Res 0051-2024
Authorizing the New York City Council to oversee the activities of the New York City Housing Authority (A.9414/S.5806).
ResolutionFiledCommittee on Public Housingintroduced 2024-02-28
Filed — closed without being enacted.
Official record · Legistar
Agenda: 2024-02-28Passed: 2025-12-31
Committee on Public Housing — New York City Housing Authority.
How it compares
15% of similar bills passed
6 passed · 33 died
This bill: 672 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 0304-2022
Authorizing the NYC Council to oversee the activities of the NYC Housing Authority. (A.9414/S.5806)
473dFiled
Res 1645-2021
NYCHA Utility Accountability Act (A.1866/S.1603)
218dFiled
Res 0105-2022
NYCHA Utility Accountability Act (A.1866/S.1603)
626dFiled
Res 0068-2022
Increase NYCHA accountability by auditing the responsiveness of NYCHA managers to tenants.
587dAdopted
Res 0056-2024
NYC Housing Authority to change its priority preference for housing to automatically place families and individuals experiencing homelessness at the highest priority level.
672dFiled
Res 0545-2023
NYC Housing Authority to change its priority preference for housing to automatically place families and individuals experiencing homelessness at the highest priority level.
264dFiled
+ 33 more comparable bills
Sponsors (19)
Lifecycle
IntroducedIntroduced by Council
2024-02-28 · City Council
ActionReferred to Comm by Council
2024-02-28 · City Council
ClosedFiled (End of Session)
2025-12-31 · City Council
Heard at (1)
City Council · 2024-02-28 · 1:30 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Attachments (4)
- Res. No. 51
- February 28, 2024 - Stated Meeting Agenda
- Hearing Transcript - Stated Meeting 2-28-24
- Minutes of the Stated Meeting - February 28, 2024
Full text
Whereas, The New York City Housing Authority ("NYCHA") is a public housing authority with 335 developments, and 177,611 units that are home to 547,891 authorized residents, through public housing, section 8, and NYCHA's implementation of the federal rental assistance demonstration ("RAD") program; and
Whereas, For the past decade, there have been numerous articles that have reported on the frequent service interruptions to heat and hot water, and to gas services at NYCHA developments; and
Whereas, On January 2019, federal and city officials agreed to the appointment of a federal monitor to help address the history of maintenance issues that have created health and safety hazards at NYCHA; and
Whereas, The federal monitor has been charged with approving action plans that require NYCHA to meet certain benchmarks to resolve reoccurring lead, mold, heat, elevator and sanitation issues, but tenants are still struggling to get repairs; and
Whereas, According to The City, an online publication, nearly four years after New York City committed $2 billion dollars to make building improvements, 92 percent of the 336 projects NYCHA intended to work on have yet to begin; and
Whereas, The same report stated that of the 24 projects that are underway, 92 percent of them have already had major postponements; and
Whereas, Some of the delayed projects included upgrades to heating systems, testing and cleaning for lead, upgrades to trash compactors and elevator repairs; and
Whereas, Tenants pay rent to NYCHA with a reasonable expectation for habitability and basic services, and NYCHA should be held accountable when it fails to make repairs; and
Whereas, Whereas, A.9414, sponsored by Assembly Member Edward Gibbs in the New York State Assembly, and companion bill, S.5806, introduced by State Senator Leroy Comrie in the New York State Senate, would increase the New York City Council's ability to mandate NYCHA to produce reports and provide information the Council; and
Whereas, Allowing local elected officials to have more oversight over NYCHA's operations would allow for more analysis over the effectiveness of programs, increase the transparency of NYCHA's operations and help respond to conditions in a more timely matter; now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York calls on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, A.9414/S.5806, in relation to authorizing the New York City Council to oversee the activities of the New York City Housing Authority.
Session 13
JLC
LS #7954
01/17/2024
Session 12
JLC
LS 7954
06/08/2022