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A00492 Summary:

BILL NOA00492
 
SAME ASSAME AS S02384
 
SPONSORPaulin
 
COSPNSRCook, Gunther
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd §§103, 204 & 206, add §204-a, EDP L; amd §§3, 2 & 16-n, UDC Act; amd §§501, 502, 510 & 520, Gen Muni L; amd §2, Chap 173/1968
 
Relates to designating blighted property and blighted areas; establishes criteria for designation; provides definition of blighted property and blighted areas; amends definition of substandard or insanitary area by removing the words "slum" and "deteriorated or deteriorating".
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A00492 Actions:

BILL NOA00492
 
01/09/2023referred to judiciary
01/03/2024referred to judiciary
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A00492 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A492
 
SPONSOR: Paulin
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the eminent domain procedure law, in relation to desig- nating blighted property and blighted areas; to amend the New York state urban development corporation act, in relation to the definition of blight and substandard or insanitary area; and to amend the general municipal law and the New York state urban development and research corporation act, in relation to substandard and insanitary areas   PURPOSE: To provide an objective, measurable standard for determining whether a property, group of properties or an area is "blighted" in the context of the exercise of eminent domain, as well as to narrow the definition of "substandard or insanitary area" found in multiple provisions of the law.   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section 1 amends Section 103 of the Eminent Domain Procedure Law ("EDPL") to add a definition of "blighted property" and "blighted area" to conform with the newly added Section 204-a, found in Section 3 of this bill. Section 2 amends subdivision B of Section 204 of the EDPL to add a clos- ing paragraph requiring a condemner to include findings that satisfy the definition of "blighted property or blighted area" if the condemner is exercising eminent domain to remedy blight. Section 3 amends the EDPL to add a new section 204-a with an objective definition of blighted property and blighted areas. A property or group of properties would be found to be blighted only if they met certain detailed criteria. Further, certain properties are listed as exempt from a blight determination. Also, in order for an area to be found to be blighted, a majority of the individual properties would have to be found to be blighted, and these properties would have to represent a geograph- ical majority of the redevelopment area. A condemner must make written findings on the conditions that constitute blight. Finally, a declara- tion of blight would be valid for up to fifteen years. Section 4 amends Section 206 of the EDPL to require the use of the factors found in subdivision B of Section 204 of the EDPL in situations where the condem- ner is exempt from the EDPL procedure. Section 5 amends Section (1)(3) of the Urban Development Corporation Act("UDCA") by adding a new subdivision to incorporate the definition of "blighted property" and "blighted area" established in EDPL Section 204-a. Section 6 amends Section (3)(12) of the UDCA to remove the teens "slum" and "deteriorated or deteriorating" from the definition of "substandard or insanitary area.". Section 7 amends Section (1)(2) of the UDCA to remove the terms "slum" and "deteriorated or deteriorating" from the legislative findings. Section 8 amends subdivision 6(d) of Section (1)(16-n) to remove the term "deteriorated" from the types of properties subject to a municipal inventory and assessment for in kind contributions. Section 9 amends Section 501 of the General Municipal Law ("GML") to remove the terms "slum" and "deteriorated or deteriorating" from the policy and purposes. Section 10 amends subdivision 4 of Section 502 of the GML to remove the terms "slum" and "deteriorated or deteriorating" from the definition of "substandard or insanitary area." Section 11 amends subdivision 5 of Section 510 of the GML to remove "slum areas" and "deteriorated or deteriorating" from the types of prop- erties that can be acquired through community renewal programs, so that blight is the sole standard. Section 12 amends Section 520 of the GML to remove "slum" and "deteri- orated or deteriorating" from the types of properties subject to urban renewal projects. Section 13 amends Section (1)(2) of the Urban Development and Research Corporation Act ("UDRCA") to remove "deterioration" from the statement of legislative findings. Section 14 provides that the act will take effect immediately.   JUSTIFICATION: That "private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation" is a right guaranteed by the New York Constitution. The words "public use" are meant to protect property owners from the State's power to transfer property from one private property owner to another. Over the last decade, courts have considered the question of whether economic development constitutes a "public use." In the most notable of these cases, Kelo v. City of New London, the Supreme Court allowed for the forcible transfer of property from one private owner to another in support of economic development. This decision has prompted legislative reform in forty-three states and it is time for New York to follow suit. In a decision by the New York Court of Appeals addressing the use of eminent domain in the context of economic development, Chief Judge Lipp- man stated that "it may be that the bar has now been set too low that what will now pass as 'blight,' as that expression has been come to be understood and used by political appointees to public corporations rely- ing upon studies paid for by developers, should not be permitted to constitute a predicate for the invasion of property rights and the razing of homes and businesses. But any such limitation upon the sover- eign power of eminent domain as it has come to be defined in the urban renewal context is a matter for the Legislature, not the courts." Matter of Goldstein v. New York State Urban Dev., (2009 NY Slip Op 08677)(emphasis added). This bill is in response to Chief Judge Lippman's invitation to further define blight. This bill provides objective, quantifiable standards by which to deter- mine whether a property or area is indeed blighted. It will ensure that condemners under the Urban Development Corporation - Act, General Munic- ipal Law, Urban Development and Research Corporation Act, and the Eminent Domain Procedure Law use consistent and predictable factors related to the public's health and safety to evaluate the blight status of a neighborhood. The bill requires that a majority of the properties within the redevelopment area be considered blighted and that these properties cover a majority of the geographical area of the project. Eminent domain can be a useful and even necessary tool for urban rede- velopment, particularly for older built-out cities like those in New York State. Its application, however, must balance the rights of proper- ty owners with the need for economic development. This bill provides much needed standards to be used when such rights are balanced against the need for development.   LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: 2021 and 2022: A.1142,Referred to. Judiciary/ S. 275,Referred to Judi- ciary 2019 and 2020: A.360,Referred to Judiciary/ S.3136,Referred to Judici- ary 2017 and 2018: A.2419,Referred to Judiciary/ S.7968,Referred to Judici- ary 2015 and 2016: A.5242,Referred to Judiciary / S.4891,Referred to judi- ciary   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None.   EFFECTIVE DATE: Immediately.
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A00492 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                           492
 
                               2023-2024 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                     January 9, 2023
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M. of A. PAULIN, COOK, GUNTHER -- read once and referred
          to the Committee on Judiciary
 
        AN ACT to amend the eminent domain procedure law, in relation to  desig-
          nating  blighted  property  and  blighted areas; to amend the New York
          state urban development corporation act, in relation to the definition
          of blight and substandard or insanitary area; and to amend the general
          municipal law and the New York state urban  development  and  research
          corporation act, in relation to substandard and insanitary areas
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Section 103 of the eminent domain procedure law is  amended
     2  by adding a new subdivision (H) to read as follows:
     3    (H)  "Blighted  property"  and  "blighted area" means property that is
     4  declared blighted under section two hundred four-a of this chapter.
     5    § 2. Subdivision (B) of section 204 of the  eminent  domain  procedure
     6  law is amended by adding a new closing paragraph to read as follows:
     7    A  condemnor shall not take action against a property or area when the
     8  public use, benefit, or purpose to be  served  by  the  proposed  public
     9  project  is to remedy blight, unless such property or area satisfies the
    10  definition of "blighted property or blighted area" as defined by section
    11  two hundred four-a of this article.   The condemnor shall  include  such
    12  findings  in its determination and findings pursuant to this subdivision
    13  in order to take action against an area or property to remedy blight.
    14    § 3. The eminent domain procedure law  is  amended  by  adding  a  new
    15  section 204-a to read as follows:
    16    §  204-a.  Blighted  property  and  blighted areas. (A) Subject to the
    17  exceptions listed in paragraph two of subdivision (B) of  this  section,
    18  any single property may be declared blighted if:
    19    (1)  (a)  (I)  The property is unfit for human habitation due to iden-
    20  tifiable conditions that endanger the life, health  and  safety  of  the
    21  owners,  occupants,  or  general public.   Conditions rendering property
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD01279-01-3

        A. 492                              2
 
     1  unfit for human habitation include, but are not limited  to,  structural
     2  defects,   dilapidation,   deterioration,   vermin  infestation,  health
     3  hazards, fire hazards, lack  of  proper  sanitary  facilities,  obsolete
     4  systems of utilities, or inadequate maintenance; or
     5    (II) The property has deteriorated to the point where:
     6    1.  the  building is structurally unsound or poses an immediate threat
     7  to life or other property; or
     8    2. the cost of rehabilitation significantly exceeds the post-rehabili-
     9  tation market value.
    10    (b) The owner fails to remedy subparagraph (a) of this paragraph with-
    11  in a reasonable time after receiving notice of violation by  the  appro-
    12  priate governing body requiring the owner to:
    13    (I)  rehabilitate the building to conform to minimum code habitability
    14  requirements; or
    15    (II) demolish the building for health and safety reasons.
    16    (2) The property is abandoned. Property shall be deemed abandoned if:
    17    (a) Property is unoccupied and has been tax delinquent  for  at  least
    18  two years; or
    19    (b)  A  building  is  unoccupied by the owner or tenants, is unfit for
    20  human habitation, and has deteriorated to the point where:
    21    (I) The building is structurally unsound or poses an immediate  threat
    22  to life or other property; or
    23    (II) The cost of rehabilitation significantly exceeds the post-rehabi-
    24  litation market value; and
    25    (III)  The  owner  is unknown or the owner fails to respond within six
    26  months to a violation notice from the appropriate governing body requir-
    27  ing the owner to:
    28    1. rehabilitate  the  building  to  conform  to  minimum  habitability
    29  requirements; or
    30    2. demolish the building for health and safety reasons.
    31    (3) A vacant lot on which a building has been demolished and for which
    32  a municipal lien for demolition costs remains unpaid for six months.
    33    (4)  Property  that  is environmentally contaminated requiring remedi-
    34  ation for current or future use under state or federal law, if the owner
    35  fails to remedy the problem within six months  of  receiving  notice  of
    36  violation from the appropriate governing body.
    37    (5)  A  premises  which,  because  of  physical  condition  or use, is
    38  regarded as a public nuisance at common  law  or  has  been  declared  a
    39  public nuisance under a statute or an applicable municipal code, and the
    40  owner  fails to abate the nuisance within six months of receiving notice
    41  of violation from the appropriate governing body.
    42    (6) Defective or unusual conditions of title that make the free trans-
    43  fer or alienation of the property impossible.
    44    (7) Property that is occupied  or  unoccupied  has  tax  delinquencies
    45  exceeding the value of the property.
    46    (B) Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision (A) of this section,
    47  the following exceptions shall apply:
    48    (1)  Property shall in no case be declared blighted if it meets one or
    49  more of the following criteria:
    50    (a) Vacant and unimproved property located in any  rural  or  suburban
    51  area which is not served by existing utilities.
    52    (b)  Property which satisfies the definition of "farm woodland", "land
    53  used in agricultural production", "unique and irreplaceable agricultural
    54  land", or "viable agricultural land", as  those  terms  are  defined  in
    55  section three hundred one of the agriculture and markets law.

        A. 492                              3
 
     1    (2) For purposes of this section, if a developer or condemner involved
     2  in  a  redevelopment  project  has  caused or brought about by action or
     3  inaction or maintained for more than seven years a condition  listed  in
     4  subdivision  (A)  of this section within the proposed project area, that
     5  condition may not be used in the determination of blight.
     6    (3)  For purposes of this section, if property located in an urbanized
     7  area generally served by municipal infrastructure  and  utilities  meets
     8  one  or more of the conditions listed in subdivision (A) of this section
     9  due to failure on the part of the appropriate governing body to  provide
    10  necessary utility services and/or infrastructure, that condition may not
    11  be used in the determination of blight.
    12    (C) Multiple properties and project areas may be declared blighted.
    13    (1) A condemner may use eminent domain to acquire any unit of property
    14  within a blighted project area.
    15    (2)  For  purposes  of acquiring multiple units of property by eminent
    16  domain, an area may be declared generally blighted only if a majority of
    17  the individual parcels in the area are declared blighted under  subdivi-
    18  sion (A) of this section and represent a majority of the geographic area
    19  of the project.
    20    (3)  Properties  owned by a developer or condemner involved in a rede-
    21  velopment project may be included in any blighted project area  determi-
    22  nation.
    23    (D) For purposes of this section, a building containing multiple units
    24  shall be treated as a single property.
    25    (E)  Before  a  property  may  be  declared  blighted pursuant to this
    26  section, the condemner shall:
    27    (1) In the case of a single property, make written findings  identify-
    28  ing  the  specific  conditions  which render the property blighted under
    29  subdivision (A) of this section;
    30    (2) In the case of multiple properties or project areas, make  written
    31  findings  demonstrating  that  the conditions of subdivision (C) of this
    32  section have been met. In order to demonstrate that a  majority  of  the
    33  individual parcels are blighted and comprise a majority of the geograph-
    34  ical  area of the project, each blighted property must be identified and
    35  the specific conditions rendering it blighted under subdivision  (A)  of
    36  this section must be identified.
    37    (F) Any declaration made pursuant to this section shall be valid for a
    38  period of up to fifteen years.
    39    §  4. Section 206 of the eminent domain procedure law, subdivision (E)
    40  as added by chapter 468 of the laws of  1978,  is  amended  to  read  as
    41  follows:
    42    §  206. Exemptions. The condemnor shall be exempt from compliance with
    43  the provisions of this article when:
    44    (A) pursuant to other state, federal, or local law  or  regulation  it
    45  considers  and submits factors [similar to those] enumerated in subdivi-
    46  sion (B) of section two hundred four,  to  a  state,  federal  or  local
    47  governmental  agency,  board  or  commission  before proceeding with the
    48  acquisition and obtains a license, a permit,  a  certificate  of  public
    49  convenience  or  necessity  or  other similar approval from such agency,
    50  board, or commission or;
    51    (B) pursuant to article VII [or article VIII] of  the  public  service
    52  law  it obtained a certificate of environmental compatibility and public
    53  need or;
    54    (C) pursuant to other law or regulation it undergoes or  conducts  [or
    55  offers  to  conduct] prior to an acquisition one or more public hearings
    56  upon notice to the public and owners of property  to  be  acquired,  and

        A. 492                              4
 
     1  provided  further that factors [similar to those] enumerated in subdivi-
     2  sion (B) of section two hundred four herein [may] shall be considered at
     3  such public hearings, or;
     4    (D) when in the opinion of the condemnor the acquisition is de minimis
     5  in  nature  so  that  the  public interest will not be prejudiced by the
     6  construction of the project or because of  an  emergency  situation  the
     7  public  interest  will  be  endangered by any delay caused by the public
     8  hearing requirement in this article.
     9    (E) when it complies with the procedures contained in section 41.34 of
    10  the mental hygiene law.
    11    § 5. Section 3 of section 1 of  chapter  174  of  the  laws  of  1968,
    12  constituting  the  New  York state urban development corporation act, is
    13  amended by adding a new subdivision 31 to read as follows:
    14    (31)  "Blighted  property"  and  "blighted  area".  Property  that  is
    15  declared  blighted  under  section 204-a of the eminent domain procedure
    16  law.
    17    § 6. Subdivision 12 of section 3 of section 1 of chapter  174  of  the
    18  laws  of  1968, constituting the New York state urban development corpo-
    19  ration act, is amended to read as follows:
    20    (12) "Substandard or insanitary area". The term "substandard or insan-
    21  itary area" shall mean and be interchangeable with a [slum,]  blighted[,
    22  deteriorated  or  deteriorating]  area, or an area which has a blighting
    23  influence on the surrounding area, whether residential, non-residential,
    24  commercial, industrial, vacant or land in highways,  waterways,  railway
    25  and subway tracks and yards, bridge and tunnel approaches and entrances,
    26  or  other  similar  facilities,  over  which air rights and easements or
    27  other rights of user necessary for the use and development of  such  air
    28  rights,  to  be developed as air rights sites for the elimination of the
    29  blighting influence, or any combination thereof and  may  include  land,
    30  buildings  or  improvements,  or air rights and concomitant easements or
    31  other rights of user necessary for the use and development of  such  air
    32  rights not in themselves substandard or insanitary.
    33    §  7. The second and the sixth undesignated paragraphs of section 2 of
    34  section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New  York
    35  state urban development corporation act, are amended to read as follows:
    36    It  is  further  found  and  declared that there exist in many munici-
    37  palities within  this  state  residential,  nonresidential,  commercial,
    38  industrial  or  vacant  areas, and combinations thereof, which are [slum
    39  or] blighted, or which are becoming [slum or] blighted areas because  of
    40  substandard[,]  or insanitary conditions, [deteriorated or deteriorating
    41  conditions, including obsolete and dilapidated buildings and structures,
    42  defective construction, outmoded design, lack of proper sanitary facili-
    43  ties or adequate fire or safety  protection,  excessive  land  coverage,
    44  insufficient  light and ventilation, excessive population density, ille-
    45  gal uses and conversions, inadequate maintenance, buildings abandoned or
    46  not utilized in whole or substantial part, obsolete  systems  of  utili-
    47  ties,  poorly  or improperly designed street patterns and intersections,
    48  inadequate access to areas, traffic congestion hazardous to  the  public
    49  safety,  lack  of  suitable  off-street  parking, inadequate loading and
    50  unloading facilities,  impractical  street  widths,  sizes  and  shapes,
    51  blocks  and lots of irregular form, shape or insufficient size, width or
    52  depth, unsuitable topography, subsoil or other physical conditions,  all
    53  of] which hamper or impede proper and economic development of such areas
    54  and  which  impair  or arrest the sound growth of the area, community or
    55  municipality, and the state as a whole.

        A. 492                              5
 
     1    It is further declared to be the policy of the state  to  promote  the
     2  safety,  health,  morals  and  welfare of the people of the state and to
     3  promote the sound growth and development of our  municipalities  through
     4  the  correction of such substandard, insanitary[,] or blighted[, deteri-
     5  orated  or deteriorating] conditions, factors and characteristics by the
     6  clearance, replanning,  reconstruction,  redevelopment,  rehabilitation,
     7  restoration  or  conservation  of  such  areas,  and of areas reasonably
     8  accessible thereto the undertaking of  public  and  private  improvement
     9  programs related thereto, including the provision of educational, recre-
    10  ational  and cultural facilities, and the encouragement of participation
    11  in these programs by private enterprise.
    12    § 8. Paragraph (d) of subdivision 6 of section 16-n of  section  1  of
    13  chapter  174  of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
    14  development corporation act, as amended by section  3  of  part  HHH  of
    15  chapter 58 of the laws of 2022, is amended to read as follows:
    16    (d)  A  municipality  that  is  granted  an award or awards under this
    17  section shall provide a  matching  contribution  of  no  less  than  ten
    18  percent of the aggregated award or awards amount. Such matching contrib-
    19  ution  may  be  in  the form of a financial and/or in kind contribution.
    20  Financial contributions may include grants from federal, state and local
    21  entities.  In kind contributions may include but shall not be limited to
    22  the efforts of municipalities to conduct an inventory and assessment  of
    23  vacant, abandoned, surplus, and condemned[, and deteriorated] properties
    24  and  to  manage  and administer grants pursuant to subdivisions four and
    25  five of this section. A municipality that is granted an award or  awards
    26  under this section shall make best efforts to ensure that minority-owned
    27  and  women-owned  business  enterprises  certified  pursuant  to article
    28  fifteen-A of the executive law are given  the  opportunity  for  maximum
    29  feasible participation in any municipal contracting opportunities.
    30    § 9. Section 501 of the general municipal law, as added by chapter 402
    31  of the laws of 1961, is amended to read as follows:
    32    §  501.  Policy  and  purposes of article. There exist in many munici-
    33  palities within this  state  residential,  non-residential,  commercial,
    34  industrial  or  vacant  areas, and combinations thereof, which are [slum
    35  or] blighted, or which are becoming [slum or] blighted areas because  of
    36  substandard[,]  or  insanitary[,  deteriorated  or deteriorating] condi-
    37  tions, factors, and characteristics, with or without  tangible  physical
    38  blight.  The  existence  of such areas constitutes a serious and growing
    39  menace, is injurious to the public safety, health, morals  and  welfare,
    40  contributes  increasingly  to  the spread of crime, juvenile delinquency
    41  and disease, necessitates excessive and disproportionate expenditures of
    42  public funds for all forms of public service and constitutes a  negative
    43  influence  on adjacent properties impairing their economic soundness and
    44  stability, thereby threatening the source of public revenues.
    45    In order to protect and promote the safety, health, morals and welfare
    46  of the people of the state and to promote the sound growth and  develop-
    47  ment of our municipalities, it is necessary to correct such substandard,
    48  insanitary,  or  blighted[,  deteriorated  or deteriorating] conditions,
    49  factors  and  characteristics  by  the  clearance,  replanning,   recon-
    50  struction, redevelopment, rehabilitation, restoration or conservation of
    51  such  areas,  the undertaking of public and private improvement programs
    52  related thereto and the encouragement of participation in these programs
    53  by private enterprise.
    54    It is necessary for the accomplishment of such purposes to grant muni-
    55  cipalities of this state the rights and powers provided in this article.
    56  The use of such rights and powers to correct  such  conditions,  factors

        A. 492                              6
 
     1  and  characteristics  and  to  eliminate  or prevent the development and
     2  spread of [deterioration and] blight through the clearance,  replanning,
     3  reconstruction,  rehabilitation,  conservation or renewal of such areas,
     4  for  residential,  commercial,  industrial,  community, public and other
     5  uses is a public use and public purpose essential to the  public  inter-
     6  est, and for which public funds may be expended.
     7    §  10.  Subdivision  4 of section 502 of the general municipal law, as
     8  amended by chapter 748 of the laws  of  1967,  is  amended  to  read  as
     9  follows:
    10    4.  "Substandard or insanitary area." The term "substandard or insani-
    11  tary area" shall mean and be interchangeable with a  [slum,]  blighted[,
    12  deteriorated  or  deteriorating]  area, or an area which has a blighting
    13  influence on the surrounding area, whether residential, non-residential,
    14  commercial, industrial, vacant, or land in highways, railway and  subway
    15  tracks,  bridge  and  tunnel  approaches and entrances, or other similar
    16  facilities, over which air rights and easements or other rights of  user
    17  necessary  for  the use and development of such air rights, to be devel-
    18  oped as air rights sites for the elimination of the blighting influence,
    19  or any combination thereof and may include land, buildings  or  improve-
    20  ments,  or  air rights and concomitant easements or other rights of user
    21  necessary for the use and development of such air rights, not  in  them-
    22  selves  substandard  or  insanitary,  the  inclusion  of which is deemed
    23  necessary for the effective undertaking of one  or  more  urban  renewal
    24  programs.
    25    §  11.  Paragraph  (a)  of subdivision 5 of section 510 of the general
    26  municipal law, as amended by chapter 829 of the laws of 1968, is amended
    27  to read as follows:
    28    (a) Notwithstanding anything contained in this article to the  contra-
    29  ry, the commissioner may in the name of the state, within appropriations
    30  heretofore  or  hereafter  made  for  state  capital grants to assist in
    31  carrying out one or more local urban renewal programs, make or  contract
    32  to  make  state  capital grants to municipalities to assist in financing
    33  the cost of the preparation and completion  of  one  or  more  community
    34  renewal programs.
    35    A  community renewal program may include, without being limited to (1)
    36  the identification of [slum areas or] blighted[, deteriorated, or  dete-
    37  riorating] areas in the community, (2) the measurement of the nature and
    38  degree  of  blight and blighting factors within such areas, (3) determi-
    39  nation of the financial, relocation,  and  other  resources  needed  and
    40  available  to  renew  such  areas,  (4)  the identification of potential
    41  project areas and, where feasible, types of urban renewal action contem-
    42  plated within such areas, and (5) scheduling  or  programming  of  urban
    43  renewal activities.
    44    §  12.  Section  520 of the general municipal law, as added by chapter
    45  402 of the laws of 1961, is amended to read as follows:
    46    § 520. Construction. This article  shall  be  construed  liberally  to
    47  effect  the  purposes  hereof  and the enumeration of specific powers in
    48  this act shall not operate to restrict the meaning of any general  grant
    49  of  power  contained  in this chapter or to exclude other powers compre-
    50  hended in such general grant. In construing this  chapter  consideration
    51  shall  be given to its purposes and intent, among others, of consolidat-
    52  ing, clarifying and simplifying the respective provisions of  the  chap-
    53  ters  repealed  as hereinafter specified in section five hundred twenty-
    54  five hereof and of authorizing municipalities to undertake one  or  more
    55  programs  of  urban  renewal  with respect to the clearance, replanning,
    56  reconstruction, rehabilitation, redevelopment, conservation, restoration

        A. 492                              7
 
     1  or improvement of substandard, insanitary, [slum,] or blighted[, deteri-
     2  orated  or  deteriorating]  residential,  non-residential,  improved  or
     3  vacant  areas,  or the remedying of unsuitable topographical, subsoil or
     4  other  physical  conditions which tend to impede the development of such
     5  areas, for residential, commercial, industrial,  community,  public  and
     6  other uses and to apply for and accept federal or state loans, subsidies
     7  or  grants  in  connection  therewith. Insofar as the provisions of this
     8  article are inconsistent with  the  provisions  of  any  other  general,
     9  special  or  local law, the provisions of this article shall be control-
    10  ling.
    11    § 13. The third undesignated paragraph of section 2 of  section  1  of
    12  chapter  173  of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
    13  development and research corporation act, is amended to read as follows:
    14    The legislature hereby declares it to be the policy of this  state  to
    15  provide an adequate supply of safe and sanitary dwelling accommodations;
    16  to  increase job opportunities and protect against involuntary unemploy-
    17  ment and underemployment by promoting, attracting, stimulating and revi-
    18  talizing business, commerce, industry and  manufacturing  in  the  urban
    19  areas  of  the  state;  and  to arrest the spread of [deterioration and]
    20  blight and promote the economic and physical development of  such  areas
    21  through the construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation and improvement
    22  of  residential,  commercial  and  industrial  structures and facilities
    23  therein.
    24    § 14. This act shall take effect immediately.
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