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July 29: Where the Candidates Are Today

Planned events for the mayoral candidates, according to the campaigns and organizations they are affiliated with. Times are listed as scheduled but frequently change.

Joseph Burgess and Nicholas Wells contributed reporting.

Event information is listed as provided at the time of publication. Details for many of Ms. Quinn events are not released for publication.

Events by candidate

Albanese

Catsimatidis

De Blasio

Liu

Quinn

Salgado

Thompson

Weiner

Group event


John A. Catsimatidis
Republican

11 a.m.
As a board member of the Police Athletic League, he attends a ribbon-cutting ceremony to mark the opening of new supervised outdoor recreational areas known as “PAL Play Streets” at 10 public-housing developments. For nearly a century, the annual summertime Play Streets program has been closing off streets and giving children supervised places to play varied activities, including stickball and jump rope, Nok hockey and mancala. The ceremony is at the New York City Housing Authority’s Grant Houses, on Amsterdam Avenue.

6:30 p.m.
Attends the opening of his eighth campaign office, this one on Third Avenue in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. The Kings County Republican chairman, Craig Eaton, is expected to join him.

Bill de Blasio
Democrat

10:15 a.m.
Releases, with health care workers, a plan to resuscitate two ailing Brooklyn hospitals that are in danger of closing, at the southwest corner of Hicks and Pacific Streets in Cobble Hill.

11:10 a.m.
Accepts endorsement from Tenants PAC, a tenants’ advocacy group that represents tenants at Stuyvesant Town, a sprawling Manhattan apartment complex with some 30,000 residents, at the corner of East 16th Street and First Avenue.

3 p.m.
Attends one of several rallies being coordinated today by New York Communities for Change, United New York, backed by the union S.E.I.U., and Fast Food Forward, which are calling for increased wages in the fast-food industry, at Union Square.

6:30 p.m.
Greets, with his wife, Chirlane McCray, concertgoers at the Martin Luther King Jr. Concert Series’ annual gospel night featuring Marvin Sapp, Israel Haughton and the New Breed, at Wingate Field in Brooklyn.

John C. Liu
Democrat

7 a.m.
Greets morning commuters at the Grant Avenue subway station, in Cypress Hills.

12 p.m.
Visits the Coney Island Generation Gap as part of a “day of service” the city comptroller’s office runs for its summer associates, in Coney Island.

5:45 p.m.
Greets afternoon commuters at the Intervale subway station, on Westchester Avenue in the Bronx.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

8:15 p.m.
Attends what appears to be his 10th iftar this month. Iftar is the traditional evening meal that breaks the fast of
Muslims during Ramadan. Tonight’s is being hosted by the Council of Masadjid of Queens, at Al Ishan Academy on Rockaway Boulevard in Queens.

Joseph J. Lhota
Republican

5:30 p.m.
Greets commuters at the Staten Island Ferry terminal, on South Street at the foot of Manhattan.

Christine C. Quinn
Democrat

7:15 a.m.
Joins striking fast-food workers at one of several rallies being coordinated today by Fast Food Forward and other groups calling for higher wages, outside a Manhattan McDonald’s, in the theater district.

11 a.m.
Joins a fellow City Council member, Steven Levin, at a news conference spotlighting imbalances in the city’s affordable housing market, at 5 Dunham Place, where 12,000 applicants are vying for the building’s 79 available affordable units, in Brooklyn.

12 p.m.
Returns with a fellow council member, Diana Reyna, to campaign at a Brooklyn senior center run by Los Sures that has been visited by three or more mayoral candidates thus far: Sal F. Albanese, June 11; Adolfo Carrión Jr., July 2; and Anthony D. Weiner, July 19. Ms. Quinn had tried to visit on July 16 but canceled to remain with Ms. Reyna’s teenage intern, who fainted from the heat at an event earlier in the day; after long delays waiting for an ambulance, she personally called the police commissioner, Raymond W. Kelly, to get an ambulance to the scene.

Some of Ms. Quinn’s events may not be shown because the campaign declines to release her advance schedule for publication.

William C. Thompson Jr.
Democrat

11 a.m.
Holds a news conference with State Assemblyman Karim Camara and Councilman Fernando Cabrera calling for the city to stop prosecuting teenagers as adults, outside City Hall.

5:30 p.m.
Greets concertgoers at the Martin Luther King Jr. Concert Series’ annual gospel night featuring Marvin Sapp, Israel Haughton and the New Breed, at Wingate Field in Brooklyn.

Anthony D. Weiner
Democrat

11 a.m.
Visits with senior citizens at Nan Shan Senior Center, on 39th Avenue in Queens.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

Sal F. Albanese
Democrat

11:15 a.m.
Meets voters, at the Senior Alliance Senior Center, on Corbin Place in Brooklyn.

11:45 a.m.
Greets voters, at the Lunar Park Senior Center, on West 12th Street in Brooklyn.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

Adolfo Carrión Jr.
Independent

3:45 p.m.
Tapes two-minute statement that all candidates are invited to submit to the New York City Campaign Finance Board that will air on NYC-TV and be used as part of an electronic voters giude.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

Erick J. Salgado
Democrat

4 p.m.
Joins State Senator Rubén Díaz Sr. in a tour of the Bronx aboard a pick-up truck, greeting voters along the way.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

Readers with information about events involving the mayoral candidates are invited to send details and suggestions for coverage to cowan@nytimes.com. You can also follow us on Twitter @cowannyt.