Friday, August 30, 2013

Big Doings Coming Soon!




(2) Tuesday, Sept. 17 - Public Meeting on Jewish Home Lifecare's proposal to build 20-story building on 97th next to Whole Foods.  6:30 PM at P.S. 163 on 97th St.

(3) Wednesday, Sept. 18 
at 8 pm 
GENERAL TENANTS MEETING

What can the City Council actually do for us? 

Meet the City Council (Dem.) Primary Winner at our General Tenants Meeting, and we can talk about building issues.  (Mice, anyone?) 

And save the date: Sat. Nov. 9th - for our Pot Luck.







Friday, August 23, 2013

Hepatitis Danger from West Side Market (B'way & 97th)

image001.jpg 
NEW YORK CITY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH 
AND MENTAL HYGIENE
Thomas Farley, MD, MPH
Commissioner   
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, August 22, 2013


HEALTH DEPARTMENT WARNS PATRONS OF AN UPPER WEST SIDE MARKET AT 97TH AND BROADWAY OF POSSIBLE EXPOSURE TO HEPATITIS A FROM AUGUST 9th TO AUGUST 22nd 

Customers who ate Chopped, Ready-to-Eat Fruit from the Westside Market (2589 Broadway btwn. 97th and 98th) Between Those Dates Should Get Hepatitis A Vaccine as a Precautionary Measure

No Current Reports of Hepatitis A in Customers

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Why the Push to Abolish Rent Regulation is Irresponsible

The Gothamist: 
by Steve Wishnia

What would happen if New York State repealed its rent-regulation laws?

New York Times Magazine economics columnist and NPR Planet Money co-founder Adam Davidson thinks it might be a good idea.  . . . Most people who live in rent stabilized apartments are above the poverty level, he says, and the poor could be protected more efficiently by giving them housing subsidies.  

These arguments, which are common among critics of rent controls, are utterly clueless about New York City's housing realities.  

Click here for the rest of the article:

Monday, July 22, 2013

Where Democratic Mayoral Candidates Stand on Tenant Issues


Much at Stake for Tenants in Mayoral Election, With Runoff Likely
By: Kenny Schaeffer
Published:  July 2013

Not since 1977 has the outcome of an election for mayor of New York City been so hard to predict.

There are now eight Democratic candidates and three Republican ones competing in the Sept. 10 primaries, and a sizeable number of voters in both parties are still undecided. It seems likely that no Democrat will win 40 percent of the primary vote. In that case, the top two will face each other in a runoff three weeks later, on Oct. 1—and the same thing could happen in the Republican primary. 

The Democratic and Republican winners will face a third candidate in the general election on Nov. 5: former Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrión, who has secured the endorsement of the corrupt Independence Party.

Click here or below for a brief roundup of the main Democratic mayoral candidates in alphabetic order, especially their positions on housing and tenants’ rights.


Monday, July 15, 2013

Responses to the NY Post Editorial

The NY Post again wrote that rent regulation is responsible for the lack of affordable
apartments.  Several tenants set the record straight:

The Issue: Whether rent regulations truly help the middle class and poor find affordable places to live.

***

Letter from Michael McKee:

“The Apartment Complex” got it exactly wrong (Editorial, July 10).

Rent regulation is the result of a housing shortage, not the cause.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

RGB votes highest increase since 2008 for rent stabilized lease renewals

The Rent Guidelines Board voted that rent stabilized tenants who renew their leases effective any time from Oct. 1, 2013 through September 30, 2013 must pay these increases:

For a 1-year lease renewal:  4% increase  

For a 2-year lease renewal:  7.75% increase.

Since it appears the RGB's calculations are based on poor math, this is quite a hit.  But it's a boon for the landlords.