The de Blasio administration quietly released a report this week saying black New Yorkers describe racism in the city as “inescapable and emotionally taxing.”

The City Commission on Human Rights posted the 74-page report to its website Monday.

The document features accounts from black New Yorkers who have experienced racism in every facet of life, including education, housing, health care, work and interactions with the police and criminal justice system.

The report comes as daily protests continue in the city over police brutality against people of color. 

"Though anti-Black racism is not a new phenomenon,” the report says. “In recent years, we have heard with disturbing frequency, reports of people going about their daily lives and being targeted because of their Blackness—in grocery stores, schools, on the street, in their own homes and neighborhoods—for humiliation, intimidation and violence. Dehumanizing Blackface depictions continue to surface within retail and in political contexts.”

The commission recommends strengthening anti-discrimination laws; holding hearings in predominately black neighborhoods to learn first-hand what residents are experiencing; and training city workers to combat race and color discrimination.