At a Capitol news conference, Silver was joined by tenant protection advocates and their families
to bring attention to the challenges working families face in these difficult economic times.
|
|
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and Housing Committee Chair Vito Lopez today
announced Assembly passage on a nine-bill package addressing the affordable
housing crisis, particularly in New York City and surrounding suburbs. The legislation
is aimed at protecting tenants from being priced out of their homes through insufficient
rent regulation laws and an unstable state housing market.
Flanked by sponsors of the bills and members of tenant advocacy groups, Silver and
Lopez held an afternoon news conference to bring attention to the measures and call
on the Senate to bring long overdue relief to New York City communities suffering from
an affordable housing shortage.
Standing in support of the legislative package were ACORN Executive Director Bertha
Lewis; Ramona Santana, a tenant leader with the Northwest Bronx Community &
Clergy Coalition; Maria Davila, a leader with Housing Here and Now and an ACORN member;
Ridgewood Bushwick Senior Citizen Council members Angela Battaglia and Carmen Bonilla;
North Bushwick Residents Association members Maritza Davila and Sonya Rivera; and Brooklyn
Unidos members Maria Viera and Elizabeth Torres.
Silver noted that in addition to the package slated for floor action later today, two additional bills
passed earlier this year.
"The Assembly Majority understands the challenges families face in these trying economic
times. New York City has faced an ongoing affordable housing crisis which is being exacerbated
by rising food, fuel and construction costs. Unless we take action now to preserve the rent
regulation system, housing in the City of New York will be too expensive for the firefighters, police
officers and teachers and others upon whom we depend," said Silver (D-Manhattan).
"Residents of New York State continue to face an affordable housing crisis. We need to
preserve as much affordable housing as possible, as well as build new housing. Keeping this issue
in the forefront will also help us fight the loss of critical affordable housing units during these difficult
economic times" said Lopez (D-Brooklyn). "The Assembly is committed to working for
rent regulation in order to protect tenants and stabilize our working class neighborhoods.
"Between a weakening economy and skyrocketing rents, working families are being priced out
and pushed out of New York City. Every year more than 10,000 tenants lose their homes to vacancy
decontrol. Thousands more are forced out by luxury decontrol, owner occupancy or landlord
harassment. This package is critically important to stemming the loss of affordable housing in
our state and will help tens of thousands of New Yorkers keep their homes. We applaud Speaker
Silver, Assemblymember Lopez and the entire Assembly Democratic conference for their leadership
on this critical issue for working families," said Lewis.
|
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver announces legislation aimed at protecting tenant
rights and providing affordable housing. Silver was joined by tenant advocacy groups
and (from left) Assembly members Jeffrey Dinowitz, Linda Rosenthal, Andrew Hevesi,
Michele Titus, Janele Hyer-Spencer, Vito Lopez and Helene Weinstein. Other Assembly
members in attendance were Michael Benjamin, James Brennan, Alec Brook-Krasny,
Ruben Diaz Jr., Vivian Cook, Adriano Espaillat, Aurelia Greene, Hakeem Jeffries, Brian
Kavanagh, Daniel O’Donnell and Ellen Young.
|
Rent regulation limits the rate of rent increases and the method, manner and the grounds for eviction
and requires services to be maintained. The shortage of affordable housing in New York City, in the
suburban counties of Westchester, Nassau, and Rockland and in many other areas of the state has
heightened the affordable housing crisis. According to housing advocates, over 300,000 rent stabilized
apartments have been decontrolled through vacancy and this number is accelerating each year.
To ensure rents remain at an affordable level and further protect New York's tenants, legislation
(A.2894) sponsored by Lopez would reduce the percentage by which
rent may be increased upon vacancy from twenty percent to ten percent and limit the number of
allowable increases to only once per year.
The Assembly's affordable housing plan would implement a host of measures to:
-
Keep affordable units in the rent regulatory system by ending the practice of "high
rent" vacancy decontrol, which allows landlords to remove apartments whose regulated
rent exceeds $2,000 permanently from state rent and eviction regulation. The measure
(A.7416-A/Rosenthal) would keep apartments protected
under rent stabilization or rent control when vacated so that there isn't a steady erosion
of units affordable to middle income people;
-
Substantially increase the amount of civil penalties the Division of Housing and Community
Renewal (DHCR) could impose on landlords who harass tenants or who violate orders of
DHCR related to rent-regulated housing (A.10823/Silver);
-
Limit a building owner's ability to recover a rent-regulated apartment for personal use
(A.799/Lopez);
-
Apply an adjustment for inflation to the rent and income deregulation thresholds for luxury
accommodations, and provide for similar periodic annual adjustments in the future
(A.10647/Bing);
-
Disallow the practice of increasing previously preferential rent upon lease renewal
(A.10055-A/Jeffries);
-
Amend the Local Emergency Housing Rent Control Act by removing the provision
that prohibits New York City from strengthening rent regulation laws to provide more
comprehensive coverage than provided by state laws
(A.4069/Lopez)/(S.1673/Krueger);
-
Permit the declaration of an emergency pursuant to the Emergency Tenant Protection
Act (ETPA) for rental housing accommodations located in buildings covered by a
project based assistance contract pursuant to Section 8 of the US housing act of
1937 (A.5677/Lopez);
-
Extend the length of time over which major capital improvement (MCI) expenses may
be recovered and require that rent surcharges authorized for MCIs shall cease when
the cost of the improvement has been recovered
(A.6510/O'Donnell);
-
Protect tenants in Mitchell-Lama developments which become subject to Rent Stabilization
or the EPTA by prohibiting an owner from applying for a rent increase based on unique and
peculiar circumstances when a project withdraws from this program
(A.352/Bing) Passed Assembly 1/29/08; and
-
Provide for the appointment of three alternates on rent guideline boards; one alternate shall
represent tenants, one shall represent owners of property and one shall be a public
representative (A.4501/Brodsky) Passed Assembly 3/3/08.
"The Assembly Majority is, as always, leading the fight for affordable, safe housing for New
York's working families," said Silver. "By preserving and expanding our state's rent
regulations we can keep housing affordable and accessible and help our families make ends meet.
Action on these measures is a very important step in keeping hard working people living and working
in New York. We remain committed to protecting tenants and ensuring that middle-class families are
not priced out of their communities."
|