You are reading

Mayor Pushing for Rent Freeze on City’s Regulated Apartments

Mayor Bill de Blasio called for a rent freeze Friday, along with other tenant relief measures (Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office)

April 24, 2020 By Allie Griffin

Mayor Bill de Blasio is pushing for a rent freeze for New York City’s one million rent-stabilized tenants.

The mayor is calling for a range of measures to assist New Yorkers unable to afford their rent amid the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting shutdown. He is also urging the state to help by allowing tenants to use their security deposit to pay their rent.

“As we get to the first of each month, this question of how am I going to pay my rent is coming up for more and more New Yorkers,” de Blasio said at his daily briefing from City Hall today. “And people are struggling.”

He called on the city’s Rent Guidelines Board (RGB) to issue an immediate rent freeze. The RGB sets how much — by a percentage — landlords can hike the rent on rent-stabilized apartments each year.

“To me it’s abundantly clear we need a rent freeze,” he said. “The facts couldn’t be clearer — greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression.”

Yesterday, the board released a report that said it was becoming more costly for landlords to operate rent stabilized buildings. The report said that rents for regulated apartments should increase to keep landlords’ net operating income stable. It suggested a 2.5 to 3.5 percent hike for one-year leases and a 3.3 to 6.75 percent for two-year leases.

De Blasio called the report “misleading” and said that it favored landlords over renters.

“The challenges that landlords are facing right now are real — I’m not belittling them — but they pale in comparison to the challenges that tenants are facing,” the mayor said.

He also asked the state government to help New Yorkers who are suddenly unable to pay their rent.

The state should allow renters to use their security deposit to cover this month’s rent as an immediate solution, de Blasio said.

“This is something the state can do quickly and easily and it makes so much sense,” he said, adding that the security deposits are sitting in escrow accounts currently unusable to either party.

De Blasio said the state should also allow tenants who are unable to pay their rent to defer payments.

“Let them defer the rent. If people don’t have any money, they don’t have money.”

The landlords and their tenants can then establish a repayment plan that each party can agree to, he said.

Lastly, de Blasio called on New York State to extend the eviction moratorium, which is set to expire in June. He said it should be extended to 60 days past the end of the crisis.

“The bottom line is tenants need more help,” de Blasio said.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

One Comment

Click for Comments 
Sunnysider

Wow too little to late. Of course rents shouldn’t be getting raised while people aren’t working, but this is effects so few. I lease from a major Queens management company and they make us sign 90 days before it expires, so I signed in at the end of January for April 1st renewal.

3
2
Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Lawmakers secure federal funding to combat flooding in Queens after impact of Hurricane Ida and other storms

U.S. Congresswomen Grace Meng and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, along with Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, announced on Jan. 7 that President Joe Biden has signed their legislation into law to address severe flooding in Queens.

The measure aims to mitigate future disasters like those caused by the remnants of Hurricane Ida in September 2021, which inundated the borough with record-shattering rainfall.

Op-ed | New York’s ground lease co-ops: Our families can’t wait any longer 

Jan. 14, 2025 By Michael Tang 

Last December brought a long-awaited victory for New York City. Our City Council adopted the historic City of Yes housing plan, paving the way for more than 80,000 new homes by 2040 with the promise of affordability. As a longtime resident of Flushing, Queens, I naturally welcomed the news – it’s a much-needed reprieve for New Yorkers as housing costs continue to soar in the midst of an unparalleled housing crisis. But entering 2025 on the heels of this win, we residents at  Murray Hill Cooperative remain at risk — our lives are virtually unchanged because we belong to the last class of unprotected “tenants” as ground lease co-op residents. Without legislative action, more than 25,000 New Yorkers face the threat of losing their homes — homes that we own — to landowners seeking to raise our ground rent to astronomical rates.