Responding to a disturbing December scuffle where a mother had her baby ripped from her arms by cops at a Brooklyn benefits center, the City Council passed a legislative package Wednesday aimed at improving poor New Yorkers’ experiences at public benefits offices.

The legislation includes a bill requiring that the NYPD train cops to be more sensitive when making arrests in front of children as well as two others requiring the city’s Human Resources Administration to audit its operations and policies at centers and implement a plan for improving client services.

Many of the other bills are aimed at promoting transparency through mandatory reporting by HRA on topics including client complaints, rejections of public assistance, and arrests and uses of force at centers.

The package was approved a week after Jazmine Headley, 24, sued the city over police and HRA security allegedly using excessive force while grabbing her 1-year-old son from her during an incident caught on video that went viral.

Councilwoman Helen Rosenthal (D-Manhattan), who sponsored the bill requiring the audit, said “it’s imperative that we get to the bottom of the institutional failures that led to HRA’s terrible treatment of Jazmine Headley.”

“Over the years, we have received many accounts of the poor treatment of New Yorkers who visit city-run public assistance and [Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program] centers in need of assistance,” Rosenthal said. “This remains absolutely unacceptable, and what happened to Jazmine Headley is a stark reminder of the indignities and injustices that low-income residents are forced to endure.”