Res 0466-2014
NYCHA to report annually the total number of vacant units in all of its developments, disaggregated by the number of units that are fit and unfit for occupancy, and provide details on the reason why.
ResolutionFiledCommittee on Public Housingintroduced 2014-11-13
Filed — closed without being enacted.
Official record · Legistar
Agenda: 2014-11-13Passed: 2017-12-31
Committee on Public Housing — New York City Housing Authority.
How it compares
15% of similar bills passed
6 passed · 33 died
This bill: 1144 days in committee
Similar bills: median 672 days · 313 days when passed
Compared against 39 Resolution bills in Committee on Public Housing.
Ranked by how closely each matches this bill's topic — closest first:
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NYCHA to report annually the total number of vacant units in all of its developments, disaggregated by the number of units that are fit and unfit for occupancy, and provide details on the reason why.
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Sponsors (10)
Lifecycle
IntroducedIntroduced by Council
2014-11-13 · City Council
ActionReferred to Comm by Council
2014-11-13 · City Council
ClosedFiled (End of Session)
2017-12-31 · City Council
Heard at (1)
City Council · 2014-11-13 · 1:30 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Full text
By Council Members Van Bramer, Torres, Chin, Johnson, Koo, Levine, Mendez, Rose, Barron and Rosenthal
Whereas, The New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) currently oversees 178,557 apartments in 334 developments throughout the city; and
Whereas, NYCHA exists for the purpose of providing low-and-moderate income New Yorkers safe and affordable housing; and
Whereas, The city's housing shortage is evident by the 247,262 families on the wait list for public housing as of March 17, 2014; and
Whereas, Families placed on the waitlist must often wait years for an apartment; and
Whereas, Nevertheless, according to a December 15, 2013, New York Times article, about 800 NYCHA units have remained empty for years due to the need to conduct major repairs like roof replacement; and
Whereas, NYCHA appears to be unable to address maintenance issues in these vacant units that could spread to nearby apartments and affect the quality of life of other residents; and
Whereas, NYCHA reports that it has $6 billion in unfunded capital improvement needs, which is expected to increase to $13.4 billion in five years; and
Whereas, NYCHA primarily receives funding through federal subsidies which have substantially declined, jeopardizing NYCHA's ability to quickly handle its repairs and infrastructure needs; and
Whereas, Renovations to vacant apartments are at risk with the steady decline of these subsidies; and
Whereas, NYCHA's delay in repairing vacant units has caused needed residential space to remain unavailable to prospective tenants; and
Whereas, An annual report on NYCHA's vacant units and the reasons why such vacancies exist will increase transparency and accountability by bringing to light what repairs if any, are necessary to return such units to the rent rolls; now therefore, be it,
Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York calls upon the New York City Housing Authority to report annually the total number of vacant units in all of its developments, disaggregated by the number of units that are fit and unfit for occupancy, and provide details on the reason why a vacant apartment is deemed unfit for occupancy.
JLC
LS 802/2014
9/5/2014 1:25 PM