affordable housing
Hillary Clinton wows them in Starrett City
In Starrett City, Brooklyn, and in front of a few hundred adoring residents, Hillary Clinton was in fine form today. She was at a rally, to support the passing of a bill by Democrats in both the Senate and the House of Representatives, which seeks to preserve affordable housing initiatives in the country. Congressman Ed Towns, who has introduced legislation that specifically deals with saving the affordability standards of the Starrett City housing development, was also on hand to speak to the concerned residents. Starrett City is the largest development of its kind in the nation. For the past two years or so, the residents have been embroiled in a battle with the old-owners, who were intent on selling the complex to a group of speculators.
Mrs. Clinton was given a rousing welcome by the mostly female audience, and was fired up as she demanded President Bush sign the bill into law. She spoke well of Barack Obama and his presidential bid, projecting that she was presently a strong supporter of his effort. Standing with her (beside congressman Towns) were Brooklyn’s ebullient Borough President Marty Markowitz, Assemblyman Vito Lopez (the county leader of Brooklyn’s democrats), Congressman Anthony Weiner, plus the district leaders of the 40th AD and some tenant activists of the development. Notably absent was the council member for the area: Charles Barron.
affordable housing | Public Housing | Ed Towns | Hillary Clinton
Rent Guidelines Board
Bumped - Bouldin
The Rent Guidelines Board will meet this evening to determine the Rent Guidelines for 1 and 2 year rents, in the City.
As a housing advocate fighting for affordable housing and helping displaced tenants through the gentrification process that's effecting various neighborhoods like Williamsburg/Greenpoint, in Brooklyn and many other neighborhoods,in the city, we must impact the RGB.
As spokes person for UNO (United Neighbors Organization),let me begin by making 2 points. First the city is in an affordable housing crunch losing 71,000 rent stabilize apartments, in the last thirteen years, to vacancy decontrol, and 40,000 due to coop condo conversion. In the last sixteen years over 40,300 of the cities subsidized apartments were lost. 26,000 of which were buy outs, in the cities Mitchell-Lama housing. If it wasn't for the 42 city council members override, of the Major's section 8 veto, more affordable housing units would never have been realized.
Second the RGB should also consider the fact that landlords income have increased as shown by the 2008 Income and Expense report conducted by this very RGB, for years 2005 to 2006. It clearly shows that increase in income outpaced increases, in operating costs of landlords.
In order to preserve affordable housing and not contribute further, to the lost of affordable housing especially, for low to moderate income families, the board should consider passing the lowest guidelines possible.
Announcements | affordable housing | Rent Guidelines Board | New York City | New Yorkers | United Neighbors Organization
Bill DeBlasio: We Told You So!
Councilman Bill DeBlasio has seemed to have never met a developer dollar he didn't like. Rumor has it he has admitted as much. But it is certain that he by and large sides quite proudly with any developer who pays lip service, no matter how far fetched, to affordable housing.
affordable housing | Atlantic Yards | Urban Development | Bill DeBlasio
Purim is Coming; Help Celebrate This Silly, Serious Holiday. Update
Purim, the Feast of Lots, the silliest of Jewish holidays is coming Thursday & Friday March 20th & 21st . It’s a raucous, drunken party holiday with costumes and funny plays. You don’t have to be Jewish to celebrate it. For non-observant people, here’s how.
Update? How can there be an update on a holiday thousands of years old? It's not. It's about the Purim party this Saturday far after the jump.
Purim celebrates a fabled victory of Jews over their enemies in Persia thousands of years ago and follows the time honored tradition: They tried to kill us. We won. Let’s Eat. For the full story, people read the whole Megillah – the scroll in which the Biblical Book of Esther is written. This is not really much a religious holiday. God appears not at all in the story which is an entirely human tale of struggle.
A bare-bones plot summary via Wikipedia:
affordable housing | purim | Domestic Workers United | Jews For Racial & Economic Justice | Workmen's Circle
Turning Abandoned Buildings Into Affordable Housing: If You Missed It, Read the Liveblog!
The Drum Major Institute's Marketplace of Ideas event this morning featured Boston Mayor Thomas Menino and his reforms to turn vacant buildings into affordable housing. Menino, who is now serving his fourth mayoral term, has reformed Boston's housing market in some pretty amazing ways. During the past decade, abandoned residential properties declined 77% as abandoned buildings were turned into viable housing.
The panel discussion featured Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, Pratt Community Development Center Director Brad Lander, and Executive Director of the Parodneck Foundation Carlton Collier. DMI Executive Director Andrea Batista Schlesinger moderated the panel.
affordable housing | homeless | Housing | Andrea Batista Schelsinger | Brad Lander | Carlton Collier | Scott Stringer | Thomas Menino
Mayor Menino's Magic Wand: Turning Abandoned Housing into Affordable Housing
Cross posted from the DMI blog.
In 1999, Boston had a housing crisis. The waiting list for public housing units had 15,000 people on it, and rent prices had gone up 47% in the past four years. More than 50,000 Bostonians were spending more than half of their income on housing, and the number of homeless people in Boston was at a record high.
But just four years later, the statistics told a different story. Almost 8,000 new housing units had been created, and 1,000 housing units were made accessible to the homeless. The new units represented about $2 billion in public and private housing investment. The number of abandoned buildings in Boston dropped by 66% -- from 1,044 in 1997 to only 350 in 2005, and by the end of 2003, 1,079 vacant public housing units had been renovated. Suddenly, housing in Boston was on its way to becoming available and affordable.
affordable housing | homeless | Housing | Brad Lander | Drum Major Institute | Scott Stringer | Thomas Menino
Will NYC Save Public Housing, Sell it, Or Sell It To Save It?
NYC’s Housing Authority (NYCHA)has sold off property because, perhaps in part, it is being pushed over a fiscal brink by the combined defunding efforts of decades of GOP office holders at the city, state and federal level. (For a very cursory – but perhaps too long – overview of some of NYCHA’s financial and operating woes, click here ).
Those of you of a certain age who remember the War in Vietnam, may recall a puzzling Military concept:“we burned the village in order to save it.†Similarly, public housing operators across the US have from time-to-time destroyed huge public housing projects in order to save them. Forty years ago, for example, I spent a moderate amount of time in the Pruit-Igoe projects of St. Louis Mo.—a 33 building forest of medium-rise buildings so badly-built, so badly maintained so crime-ridden that they were torn down altogether in 1972. Since then, the dynamite & bull-dozer solution to public housing failures (and even some successes) has been applied in other locales (famously Cabrini-Green in Chicago and recently, in Staten Island). In general, NYCHA housing – even at its worst moments of disrepair and dangerousness – never equaled the disgrace of Pruitt-Igoe.
The right-wing idea is that the solution to the financial crisis in public housing
affordable housing | NYCHA | Public Housing | DC 37 | Douglas Apple | George W. Bush | Lillian Roberts | Local 237 IBT | Michael Bloomberg | Sean Moss
Short Takes Tuesday
Something Different After Day 181. Gov. Elliot Spitzer and his NYS Division of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR) dramatically altered and improved the housing fate of tens of thousands of Mitchell-Lama tenants. When the owners of Mitchell-Lama projects opt out of the program, the usual rule of law had been that those tenants become rent-stabilized – no big windfall for the owner. However, some owners, seizing on language in the enabling legislation, had won a court ruling that opting out of Mitchell-Lama was itself such a “unique and peculiar circumstance†that the apartments could instantly be converted to market rate. Yesterday, the Governor and the DCHR closed that loophole. NYDN article here.
affordable housing | Health | Mitchell-Lama | Politics of Crime | Children's Defense Fund | Eliot Spitzer | George W. Bush | Paul Krugman
Actually Affordable Housing: Mayor Bloomberg's Report Card; Tuesday 5PM
Are you, like most New York City residents a renter? Consider spending some time with other tenants this Tuesday. Advocates for actually affordable housing will meet Tuesday, June 26, 2007 at 5PM at the Great Hall of The Cooper Union. 7 East 7th Street at the corner of 3rd Ave. After the press event, you can join other tenants at a Punch & Judy show, the Rent Guildlines Board's final meeting where Mr. Bloomberg's appointees decide how much more rent you should pay. ( To register to speak at the public hearing, call the RGB at 212-385-2934.)
Take the 6 train to Astor Pl., or the R,W to 8th Street
or M1, M15, M6, M101, or M102 buses to Astor Place or Cooper Square
From Tenants & Neighbors:
There will be a press conference to present Mayor Bloomberg's HOUSING REPORT CARD. This event will take place at the final vote of the New York City Rent Guidelines Board, where this year's rent increases will be determined for one million rent stabilized households.
Although the Mayor will receive a few good grades for his
affordable housing | Housing Here & Now | Michael Bloomberg | Tenants & Neighbors
Upcoming Community Events in Brooklyn
Here are some community-oriented events coming up in Brooklyn:
Now Playing: "Brooklyn Matters"
"Brooklyn Matters," Isabel Hill's riveting documentary exposé of the forces attempting to push the "Atlantic Yards" project forward regardless of the consequences, is coming to a screen near you:
May 20th, 9 p.m.
Barbés. 378 9th Street (@ 6th Avenue). Park Slope
May 21st, 8:30 p.m.
Cattyshack. 249 4th Avenue (@ Carroll Street). Park Slope
Sponsored by Lambda Independent Democrats
May 22nd, 7 p.m.
Phoenix House. 174 Prospect Place (between Carlton and Vanderbilt). Prospect Heights
Sponsored by Prospect Place Block Association (Flatbush to Underhill)
To view a trailer, host a screening, order the DVD and for more information on future screenings, please visit http://www.brooklynmatters.com.
affordable housing | Community | Urban Development | Brooklyn







