Editor | Jarrett Murphy |
---|---|
Categories | Citizen journalism, non-profit journalism, alternative weekly |
Publisher | Jarrett Murphy |
Founder | Robert Schur, Ron Shiffman, Philip St. Georges |
Year founded | 1976 |
Final issue | May/June 2012 |
Company | The Community Service Society of New York |
Based in | New York City |
Website | www |
ISSN | 0199-0330 |
Coordinates: 40°43′42″N 73°59′28″W / 40.7283°N 73.9911°W For the London magazine of the same name, see City Limits (magazine)
City Limits is a nonprofit media organization based in New York City. For 36 years, City Limits published an investigative journalism magazine on civic issues affecting the city's low- and moderate-income communities, as well as analysis on national urban policy issues. In May 2012, the publication announced that it would become an all-digital operation, launching the online news website Brooklyn Bureau with support from the Brooklyn Community Foundation, and also acquiring the Bronx News Network to create the Bronx Bureau.
City Limits was founded in February 1976 as a newsletter and resource for advocates in New York City's housing rehabilitation movement. The publication would expand to become an investigative monthly magazine that covered other major policy issues over the next three decades, establishing the Center for an Urban Future in 1996 as a research institution dedicated to exploring policy solutions that were featured in City Limits' reportage.
In 2009, City Limits was acquired by the Community Service Society of New York and re-launched as a single-issue bi-monthly magazine and weekly news website. Focused exclusively on civic issues related to housing, education, criminal justice, the environment, economic and government policy, City Limits updates its site weekly with in-depth news and analysis.
After re-launching in 2009, City Limits received several journalism awards for its investigations, including two Sigma Delta Chi Awards for the September 2010 report, "Risky Play: Was New York City's Shift to Artificial Grass a $300 Million Mistake", and the May 2011 investigation, "Behind Bars: Male Guards, Female Inmates and Sexual Abuse in New York State Prisons".