A recent report by the city comptroller's office revealed failures with the city's 60-day rule for migrant shelters.

Under the policy, the city only houses migrants for a limited time before they must find alternative options or apply once again for housing.

In a legal settlement with the Legal Aid Society, the city pledged to provide families help finding more stable housing once out of the shelter system.

But the comptroller's report found the city implemented the 60-day policy in a "haphazard manner."

The report detailed that oftentimes, families are not getting the assistance they were promised.

This all comes as the city winds down its contract with DocGo, a company tasked with providing migrant services. DocGo been at the center of controversy after some claimed the company lacked expertise in serving migrants.

City Comptroller Brad Lander joined NY1 political reporter Bobby Cuza on “Inside City Hall” Monday night to discuss his recent report and more.

"Like a lot of people, we didn't like the idea [of] kicking people out of shelter after 60 days, but what we found was that when it was implemented, it was done in a really ineffective and haphazard way," Lander said. "No written policies. No training for staff."