New York Public Notices
91,133 New York public notices indexed and searchable: foreclosures, probate, lis pendens, tax deeds, and government filings. Browse by city, county, category, or case.
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Results for "Philip C. Barrett"
Saratoga County Chief Executive Philip C. Barrett issued Emergency Order No. 27 extending the county's local state of emergency related to an influx of asylum seekers. The order takes effect immediately and extends the emergency for an additional five days through May 18, 2026.
Saratoga County Chief Executive Philip C. Barrett issued Emergency Order No. 26 extending a local state of emergency related to a surge of asylum seekers. The order takes effect immediately and extends the emergency an additional five days, through May 13, 2026.
Local state of emergency declared in Saratoga County due to population surge.
Local state of emergency declared in Saratoga County effective May 4, 2026.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers.
Local state of emergency declared in Saratoga County effective March 5, 2026.
Local state of emergency declared in Saratoga County effective March 5, 2026.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Local state of emergency extended due to increased asylum seekers in Saratoga County.
Saratoga County issued Emergency Order No. 8 extending a previously declared local state of emergency related to a surge of asylum seekers; the order takes effect immediately and extends emergency powers for five days (Feb 8–Feb 12, 2026).
Saratoga County extended a local state of emergency related to a surge in asylum seekers and issued Emergency Order No. 8, effective February 8–12, 2026, allowing five-day emergency orders to be renewed while the broader county emergency continues.
The Saratoga County Chief Executive extended a local state of emergency for five days (Feb 8–Feb 12, 2026) due to a continuing surge in asylum seekers; the order takes effect immediately and may be renewed in five-day increments.
What Are Public Notices in New York?
Public notices in New York are legally mandated announcements published in official newspapers and government portals. Under state law, government agencies, courts, and private parties must publish these notices to inform the public of actions that may affect their rights or property.
Common types of public notices in New York include foreclosure filings, probate and estate notices, fictitious business name statements, tax deed sales, lis pendens (pending lawsuit filings on real property), name change petitions, and government bid solicitations.
NoticeRegistry maintains a research-grade archive of New York public notices sourced from official courthouse records and legal newspapers. Each notice is parsed into a plain-English summary, geocoded, and tagged with structured metadata, searchable by address, party, case number, city, county, or category, and cross-linked to related filings. Set up a free watchlist to be notified when new notices match your criteria.