•  Summary 
  •  
  •  Actions 
  •  
  •  Committee Votes 
  •  
  •  Floor Votes 
  •  
  •  Memo 
  •  
  •  Text 
  •  
  •  LFIN 
  •  
  •  Chamber Video/Transcript 

S08215 Summary:

BILL NOS08215
 
SAME ASSAME AS A08533
 
SPONSORGIANARIS
 
COSPNSRJACKSON, STAVISKY
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd 26-510, NYC Ad Cd; rpld 4 sub a-1, amd 4, Emerg Ten Prot Act of 1974
 
Amends the composition of rent guidelines boards and the factors to be considered in establishing annual rent adjustments; eliminates the price index of operating costs as a factor in determining rent increases.
Go to top

S08215 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          8215
 
                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                      May 21, 2025
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by Sen. GIANARIS -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
          printed to be committed to the Committee on Housing, Construction  and
          Community Development
 
        AN  ACT to amend the administrative code of the city of New York and the
          emergency tenant protection act of nineteen seventy-four, in  relation
          to  the  composition  of rent guidelines boards, and the factors to be
          considered in establishing annual  rent  adjustments;  and  to  repeal
          certain  provisions of the emergency tenant protection act of nineteen
          seventy-four relating to rent guidelines boards in counties
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section  1.  This  act  shall  be  known and may be cited as the "rent
     2  guidelines board reform act".
     3    § 2. Subdivisions a, b, c and h of section 26-510 of  the  administra-
     4  tive code of the city of New York, subdivision b as amended by section 4
     5  of  part  C  of  chapter 36 of the laws of 2019, are amended and two new
     6  subdivisions k and l are added to read as follows:
     7    a. There shall be a rent guidelines board to consist of  [nine]  seven
     8  members, [appointed] nominated by the mayor subject to confirmation by a
     9  vote  of  the  city  council,  which shall conduct a public hearing on a
    10  nomination within thirty days of receipt of a nomination from the mayor.
    11  Two members shall be representative of tenants, two shall  be  represen-
    12  tative  of  owners of property, and [five] three shall be public members
    13  [each].  Each of [whom] the public members shall have had at least  five
    14  [years]  years'  experience  in  [either]  public service, philanthropy,
    15  social services, urban planning, sociology, geography, labor,  nonprofit
    16  management,  finance,  economics  or housing. One public member shall be
    17  designated by the mayor to serve as [chairman] chair and shall  hold  no
    18  other  public  office.  No  member, officer or employee of any municipal
    19  rent regulation agency or the state division of  housing  and  community
    20  renewal  and  no  person  who owns or manages real estate covered by the
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD03772-04-5

        S. 8215                             2
 
     1  emergency tenant protection act of nineteen seventy-four or this law [or
     2  who is an officer of any owner or tenant organization] shall serve on  a
     3  rent  guidelines  board. One public member, one member representative of
     4  tenants  and  one member representative of owners shall serve for a term
     5  ending two years from January first next succeeding the  date  of  their
     6  appointment; one public member, one member representative of tenants and
     7  one  member  representative of owners shall serve for terms ending three
     8  years from the January first next succeeding the date of their  appoint-
     9  ment  [and  two  public  members shall serve for terms ending four years
    10  from January first next succeeding the dates of their  appointment.  The
    11  chairman  shall  serve  at  the  pleasure of the mayor]. Thereafter, all
    12  members shall continue  in  office  until  their  successors  have  been
    13  appointed  and  qualified.  The  mayor  and  city council shall fill any
    14  vacancy which may occur by reason of death, resignation or otherwise  in
    15  a  manner  consistent  with  the  original appointment. All appointments
    16  thereafter shall be confirmed by a vote of the city  council.  A  member
    17  may be removed by the mayor for cause, but not without an opportunity to
    18  be  heard  in  person or by counsel, in [his or her] their defense, upon
    19  not less than ten days notice.
    20    b. The rent guidelines board shall establish annual  [guidelines  for]
    21  rent  adjustments,  if any, and in determining whether rents for housing
    22  accommodations subject to the emergency tenant protection act  of  nine-
    23  teen  seventy-four  or  this law shall be adjusted shall consider, among
    24  other things (1) [the economic condition of the residential real  estate
    25  industry  in  the affected area including such factors as the prevailing
    26  and projected (i) real estate taxes and  sewer  and  water  rates,  (ii)
    27  gross  operating  maintenance  costs (including insurance rates, govern-
    28  mental fees, cost of fuel and labor costs), (iii) costs and availability
    29  of financing (including effective  rates  of  interest),  (iv)  over-all
    30  supply  of  housing  accommodations  and over-all vacancy rates (2)] the
    31  state of the rental real estate market and submarkets within the city of
    32  New York, including the availability  of  affordable,  habitable  rental
    33  housing  accommodations,  (2)  the economic condition of the residential
    34  real estate industry, including changes in the value of residential real
    35  estate, the profitability  of  ownership  of  rental  housing  and  such
    36  factors  as the prevailing (i) increases or decreases in rents and gross
    37  rental income, including  income  from  other  than  residential  rents,
    38  including  imputed  rental  value  for  apartments occupied by owners or
    39  members of their families or associates of owners, for buildings subject
    40  to this law or the emergency tenant protection act of nineteen  seventy-
    41  four,  (ii) increases or decreases in operation and maintenance costs of
    42  buildings subject to this law or the emergency tenant protection act  of
    43  nineteen  seventy-four  including  real  estate  taxes,  sewer and water
    44  rates, insurance rates, administrative costs, governmental  fees,  fuel,
    45  utilities, and labor, (iii) costs and availability of financing (includ-
    46  ing effective rates of interest) and costs, availability and profitabil-
    47  ity  of  refinancing,  (iv) economic benefits, other than rental income,
    48  derived from the ownership and upgrading of rental property, (v) returns
    49  on capital placed at risk by owners, (vi)  over-all  supply  of  housing
    50  accommodations  and over-all vacancy rates, (vii) increases or decreases
    51  in net operating income of buildings subject to this law or the emergen-
    52  cy tenant protection act of nineteen  seventy-four,  (3)  relevant  data
    53  from  the  current and projected cost of living indices for the affected
    54  area, [(3)] (4) median tenant incomes and rent burdens for  tenants  and
    55  other  measures  of  affordability,  (5)  such other data as may be made
    56  available to it.  Net operating income shall mean the percentage of each

        S. 8215                             3
 
     1  dollar of gross rental income remaining after payment of  all  costs  of
     2  operation  and  maintenance. Debt service payments, capital expenditures
     3  and depreciation shall  not  be  considered  operation  and  maintenance
     4  costs,  and  the  rent  guidelines board shall not consider debt service
     5  payments, capital expenditures or  depreciation  in  determining  annual
     6  rent adjustments.  The board shall not consider a price index of operat-
     7  ing  costs  when  determining  annual adjustments. Not later than [July]
     8  December first of each year, the rent guidelines board shall  file  with
     9  the  city  clerk its findings for the preceding calendar year, and shall
    10  accompany such findings with a statement of the [maximum] rate or  rates
    11  of  rent adjustment, if any, for one or more classes of housing accommo-
    12  dations subject to this law or the emergency tenant  protection  act  of
    13  nineteen  seventy-four,  authorized for vacancy leases or renewal leases
    14  or other rental agreements commencing on the next  succeeding  [October]
    15  March  first  or  within the twelve months thereafter. Such findings and
    16  statement shall be published in the City Record and the rent  guidelines
    17  board  shall  disseminate  such  findings  and statement to citywide and
    18  local newspapers, radio and television stations and other  media.    The
    19  rent  guidelines  board shall not establish annual [guidelines for] rent
    20  adjustments based on the current rental cost of a unit or on the  amount
    21  of  time  that  has elapsed since another rent [increase] adjustment was
    22  authorized pursuant to this title.
    23    c. [Such] As of the effective date of the chapter of the laws  of  two
    24  thousand  twenty-five that amended this subdivision until December thir-
    25  ty-first, two thousand twenty-six members shall be compensated on a  per
    26  diem  basis  of [one] two hundred dollars per day for no more than twen-
    27  ty-five days a year except that the [chairman] chair  shall  be  compen-
    28  sated at [one] two hundred [twenty-five] fifty dollars a day for no more
    29  than  fifty  days a year.  Beginning January first, two thousand twenty-
    30  seven and annually thereafter compensation shall be updated  to  reflect
    31  the  annual  average  changes  of the consumer price index for all urban
    32  consumers (CPI-U), as published annually by the United States department
    33  of labor bureau of labor statistics. The [chairman] chair shall be chief
    34  administrative officer of the rent guidelines board and  among  [his  or
    35  her]  such  chair's  powers and duties [he or she] such chair shall have
    36  the authority to employ, assign and supervise the employees of the  rent
    37  guidelines  board and shall, with the advice and consent of four or more
    38  other members of the rent guidelines board,  enter  into  contracts  for
    39  consultant services. The department of housing preservation and develop-
    40  ment  shall  cooperate  with  the  rent  guidelines board and may assign
    41  personnel and perform such services in connection with the duties of the
    42  rent guidelines board as may reasonably be required  by  the  [chairman]
    43  rent guidelines board.
    44    h.  The  rent  guidelines  board prior to the annual adjustment of the
    45  level of fair rents provided for under subdivision b of this section for
    46  dwelling units and hotel dwelling units covered by this law, shall  hold
    47  a  public  hearing or hearings for the purpose of collecting information
    48  relating to all factors set forth in  subdivision  b  of  this  section.
    49  Notice of the date, time, location and summary of subject matter for the
    50  public  hearing  or hearings shall be published in the City Record daily
    51  for a period of not less than eight days and at least  once  in  one  or
    52  more  newspapers  of general circulation at least eight days immediately
    53  preceding each hearing date, at the expense of the city of New York, and
    54  the hearing shall be open for  testimony  from  any  individual,  group,
    55  association  or  representative  thereof  who wants to testify. A public
    56  hearing shall be held in each  of  the  following  counties:  New  York,

        S. 8215                             4
 
     1  Kings,  Queens,  Richmond  and Bronx.   Additionally, there shall be one
     2  hearing that accepts testimony virtually.
     3    k.  All  owners  of  housing accommodations subject to this law or the
     4  emergency tenant protection act of nineteen seventy-four shall  annually
     5  submit  income  and expenditure reports to the New York city rent guide-
     6  lines board on a form to be promulgated by the board.   The rent  guide-
     7  lines board is authorized to enter into an agreement with the department
     8  of  finance  to implement this function on behalf of the rent guidelines
     9  board, pursuant to local law number sixty-three of the city of New  York
    10  for  the  year  nineteen  hundred  eighty-six,  provided that income and
    11  expenditure data for the last calendar year shall  be  provided  to  the
    12  rent guidelines board no later than forty-five days prior to its prelim-
    13  inary vote.  Owners who fail to submit such reports shall be barred from
    14  applying  for or collecting any rent adjustment to which the owner might
    15  otherwise be entitled under the emergency tenant protection act of nine-
    16  teen seventy-four or this law during the twelve-month  period  beginning
    17  the  next  March  first, and the state division of housing and community
    18  renewal shall  fine  such  owners  one  thousand  dollars  for  a  first
    19  violation, five thousand dollars for a second violation, or ten thousand
    20  dollars for a third or later violation of this requirement.
    21    l. No later than one year after the effective date of this subdivision
    22  and  thereafter  no less often than every ten years, the rent guidelines
    23  board shall require a sample of landlords subject  to  regulation  under
    24  this  law  to  make  available their books and records regarding income,
    25  expenditures, tax benefits and financing arrangements for examination by
    26  the board and the board shall utilize the results  of  the  analysis  of
    27  such  sample  as  one of the criteria upon which its findings are based.
    28  Such sample shall be designed to be  reasonably  representative  of  the
    29  types  of  buildings,  excluding  buildings  that have been converted to
    30  co-operative or condominium states, that are subject to regulation under
    31  this law or the emergency tenant protection act of nineteen seventy-four
    32  within the municipality. Any information provided by owners pursuant  to
    33  this  subdivision regarding an individual building or group of buildings
    34  shall not be available to the public under the  freedom  of  information
    35  law and the rent guidelines board shall safeguard the confidentiality of
    36  such  information  provided however, that the board shall make available
    37  to the public cumulative and statistical results of  the  annual  income
    38  and  expenditure  submissions  and the examination of the representative
    39  sample of books and records required herein.
    40    § 3. Subdivision a of section 4 of section 4 of  chapter  576  of  the
    41  laws  of 1974, constituting the emergency tenant protection act of nine-
    42  teen seventy-four, as amended by section 5 of part G of  chapter  36  of
    43  the laws of 2019, is amended to read as follows:
    44    a.  In  each  county wherein any city having a population of less than
    45  one million or any town or village has determined the  existence  of  an
    46  emergency  pursuant to section three of this act, there shall be created
    47  a rent guidelines board to consist of [nine] seven members appointed  by
    48  the  [commissioner  of housing and community renewal upon recommendation
    49  of the] county legislature, except that a rent guidelines board  created
    50  subsequent  to the effective date of [the] chapter 36 of the laws of two
    51  thousand nineteen [that amended this section] shall  consist  of  [nine]
    52  seven  members  appointed  by [the commissioner of housing and community
    53  renewal upon recommendations of] the local legislative body of each city
    54  having a population of less than one million or town  or  village  which
    55  has  determined  the existence of an emergency pursuant to section three
    56  of this act. Such [recommendation] appointments  shall  be  made  within

        S. 8215                             5
 
     1  thirty  days  after  the first local declaration of an emergency in such
     2  county, city, town, or village; two such members shall be representative
     3  of tenants, two shall be  representative  of  owners  of  property,  and
     4  [five]  three shall be public members [each of whom]. Each of the public
     5  members shall have had  at  least  five  [years]  years'  experience  in
     6  [either]  public service, philanthropy, social services, urban planning,
     7  sociology, geography, labor, nonprofit management, finance, economics or
     8  housing. One public member shall be  designated  by  the  [commissioner]
     9  county  legislature  or  local  legislative  body to serve as [chairman]
    10  chair and shall hold no other  public  office.  No  member,  officer  or
    11  employee  of  any municipal rent regulation agency or the state division
    12  of housing and community renewal and no person who owns or manages  real
    13  estate  covered by this law or [who is an officer of any owner or tenant
    14  organization] the New York  city  rent  stabilization  law  of  nineteen
    15  hundred  sixty-nine  or  more  than two rental apartments not covered by
    16  this law or the New York city rent stabilization law of nineteen hundred
    17  sixty-nine shall serve on a rent guidelines board.  One  public  member,
    18  one  member  representative  of tenants and one member representative of
    19  owners shall serve for a term ending two years from January  first  next
    20  succeeding  the date of their appointment; one public member, one member
    21  representative of tenants and one member representative of owners  shall
    22  serve  for terms ending three years from the January first next succeed-
    23  ing the date of their appointment [and three public members shall  serve
    24  for terms ending four years from January first next succeeding the dates
    25  of  their appointment]. Thereafter, all members shall serve for terms of
    26  four years each. Members shall continue in  office  until  [their]  such
    27  member's  successors have been appointed and qualified. The [commission-
    28  er] county legislature or local legislative body shall fill any  vacancy
    29  which  may  occur  by  reason  of  death, resignation or otherwise in [a
    30  manner consistent] accordance with the [original appointment] provisions
    31  of this subdivision.  A member of a county rent guidelines board may  be
    32  removed  by  the  [commissioner]  county  legislature for cause, but not
    33  without an opportunity to be heard in person or  by  counsel,  in  [his]
    34  such  member's  defense,  upon not less than ten [days] days' notice.  A
    35  member of a municipal rent guidelines board may be removed by the  local
    36  legislative  body  for cause, but not without an opportunity to be heard
    37  in person or by counsel, in such member's defense, upon  not  less  than
    38  ten  days' notice. Compensation for the members of the board shall be on
    39  a per diem basis at the rate of [one] two hundred dollars per  day,  for
    40  no  more than twenty days a year, except that the [chairman] chair shall
    41  be compensated at the rate of  [one]  two  hundred  [twenty-five]  fifty
    42  dollars  a  day for no more than thirty days a year. The [board shall be
    43  provided staff assistance by the]  division  of  housing  and  community
    44  renewal  shall  cooperate  with the county and municipal rent guidelines
    45  boards  and  shall  assign  personnel  and  perform  such  services   in
    46  connection  with the duties of the rent guidelines boards as may reason-
    47  ably be required by the boards.  [The compensation of such  members  and
    48  the  costs  of staff assistance shall be paid by the division of housing
    49  and community renewal which shall be reimbursed in the manner prescribed
    50  in section four of this act. The local legislative  body  of  each  city
    51  having  a  population of less than one million and each town and village
    52  in which an emergency has been determined to exist  as  herein  provided
    53  shall  be authorized to designate one person who shall be representative
    54  of tenants and one person who shall be representative of owners of prop-
    55  erty to serve at its pleasure and without  compensation  to  advise  and
    56  assist the county rent guidelines board in matters affecting the adjust-

        S. 8215                             6

     1  ment  of  rents for housing accommodations in such city, town or village
     2  as the case may be.]
     3    §  4. Subdivision a-1 of section 4 of section 4 of chapter 576  of the
     4  laws of 1974, constituting the emergency tenant protection act of  nine-
     5  teen seventy-four, is REPEALED.
     6    §  5.  Subdivision  b  of section 4 of section 4 of chapter 576 of the
     7  laws of 1974, constituting the emergency tenant protection act of  nine-
     8  teen  seventy-four,  as  amended by chapter 486 of the laws of 1976, the
     9  opening paragraph as amended by section 3 of part Q of chapter 39 of the
    10  laws of 2019, and  the  second  and  third  undesignated  paragraphs  as
    11  amended  by  chapter  330  of the laws of 1980, is amended and three new
    12  subdivisions f, g and h are added to read as follows:
    13    b. A county or municipal rent guidelines board shall establish  annual
    14  [guidelines for] rent adjustments, if any, which, at its sole discretion
    15  may  be varied and different for and within the several zones and juris-
    16  dictions of the board, and in  determining  whether  rents  for  housing
    17  accommodations  as  to  which an emergency has been declared pursuant to
    18  this act shall be adjusted, shall consider among other things  (1)  [the
    19  economic  condition  of  the  residential  real  estate  industry in the
    20  affected area including such factors as the prevailing and projected (i)
    21  real estate taxes and sewer and water rates, (ii) gross operating  main-
    22  tenance  costs  (including  insurance  rates, governmental fees, cost of
    23  fuel and  labor  costs),  (iii)  costs  and  availability  of  financing
    24  (including effective rates of interest), (iv) over-all supply of housing
    25  accommodations  and  over-all vacancy rates (2)] the state of the rental
    26  real estate market and submarkets  within  those  areas,  including  the
    27  availability of affordable, habitable rental housing accommodations, (2)
    28  the  economic condition of the residential real estate industry, includ-
    29  ing changes in the value of residential real estate,  the  profitability
    30  of  ownership  of  rental housing and such factors as the prevailing (i)
    31  increases or decreases in  rents  and  gross  rental  income,  including
    32  income from other than residential rents, including imputed rental value
    33  for  apartments occupied by owners or members of their families or asso-
    34  ciates of owners, for buildings subject to this act, (ii)  increases  or
    35  decreases  in  operation  and  maintenance costs of buildings subject to
    36  this act including real estate taxes, sewer and water  rates,  insurance
    37  rates,  administrative  costs,  governmental  fees, fuel, utilities, and
    38  labor, (iii) costs and availability of  financing  (including  effective
    39  rates  of  interest)  and costs, availability and profitability of refi-
    40  nancing, (iv) economic benefits, other than rental income, derived  from
    41  the  ownership  and upgrading of rental property, (v) returns on capital
    42  placed at risk by owners, (vi) over-all supply of housing accommodations
    43  and over-all vacancy rates, (vii) increases or decreases in net  operat-
    44  ing  income of buildings subject to this act, (3) relevant data from the
    45  current and projected cost of living  indices  for  the  affected  area,
    46  [(3)] (4) median incomes and rent burdens for tenants and other measures
    47  of  affordability,  (5) such other data as may be made available to it.
    48  Net operating income shall mean the percentage of each dollar  of  gross
    49  rental  income  remaining  after  payment  of all costs of operation and
    50  maintenance. Debt service payments, capital  expenditures  and  depreci-
    51  ation  shall  not be considered operation and maintenance costs, and the
    52  rent guidelines board shall not consider debt service payments,  capital
    53  expenditures  or  depreciation  in  determining annual rent adjustments.
    54  The board shall not consider a  price  index  of  operating  costs  when
    55  determining  annual  adjustments.  As  soon  as  practicable  after  its
    56  creation and thereafter not later than [July]  December  first  of  each

        S. 8215                             7
 
     1  year,  a  rent  guidelines  board  shall file with the state division of
     2  housing and community renewal its findings for  the  preceding  calendar
     3  year,  and shall accompany such findings with a statement of the maximum
     4  rate  or  rates  of  rent adjustment, if any, for one or more classes of
     5  accommodation subject to this act,  authorized  for  vacancy  leases  or
     6  renewal  leases  or  other  rental agreements commencing [during] on the
     7  next succeeding March first or within the twelve months thereafter.  The
     8  standards  for  rent adjustments may be applicable for the entire county
     9  or municipality and may be varied according to such zones  or  jurisdic-
    10  tions  within  such  county  as the board finds necessary to achieve the
    11  purposes of this subdivision.  The state division of housing and  commu-
    12  nity renewal shall disseminate such findings and statement to countywide
    13  and  local  newspapers, radio and television stations and other media. A
    14  rent guidelines board shall not establish annual [guidelines  for]  rent
    15  adjustments  based on the current rental cost of a unit or on the amount
    16  of time that has elapsed since another rent  [increase]  adjustment  was
    17  authorized pursuant to this chapter.
    18    The  standards  for  rent  adjustments  established  annually shall be
    19  effective for leases commencing on [October] March first  of  each  year
    20  and  during  the  next succeeding twelve months whether or not the board
    21  has filed its findings and statement of the maximum  rate  or  rates  of
    22  rent  adjustment by [July] December first of each year. If such lease is
    23  entered into before such filing by the board, it  may  provide  for  the
    24  rent  to  be  adjusted by the rates then in effect, subject to change by
    25  the applicable rates of rent adjustment when filed, such  change  to  be
    26  effective  as  of  the date of the commencement of the lease. Said lease
    27  must provide that, if the new rates of rent adjustment differ for leases
    28  of different terms, the tenant has the option of changing  the  original
    29  lease  term to any other term for which a rate of rent adjustment is set
    30  by the board, with the rental to be adjusted accordingly.
    31    Where a city, town or village shall act to determine the existence  of
    32  public emergency pursuant to section three of this act subsequent to the
    33  establishment of annual [guidelines for] rent adjustments of the housing
    34  accommodations subject to this act, the rent guidelines board as soon as
    35  practicable thereafter shall file its findings and rates of rent adjust-
    36  ment,  if  any,  for  vacancy  leases  or renewal leases or other rental
    37  agreements for the housing  accommodations  in  such  a  city,  town  or
    38  village,  which  rates  shall  be  effective  for leases or other rental
    39  agreements commencing on or after the effective  date  of  the  determi-
    40  nation.
    41    f.  In  addition to public hearings, a county or municipal rent guide-
    42  lines board shall hold a hearing that accepts testimony virtually.
    43    g. All owners of housing accommodations  subject  to  this  act  shall
    44  annually  submit income and expenditure reports to the division of hous-
    45  ing and community renewal on a form to be promulgated by  the  division.
    46  Owners who fail to submit such reports shall be barred from applying for
    47  or  collecting any rent adjustment to which the owner might otherwise be
    48  entitled under this act or the emergency tenant protection act of  nine-
    49  teen  seventy-four during the twelve-month period beginning the first of
    50  March next succeeding the effective date of this  subdivision,  and  the
    51  division  shall  fine  such  owners  one  thousand  dollars  for a first
    52  violation, five thousand dollars for a second violation, or ten thousand
    53  dollars for a third or later violation of this requirement.
    54    h. No later than one year after its creation and  thereafter  no  less
    55  often  than  every  ten years, the rent guidelines board shall require a
    56  sample of owners subject to regulation under this act within the  juris-

        S. 8215                             8
 
     1  diction of a county or municipal rent guidelines board to make available
     2  their books and records regarding income, expenditures, tax benefits and
     3  financing arrangements for examination by the division and the county or
     4  municipal rent guidelines board shall utilize the results of analysis of
     5  such  sample  as  one of the criteria upon which its findings are based.
     6  Such sample shall be designed to be  reasonably  representative  of  the
     7  types  of  buildings,  excluding  buildings  that have been converted to
     8  co-operative or condominium status, that are subject to regulation under
     9  this act within the municipality. Any  information  provided  by  owners
    10  pursuant  to  this subdivision regarding an individual building or group
    11  of buildings shall not be available to the public under the  freedom  of
    12  information  law and the state division of housing and community renewal
    13  shall safeguard the confidentiality of such information provided  howev-
    14  er,  that  the  board  shall make available to the public cumulative and
    15  statistical results of the annual income and expenditure submissions and
    16  the examination of  the  representative  sample  of  books  and  records
    17  required herein.
    18    §  6.  Separability.  If  any section, clause or provision in this act
    19  shall be held by a competent court to be unconstitutional or ineffective
    20  in whole or in part, to the extent that it is  not  unconstitutional  or
    21  ineffective,  it  shall  be  valid  and effective, and no other section,
    22  clause or provision shall on account thereof be deemed invalid or  inef-
    23  fective.
    24    §  7.  This act shall take effect immediately; provided, however, that
    25  the amendments to section 26-510 of the rent stabilization law of  nine-
    26  teen  hundred sixty-nine made by section two of this act shall expire on
    27  the same date as such law expires and shall not affect the expiration of
    28  such law as provided under section 26-520 of such law.
Go to top