed Attia, director of the Street Vendor Project of the Urban Justice Center, said in a statement that previous aid packages had left out street vendors. “Street vendors are part of the culture and fabric of NYC but unfortunately they have suffered mightily during this current pandemic and have been all but abandoned by COVID-19 recovery efforts,” he said."New York’s smallest businesses will no longer be supervised by police
Quartz
"Many of the operators in New York are immigrant Hispanic residents who commute from outer boroughs with incomes that have to support multiple people, according to a 2019 survey by the Street Vendor Project."Contact
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