You're wrong about that. If I am a resident in an apartment building and I believe some new tenants are illegal aliens it is now illegal for me to report it.
And as far as service providers interacting with citizens, so what? If I decide not to hire someone because I think he is an illegal alien because he is unable to prove it. Maybe I don't want to rent to someone because he can't prove he is a citizen.
There are already laws on the books, strict laws, against racial and sexual discrimination.
The kicker here is that now it's not just what you say but what others feel you meant. Now the government are mind readers and have the power to determine your motivations.
No, i'm not wrong and your whole post is off the mark.
First of all, the entire guideline document is here:
https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/cchr/downloads/pdf/publications/immigration-guidance.pdfThe portion about "illegals" is on page 14- excerpted:
The use of the terms “illegal alien” and “illegals,” with the intent to demean, humiliate, or
offend a person or persons in the workplace, amounts to unlawful discrimination under
the NYCHRL.
In the workplace. In the workplace. In the workplace. Taken directly from the document.
Nothing about neighbors not being able to report you anywhere in the document because that's not what HRL covers. People call the police over bullshit all day long, so if you actually just applied even a small amount of common sense, you'd realize how wrong you were.
Furthermore, as to your other point about not hiring an undocumented worker, that's also right in the document. It is perfectly legal not to hire someone if they are undocumented, but if you do hire them, you cannot harass them, take advantage of them or abuse them.