Michael Bloomberg (Getty Images/Mandel Ngan/AFP)

Democrat presidential hopeful Michael Bloomberg banned, or attempted to ban, far more than just large sodas during his dozen years as mayor of New York City, according to a list published on the eve of his departure from office.

On New Year’s Eve 2013, Gizmodo published a list if compiled of 32 Bloomberg bans, some of which were overturned or merely promoted by Mayor Bloomberg.

The majority of bans fell into one of three categories: smoking, transportation and food/beverage – but, music, grass clippings and heating oils were also targeted, the list reveals. By general category, the bans addressed the following areas of New Yorkers’ lives:

Smoking/Tobacco: 6

Transportation: 6

Food/Food Service: 5

Buildings/Bathrooms/Black Roofs: 5

Music: 2

Grass clippings/Grassy Areas: 2

Cell Phones in Schools: 1

Guns: 1

Term Limits: 1

Organic Food Waste from Landfills: 1

Heating Oils: 1

Greenhouse Gas Emissions: 1

The full list compiled by Gizmodo, including links to sources such as The New York Times, The Huffington Post and CBS News, is presented below. Read Gizmodo’s original 2013 article here.

* Overruled/appealed ban

** Suggested/voluntary ban

*** Proposed/pending ban