S01941 Summary:

BILL NOS01941
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORBAILEY
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd §§103 & 204, add §204-a, EDP L; amd §§2, 3, 5 & 10, rpld §3 sub 12, UDC Act
 
Defines blighted properties and areas.
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S01941 Actions:

BILL NOS01941
 
01/17/2023REFERRED TO JUDICIARY
01/03/2024REFERRED TO JUDICIARY
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S01941 Committee Votes:

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S01941 Floor Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
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S01941 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          1941
 
                               2023-2024 Regular Sessions
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                    January 17, 2023
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  Sen.  BAILEY -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
          printed to be committed to the Committee on Judiciary
 
        AN ACT to amend the eminent domain procedure law and the New York  state
          urban development corporation act, in relation to defining blight; and
          to  repeal  certain provisions of the New York state urban development
          corporation act relating thereto
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section  1.  Legislative  findings  and intent. The legislature hereby
     2  finds and declares that eminent domain,  while  a  meaningful  tool  for
     3  government to move forward on important projects, has come under a great
     4  deal  of  criticism  in  recent  years for many alleged abuses that have
     5  occurred within the state of  New  York.  Traditionally,  the  right  of
     6  eminent domain, or the state's ability to seize private land was limited
     7  for  "public use". However, over the years, phrases such as "public use"
     8  and "blighted" have taken on more expansive meanings.
     9    Since Kelo v. City of New London, the 2005 decision in which the  U.S.
    10  Supreme  Court  approved  the  forcible  transfer  of  property from one
    11  private owner to another in the name of "economic  development",  forty-
    12  three states have passed eminent domain reform legislation. New York has
    13  thus  far  failed  to  take such action but continues again and again to
    14  approve eminent domain condemnation for projects  that  benefit  private
    15  entities  at  the  public's  expense. A 2009 report by the Institute for
    16  Justice entitled "Building Empires, Destroying Homes:    Eminent  Domain
    17  Abuse  in  New York" detailed widespread eminent domain abuse throughout
    18  the state.
    19    Furthermore, two recent court decisions, Goldstein v. New  York  State
    20  Urban  Development Corporation and Kaur v. New York State Urban Develop-
    21  ment Corporation demonstrate the need to balance the rights of  property
    22  owners without stifling positive economic development programs. Instead,
    23  New  Yorkers  suffer  under an inequitable system of eminent domain laws

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD04471-01-3

        S. 1941                             2
 
     1  that greatly favors private developers partnered with public  actors  at
     2  the expense of homeowners, businesses, and tenants.
     3    The use of "blight" as a basis for condemnation is vaguely defined and
     4  in  need  of  clarification.  Under  the loose standards of existing law
     5  practically anything can qualify as blighted. Consequently it is  imper-
     6  ative  that  the  legislature  enact  objective  criteria to ensure that
     7  blight determinations are consistent, predictable, and based on  factors
     8  actually  related to the public's health and safety. There also needs to
     9  be better protections in place so that tenants and low income  residents
    10  are ensured that they are not excluded from the development process.
    11    As Judge Catterson notes for the majority in the Kaur decision, it has
    12  been  well  documented  that  the urban renewal schemes of the 1950s and
    13  1960s displaced millions of people and destroyed hundreds  of  neighbor-
    14  hoods.  By  and far, these programs disproportionately harmed low income
    15  and minority families. Legislative  reforms  are  needed  to  prevent  a
    16  repeat  of  these  injustices.  It  is now time for New York to make the
    17  necessary reforms that will ensure a  fair  and  equitable  use  of  our
    18  eminent domain laws.
    19    §  2.  Section  103  of the eminent domain procedure law is amended by
    20  adding five new subdivisions (H), (I), (J),  (K)  and  (L)  to  read  as
    21  follows:
    22    (H)  "Blighted  property"  and  "blighted  area" mean property that is
    23  declared blighted under section two hundred four-a of this chapter.
    24    (I) "Slum" means property that is declared blighted under section  two
    25  hundred four-a of this chapter.
    26    (J)  "Substandard  and  insanitary  property"  means  property that is
    27  declared blighted under section two hundred four-a of this chapter.
    28    (K) "Unfit for human habitation" means premises which  have  identifi-
    29  able conditions that endanger the life, health and safety of the owners,
    30  occupants,  or the public. Conditions rendering property unfit for human
    31  habitation include, but  are  not  limited  to,  substantial  structural
    32  defects  or  deterioration, vermin infestation, lack of necessary utili-
    33  ties, and fire hazards.
    34    (L) "Abandoned property" means:
    35    (1) unoccupied property which has been tax delinquent for at least two
    36  years; or
    37    (2) a building:
    38    (a) that is unoccupied by owner or tenant;
    39    (b) that is unfit for habitation;
    40    (c) that has deteriorated to the point where:
    41    (I) the building is structurally unsound or poses an immediate  threat
    42  to life or other property; or
    43    (II) the cost of rehabilitation significantly exceeds the post-rehabi-
    44  litation market value; and
    45    (d)  the  owner  is  unknown  or the owner fails to respond within six
    46  months to a violation notice from the appropriate governing body requir-
    47  ing the owner to:
    48    (I) rehabilitate the building to conform to minimum code  habitability
    49  requirements; or
    50    (II) demolish the building for health and safety reasons; or
    51    (3) a vacant lot on which a building has been demolished and for which
    52  a municipal lien for demolition costs remains unpaid for six months.
    53    §  3.  Paragraph  4  of  subdivision (B) of section 204 of the eminent
    54  domain procedure law is amended and a new paragraph 5 is added  to  read
    55  as follows:
    56    (4) such other factors as it considers relevant[.];

        S. 1941                             3
 
     1    (5)  the  findings required pursuant to subdivision (D) of section two
     2  hundred four-a of this article.
     3    §  4.  The  eminent  domain  procedure  law is amended by adding a new
     4  section 204-a to read as follows:
     5    § 204-a. Blighted properties and areas. (A) Subject to the  exceptions
     6  listed  in  paragraph two of subdivision (B) of this section, any single
     7  property may be declared blighted if  it  meets  any  of  the  following
     8  conditions:
     9    (1) Any premises, which because of dilapidation, deterioration, struc-
    10  tural defects, vermin infestation, health hazards, fire hazards, lack of
    11  utilities, lack of facilities or equipment required by statute or munic-
    12  ipal code, neglect, or lack of maintenance:
    13    (a) is unfit for human habitation;
    14    (b) has deteriorated to the point where:
    15    (I)  the building is structurally unsound or poses an immediate threat
    16  to life or other property; or
    17    (II) the cost of rehabilitation significantly exceeds the post-rehabi-
    18  litation market value; and
    19    (c) the owner fails to remedy the problem  within  a  reasonable  time
    20  after  receiving  notice  of violation by the appropriate governing body
    21  requiring the owner to:
    22    (I) rehabilitate the building to conform to minimum code  habitability
    23  requirements; or
    24    (II) demolish the building for health and safety reasons.
    25    (2)  Any  abandoned  property as defined in subdivision (L) of section
    26  one hundred three of this chapter.
    27    (3) Property that is environmentally contaminated  and  that  requires
    28  remediation for current or future use under state or federal law, if the
    29  owner  fails to remedy the problem within six months of receiving notice
    30  of violation from the appropriate governing body.
    31    (4) A premises  which,  because  of  physical  condition  or  use,  is
    32  regarded  as  a  public  nuisance  at  common law or has been declared a
    33  public nuisance under a statute or an applicable municipal code, and the
    34  owner fails to abate the nuisance within six months of receiving  notice
    35  of violation from the appropriate governing body.
    36    (5)  Any  well, shaft, basement, excavation, or unsafe fence or struc-
    37  ture that, because of physical condition, use or occupancy, is deemed an
    38  attractive nuisance to children,  and  the  owner  fails  to  abate  the
    39  nuisance  within six months after receiving notice of violation from the
    40  appropriate governing body.
    41    (6) Vacant property that has become overgrown with weeds, is  a  place
    42  for  the accumulation of trash and debris, or a haven for vermin, if the
    43  owner fails to remedy the problem  within  six  months  after  receiving
    44  notice  of  violation  by  the  appropriate governing body requiring the
    45  owner to rehabilitate the property to conform with minimum code require-
    46  ments.
    47    (7) Defective or unusual conditions of title that make the free trans-
    48  fer or alienation of the property impossible.
    49    (8) Occupied or unoccupied property that has tax delinquencies exceed-
    50  ing the value of the property.
    51    (9) Property that is used for pervasive and persistent criminal activ-
    52  ity. For purposes of this section, such activity shall be defined as two
    53  or more convictions of any person or persons had, within a period of one
    54  year, for any of the following penal law offenses arising out of conduct
    55  engaged in at the property:

        S. 1941                             4
 
     1    (a) sale of a  controlled  substance  described  in  sections  220.31,
     2  220.34, 220.39, 220.41, or 220.43 of the penal law; or
     3    (b)  offenses  related  to  the  crime of prostitution as described in
     4  article two hundred thirty of the penal law; or
     5    (c) offenses related to the crime of gambling as described in  article
     6  two hundred twenty-five of the penal law; or
     7    (d)  enterprise corruption as defined in article four hundred sixty of
     8  the penal law.
     9    (10) Property that does not otherwise meet any of the conditions list-
    10  ed in this section may not be declared blighted.
    11    (B) Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision (A) of this section,
    12  the following exceptions shall apply:
    13    (1) Property shall in no case be declared blighted if it meets one  or
    14  more of the following criteria:
    15    (a)  Vacant  and  unimproved property located in any rural or suburban
    16  area which is not served by existing utilities.
    17    (b) Property which satisfies the definition of "farm woodland",  "land
    18  used in agricultural production", "unique and irreplaceable agricultural
    19  land",  or  "viable  agricultural  land",  as those terms are defined in
    20  section three hundred one of the agriculture and markets law.
    21    (2) For purposes of this section, if a developer or condemnor involved
    22  in a redevelopment project has caused or  brought  about  by  action  or
    23  inaction  or  maintained for more than seven years a condition listed in
    24  subdivision (A) of this section within the proposed project  area,  that
    25  condition may not be used in the determination of blight.
    26    (3)  For purposes of this section, if property located in an urbanized
    27  area generally served by municipal infrastructure  and  utilities  meets
    28  one  or more of the conditions listed in subdivision (A) of this section
    29  due to failure on the part of the appropriate governing body to  provide
    30  necessary utility services and/or infrastructure, that condition may not
    31  be used in the determination of blight.
    32    (C)  Multiple properties and project areas may be declared blighted if
    33  they meet any of the following conditions:
    34    (1) For purposes of acquiring multiple units of  property  by  eminent
    35  domain, an area may be declared generally blighted only if:
    36    (a)  the area is located in an urban or suburban area generally served
    37  by existing utilities and infrastructure; and
    38    (b) seventy-five percent of the individual parcels  in  the  area  are
    39  declared blighted under subdivision (A) of this section.
    40    (2) A condemnor may use eminent domain to acquire any unit of property
    41  within a blighted project area.
    42    (3)  Properties  owned by a developer or condemnor involved in a rede-
    43  velopment project may be included in any blighted project area  determi-
    44  nation.
    45    (4) For purposes of this section, a building containing multiple units
    46  shall be treated as a single property.
    47    (D)  The  following  findings  shall  be required before a property or
    48  project area may be declared blighted:
    49    (1) To declare any single property blighted, the condemnor  must  make
    50  written  findings  identifying  the specific conditions which render the
    51  property blighted under subdivision (A) of this section.
    52    (2) To declare multiple properties  or  project  areas  blighted,  the
    53  condemnor must make written findings demonstrating that the requirements
    54  of  subdivision  (C)  of this section have been met. To demonstrate that
    55  seventy-five percent of the parcels in the area are individually blight-
    56  ed, each blighted parcel must be identified and the specific  conditions

        S. 1941                             5
 
     1  rendering  it  blighted  under  subdivision  (A) of this section must be
     2  identified.
     3    (E)  Any  declaration made pursuant to subdivision (D) of this section
     4  shall be valid for a period of ten years.
     5    § 5. Section 2 of section 1 of  chapter  174  of  the  laws  of  1968,
     6  constituting  the  New York state urban development corporation act, the
     7  ninth undesignated paragraph as added by chapter 280 of the laws of 1984
     8  and the tenth undesignated paragraph as amended by chapter  747  of  the
     9  laws of 2005, is amended to read as follows:
    10    §  2.  Statement  of  legislative  findings and purposes. It is hereby
    11  found and declared that there exists in [urban] some areas of this state
    12  a condition of substantial and persistent unemployment and  underemploy-
    13  ment  which  causes  hardship  to  many individuals and families, wastes
    14  vital human resources, increases the public assistance  burdens  of  the
    15  state  and municipalities, impairs the security of family life, contrib-
    16  utes to the growth of crime and delinquency, prevents many of our  youth
    17  from  finishing  their  educations,  impedes  the  economic and physical
    18  development of municipalities and  adversely  affects  the  welfare  and
    19  prosperity  of  all  the people of the state. [Many existing industrial,
    20  manufacturing and commercial facilities in such urban areas are obsolete
    21  and inefficient, dilapidated, and without adequate  mass  transportation
    22  facilities  and  public  services. Many of such facilities are underuti-
    23  lized or in the process of being vacated, creating additional  unemploy-
    24  ment.  Technological  advances  and  the  provision of modern, efficient
    25  facilities in other states will speed the obsolescence  and  abandonment
    26  of  existing  facilities  causing  serious  injury to the economy of the
    27  state. Many existing and planned industrial, manufacturing  and  commer-
    28  cial  facilities are, moreover, far from or not easily accessible to the
    29  places of residence of substantial numbers of unemployed persons.  As  a
    30  result,  problems  of  chronic unemployment are not being alleviated but
    31  are aggravated. New industrial, manufacturing and commercial  facilities
    32  are  required  to attract and house new industries and thereby to reduce
    33  the hazards of unemployment. The unaided efforts of  private  enterprise
    34  have  not met and cannot meet the needs of providing such facilities due
    35  to problems encountered in assembling suitable building sites]
    36    It is further found and declared that the unaided efforts  of  private
    37  industrial,  manufacturing  and  commercial  businesses  are  negatively
    38  affected by aging and inefficient facilities,  difficulties  in  finding
    39  suitable  building  sites  for  new  facilities, lack of adequate public
    40  services, the unavailability of private capital for development [in such
    41  urban areas], and the inability of private enterprise alone  to  plan[,]
    42  and  finance  development  and  to coordinate [industrial and commercial
    43  development] such development with [residential developments for persons
    44  and families of low income and  with]  affordable  housing  development,
    45  community  development programs, public services and mass transportation
    46  facilities.
    47    It is further found and declared that  there  exist  in  many  munici-
    48  palities  within  this  state  [residential, nonresidential, commercial,
    49  industrial or vacant areas, and combinations thereof, which are slum  or
    50  blighted,  or  which  are  becoming  slum  or  blighted areas because of
    51  substandard,  insanitary,  deteriorated  or  deteriorating   conditions,
    52  including  obsolete  and dilapidated buildings and structures, defective
    53  construction, outmoded design, lack of  proper  sanitary  facilities  or
    54  adequate  fire  or  safety protection, excessive land coverage, insuffi-
    55  cient light and ventilation, excessive population density, illegal  uses
    56  and  conversions,  inadequate  maintenance,  buildings  abandoned or not

        S. 1941                             6

     1  utilized in whole or substantial part, obsolete  systems  of  utilities,
     2  poorly  or improperly designed street patterns and intersections, inade-
     3  quate access to areas, traffic congestion hazardous to the public  safe-
     4  ty,  lack of suitable off-street parking, inadequate loading and unload-
     5  ing facilities, impractical street widths, sizes and shapes, blocks  and
     6  lots  of  irregular  form,  shape  or insufficient size, width or depth,
     7  unsuitable topography, subsoil or other  physical  conditions,  all  of]
     8  blighted properties and blighted areas, which are characterized by prem-
     9  ises  unfit for human habitation and dangerous to life and property, and
    10  which hamper or impede proper and economic development of such areas and
    11  which impair or arrest the sound growth of the area, community or  muni-
    12  cipality, and the state as a whole.
    13    It is further found and declared that there is a serious need through-
    14  out the state for adequate educational, recreational, cultural and other
    15  community  facilities, the lack of which threatens and adversely affects
    16  the health, safety[, morals] and welfare of the people of the state.
    17    It is further  found  and  declared  that  there  continues  to  exist
    18  throughout  the  state  a seriously inadequate supply of [safe and sani-
    19  tary] decent dwelling accommodations for persons  and  families  of  low
    20  income.  This condition is contrary to the public interest and threatens
    21  the health, safety, welfare, comfort and security of the people  of  the
    22  state.  The  ordinary operations of private enterprise cannot provide an
    23  adequate  supply  of  safe  and  sanitary  dwelling  accommodations  [at
    24  rentals] which persons and families of low income can afford.
    25    It  is  further  found  and  declared  that there is an urgent need to
    26  protect and enhance the quality of the natural environment, to encourage
    27  the development and expansion of existing  and  alternative  sources  of
    28  energy  and  the  conservation  of  energy, and to abate and prevent the
    29  generation of hazardous waste, toxic by-products,  and  other  types  of
    30  environmental pollution.
    31    It  is  hereby  declared  to  be  the policy of the state to promote a
    32  vigorous and growing economy, to  prevent  economic  stagnation  and  to
    33  encourage  the  creation  of  new  job opportunities in order to protect
    34  against the hazards of unemployment, reduce the level of public  assist-
    35  ance  to now indigent individuals and families, increase revenues to the
    36  state and to its municipalities and to achieve  stable  and  diversified
    37  local  economies. In furtherance of these goals, it is the policy of the
    38  state to retain  existing  industries  and  to  attract  new  industries
    39  through  the  acquisition,  construction,  financing, reconstruction and
    40  rehabilitation of industrial and  manufacturing  plants  and  commercial
    41  facilities,  and  to  develop  sites  for  new industrial and commercial
    42  building. It is further declared to  be  the  policy  of  the  state  to
    43  promote the development of such plants and facilities, reasonably acces-
    44  sible  to residential facilities, in those areas where substantial unem-
    45  ployment or underemployment exists, to the end that the  industrial  and
    46  commercial  development [of our urban areas] will proceed in sound fash-
    47  ion and in coordination with development of housing, mass transportation
    48  and public services, and that job opportunities  will  be  available  in
    49  those areas where people lack jobs.
    50    It  is  further  declared to be the policy of the state to promote the
    51  safety, health[, morals] and welfare of the people of the state  and  to
    52  promote  the  sound growth and development of our municipalities through
    53  the [correction of such substandard, insanitary, blighted,  deteriorated
    54  or  deteriorating  conditions, factors and characteristics by the clear-
    55  ance, replanning, reconstruction, redevelopment, rehabilitation,  resto-
    56  ration  or  conservation of such areas,] redevelopment of blighted areas

        S. 1941                             7
 
     1  and [of areas reasonably accessible thereto] the undertaking  of  public
     2  and  private  improvement  programs  [related  thereto],  including  the
     3  provision of educational, recreational and cultural facilities, and  the
     4  encouragement  of participation in these programs by private enterprise.
     5  In furtherance of these goals, it is the policy of the state  to  engage
     6  and empower the public through educational programs, community outreach,
     7  and  an open and inclusive redevelopment planning process; to coordinate
     8  redevelopment projects and improvement programs  with  local  government
     9  planning  goals;  to  respect  communities' existing social and cultural
    10  fabric and to limit residential and  business  displacement  to  maximum
    11  extent  possible;  to  reuse  existing  resources and infrastructure and
    12  recycle materials and structures; to  encourage  energy  efficiency  and
    13  sustainable  building; to conserve undeveloped land and encourage infill
    14  and brownfield development; to improve or restore natural  systems  such
    15  as  streambeds, drainage courses, wetlands, rivers, and other ecological
    16  features, and to encourage the creation of publicly available open spac-
    17  es; to ensure that environmental pollution does not  disparately  affect
    18  areas with a substantial number of minority or low income households; to
    19  incorporate  cultural  resources  and landscapes into project designs by
    20  preserving and rehabilitating buildings  with  cultural,  historical  or
    21  architectural significance, encouraging adaptive reuse as an alternative
    22  to demolition and new construction, and encouraging compatible design of
    23  new construction; to encourage the retention and construction of afford-
    24  able housing through incentives, loans, and other programs; to encourage
    25  development  that  is accessible and inviting to pedestrians, bicyclists
    26  and transit users, and to discourage  development  that  is  reliant  on
    27  personal   automobile  transportation;  to  increase  opportunities  for
    28  private enterprise, especially for small businesses,  local  businesses,
    29  and  businesses  owned  by minorities and women, through procedures that
    30  are fair, open, equitable, transparent, and demonstrated to be the  best
    31  choice  for  the  public  interest; to provide sufficient guarantees and
    32  protections in the event that private developers withdraw  from  partic-
    33  ipation  in  a redevelopment project or improvement program; to increase
    34  employment opportunities for  local  residents,  especially  low  income
    35  residents, homeless persons, single parents, formerly incarcerated indi-
    36  viduals,  and  persons  with  other  barriers to employment, through job
    37  training, local hiring and other assistance programs; and  to  encourage
    38  the creation of quality jobs that provide a living wage, adequate health
    39  benefits, and opportunities for advancement.
    40    It  is  further  declared to be the policy of the state to promote the
    41  safety, health[, morals] and welfare of the people of the state  through
    42  the provision of adequate, safe and sanitary dwelling accommodations and
    43  facilities incidental or appurtenant thereto for persons and families of
    44  low income.
    45    For  these  purposes, there should be created a corporate governmental
    46  agency to be known as the "New York state urban development corporation"
    47  which, through issuance of bonds and notes  to  the  private,  investing
    48  public,  by  encouraging  maximum participation by the private sector of
    49  the economy, including the sale or lease of the  corporation's  interest
    50  in  projects  at  the earliest time deemed feasible, and through partic-
    51  ipation in programs undertaken by the state, its agencies  and  subdivi-
    52  sions,  and by municipalities and the federal government, may provide or
    53  obtain the capital resources necessary  to  acquire,  construct,  recon-
    54  struct,  rehabilitate or improve such industrial, manufacturing, commer-
    55  cial, educational, recreational and  cultural  facilities,  and  housing
    56  accommodations  for  persons  and families of low income, and facilities

        S. 1941                             8
 
     1  incidental or appurtenant thereto, and  to  carry  out  the  [clearance,
     2  replanning,  reconstruction  and  rehabilitation of such substandard and
     3  insanitary] redevelopment of blighted areas.
     4    It is further declared to be the policy of New York state to encourage
     5  the development of research and development facilities and high technol-
     6  ogy  industrial  incubator  space  at  institutions  of higher education
     7  located in this state and authorized to confer degrees by law or by  the
     8  board  of  regents,  or  on lands in reasonable proximity to such insti-
     9  tutions provided that (i) in the case of research and development facil-
    10  ities such facilities are for the cooperative use of one  or  more  such
    11  institutions  and  one or more business corporations, research consortia
    12  or other industrial organizations  involved  in  research,  development,
    13  demonstration,  or other technologically oriented industrial activities;
    14  and (ii) in the case of high technology industrial incubator space, such
    15  space shall be for rental to business concerns which are in their  form-
    16  ative  stages  and  which  are  involved  in high technology activities,
    17  including but not limited to business concerns  initiated  by  students,
    18  employees  of  such  institution,  including  faculty  members and other
    19  persons or firms academically associated with such institution.
    20    It is hereby declared that the acquisition,  construction,  financing,
    21  reconstruction,  rehabilitation or improvement of such industrial, manu-
    22  facturing and commercial facilities, and of such  cultural,  educational
    23  and  recreational  facilities  including  but  not limited to facilities
    24  identified as projects and called for to implement  a  state  designated
    25  heritage  area  management  plan  as  provided  in title G of the parks,
    26  recreation and historic preservation law;  the  [clearance,  replanning,
    27  reconstruction  and  rehabilitation  of such substandard and insanitary]
    28  redevelopment of blighted areas; and the provision of adequate, safe and
    29  sanitary housing accommodations for persons and families of  low  income
    30  and  such  facilities  as  may  be incidental or appurtenant thereto are
    31  public uses and public purposes for which public money may be loaned and
    32  private property may be acquired and tax exemption granted, and that the
    33  powers and duties of the New York state urban development corporation as
    34  hereinafter prescribed are necessary  and  proper  for  the  purpose  of
    35  achieving the ends here recited.
    36    §  6.  Section  3  of  section  1  of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968,
    37  constituting the New York state urban development  corporation  act,  is
    38  amended by adding two new subdivisions 31 and 32 to read as follows:
    39    (31)  "Blighted  property"  and  "blighted  area".  Property  that  is
    40  declared blighted under section 204-a of the  eminent  domain  procedure
    41  law.
    42    (32) "Slum". Property that is declared blighted under section 204-a of
    43  the eminent domain procedure law.
    44    §  7.  Subdivision  12 of section 3 of section 1 of chapter 174 of the
    45  laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban  development  corpo-
    46  ration  act,  is  REPEALED  and a new subdivision 12 is added to read as
    47  follows:
    48    (12) "Substandard and insanitary property". Property that is  declared
    49  blighted under section 204-a of the eminent domain procedure law.
    50    §  8.  Subdivision  7  of section 5 of section 1 of chapter 174 of the
    51  laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban  development  corpo-
    52  ration act, is amended to read as follows:
    53    (7)  To  acquire  or contract to acquire from any person, firm, corpo-
    54  ration, municipality, federal  or  state  agency,  by  grant,  purchase,
    55  condemnation  or otherwise, leaseholds, real, personal or mixed property
    56  or any interest therein, subject to the limitations in section 204-a  of

        S. 1941                             9
 
     1  the eminent domain procedure law; to own, hold, clear, improve and reha-
     2  bilitate,  and to sell, assign, exchange, transfer, convey, lease, mort-
     3  gage, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same;
     4    §  9.  Section  10  of  section  1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968,
     5  constituting the New  York  state  urban  development  corporation  act,
     6  subdivision  (d) as amended by chapter 847 of the laws of 1971, subdivi-
     7  sions (e) and (f) as added and subdivisions (g) and (h) as relettered by
     8  chapter 839 of the laws of 1987, is amended to read as follows:
     9    § 10. Findings of the corporation. Notwithstanding any other provision
    10  of this act, the corporation shall not be  empowered  to  undertake  the
    11  acquisition, construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation or improvement
    12  of a project unless the corporation finds:
    13    (a) in the case of a residential project:
    14    (1)  That  there  exists,  in  the  area in which the project is to be
    15  located, or in an area reasonably accessible to such area,  a  need  for
    16  [safe  and  sanitary] decent housing accommodations for persons or fami-
    17  lies of low income, which the operations of  private  enterprise  cannot
    18  provide;
    19    (2)  That  the  project  has  been  approved as a project of a housing
    20  company pursuant to the provisions of the private housing finance law.
    21    (b) in the case of an industrial project:
    22    (1) That the area  in  which  the  project  is  to  be  located  is  a
    23  [substandard or insanitary area, or is in danger of becoming a substand-
    24  ard or insanitary area] blighted area, as that term is defined in subdi-
    25  vision  (H)  of section 103 of the eminent domain procedure law, wherein
    26  there exists a condition of substantial and persistent  unemployment  or
    27  underemployment;
    28    (2) That the acquisition or construction and operation of such project
    29  will  prevent,  eliminate  or  reduce unemployment or underemployment in
    30  such area;
    31    (3) That such project shall consist of a building or  buildings  which
    32  are  suitable for manufacturing, warehousing or research or other indus-
    33  trial, business or commercial purposes[.];
    34    (4) That adequate provision has been, or will be made for the  payment
    35  of the cost of the acquisition, construction, operation, maintenance and
    36  upkeep of such project[.];
    37    (5) That the acquisition and construction, proposed leasing, operation
    38  and use of such project will aid in the development, growth and prosper-
    39  ity of the state and the area in which such project is located;
    40    (6)  That  the  plans  and  specifications assure adequate light, air,
    41  sanitation and fire protection.
    42    (c) in the case of a land use improvement project:
    43    (1) That the area  in  which  the  project  is  to  be  located  is  a
    44  [substandard or insanitary area, or is in danger of becoming a substand-
    45  ard  or  insanitary  area and tends to impair or arrest the sound growth
    46  and development of the municipality] blighted  area,  as  that  term  is
    47  defined  in  subdivision (H) of section 103 of the eminent domain proce-
    48  dure law;
    49    (2) That the project consists of a plan or undertaking for the  clear-
    50  ance, replanning, reconstruction and rehabilitation of such area and for
    51  recreational and other facilities incidental or appurtenant thereto;
    52    (3)  That  the  plan  or  undertaking  affords maximum opportunity for
    53  participation by private enterprise, consistent with the sound needs  of
    54  the municipality as a whole.
    55    (d) in the case of a civic project:

        S. 1941                            10
 
     1    (1)  That the area in which the project is to be located is a blighted
     2  area, as that term is defined in subdivision (H) of section 103  of  the
     3  eminent domain procedure law, wherein there exists [in the area in which
     4  the  project  is  to  be located,] a need for the educational, cultural,
     5  recreational, community, municipal, public service or other civic facil-
     6  ity to be included in the project;
     7    (2) That the project shall consist of a building or buildings or other
     8  facilities  which  are suitable for educational, cultural, recreational,
     9  community, municipal, public service or other civic purposes;
    10    (3) That such project will be leased to or owned by the  state  or  an
    11  agency  or  instrumentality  thereof,  a  municipality  or  an agency or
    12  instrumentality thereof, a public corporation, or any other entity which
    13  is carrying out a community, municipal, public service  or  other  civic
    14  purpose,  and that adequate provision has been, or will be, made for the
    15  payment of the cost of acquisition, construction, operation, maintenance
    16  and upkeep of the project;
    17    (4) That the plans and specifications assure or will  assure  adequate
    18  light, air, sanitation and fire protection.
    19    (e) in the case of an industrial effectiveness project:
    20    (1)  That a feasibility study or productivity assessment exists demon-
    21  strating the potential for future profitability of the  firm  requesting
    22  financial  assistance and such study or assessment has been reviewed and
    23  approved by the commissioner of economic development;
    24    (2) That for loans to implement a  corporate  restructuring  or  turn-
    25  around plan, the management of the industrial firm requesting assistance
    26  is  capable  and  the  firm  has  a sound business development plan that
    27  includes measures to ensure labor  and  management  cooperation  and  to
    28  effect changes required to continue as a successful business;
    29    (3)  That  the  requested  financial  assistance is not available from
    30  other public or private financing sources; and
    31    (4) That the area  in  which  the  project  is  to  be  located  is  a
    32  [substandard or insanitary area, or is in danger of becoming a substand-
    33  ard or insanitary area] blighted area, as that term is defined in subdi-
    34  vision  (H)  of section 103 of the eminent domain procedure law, wherein
    35  there exists a condition of substantial and persistent  unemployment  or
    36  underemployment.
    37    (f)  in  the  case  of  a  small  and medium-sized business assistance
    38  project:
    39    (1) That the area in which the project will be located is a [substand-
    40  ard or insanitary area, or is in danger of  becoming  a  substandard  or
    41  insanitary  area]  blighted area, as that term is defined in subdivision
    42  (H) of section 103 of the eminent domain procedure  law,  wherein  there
    43  exists  a condition of substantial and persistent unemployment or under-
    44  employment;
    45    (2) That the project demonstrates  market,  management  and  financial
    46  feasibility and has a clear likelihood of success;
    47    (3)  That the [industrial] firm provides at least a ten percent equity
    48  contribution and such contribution is not  derived  from  other  govern-
    49  mental sources;
    50    (4)  That  the  requested  financial  assistance is not available from
    51  other public or private financing sources on terms compatible  with  the
    52  successful completion of the project;
    53    (5)  That the project will not result in the relocation of any [indus-
    54  trial] firm from one municipality within the state  to  another  munici-
    55  pality,  or  in  the  abandonment of one or more of the firms' plants or
    56  facilities located within the state, except under one of  the  following

        S. 1941                            11
 
     1  conditions: (i) when [an industrial] a firm is relocating within a muni-
     2  cipality  with  a population of at least one million where the governing
     3  body of such municipality approves such relocation; [or] (ii) the corpo-
     4  ration notifies each municipality from which such [industrial] firm will
     5  be  relocated  and each municipality agrees to such relocation; or (iii)
     6  the corporation shall determine on the basis of the  application  before
     7  it  that the project is reasonably necessary to discourage the firm from
     8  relocating to a location outside the state and to preserve  the  compet-
     9  itive position of the firm within its respective industry; and
    10    (6) That the project is not for the purpose of refinancing any portion
    11  of  the  total  project  cost  or  other  existing loans or debts of the
    12  project sponsor or owner.
    13    (g) in the case of all projects, that [there is a feasible method  for
    14  the  relocation  of  families and individuals displaced from the project
    15  area into decent, safe and sanitary dwellings] the displacement of resi-
    16  dents and businesses is limited to the maximum extent possible, and that
    17  all displaced residents and businesses will be afforded adequate compen-
    18  sation and/or assistance to be  relocated  to  substantially  comparable
    19  properties,  which are or will be [provided] located in the project area
    20  or in [other areas] an area reasonably proximate to the project area and
    21  not generally less desirable in regard to public  utilities  and  public
    22  and  commercial  facilities, at substantially comparable rents or prices
    23  [within the financial  means  of  such  families  or  individuals],  and
    24  reasonably  accessible  to  their  places of dwelling and/or employment.
    25  [Insofar as is feasible, the] The corporation shall offer  substantially
    26  comparable  housing  accommodations  to  [such families and individuals]
    27  displaced residents in [residential] projects [of the corporation]  that
    28  include  a residential component, and insofar as is feasible, the corpo-
    29  ration shall offer substantially  comparable  industrial  or  commercial
    30  accommodations  to  displaced  businesses  in  projects  that include an
    31  industrial or commercial component. The corporation may render to  busi-
    32  ness and commercial tenants and [to families or other persons] displaced
    33  [from  the  project area,] residents any other such assistance as it may
    34  deem [necessary to enable them to relocate] appropriate.
    35    (h) in the case of all projects, the corporation shall state the basis
    36  for its findings.
    37    § 10. This act shall take effect immediately.
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