On June 2, the City Council voted on legislation requiring inspections for self-closing doors in residential buildings. This is an additional fire safety measure to prevent fire tragedies, and it complements the recent legislative package that was passed in May and signed into law on June 1. These bills passed by the Council are intended to strengthen fire safety in residences throughout New York City, in the aftermath of the Jan. 9 Twin Parks fire in the Bronx.
“Following the tragedy at the Twin Parks North West residential building in the Bronx, it is imperative that we continue to take meaningful and impactful actions to safeguard the lives of all New Yorkers,” said Speaker Adrienne Adams. “Strengthening inspection processes for self-closing doors will ultimately save lives, especially in higher risk buildings.”
Local Law 111 of 2018 requires multiple dwelling buildings to have doors providing access to stairs or interior corridors with a self-closing apparatus. Failure to provide a functioning self-closing door is considered an “immediately hazardous” violation, which landlords will have two weeks to correct. The passed bill, Int. 208-A, with the aim of targeting higher risk buildings, like Twin Parks, requires HPD to select 300 buildings annually for inspection for self-closing door compliance, in addition to compliance with requirements for posting fire safety information for residents.
The criteria for selecting these buildings will be determined by HPD but will include buildings identified in consultation with the Fire Department. Buildings that are inspected don’t need to be inspected again for five years. Buildings that are in HPD’s alternative enforcement program or that are the subject of a court order requiring an administrator to take control of the building to make necessary repairs aren’t subject to inspection under this bill, as these buildings will already be inspected for safety hazards.
Intro. 208-A, sponsored by Council Member Nantasha Williams, also requires HPD and FDNY to share data regarding fire safety violations, and for each agency to use that data to better inform their building inspection protocols. Under the new law, HPD will have until July 1 to provide the Fire Department access to all records of fire safety violations issued by HPD from January 2017 to the present.
In addition, the bill requires HPD to submit to the City Council and mayor, and post for public viewing, an annual report that details the findings of that year’s inspections. The report will include the building’s address; owner; number of floors; when the inspection occurred and whether the building could be accessed; and the number of violations discovered and corrected.
Intro 208-A follows the fire safety legislative package recently signed into law by Mayor Eric Adams. The laws include shortening the timeline of re-inspection for self-closing door violations, increasing the fine for building owners who don’t cure violations, banning the sale of certain space heaters that don’t meet certain safety standards, and codifying increased fire safety outreach.