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A03809 Summary:

BILL NOA03809A
 
SAME ASSAME AS S02828-B
 
SPONSORWright
 
COSPNSRRosenthal, Gottfried, Mosley, Bichotte, Pichardo, Joyner, Linares, Mayer, Crespo, Abinanti, Seawright, Kavanagh
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd §10, Emerg Ten Prot Act of 1974; amd §26-511, NYC Ad Cd
 
Prohibits an owner from adjusting the amount of preferential rent, rent charged and paid by the tenant which is less than the legal regulated rent for the housing accommodation, upon the renewal of a lease; only allows the owner to make such adjustments upon a vacancy which is not the result of the failure of the owner to maintain a habitable residence.
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A03809 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A3809A
 
SPONSOR: Wright (MS)
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the emergency tenant protection act of nineteen seventy-four and the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the regulation of rents   PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL: This bill would prohibit an owner from adjusting the amount of preferen- tial rent upon the renewal of a lease.   SUMMARY OF SPECIFIC PROVISIONS: The bill would prohibit owners from increasing a less than legal regu- lated rent to the legal regulated rent upon a lease renewal; only upon a tenant's vacancy could an owner increase the less than legal regulated rent. In addition, such a vacancy may not be caused by an owner or an agent of the owner's the failure to maintain the housing accommodation in a habitable condition.   JUSTIFICATION: As housing costs increase across the City of New York, the displacement of working families and middle class residents from rent regulated apartments has resulted in a housing crisis. The displacement of rent regulated tenants has been aggravated by a landlord's ability to abandon a preferential rent upon the renewal of a lease. Prior to a change in law, a preferential rent was permanent for the duration of a tenancy and could only be increased upon vacancy. Howev- er, as a result of amendments to the law in 2003, landlords are now permitted to abandon a discounted, preferential rent and impose the statutory rent upon vacancy or renewal of a lease. Pursuant to this provision, tenants throughout New York City have faced sudden and unan- ticipated rent increases upon lease renewal. As a result, many tenants cannot pay new rental payments and have been forced out of their rent- regulated apartments. Equally problematic is that there is no "clean hands" requirement that a landlord conduct him/herself responsibly when abandoning a preferential rent and imposing the maximum rent upon vacancy. If a tenant leaves an apartment that is uninhabitable due unsanitary conditions, lack of heat, hot water, electricity, repairs, etc., a landlord can precipitously increase rent upon the vacancy of an apartment. As such, the law encour- ages bad actors to deprive tenants of a habitable apartment in order to benefit from the ability to abandon a preferential rent. In order to stem the displacement crisis in New York City and preserve the affordable housing stock available to working families and moder- ate-income residents, the rent regulation laws are in need of reform. This proposed amendment of the preferential rent provisions is an impor- tant step in that direction.   LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: 2014: A.5473 Passed Assembly 2013: A.5473 Passed Assembly 2012: A1364-A - Advanced to Third Reading 2011: A1364 - Referred to Housing 2010: A465-A - Passed Assembly 2009: A465 - Passed Assembly 2008: A10055A - Passed Assembly   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None to State.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect immediately.
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