The Agency You’ll Join:
The New York City Mayor’s Office is responsible for overseeing city services throughout the five boroughs, coordinating public agencies and departments, and managing public property. The administration is leading the fight in making the city more affordable, reducing inequality, improving public safety, ensuring delivery of efficient and effective services, and working to make New York City’s economy stronger. We value leadership, transparency, fairness, and efficiency as we actively seek diverse talents from various sectors to join our team. For current job opportunities, visit our careers page.
The Team You’ll Work With:
For half a century, the Mayor's Office for People with Disabilities (MOPD) has been the liaison between the New York City government and the disability community. In partnership with City offices and agencies, MOPD ensures City initiatives, programs, and policies address the needs and interests of people with disabilities. The office regularly engages in advocacy and policymaking at the local, state, national, and international levels to make certain accessibility and full inclusion are key priorities for all public and private stakeholders alike.
The Problems You’ll Solve:
The Accessibility Specialist will assist MOPD’s Senior Director of Physical Accessibility by serving as the primary point of contact for field visits, site visits, inspections, and documentation related to accessibility in the built environment.
MOPD works with City agencies, property owners, design professionals, and community stakeholders to support accessibility and inclusive design throughout New York City’s built environment. This includes providing technical guidance, reviewing accessibility concerns, coordinating site assessments, and helping develop practical recommendations for buildings, public spaces, facilities, and events.
Job duties will include:
- Serve as MOPD’s primary point of contact for physical accessibility site visits, field visits, inspections, and related follow-up assignments.
- Coordinate, schedule, and attend field visits involving City agency facilities, public buildings, community spaces, public events, constituent concerns, interagency accessibility matters, Dining Out NYC locations, and other physical accessibility issues as assigned.
- Conduct field documentation of physical accessibility conditions, including photographs, measurements, notes, sketches, and other records needed to describe existing site conditions clearly.
- Prepare timely written site visit reports and follow-up materials that organize photographs, measurements, field notes, observed accessibility concerns, and recommended next steps for supervisory review.
- Support fast-turnaround accessibility assessments for events, programs, and site conditions where recommendations may be needed within the same week or day as the site visit.
- Track multiple active field assignments, including logging requests, maintaining site visit records, monitoring report status, coordinating follow-up, and documenting final disposition or close-out.
- Assist with developing and maintaining standard site visit procedures, inspection checklists, photo documentation protocols, field report templates, and internal tracking tools.
- Assist with developing standard response templates for common physical accessibility inquiries and referrals to the appropriate City, State, or federal agency.
- Apply basic knowledge of the 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design, NYC Building Code, and related accessibility concepts to help identify applicable requirements for accessible features observed during field visits, with final technical determinations subject to supervisory review.
- Participate in interagency meetings, walkthroughs, task force discussions, and community or constituent site visits as directed by MOPD leadership.
- Under supervision, assist with other physical accessibility projects as identified by MOPD leadership.
About You:
- You are an organized, practical professional with a degree or experience in architecture, construction, engineering technology, building inspection, accessibility, project management, or a related built-environment field.
- You can document existing conditions, manage multiple assignments, communicate clearly with City agencies and the public, and turn field observations into clear reports and practical next steps.
- You understand basic architectural and construction concepts, including field surveys, existing conditions, measurements, photographs, drawings, and written documentation.
- You also have a demonstrated interest in accessibility, universal design, inclusive design, public service, and/or improving access to buildings, public spaces, events, and services for people with disabilities.
Minimum Required Qualifications:
- A baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and two years of experience in community work or community centered activities in an area related to the duties described above; or
- High school graduation or equivalent and six years of experience in community work or community centered activities in an area related to the duties as described above; or
- Education and/or experience which is equivalent to "1" or "2" above. However, all candidates must have at least one year of experience as described in "1" above.
Additional Information
- In addition to the resume, a cover letter is required to apply.
COMMUNITY COORDINATOR - 56058
1. A baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and two years of experience in community work or community centered activities in an area related to the duties described above; or
2. High school graduation or equivalent and six years of experience in community work or community centered activities in an area related to the duties as described above; or
3. Education and/or experience which is equivalent to "1" or "2" above. However, all candidates must have at least one year of experience as described in "1" above.
The City of New York is an inclusive equal opportunity employer committed to recruiting and retaining a diverse workforce and providing a work environment that is free from discrimination and harassment based upon any legally protected status or protected characteristic, including but not limited to an individual's sex, race, color, ethnicity, national origin, age, religion, disability, sexual orientation, veteran status, gender identity, or pregnancy.

The City of New York is the most iconic and dynamic city on the planet. With a population of more than 8.4 million people, New York is not only the largest city in the United States — it is the academic, cultural, commercial, and financial capital of the world.
City government is filled with opportunities for talented individuals seeking to improve their communities and make a meaningful difference in the lives of their fellow New Yorkers. Every day, the City’s more than 300,000 employees improve infrastructure, provide vital social services, build technology, protect health and safety, and so much more. Join us today at: http://www1.nyc.gov/jobs
The City of New York offers its employees:
• A chance to build the future of this city. New York City government is at the crossroads of where policy, great ideas, city services, and smart urban planning meet the lives and needs of every day New Yorkers.
• Competitive salary and benefits. Hiring packages include a competitive salary, health benefits, various pension plans, employee assistance programs, and individual retirement accounts.
• Diverse career opportunities. As the largest local government in the United States with more than 40 agencies, the City of New York offers a broad spectrum of opportunities — from education, housing development, and public health to sustainability, economic growth, technology, and emergency management.
• Career Satisfaction. As a City employee, you will have the chance to shape the future of New York City and improve the quality of life for your family, neighbors, and fellow New Yorkers.
• Equal Opportunity and Inclusion. The City of New York is an equal opportunity employer that prohibits discriminatory action against City employees and applicants for employment based on their actual or perceived race, color, national origin, ethnicity alienage, citizenship status, gender, religion, creed and all other protected categories.