In a preliminary vote held on May 7, the NYC Rent Guidelines Board (RGB) proposed guidelines for rent-stabilized apartments effective Oct. 1, 2020, through Sept. 30, 2021. The board voted 5-4 to endorse freezing rents on one-year leases and the first year of two-year leases signed on or after Oct. 1, 2020. During the second year of two-year agreements, rents would rise 1 percent under the proposal.
The RGB has approved a rent freeze on one-year leases twice so far in de Blasio’s term, in 2015 and 2016. Last year, the board approved a 1.5 percent increase for one-year leases and a 2.5 percent hike for two-year leases. This year, the board’s final vote for the rent guidelines is scheduled for June 17.
While not binding, preliminary votes indicate what proposals can gain the support of a majority of the nine-member board. The public members of the board rejected the proposal of the two landlord and two tenant representatives.
At the meeting, the board’s two landlord representatives called for an increase, citing reports that showed owners’ revenue declined for the first time since 2003. In its own reports, the RGB projected that increases of 2.5 percent and 3.5 percent for one-year leases and 3.3 percent to 6.75 percent for two-year leases would be needed to maintain net operating income for owners of rent-stabilized buildings. According to the Income and Expense report, net operating income declined by 0.6 percent from 2017 to 2018 to $535 monthly per apartment.
The landlord representatives’ proposal was to increase rents 2 to 3 percent for one-year leases and 4.75 to 5.5 percent for two-year leases, with a stipulation that no increase could be collected before Jan. 1, 2021, due to the pandemic.
The two tenant representatives, on the other hand, proposed a rent rollback of -3 to 0 percent for one-year leases, and -2 to 0 percent for two-year leases. They pointed to the economic hardships renters are currently feeling as a result of the pandemic. As noted in the yearly Income and Expense report, the data is from 2018 and doesn’t reflect the current economic climate during the pandemic.
The Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act (HSTPA) of 2019 eliminated the statutory vacancy rate and doesn’t permit the RGB to establish a separate vacancy rate. This action eliminated the vacancy bonus that allowed owners to hike the legal rent up to 20 percent on new leases for stabilized apartments. But, according to the DHCR, a one or two-year lease guideline may be applied and added to the previous tenant’s legal rent, but only if explicitly authorized by the RGB.
The most recently enacted rent guidelines in effect in NYC since the effective date of HSTPA, Apartment and Loft Order #50 (effective Oct. 1, 2018, through Sept. 20, 2019) and Apartment and Loft Order #51 (effective Oct. 1, 2019, through Sept. 30, 2020), don’t authorize these guidelines to apply to vacancy leases.
But in approving the preliminary guidelines, the board indicated that landlords could hike the rent on leases for vacant units as much as they could for leases on occupied apartments. This was achieved by changing the wording on the RGB’s preliminary order. In prior years, a key heading in the document stated, “proposed adjustment for renewal leases.” This year the heading has been changed to “proposed adjustment for leases,” a shift that means the adjustment applies both to new leases on vacant apartments and renewal leases on occupied units.
Leah Goodridge, a supervising attorney with the Housing Project at Mobilization for Justice and one of the board’s tenant representatives, has stated that the freeze would be a major win for tenants. However, she voted against the proposal because it would apply to leases signed after a vacancy, allowing the rent to rise by 1 percent in the second year of a two-year lease.
At a discussion toward the end of the RGB’s preliminary vote meeting, Goodridge said, “The rent-reform law is very clear that there shall be no more vacancy bonuses, and my misgiving is that we’d be using this vote to circumvent that and treat vacancy bonuses the same as renewal leases when the law is very clear.
Patti Stone, one of the landlord representatives on the RGB, countered, “The law actually rescinded the statutory vacancy increase but said that it’s really up to – that there’s no vacancy [allowance] unless granted by the Rent Guidelines Board,” meaning that the RGB retained the power to grant them.
This year, the change has minimal impact, since rents are likely to be frozen. But in future years, should the RGB permit rents on renewal leases to rise, the rent on vacant apartments would, too.
But it’s important to note that RGB rent hikes typically are in the single digits, so it’s unlikely the vacancy allowance would ever get as high as the former 18 percent to 20 percent range. And since the elimination of vacancy decontrol, a mechanism that removed vacant apartments from the stabilization system once a certain rent level was reached, as a result of HSTPA there is no longer any possibility that the vacancy bonus would, by raising the rent, help push an apartment out of the system altogether.
Anyone can comment on the proposed guidelines. The deadline to submit comments is June 11, 2020. The following are the available methods to comment on the proposed guidelines:
Because of the ongoing COVID-19 public health concerns, the RGB has been convening virtual meetings. With the vote on the proposed rent guidelines, a notice and comment period, public hearings, and a vote on the final rent orders follows.
The final virtual meeting to adopt final rent guidelines will be held on Wed., June 17, at 7 p.m. Here’s the schedule of remaining RGB meetings and hearings: