Erie Buffalo County Health Department 2026: Services & Phone

Last reviewed 2026. This independent guide is for the Erie County Department of Health in Buffalo, New York. It is built around official Erie County and City of Buffalo public pages so residents can reach the correct office, clinic, complaint route, inspection lookup, vital-records office or emergency contact without confusing Buffalo, Erie County NY, Erie County PA and Erie County OH.

Erie County, New York Health Department

Erie County Health Department in Buffalo: Services, Phone Numbers, Clinics and the Right Office to Contact

The Erie County Department of Health, often called ECDOH, serves Buffalo and Erie County, New York through public health administration, clinics, Environmental Health, restaurant inspections, immunizations, sexual health services, family planning, rabies and vector control, lead poisoning prevention, public health preparedness, harm reduction, health equity and community health programs. The key is knowing which Erie County location or phone number matches your need.

Administrative office95 Franklin Street, Buffalo, NY 14202
Main phone(716) 858-7690
CommissionerGale R. Burstein, MD, MPH, FAAP
Emergency ruleFor life-threatening emergencies, call 911
Buffalo NY, not Erie PA or Erie OH Jesse Nash Health Center: clinic services 503 Kensington: Environmental Health Vital records usually route to city or town clerks
Use the correct Erie County

This page is for Erie County, New York, including Buffalo and nearby Erie County communities. It is not for the Erie County Department of Health in Pennsylvania, the Erie County Health Department in Ohio, or any unrelated Erie-named office. If your address, birth record, restaurant complaint, rabies exposure, clinic visit or permit is not in Erie County, New York, this is the wrong public health route.

Agency
Erie County Department of Health, New York
Administrative office
Rath Building, 95 Franklin Street, Buffalo, NY 14202
Main phone and fax
Main: (716) 858-7690   Fax: (716) 858-8701
Commissioner
Gale R. Burstein, MD, MPH, FAAP, Commissioner of Health
Major clinic site
Jesse Nash Health Center, 608 William Street, Buffalo, NY 14206. Sexual Health Center: (716) 858-7687. Family Planning Center: (716) 858-2779. Immunizations: (716) 858-2373.
Environmental Health
503 Kensington Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14214. Phone: (716) 961-6800. After-hours environmental emergencies: (716) 961-7898.
Best first step
Choose the right office before calling. Administration, clinics, Environmental Health, Medical Examiner, EMS preparedness and vital records are not the same desk.

Quick answer: what the Erie County Department of Health does

The Erie County Department of Health promotes and protects health in Erie County, New York through public health prevention, education, enforcement, emergency preparedness, disease control and community partnerships. For a Buffalo resident, that can mean a clinic visit at Jesse Nash Health Center, a restaurant inspection lookup, a rabies exposure call, a lead question, a substance-use harm-reduction request, a family planning appointment, a vaccine question, a public health complaint or a public health alert.

The biggest mistake is assuming the Health Department is one walk-in counter. Erie County separates services by location. The administrative office is at the Rath Building at 95 Franklin Street. The Jesse Nash Health Center at 608 William Street handles sexual health, family planning, PrEP, immunizations, disease investigation and TB-related clinic routing. Environmental Health and Public Health Laboratories are at 503 Kensington Avenue. The Medical Examiner is at 501 Kensington Avenue. Emergency Medical Services, public health emergency preparedness and related programs are tied to the 500 Commerce Drive location in Amherst.

Use this for general routing

Call the main office

Call (716) 858-7690 for general Erie County Department of Health routing, administrative questions or help finding the correct ECDOH program.

Use this for clinic care

Jesse Nash Health Center

Use the 608 William Street clinic site for sexual health, family planning, PrEP, immunizations, disease investigation and related public health clinic services.

Use this for complaints

Environmental Health

Call (716) 961-6800 for Environmental Health, including rabies, rodents, lead, restaurant complaints, food safety and environmental public health concerns.

Erie County Health Department phone numbers by service

Use this phone table before calling. It is better to call the correct program directly than to leave a vague message at the wrong office. If you are not sure which program applies, call the main office and say exactly what you need: vaccine appointment, rabies exposure, restaurant complaint, sexual health clinic, family planning, lead, Medicaid routing, Narcan, crisis support or a vital-record question.

Need Best phone or route What to say when you call
General Erie County Department of Health help (716) 858-7690 Say you need help reaching the correct ECDOH program and name your issue in one sentence.
Environmental Health (716) 961-6800 Use for restaurants, food safety, rabies, rodents, lead, septic, property transfer, environmental complaints and permits.
Rabies, animal bites, bats and wildlife exposure (716) 961-6800; after business hours (716) 961-7898 Say whether a person or pet was bitten, scratched, exposed to a bat or exposed to a wild animal.
Rats and rodents (716) 961-6800 Give the address, visible condition, garbage or standing-water issue, and whether it is private property or public area.
Sexual Health Center (716) 858-7687 Ask about STI testing, treatment, HIV testing, support services and walk-in availability.
Family Planning Center (716) 858-2779 Ask about appointments, walk-ins, reproductive health services, payment options and what ID or insurance to bring.
Immunizations (716) 858-2373 Say whether the vaccine is for school, daycare, college, travel, adult catch-up or a vaccine record question.
Lead poisoning prevention (716) 961-6800 Ask for lead program guidance and be ready with the child’s age, address and any testing or inspection details.
Substance use, harm reduction, Narcan or test strips (716) 858-7695 Ask about Narcan, fentanyl test strips, xylazine test strips or harm-reduction support.
Medicaid (716) 858-6244 Ask for Medicaid routing. This is not the same as a clinic appointment or emergency medical care.
Mental health crisis support Call or text 988; 24-hour crisis hotline (716) 834-3131 Use crisis lines for emotional distress, suicidal thoughts, substance-use crisis or urgent behavioral-health support.
Life-threatening emergency 911 Do not wait for a routine health department office if there is immediate danger.

Best call strategy for Buffalo residents

Do not open with a long story. Start with one direct sentence: “I live in Erie County, New York, and I need help with a restaurant complaint,” or “I need the Sexual Health Center,” or “I found a bat in my home and need rabies guidance.” That sentence helps staff route you faster than a full timeline before they know which program should answer.

Have the address, date, patient age, exposure date, business name, school deadline, insurance card, photo ID or complaint location ready depending on the issue. Public health offices work from specifics. A complaint with a date, address and clear description is stronger than a general statement that something is unsafe.

Erie County Department of Health locations in Buffalo and Erie County

ECDOH is not just one address. The correct location depends on the service. The Rath Building is the administrative office. The Jesse Nash Health Center handles major clinic services. Environmental Health and Public Health Laboratories are on Kensington Avenue. The Medical Examiner is also on Kensington Avenue but at a different building. EMS, public health emergency preparedness, the Medical Reserve Corps and paramedic programs are listed at the 500 Commerce Drive location in Amherst.

Location Address and phone Services listed there
Rath Building 95 Franklin Street, Buffalo, NY 14202. Phone: (716) 858-7690. Administration, Cancer Services, Community Wellness, Early Intervention, Epidemiology and Surveillance, Harm Reduction, Health Equity.
Jesse Nash Health Center 608 William Street, Buffalo, NY 14206. Phone: (716) 858-7687. Family Planning, Sexual Health, PrEP, Immunizations and Immunization Action Plan, Disease Investigation and Partner Services, Tuberculosis.
ECDOH Building 503 Kensington Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14214. Phone: (716) 961-6800. Environmental Health and Public Health Laboratories.
Medical Examiner 501 Kensington Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14214. Phone: (716) 961-7591. Medical Examiner.
500 Commerce Drive 500 Commerce Drive, Amherst, NY 14228. Ambulance Service, Erie County Medical Reserve Corps, Emergency Medical Services, Paramedic Program, Public Health Emergency Preparedness.
Erie County Health Mall 1500 Broadway, Buffalo, NY 14212. Phone: (716) 858-8888. Call for services before visiting.

Map to the Erie County Department of Health administrative office

The main ECDOH administrative office is at 95 Franklin Street, Buffalo, NY 14202. Use this map for administration and general department routing. Do not use this map if your appointment or service is at Jesse Nash Health Center, the Environmental Health building, the Medical Examiner office or another ECDOH location.

Before you visit 95 Franklin Street

  • Call first if you need a clinic appointment or health screening.
  • Use Jesse Nash Health Center for sexual health, family planning and many immunization questions.
  • Use 503 Kensington Avenue for Environmental Health issues.
  • Use the correct vital-records clerk if you need a birth, death or marriage certificate.

Bring the right details

  • Photo ID and insurance information for clinic visits if applicable.
  • Business name and address for restaurant or food complaints.
  • Exposure date and animal information for rabies questions.
  • Property address for environmental, lead, septic or rodent concerns.

Service area: Buffalo and Erie County communities

The Erie County Department of Health serves Erie County, New York. That includes Buffalo and many nearby municipalities and communities, such as Amherst, Cheektowaga, Tonawanda, West Seneca, Hamburg, Orchard Park, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Clarence, Depew, Williamsville, Kenmore, Angola, East Aurora, Eden, Evans, Grand Island, Alden, Newstead, Elma, Boston, Brant, Collins, Concord, Marilla, North Collins and Sardinia. Service availability can depend on the program, address, age, income, insurance, exposure type, complaint location, school requirement or public health issue.

Buffalo Amherst Cheektowaga Tonawanda West Seneca Hamburg Lackawanna Orchard Park Lancaster Clarence Grand Island East Aurora

Clinics and healthcare services through ECDOH

ECDOH clinics and healthcare services are concentrated around the Jesse Nash Health Center and related public health programs. The official clinics page links residents to health insurance and low-cost healthcare services, dental provider resources, primary care provider resources, LGBTQIA+ healthcare provider resources and sexual-health-related provider directories. The department also warns that its public health website does not replace personal medical advice from your own qualified healthcare provider.

That warning matters. The Health Department can help with public health programs, clinics, STI testing, family planning, vaccines, disease prevention and community health. It is not a substitute for a primary care doctor, emergency department, urgent care, hospital specialist or 911. In January 2026, Erie County publicly urged residents to use emergency departments and ambulance services for true medical emergencies and to consider urgent care, doctor offices and telehealth for non-emergency medical care when appropriate.

Use ECDOH for

  • Public health clinics
  • Sexual health and HIV testing
  • Family planning
  • Immunization questions
  • Disease investigation and partner services

Use your provider for

  • Diagnosis and treatment plans
  • Chronic disease management
  • Medication management
  • Specialist referrals
  • Follow-up after hospital or emergency care

Use emergency care for

  • Chest pain
  • Severe breathing trouble
  • Severe bleeding
  • Stroke symptoms
  • Any life-threatening emergency

Vaccines, school immunizations and records questions

The ECDOH vaccine pages explain that the Jesse Nash Health Center offers certain vaccines through the Family Planning Center, including HPV, Hepatitis A/B and MMR, and that the ECDOH Immunization Clinic offers several vaccines, including COVID-19, with appointments required. Erie County also points families to immunization clinics in Western New York and identifies the ECDOH Immunization Action Plan Program as a program that works with providers, day care providers, schools and others to raise vaccination rates and answer questions about immunizations needed for school or college.

For residents, the practical route is simple: call (716) 858-2373 for immunizations. If your child needs school or daycare vaccines, gather prior records before calling. If you are an adult, ask whether you should use your primary care provider, pharmacy, ECDOH clinic or another local immunization clinic. If you need a vaccine record, ask whether your information is in the New York State Immunization Information System, commonly known as NYSIIS, and what proof is acceptable for school, college, work or travel.

School deadline warning

Do not wait until the last week before school, day care, camp, college move-in or an employer deadline. Erie County’s vaccine information notes that appointments can book up before school begins. A missing dose, missing record, medical exemption question or vaccine spacing rule can delay compliance.

  1. Identify the deadline. School, daycare, college, employment, travel and outbreak-related vaccine questions are not the same.
  2. Gather all records. Bring pediatrician records, pharmacy records, prior health department records, school forms and any NYSIIS documentation you already have.
  3. Call the right line. Use the immunization line at (716) 858-2373 or the Jesse Nash clinic route if the official page directs you there.
  4. Ask about appointments. Some services are appointment-based. Do not assume a same-day walk-in vaccine will be available.
  5. Keep final proof. Save a clear copy of your updated record for school, work, travel or future healthcare visits.

Sexual Health Center and Family Planning Center in Buffalo

The Sexual Health Center is located at the Jesse Nash Health Center, 608 William Street, Buffalo, NY 14206. The phone number is (716) 858-7687, and the fax is (716) 858-4962. Erie County lists the center as a walk-in center, with services provided on a first-come, first-served basis until capacity is reached. All services are confidential, and the page states that anyone age 12 or older can receive medical care at the clinic. Bring photo ID and insurance information if applicable.

The Family Planning Center is also at the Jesse Nash Health Center, 608 William Street. Its phone number is (716) 858-2779, and the fax is (716) 858-7023. Erie County lists appointments as preferred while accepting walk-ins. The official Family Planning page also states that all Erie County residents are seen regardless of ability to pay, staff can help people without insurance get free or low-cost family planning services, and staff can help with the Family Planning Benefit Program.

Clinic Location and phone Best use
Sexual Health Center Jesse Nash Health Center, 608 William Street, Buffalo. Phone: (716) 858-7687. STI testing and treatment, HIV testing and support, confidential sexual health services.
Family Planning Center Jesse Nash Health Center, 608 William Street, Buffalo. Phone: (716) 858-2779. Reproductive health, contraception, pregnancy-related counseling, family planning services and benefit-program help.
Immunization support Jesse Nash Health Center / ECDOH Immunization Clinic. Phone: (716) 858-2373. School, college, adult, COVID-19, MMR, HPV, Hepatitis A/B and vaccine-record questions.

Environmental Health: complaints, lead, septic, property transfers and public health hazards

The Division of Environmental Health is based at the ECDOH Building, 503 Kensington Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14214. The phone number is (716) 961-6800, fax is (716) 961-6880, and the email listed by the division is environmental.health@erie.gov. For emergencies after regular business hours, Erie County lists (716) 961-7898.

Environmental Health is the correct route for restaurant inspections, food safety, temporary food stands, rabies, rats and rodents, lead poisoning, property transfers, septic and onsite wastewater treatment, air quality, extreme heat, mold and moisture, ticks, mosquitoes, standing water and similar environmental public health topics. This is also the office to use for many public health complaints, not the general administrative line.

Use Environmental Health when the issue is place-based

If the issue is tied to a restaurant, building, property, rodent infestation, standing water, food stand, tattoo or piercing concern, septic system, lead hazard or rabies exposure, Environmental Health is usually the better first route than the main ECDOH administrative office.

What makes a complaint stronger

Write the address, business name, date, time, what you observed, whether anyone was injured or became ill, and whether photos, receipts or other documentation exist. Do not submit a vague complaint when a specific complaint is possible.

Restaurant inspections, food sanitation and temporary food stands

Erie County Environmental Health includes Food Sanitation Services. This program inspects food service establishments such as restaurants, mobile food trucks, temporary food stands and caterers. It also provides education and information about safe food handling. Erie County points residents to restaurant and food facility inspection records for food service establishments in Erie County and states that sanitarians and engineers conduct unannounced inspections on a regular basis and in response to complaints.

If you want to file a complaint about a restaurant or food facility, use the official complaint route or call (716) 961-6800. For a temporary food stand, Erie County states that operators must get an Erie County Health Permit and follow New York State Sanitary Code requirements. The official food page also says a temporary food service establishment application and correct fee should be submitted at least five days before the event to avoid an additional $40 late filing fee, and that operation of a frozen dessert machine requires an additional $25 fee.

Food-related need Correct route Important detail
Check a restaurant inspection Restaurant Inspections and Food Sanitation Services Use Erie County’s own inspection-record route; statewide databases may not include Erie County records.
Report a restaurant complaint Service Requests and Complaints or (716) 961-6800 Include business name, address, date, time and what happened.
Open a restaurant or food facility Use Erie County’s guide to opening a food service establishment. Do not sign a lease or start construction without understanding health permit and plan-review requirements.
Temporary food stand Complete the official temporary food service application and submit it with the correct fee. Submit at least five days before the event to avoid a listed $40 late filing fee.

Rabies, rodents, ticks, bats and other vector issues

For rabies and vector concerns, call (716) 961-6800. For emergencies after regular business hours, Erie County lists (716) 961-7898. If you or a pet were bitten or scratched by a wild animal, call ECDOH immediately. If you find a bat in your home, Erie County says not to let the bat get outside and to call ECDOH immediately. If an animal shows signs of rabies, do not approach it.

Erie County’s Rabies, Disease and Vector Control Program investigates animal bites or scratches, wildlife encounters, rodent problems, standing water, untreated swimming pools and containers that can create mosquito-breeding areas. The program also connects residents to information on Lyme disease, West Nile virus, Eastern Equine Encephalitis, bed bugs, cockroaches and other insect-related concerns.

Urgent exposure rule

If there is a severe bite, deep wound, uncontrolled bleeding, breathing trouble, a child in immediate danger, suspected rabies exposure or any life-threatening emergency, call 911 or seek emergency care first. Do not wait for normal office hours or try to solve a serious exposure through a routine web form.

  1. Separate the person or pet from the animal. Do not chase, handle or approach a wild or aggressive animal.
  2. Get medical help if needed. Serious bites and wounds need healthcare before paperwork.
  3. Call the rabies line. Use (716) 961-6800 during regular business hours or (716) 961-7898 for after-hours environmental emergencies.
  4. Keep the facts clear. Note the address, animal type, bite or scratch time, whether the animal is available for testing, and whether a pet was involved.
  5. Follow official guidance. Rabies and bat exposures are time-sensitive. Do not rely on guesses or social media comments.

Harm reduction, Narcan, test strips and crisis routing

Erie County lists (716) 858-7695 for substance use and harm reduction, including text-for-Narcan, fentanyl test strips and xylazine test strips. This route is different from Medicaid, sexual health, family planning and emergency response. If someone is overdosing or in immediate danger, call 911. If someone is in mental health crisis, call or text 988 or use the 24-hour crisis hotline listed by ECDOH at (716) 834-3131.

Use harm reduction line for

  • Naloxone or Narcan information
  • Fentanyl test strips
  • Xylazine test strips
  • Substance-use harm-reduction support

Use crisis or emergency care for

  • Possible overdose
  • Immediate danger
  • Suicidal thoughts or severe emotional distress
  • Medical emergency requiring urgent response

WIC and breastfeeding support in Erie County

Do not assume ECDOH is the direct WIC office. Erie County public information points residents toward local WIC providers and partners. Catholic Charities identifies itself as the WIC administrator for Erie, Niagara and Chautauqua counties and lists (716) 218-1484 for more information or sign-up. Erie County Department of Health also supports breastfeeding, chestfeeding and lactation-friendly initiatives through the Office of Health Equity and community partnerships.

For WIC, use the local WIC route rather than the general ECDOH administrative phone. For workplace lactation and public health education, ECDOH’s Office of Health Equity may be relevant. For medical concerns about infant feeding, postpartum health or pregnancy, speak with a qualified healthcare provider.

Health Equity, community wellness and public health information

ECDOH includes an Office of Health Equity at 95 Franklin Street in Buffalo. The Office of Health Equity phone listed on the official Health Equity page is (716) 858-2152, with email healthequity@erie.gov. Erie County also uses public health education materials, community wellness programs, health equity reports, podcasts, videos and public health advisories to reach residents across Buffalo and the county.

For a resident, the practical lesson is this: not every health department service is a clinic. Some services are education, policy, community outreach, data, public health preparedness, emergency response planning or partner coordination. If you are trying to solve a specific personal health problem, ask which program actually provides direct service before showing up.

Birth, death and marriage certificates are not handled by ECDOH clinics

Vital records are a common source of confusion. The Erie County Department of Health is not the place to request most birth, death or marriage certificates. In New York, vital records are generally handled by the registrar, city clerk or town clerk where the event occurred. For a birth that occurred in the City of Buffalo, Buffalo’s official Birth Certificate Request page says birth records from 1878 to current are available at the Buffalo City Clerk’s Office on the 13th floor of City Hall in Room 1302. For Buffalo death records, the City of Buffalo lists Vital Records at 1302 City Hall, 65 Niagara Square, Buffalo, NY 14202.

The Erie County Clerk also explains that birth records are available through the Registrar of Vital Statistics in the city or town where the birth occurred, and that for those born in the City of Buffalo, residents can contact the City of Buffalo Vital Records Office. So the safe rule is simple: do not go to ECDOH for a certified birth, death or marriage certificate unless an official page directly instructs you to do so. Use the correct city, town or clerk’s vital-records route.

If you need Do not use Better route
Buffalo birth certificate ECDOH clinic or administrative office City of Buffalo Birth Certificate Request
Buffalo death certificate ECDOH clinic or Environmental Health City of Buffalo Death Certificate Request
Buffalo marriage record Health Department main phone City of Buffalo Marriage Certificate Request
Birth or death record outside Buffalo Buffalo City Clerk by default Contact the city or town clerk where the birth or death occurred.

Service requests and complaints: how to submit useful information

Erie County provides service request and complaint routes through its health department pages. Use these routes for public health problems that can be investigated or routed to the correct program. A complaint about a restaurant is different from a complaint about rats, standing water, tobacco, tattooing or a workplace issue. The official complaints page also points some issues to outside agencies, such as OSHA, Public Employee Safety and Health, the New York State Department of Labor or the New York State Department of State, depending on the complaint type.

  1. Choose the correct category. Food, rodents, rabies, lead, sanitation and workplace issues have different enforcement routes.
  2. Write the exact location. Include street address, business name, apartment number, cross street or property description.
  3. Write dates and times. Investigators cannot work well from “recently” when a specific date is available.
  4. Describe the public health risk. Focus on food safety, exposure, sanitation, animal bite, standing water, rodent conditions, lead or other measurable risks.
  5. Keep your complaint factual. Anger is understandable, but facts drive enforcement.

What the Erie County Department of Health does not handle

A useful public health page must also stop people from going to the wrong place. ECDOH is important, but it is not every health, records, benefits or emergency office in Erie County.

Need Wrong route Correct or safer route
Life-threatening medical emergency Routine ECDOH phone or web page Call 911.
Personal diagnosis or treatment plan Public health website Use your doctor, urgent care, hospital, specialist or emergency care as appropriate.
Buffalo birth, death or marriage certificate ECDOH clinic Use Buffalo City Clerk Vital Records or the correct city or town clerk.
Erie County PA or Erie County OH health office Buffalo NY ECDOH Use that county’s official health department.
Private hospital or doctor medical records County health department unless ECDOH created the record Contact the provider or records custodian that created the record.

Erie County NY vs Erie County PA vs Erie County OH

The phrase “Erie County Health Department” can point to more than one place. This article targets the Buffalo, New York entity. If you search from outside Western New York, double-check the state before calling, submitting complaints, checking restaurant records or requesting vital records.

This page

Erie County, New York

Buffalo, Amherst, Cheektowaga, Tonawanda, West Seneca, Hamburg, Lackawanna and other Erie County NY communities. Official ECDOH website: www3.erie.gov/health.

Not this guide

Erie County, Pennsylvania

Erie, PA has its own county health department. Do not use Buffalo NY numbers for Pennsylvania records, clinics, restaurant complaints or health alerts.

Not this guide

Erie County, Ohio

Erie County, Ohio has a separate health department. Do not use Buffalo NY Environmental Health or clinic phone numbers for Ohio WIC, permits or public health questions.

Official links for Erie County Health Department users

Use these official pages for final verification before you visit, submit a complaint, rely on a phone number, check inspection records or request a service.

Social and public updates

ECDOH links to social channels from its official site, but appointment rules, public health services, phone numbers, fees, complaints and records should be verified on official Erie County or City of Buffalo pages before you act.

Erie County Health Department FAQ

What is the Erie County Health Department phone number in Buffalo NY?

The main Erie County Department of Health administrative phone number is (716) 858-7690. Environmental Health is (716) 961-6800, the Sexual Health Center is (716) 858-7687, the Family Planning Center is (716) 858-2779, Immunizations is (716) 858-2373, Substance Use and Harm Reduction is (716) 858-7695, and Medicaid routing is (716) 858-6244.

Where is the Erie County Department of Health administrative office?

The administrative office is in the Rath Building at 95 Franklin Street, Buffalo, NY 14202. This is not the same as the Jesse Nash Health Center at 608 William Street or the Environmental Health building at 503 Kensington Avenue.

Who is the Erie County Commissioner of Health?

The official ECDOH page identifies Gale R. Burstein, MD, MPH, FAAP as Commissioner of Health.

Where is the Jesse Nash Health Center?

The Jesse Nash Health Center is at 608 William Street, Buffalo, NY 14206. It houses services such as Sexual Health, Family Planning, PrEP, Immunizations, Disease Investigation and Partner Services, and Tuberculosis-related routing.

What number do I call for the Erie County Sexual Health Center?

Call (716) 858-7687. The Sexual Health Center is at Jesse Nash Health Center, 608 William Street, Buffalo. Erie County lists it as a confidential walk-in center with services provided first come, first served until capacity is reached.

What number do I call for Erie County Family Planning?

Call (716) 858-2779. The Family Planning Center is at Jesse Nash Health Center, 608 William Street, Buffalo. Appointments are preferred, and walk-ins are accepted according to the official page.

How do I contact Environmental Health in Erie County NY?

Call (716) 961-6800. The Environmental Health Division is at 503 Kensington Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14214. For environmental emergencies after regular business hours, Erie County lists (716) 961-7898.

How do I report a restaurant complaint in Erie County?

Use Erie County’s Service Requests and Complaints page or call Environmental Health at (716) 961-6800. Include the restaurant name, address, date, time and a clear description of the food safety issue.

Where can I look up Erie County restaurant inspections?

Use the official Erie County Restaurant Inspections and Food Sanitation Services page, which links to restaurant and food facility inspection records for Erie County. Do not assume a statewide inspection database includes Erie County records.

Who do I call for a bat, animal bite or rabies concern?

Call ECDOH Environmental Health immediately at (716) 961-6800. For emergencies after regular business hours, use (716) 961-7898. If the bite or exposure is medically urgent, call 911 or seek emergency care first.

Does the Erie County Department of Health issue birth certificates?

No, not for the usual resident request. Birth, death and marriage certificates route to the registrar, city clerk or town clerk where the event occurred. For births in the City of Buffalo, use the Buffalo City Clerk’s birth certificate request process at City Hall.

Is this page for Erie County Pennsylvania or Erie County Ohio?

No. This guide is only for the Erie County Department of Health in Buffalo and Erie County, New York. Erie County, Pennsylvania and Erie County, Ohio have separate health departments and separate official contact routes.

What should I do in a public health emergency after hours?

For life-threatening emergencies, call 911. For Environmental Health emergencies after regular business hours, Erie County lists (716) 961-7898. For mental health or substance-use crisis support, call or text 988 or use the 24-hour crisis hotline listed by ECDOH at (716) 834-3131.

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