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New York State has halted non-essential construction. On March 27, Governor Cuomo amended the executive order, which required non-essential businesses and nonprofits to limit in-person work to curb COVID-19 transmission to include the suspension of all non-essential construction. Following the state’s move, on March 30, the city’s DOB announced that all work on non-essential construction and demolition sites is suspended for the duration of the COVID-19 publ...
At the beginning of March, to kick off National Consumer Protection Week, New York Attorney General Letitia James released the top 10 consumer fraud complaints her office received in 2019. After analyzing all consumer complaints received statewide throughout 2019, the AG’s office found that landlord/tenant disputes ranked fourth, with 1,910 complaints. These complaints included disputes over security deposit releases and tenant harassment.
In 2014 and 2015, New York City experienced two deadly gas explosions that prompted lawmakers to pass gas safety legislation in 2016. One explosion in March 2014 brought down two five-story apartment buildings in East Harlem, leaving more than 100 families homeless. And the other explosion occurred in March 2015, reducing an East Village building to rubble, killing two people and injuring four people critically. Inspectors found a flexible hose attached to the gas line ...
On Jan. 15, the NYC Department of Finance (DOF) announced the publication of the tentative property assessment roll for fiscal year (FY) 2021, which shows the total market value of all NYC properties for the upcoming year at about $1.378 trillion, an increase of $62 billion, or 4.7 percent from the 2020 fiscal year. According to the DOF, citywide assessed values rose by 6.7 percent, to $273.8 billion in FY 2021.
As a result of Local Law 69 of 2017, apartment building owners are required to file bedbug infestation and treatment reports with HPD annually. When the law became effective, the initial due date for the filing was Jan. 31, 2019. Now, owners are required to file a Bedbug Annual Report between Dec. 1 and Dec. 31 for subsequent years beginning in December 2019. You can find the online application through HPD’s website at Read More
The Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act (HSTPA) made it possible to freeze rents at preferential rates for qualifying New Yorkers. The de Blasio administration has released guidance regarding renter rights under the HSTPA. This guidance will allow New Yorkers who pay preferential rents in rent-stabilized apartments to benefit from the city’s Rent Freeze Programs.
During the previous “heat season,” the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) fielded 232,621 heat complaints, an increase of 8.1 percent compared to the previous heat season. The current heat season begins on Oct. 1 and continues through May 31, 2020. During this time period, residential building owners with tenants are required by law to provide heat and hot water to their tenants.
The Division of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR) recently announced a decrease in this year’s air-conditioner rent surcharge for owners who pay for electricity. It set the monthly surcharge at $24.94, down $1.48 from $26.42 last year. This year’s decrease reflects a 5.61 percent decline in the price of electricity for electrical inclusion buildings as calculated by the Rent Guidelines Board’s 2019 Price Index of Operating Costs issued in April 2019...
The Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act (HSTPA) of 2019, which went into effect on June 14, 2019, made numerous changes to the rent regulation laws. These changes required the DHCR to review and update the New York City Lease Rider [RA-LR1] and the Emergency Tenant Protection Act Standard Lease Addenda [RA-LR1 ETPA] to reflect these changes.
On June 25, 2019, the New York City Rent Guidelines Board (RGB) issued an order—RGBO #51—setting the rent increases you may take for rent-stabilized tenants in New York City on leases beginning anytime on or after Oct. 1, 2019, through Sept. 30, 2012. The board is mandated to establish fair rents for property owners and tenants. And the mayor appoints members to the board. The board is made up of two tenant representatives, two landlord representatives, and ...