Res 0073-2018
NYCHA to conduct a survey of its entire portfolio to determine how much leasable property is owned throughout the city.
ResolutionFiledCommittee on Public Housingintroduced 2018-01-31
Filed — closed without being enacted.
Official record · Legistar
Agenda: 2018-01-31Passed: 2021-12-31
Committee on Public Housing — New York City Housing Authority.
How it compares
15% of similar bills passed
6 passed · 33 died
This bill: 1430 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:
Res 0195-2014
NYCHA to conduct a survey of its entire portfolio to determine how much leasable property is owned throughout the city.
1342dFiled
Res 0293-2018
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.
1359dFiled
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.
1144dFiled
Res 0068-2022
Increase NYCHA accountability by auditing the responsiveness of NYCHA managers to tenants.
587dAdopted
Res 0676-2018
Require NYCHA to conduct annual evaluations of agency property employees.
1106dFiled
Res 0332-2022
Require NYCHA to conduct annual evaluations of agency property employees.
458dFiled
+ 33 more comparable bills
Sponsors (3)
Lifecycle
IntroducedIntroduced by Council
2018-01-31 · City Council
ActionReferred to Comm by Council
2018-01-31 · City Council
ClosedFiled (End of Session)
2021-12-31 · City Council
Heard at (1)
City Council · 2018-01-31 · 1:30 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Attachments (4)
- Res. No. 73
- January 31, 2018 - Stated Meeting Agenda
- Hearing Transcript - Stated Meeting 01-31-2018
- Minutes of the Stated Meeting - January 31, 2018
Full text
By Council Members Levin, Brannan and Ampry-Samuel
Whereas, The New York City Housing Authority ("NYCHA") is a public housing authority with 326 developments, 2,462 buildings, and 176,066 public housing units, making it the largest public housing provider in North America; and
Whereas, The majority of NYCHA's housing stock is over fifty years old and have over $16.5 billion dollars in unfunded capital needs; and
Whereas, The bulk of NYCHA's capital funds come from federal grants and these grants have declined substantially in recent years, falling from $420 million annually in 2001 to $318 million annually in 2016; and
Whereas, Since 2001, NYCHA has experienced a cumulative federal grant funding loss of approximately $1.375 billion; and
Whereas, According to an August 2008 report by former Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer entitled "Land Rich, Pocket Poor ("the Report")," there are 30.5 million square feet of unused development rights in NYCHA developments throughout Manhattan alone; and Whereas, In order to generate revenue and address its funding gap, in 2013, NYCHA identified land on the grounds of eight housing developments in Manhattan which could be leased for development; and
Whereas, NYCHA should conduct a thorough survey to determine exactly how much leasable property it owns throughout the city; and
Whereas, The data should be identified by block and lot, lot area, lot frontage, lot depth, potential gross floor area, square footage, buildable square footage and existing zoning and floor area ratio potential; and
Whereas, Additionally, NYCHA should estimate the number of buildings, floors and units that can be built on each site and what number and percentage of those units might be used for residential purposes including affordable housing; and
Whereas, NYCHA should also estimate the market value of each lot they identify; and
Whereas, These survey results should be posted on NYCHA's website and made searchable in an open data format by borough, block, development, community district, council, senate, assembly and congressional districts; now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York calls upon the New York City Housing Authority to conduct a survey of its entire portfolio to determine how much leasable property is owned throughout the city.
GP/JLC
LS 274/ Res. No. 195
LS 775
1/3/2018