In New York,
special purpose units of government provide specialized services only to those who live in the district, and are empowered to tax residents of the district for the services provided in common. Special districts often cross the lines of towns, villages, and hamlets, and occasionally cities or counties.
School district School districts are the most common kind of special district in New York. They provide, arrange, or contract for all public education services, including special education and school transportation, the latter also for non-public schools. School districts are rarely precisely coextensive with the cities, towns, villages, or hamlets that bear the same name, meaning that a person living in one hamlet or village might send their children to a school associated with a different hamlet or village. Residents pay school taxes to the same school district in which they live and any children living with them attend school. All tax-paying residents are eligible for the
STAR Program tax rebate, which in effect lessens the value of an individual's primary residence to lessen the tax burden on the residence. All but five school districts are separate from municipal governments. The exceptions are the five cities whose populations exceed 125,000 (Buffalo, New York, Rochester, Syracuse and Yonkers), in which education is part of the municipal budget. Schools in the city of New York are controlled by the
New York City Department of Education, and the city is divided by the department into 11 "school regions" (10 geographic regions and a "District 75" for students with disabilities) There are five types of school districts in the state, each with slightly different laws.
Common school district Common school districts, established in 1812, were the first type of school district in the state. In July 2004, there were only 11 such districts remaining. They are not authorized to provide secondary education. They must, therefore, contract with neighboring school districts to provide
high school education for pupils in the district. Typically one trustee or a three-person board of trustees will govern the district.
Union free school district In 1853, the legislature established union free school districts, which are districts resulting from a "union" of two or more common school districts, "free" from the restrictions that previously barred them from operating high schools. In July 2004, there were 163 school districts of this type. Despite being able to operate high schools, thirty-one of these districts provided only elementary education. Those districts that are not components of central school districts provide secondary education either by contracting with other districts or being located in one of the three central high school districts. Each union free school district is governed by a three- to nine-member
board of education.
Central school district Central school districts are the most prevalent type of school district in New York. In July 2004, there were 460 such districts. They began as a result of legislation in 1914. Central school districts may form from any number (including one) of common, union free, and/or central school districts. Central school districts are permitted to provide secondary education. Its board of education must consist of five, seven, or nine members and length of service must be three, four, or five years, each decided upon by the voters in the district.
Central high school district Not to be confused with central school districts, there are only three central high school districts in New York state, all in
Nassau County:
Bellmore–Merrick Central High School District,
Sewanhaka Central High School District, and
Valley Stream Central High School District. Central high school districts provide secondary education to students in two or more common or union free districts. With creation authorized by the legislature in 1917 and repealed in 1944, creation was reauthorized exclusively for
Suffolk County in 1981. Such districts already established were not affected by the repeal.
City school district In those cities with populations exceeding 125,000 (New York City,
Buffalo,
Yonkers,
Rochester, and
Syracuse), the city school districts are coterminous with the city limits, and education is part of the municipal budget. These districts cannot incur debts or levy taxes. The governmental structure in all of these except for New York is that of an elected or appointed board of education. New York's public education is headed by a chancellor and has a 13-member all-appointed Department of Education Panel for Education Policy. The city school districts for the 57 cities having fewer than 125,000 people are separate from the municipal government and are authorized to levy taxes and incur debt. Each of them is governed by an elected
board of education with five, seven, or nine members. Districts for smaller cities often extend beyond the city borders and are referred to as "enlarged city school districts", seven of which have reorganized as "central city school districts".
Supervisory school district (BOCES) Owing to the extremely large number (735 in April 2025) of school districts, many of which are quite small, most of them are organized into 37 supervisory districts. Each of these has a
Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES). Each BOCES provides services that are considered difficult for the component school districts to provide on their own, often including special classes for students with disabilities, trades, medical professions such as physical therapy or other specialized classes.
Fire district Fire districts are public corporations that generally provide fire protection and other emergency response in towns outside villages. A fire district can levy taxes and incur debt just like other general purpose municipal corporations, although fire districts do not have home rule powers and the taxes are generally collected by the town or towns that the district serves. Fire districts depend on their towns for initial establishment, expansion of district territory, and dissolution, but are otherwise thereafter autonomous political entities able to exercise only those specific powers granted to them by statute. The district is governed by a board of elected commissioners. Villages generally provide their own fire protection, but joint town-village fire districts are permitted. A Joint Fire District is a fire district that encompasses more than one town, wholly or in part, and may also include a village. This is some times done to reduce duplication of services in a small area or to help spread the tax burden when there is a large difference in tax base between neighboring towns. A joint fire district may also be formed when a fire department in a village that has fire protection districts in the surrounding towns separates itself from the village government to obtain greater self-governance. This was seen in 2003 when the fire department in the village of
Baldwinsville formed a joint fire district consisting of the village of Baldwinsville and parts of the towns of
Lysander and
Van Buren in
Onondaga County. There were 868 fire districts in New York at the end of 2003.
Fire protection district A fire protection district is established by a town board in order to contract fire protection services with any city, village, fire district or incorporated fire company. Unlike fire districts, fire protection districts are not authorized to levy property taxes and do not have an independently elected board of commissioners. The levy to support fire protection districts is part of the town levy and the oversight of the district is via the town board.
Public benefit corporation/authority Public benefit corporations in New York operate like quasi-private corporations, generally with boards appointed by elected officials. They are a form of government bureaucracy in one sense but, unlike government agencies, public benefit corporations are exempt from some regulations. Of particular importance, they can take out their own debt, allowing them to bypass legal limits on state debt. This allows them to make potentially risky capital and infrastructure investments without putting so much of the credit of New York on the line. However, it also allows them to avoid many of the oversight and reporting regulations that apply to state government. Public benefit corporations get charters from New York and are usually designed to perform a specific, narrow function in the public interest. The
Metropolitan Transportation Authority manages
public transportation in the New York Metropolitan Area (this includes the
New York subway and public bus systems, as well as
Metro-North Railroad and the
Long Island Rail Road, and the
Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority). The
New York State Thruway Authority originally only maintained the
New York State Thruway from New York City to the Pennsylvania border southwest of
Buffalo, but now maintains the toll-free
Interstate 287 corridor. Many regions also have authorities to manage their local public transportation such as the
Central New York Regional Transportation Authority, which manages public transportation in
Onondaga,
Oswego,
Cayuga, and
Oneida counties; and the
Capital District Transportation Authority for the
Capital District area around
Albany,
Schenectady,
Troy, and
Saratoga Springs. At the end of 2005, there were 866 public benefit corporations, of which 266 were public authorities.
Library district Library districts are usually coextensive with the same school district but raise taxes separately and serve all the residents of the library district. They often form cooperative associations with other library districts for shared services, purchasing and cross-library lending.
Lake Protection and Rehabilitation district Lake Protection and Rehabilitation districts are created to allow local government entities raise additional tax funding for projects in and around lakes. The NY State legislature defines these projects and duties as: • Initiating and coordinating research and surveys for the purpose of gathering data on the lake, related shorelands, and the drainage basin; • Planning lake rehabilitation projects; • Adopting by resolution rules for carrying out their duties and plans for lake rehabilitation projects; • Contacting and attempting to secure the cooperation of officials of units of general purpose government in the area for the purpose of enacting ordinances deemed necessary by the board of supervisors as furthering the objectives of the district; • Carrying out lake protection and rehabilitation projects and obtaining any necessary permits therefor; and • Maintaining liaison with those officials of state government and local government involved in lake protection and rehabilitation.
Other types of special purpose units Other special districts may include emergency rescue squads (also known as Consolidated Health Districts), sanitation, police, water, sewer, park, and parking. ==See also==