Public Hearing - February 14, 2024

                                                                       1

 1  BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE SENATE FINANCE
    AND ASSEMBLY WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEES
 2  ------------------------------------------------------

 3          JOINT LEGISLATIVE HEARING

 4             In the Matter of the
            2024-2025 EXECUTIVE BUDGET
 5                  ON HOUSING
    
 6  ------------------------------------------------------

 7                              Hearing Room B
                                Legislative Office Building
 8                              Albany, NY
    
 9                              February 14, 2024
                                12:06 p.m.  
10  

11   PRESIDING:

12           Assemblywoman Helene E. Weinstein
             Chair, Assembly Ways & Means Committee
13  
             Senator Brian Kavanagh
14           Chair, Senate Housing Committee
    
15  PRESENT:

16           Assemblyman Edward P. Ra 
             Assembly Ways & Means Committee (RM)
17  
             Senator Thomas O'Mara
18           Senate Finance Committee (RM)
    
19           Assemblywoman Linda B. Rosenthal 
             Chair, Assembly Housing Committee
20  
             Senator Pamela Helming
21  
             Assemblyman Keith P. Brown
22  
             Senator Rachel May
23  
             Assemblyman Edward C. Braunstein
24  

                                                                   2

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Housing
 2  2-14-24
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4            Senator Julia Salazar
    
 5            Assemblyman Erik M. Dilan
    
 6            Assemblywoman Yudelka Tapia
    
 7            Senator Jabari Brisport
    
 8            Assemblyman Tony Simone
    
 9            Senator Robert Jackson
    
10            Assemblyman Harvey Epstein
    
11            Senator Zellnor Myrie
    
12            Assemblywoman Dr. Anna R. Kelles
    
13            Assemblyman Demond Meeks
    
14            Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal
    
15            Assemblyman Chris Burdick
    
16            Senator Cordell Cleare
    
17            Assemblywoman Grace Lee
    
18            Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon
    
19            Assemblyman Al Taylor
    
20            Senator Jack M. Martins
    
21            Assemblywoman Dana Levenberg
    
22            Assemblyman Brian Manktelow
    
23            Senator Leroy Comrie
    
24            Assemblywoman Marcela Mitaynes
    

                                                                   3

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Housing
 2  2-14-24
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4  
              Assemblywoman Monique Chandler-Waterman
 5  
              Senator George M. Borrello
 6  
              Assemblywoman Nikki Lucas
 7  
              Assemblyman Jeff Gallahan
 8  
    
 9  
    
10  
    
11  
    
12                     LIST OF SPEAKERS
    
13                                       STATEMENT   QUESTIONS
    
14  RuthAnne Visnauskas
    Commissioner & CEO
15  New York State Homes and 
     Community Renewal                       13           20
16  
    
17  
    
18  

19

20

21

22

23

24


                                                                   4

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Housing
 2  2-14-24
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS, Cont.  
    
 4                                       STATEMENT   QUESTIONS
    
 5  Jolie Milstein
    President and CEO
 6  NYS Assn. for Affordable Housing
         -and-
 7  Mark Streb
    Executive Director
 8  Neighborhood Preservation
     Coalition of NYS
 9       -and-
    Erin Burns-Maine
10  Senior Vice President for 
     Policy and Government Affairs
11  Community Preservation Corporation
         -and-
12  William J. Simmons
    President
13  NYS Public Housing Authority
     Directors Association
14       -and-
    Sylvia Morse
15  Policy Program Manager
    Pratt Center for Community 
16   Development
         -on behalf of-
17  Basement Apartments Safe
     for Everyone                              173       190
18  
    
19

20

21

22

23

24


                                                                   5

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Housing
 2  2-14-24
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS, Cont.  
    
 4                                       STATEMENT   QUESTIONS
    
 5  Jacob Inwald
    Director of Litigation-Economic
 6   Justice
    Legal Services NYC 
 7       -and-
    Erica Zimny
 8  Deputy Director
    Legal Services Access Alliance
 9       -and-
    Christie Peale
10  Executive Director and CEO
    Center for NYC Neighborhoods 
11       -and-
    Randy Dillard
12  Tenant Leader
    CASA
13  Steering Committee Member
    Right to Counsel Coalition 
14       -and-
    Michael McKee
15  Treasurer 
    Tenants PAC                               222       238
16  
    
17  
    
18  
    
19

20

21

22

23

24


                                                                   6

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Housing
 2  2-14-24
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS, Cont.  
    
 4                                       STATEMENT   QUESTIONS
    
 5  Megan Wylie
    Director, Government Relations 
 6  New York Building Congress
         -and-
 7  Manny Pastreich
    President
 8  32BJ SEIU                                   
         -and-
 9  Bria Donohue
    Government Affairs Manager
10  American Institute of Architects
     New York
11       -and-
    Rachel Fee
12  Executive Director
    New York Housing Conference
13       -and-
    Annemarie Gray
14  Executive Director
    Open New York                            280       298
15  

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24


                                                                   7

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Housing
 2  2-14-24
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS, Cont.  
    
 4                                       STATEMENT   QUESTIONS
    
 5  Emily Goldstein
    Director of Organizing and
 6   Advocacy
    Association for Neighborhood 
 7   and Housing Development (ANHD)
         -and-
 8  Rashida Taylor
    Project Manager
 9  Interfaith Affordable Housing
     Collaborative and Partnership for
10   Faith-Based Housing and
     Community Development
11       -and-
    Patrick Boyle
12  Senior Director, NY
    Enterprise Community Partners
13       -and-
    Dr. Sandhya Kajeepeta
14  Senior Researcher 
    Thurgood Marshall Institute
15  NAACP Legal Defense and 
    Educational Fund
16       -and-
    Barbara Williams
17  Member
    Community Voices Heard
18       -and-
    Jennifer Hernandez
19  Staff Member
    Make the Road New York                    322     340
20  
    
21

22

23

24


                                                                   8

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Housing
 2  2-14-24
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS, Cont.  
    
 4                                       STATEMENT   QUESTIONS
    
 5  Michael Borges
    Executive Director 
 6  Rural Housing Coalition 
     of New York
 7       -and-
    Lori Bellingham
 8  VP for Community Impact 
    Adirondack Foundation
 9       -and-
    Blair W. Sebastian 
10  Advocate
    New York State Rural Advocates         356        366
11  
    
12  

13  

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24


                                                                   9

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Good afternoon.  

 2           We'll officially start.  I am Helene 

 3           Weinstein, chair of the Assembly's Ways and 

 4           Means Committee, and today we begin the 13th 

 5           and actually the last in a series of hearings 

 6           conducted by the joint fiscal committees of 

 7           the Legislature regarding the Governor's 

 8           proposed budget for fiscal year '24-'25.  

 9                  The hearings are conducted pursuant to 

10           the Constitution and the Legislative Law, and 

11           today the Assembly Ways and Means Committee 

12           and the Senate Finance Committee will hear 

13           testimony concerning the Governor's proposal 

14           for housing.

15                  I will now introduce the members of 

16           the Assembly who are -- Democratic members of 

17           the Assembly who are here, and then 

18           Senator Kavanagh, who is filling in for 

19           Chair Liz Krueger, will introduce his 

20           colleagues.  And then the Minority members 

21           will be introduced.

22                  So we have with us the Housing chair 

23           of the Assembly, Linda Rosenthal; 

24           Assemblyman Braunstein; Assemblyman Burdick; 


                                                                   10

 1           Assemblyman Dilan; Assemblyman Epstein; 

 2           Assemblywoman Simon; Assemblywoman Tapia; 

 3           Assemblyman Simone; Assemblywoman Mitaynes.

 4                  And Senator Kavanagh, if you want to 

 5           introduce your members.

 6                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Again, I'm 

 7           State Senator Brian Kavanagh, filling in as a 

 8           poor substitute for Liz Krueger, our 

 9           Finance chair.

10                  And we're joined on the Majority side 

11           in the Senate by Senators Brad Hoylman; 

12           Zellnor Myrie; Jabari Brisport; and Julia 

13           Salazar.

14                  SENATOR O'MARA:  And --

15                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  And, forgive me, 

16           also Cordell Cleare, who's obscured by the 

17           speaker and sitting by her friend Jo Anne 

18           Simon.

19                  SENATOR O'MARA:  And on our side, I am 

20           Finance Ranker Senator Tom O'Mara.  

21                  We're joined by our Housing ranker, 

22           Senator Pam Helming, and Senator George 

23           Borrello.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman Ra, 


                                                                   11

 1           our ranker on Ways and Means.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  Good 

 3           afternoon.

 4                  We're joined by Assemblyman Keith 

 5           Brown, who is filling in as our ranker on 

 6           Housing for Mr. Fitzpatrick.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So now a few 

 8           ground rules.  

 9                  Shut off your cellphones.

10                  The governmental witness here today, 

11           the commissioner, will have 10 minutes to 

12           present her testimony.

13                  When we go to the panels of 

14           nongovernmental witnesses, each member of 

15           that panel will have three minutes to present 

16           their testimony.  Just remember, three 

17           minutes goes fast.

18                  And we have -- all of your written 

19           testimonies have been submitted and are or 

20           will be posted on both the Senate and 

21           Assembly's websites.  So please don't read 

22           your testimony, just tell us the highlights.  

23                  In terms of questions and answers from 

24           the legislators, for the chairs -- in this 


                                                                   12

 1           case, Senator Kavanagh and Assemblymember 

 2           Rosenthal -- you have 10 minutes to ask 

 3           questions of our Housing commissioner.  Then 

 4           both chairs can get a three-minute second 

 5           round if needed.

 6                  The rankers on the respective 

 7           committees, Housing and Ways and Means, have 

 8           five minutes to ask a question.  And all 

 9           other members of the relevant committee have 

10           three minutes.

11                  And just to remind the legislators, 

12           the time frame is both for the question and 

13           for the answer.  So please be kind to the 

14           people testifying and don't leave them 

15           10 seconds to answer a lengthy question.

16                  So with that -- oh.  Just everybody 

17           keep an eye on the clock -- legislators, 

18           testifiers.  When it's green, you can speak.  

19           When it goes yellow, you still can talk, but 

20           that means you only have a minute left.  And 

21           when it's red, it's time to get up.

22                  And Commissioner, if there are 

23           questions you don't have time to answer, feel 

24           free to -- well, not feel free, but we'd like 


                                                                   13

 1           you to then send written responses to those 

 2           questions to both the chairs of Ways and 

 3           Means and Senate Finance.  

 4                  And with that, with those ground 

 5           rules -- and we may have some additional 

 6           members that will come join us -- I'm very 

 7           happy to welcome the New York State Homes and 

 8           Community Renewal commissioner and CEO, 

 9           RuthAnne Visnauskas.

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Great.  Hi.  

11                  Good afternoon and happy Valentine's 

12           Day, Chairs Weinstein and Senator Kavanagh.  

13           I am RuthAnne Visnauskas, commissioner and 

14           CEO of New York State Homes and Community 

15           Renewal, and it's my pleasure to testify 

16           before you today on Governor Hochul's 2025 

17           Executive Budget and HCR's efforts to address 

18           New York's housing crisis.  

19                  As the Governor has said repeatedly 

20           over the past year, the shortage of housing 

21           is driving up costs and driving people out of 

22           New York State.  And the only thing that will 

23           solve this issue is to increase the supply of 

24           homes.  


                                                                   14

 1                  If we need more proof that we need a 

 2           major housing production boom, we have that 

 3           in the latest Housing and Vacancy Survey, 

 4           which pegs New York City's rental vacancy 

 5           rate at a shocking 1.41 percent, the lowest 

 6           in 56 years.  A healthy vacancy rate is 

 7           considered somewhere between 5 and 8 percent.  

 8           And for asking rents below $2,400, the 

 9           availability of units is at a functional 

10           zero.  

11                  A vacancy rate this low places 

12           enormous pressure on our housing market and 

13           enormous stress on our families.  What is 

14           more disheartening than starting your search 

15           for housing knowing less than 1 percent of 

16           units in New York City are even available to 

17           you?  

18                  This is exactly why enacting the 

19           housing supply elements of Governor Hochul's 

20           2025 budget is more important than ever.  

21                  I like to think we may be poised to 

22           turn the corner, but while the Governor's 

23           100,000-unit Housing Plan is on track, it 

24           cannot, on its own, create the housing that 


                                                                   15

 1           we need in this state.  There is no doubt 

 2           that we still need to generate hundreds of 

 3           thousands of homes over the next decade to 

 4           make up for severe underproduction.  All 

 5           communities and levels of government must be 

 6           part of the solution.  

 7                  We still need significant legislative 

 8           changes to allow for production at scale to 

 9           meet the demand.  That is our mission, and it 

10           will be our legacy for New Yorkers -- for 

11           young people looking to buy a first home, for 

12           families that need room to grow, and for 

13           older New Yorkers who want to remain in 

14           communities they've lived in their entire 

15           lives.  

16                  We're nearing completion of the second 

17           year of the Governor's $25 billion, five-year 

18           Housing Plan, and I'm proud to say that in 

19           the first two years, we are on track to 

20           create and preserve nearly 40,000 affordable 

21           homes.  

22                  A couple of highlights from the past 

23           year.  I'm proud to note that New York was 

24           the first state to gain approval for our plan 


                                                                   16

 1           to spend $450 million in American Recovery 

 2           Act funds, and that we have expended all of 

 3           this federal funding to assist 18,000 

 4           households in stabilizing their homes.  We 

 5           provided $26 million to help 24 land banks 

 6           revitalize communities across the state.  

 7                  We're delivering $50 million in home 

 8           repair funds to targeted communities in every 

 9           part of the state, focusing on communities 

10           with the highest rate of homeownership among 

11           homeowners of color and where there are 

12           significant indicators of housing distress.

13                  We provided $5 million in Main Street 

14           Grants to reinvest in our state's Main 

15           Streets.

16                  For our affordable home ownership 

17           program, we've approved over 500 projected 

18           homes for sale so far.

19                  And lastly, our financing programs 

20           require stringent design and sustainability 

21           guidelines.  And through our Clean Energy 

22           Initiative with NYSERDA, this year we awarded 

23           more than $12 million to 18 different 

24           projects that meet or exceed New York State's 


                                                                   17

 1           climate goals.

 2                  Nearly every New Yorker understands 

 3           the huge effort and fortitude it takes to 

 4           secure a decent, safe and affordable home in 

 5           the neighborhood of their choice.  

 6                  The Pro-Housing Community program, 

 7           launched in 2023, remains a key component to 

 8           this pressing challenge.  Going forward, 

 9           municipalities will now be required to be 

10           certified as pro-housing in order to qualify 

11           for up to $650 million in discretionary 

12           funding, including the Downtown 

13           Revitalization Initiative, the NY Forward 

14           program, and our own New York Main Street 

15           program.

16                  To further efforts to increase housing 

17           supply, the Governor's budget proposes 

18           $500 million over two years to assist state 

19           agencies in repurposing their properties for 

20           housing.  

21                  New York City, given its dangerously 

22           low vacancy rate and the critical importance 

23           of maintaining its status and its 

24           world-leading role as an economic driver and 


                                                                   18

 1           a center for creativity, has a real starring 

 2           role in the budget this year.  Legislation to 

 3           increase the housing supply in New York City 

 4           includes a new tax incentive for the 

 5           development of rental housing, an extension 

 6           of the deadline for developments that were 

 7           vested in the prior tax incentive program, 

 8           authority for the city to lift outdated 

 9           residential density restrictions, a tax 

10           incentive to encourage affordable housing in 

11           office conversions, and a path towards 

12           legalizing existing basement and cellar 

13           apartments.  

14                  Through it all, we must keep pushing 

15           back on discriminatory practices on the part 

16           of industries and landlords.  We will 

17           continue to aggressively enforce the state 

18           and federal Fair Housing laws.  New Yorkers 

19           deserve that respect and protection.  

20                  Further, the Governor's plan proposes 

21           legislation to increase protections for 

22           affordable housing providers by prohibiting 

23           insurance carriers from raising premiums or 

24           denying coverage based on tenant source of 


                                                                   19

 1           income, the existence of affordable housing 

 2           units, or if the building's residents are in 

 3           receipt of government assistance.  When these 

 4           costs go up, they increase the cost of 

 5           operating housing.

 6                  Finally, the Governor has proposed 

 7           legislation to protect homeowners by creating 

 8           a clear definition of the crime of deed 

 9           theft, to enhance enforcement and other 

10           measures to prevent against this terrible 

11           crime.  

12                  I've traveled from one end of New York 

13           to the other this past year, attending 

14           meetings, taking tours, officiating at 

15           ribbon-cuttings and ground-breakings.  In 

16           Schenectady I helped cut the ribbon on 

17           Northside Village, a newly redeveloped public 

18           housing complex that will provide 300 modern, 

19           affordable and energy-efficient homes.  And I 

20           was thrilled to celebrate the opening of 55 

21           new apartments at The Green at Garvies Point 

22           in Glen Cove, on Long Island's North Shore.

23                  But whatever the location or type of 

24           development, I'm always deeply moved by the 


                                                                   20

 1           incredible impact that getting a permanent, 

 2           safe home has on New York's individuals and 

 3           families.  There is no substitute for that 

 4           experience.  And what remains abundantly 

 5           clear is that the state's housing crisis will 

 6           only be remedied with bold and creative 

 7           solutions that significantly increase our 

 8           supply and thereby drive down prices.

 9                  The urgency of this housing crisis 

10           demands action.  The Governor's initiatives, 

11           as expressed in her Executive Budget, 

12           encompass our idea for meeting the housing 

13           needs for all New Yorkers, and with your help 

14           I know we will meet this challenge head on.

15                  Thank you, and I'm ready to take your 

16           questions. 

17                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

18                  We go first to the Assembly Housing 

19           chair, Assemblywoman Rosenthal.  

20                  I just want to acknowledge we've been 

21           joined by Assemblywoman Lee and 

22           Assemblyman Braunstein and 

23           Assemblyman Gallahan.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Thank you, 


                                                                   21

 1           Chair Weinstein.  

 2                  It's good to see everyone.  And hello, 

 3           Commissioner.  And hello, out there to 

 4           everybody in the audience for tuning in to 

 5           this most important hearing -- the last, but 

 6           the most important, because it concerns 

 7           housing.

 8                  So, Commissioner, I have a number of 

 9           different questions.  My first question would 

10           be -- last year the Governor put no money in 

11           for HOPP funding, which you know is used 

12           throughout the state and helps keep tenants 

13           in their homes and helps homeowners stay in 

14           their homes.  Yet there's no funding this 

15           year in the budget again.  

16                  Can you explain why?  

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.  Last 

18           year it was a legislative add, and we would 

19           look forward to working with the Legislature 

20           on that this year as well.  

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  So the 

22           Legislature has to put it in, not the 

23           Governor.  Even though I think you have cited 

24           and the Governor has said how important these 


                                                                   22

 1           kinds of funds are.

 2                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes, we look 

 3           forward to working with you to put that in 

 4           the budget.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  (Laughing.) 

 6           Okay.  So we all know about the housing 

 7           crisis.  And right now there's not enough 

 8           housing of any type, but there's not enough 

 9           housing for people who make -- who are 

10           low-income earners or even middle-income 

11           earners.  

12                  So can you tell me over the past 

13           10 years how much affordable housing has been 

14           created through the 421-a program?  And, if 

15           you know, at what income bands.

16                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I believe 

17           the stat that's generally been used, you 

18           know, in sort of research and press articles 

19           is that between 2010 and 2020, about 

20           70,000 units of housing were produced through 

21           the program in New York City.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Okay.  And 

23           are they all still affordable?  Some of them 

24           will expire, no?  


                                                                   23

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Those 

 2           were between 2010 and 2020.  I believe those 

 3           would all still be affordable.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Okay, can 

 5           you explain why -- and I know this is not 

 6           you, but we've heard from developers they're 

 7           just not building.  And why do you think that 

 8           is?  

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Well, as you 

10           know, that program has expired and it's a 

11           sort of quick --

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  They're not 

13           building anything.

14                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Right, 

15           including rental housing.  And I think with 

16           the absence of that tax exemption, the 

17           finances of the rental projects, given the 

18           property tax structure in New York City, 

19           doesn't sort of pencil or make economic 

20           sense.  

21                  So you're right, you've seen a 

22           decrease in the production of new rental 

23           housing since the expiration of the program.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  So you think 


                                                                   24

 1           that absent a tax incentive there will be no 

 2           building?  

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I believe 

 4           the stat is that 70 percent of the units 

 5           produced between 2010 and 2020 utilized 

 6           421-a.  So yes, I think in the absence of 

 7           that exemption you would see a significant 

 8           decrease in production.  

 9                  And we see that now in the permit 

10           data, right?  There's permit data that is out 

11           for 2023 that shows a significant drop in 

12           permits last year.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Okay.  

14                  The Governor talks a lot about 

15           pro-housing community, but there are scant 

16           details in the budget about what that means.  

17           And I wonder if you'd explain that.

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.  

19                  The Pro-Housing Communities program 

20           was launched last July -- announced last July 

21           by the Governor.  And we at HCR opened up the 

22           program in September.  And localities can 

23           apply, there's sort of three steps to apply 

24           to get certified.  


                                                                   25

 1                  And as proposed in the budget this 

 2           year, the certification would be a 

 3           prerequisite for a series of state funding 

 4           programs that go to municipalities.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  But that's 

 6           vague.  I mean, can you explain more?  

 7           Because I've had a lot of people ask me what 

 8           does it mean, and nobody can figure it out 

 9           because the details are so sparse.

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.  Is 

11           there anything specifically you'd want me to 

12           cover?

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  No, no, no.  

14           Just -- there's not much info there.

15                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.  

16                  So there's three ways that you apply.  

17           You submit us a letter of intent.  You submit 

18           us your zoning code and your building permit 

19           data.  And then you either, through your 

20           building permits, reflect that you have 

21           either grown -- which is the third way to get 

22           certified, the sort of third piece -- and if 

23           you haven't grown, then we would ask that you 

24           pass a resolution locally that has a series 


                                                                   26

 1           of sort of pro-housing statements in it about 

 2           reducing regulation to housing, wanting to 

 3           grow your housing stock, that type of thing.  

 4                  Those are the sort of three steps a 

 5           community has to take to get certified.  

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  So have any 

 7           localities been certified so far?  

 8                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.  Twenty 

 9           have been certified so far, and we have about 

10           hundred other localities that we're working 

11           with in the process.  

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Okay.  So 

13           Mitchell-Lama is one of the most successful 

14           programs, yet many developments are -- well, 

15           in my opinion, not supervised properly, and 

16           many projects are trying to get out of deep 

17           holes because they can't keep up with 

18           repairs, et cetera.  

19                  I notice there's no money -- it's once 

20           again an Assembly and Senate add for 

21           Mitchell-Lama funding.

22                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So we had 

23           funding in the Housing Plan for 

24           Mitchell-Lamas.  We -- in the course of the 


                                                                   27

 1           last Housing Plan, we had a series of 

 2           legislative adds.  We have actually just 

 3           finished spending those down, so we haven't 

 4           touched any of the $150 million that's in the 

 5           second Housing Plan.  We haven't spent any of 

 6           that yet, so we didn't feel that we needed 

 7           any additional funding this year for 

 8           Mitchell-Lamas since we haven't spent any of 

 9           that funding yet.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  The previous 

11           421-a program, has HCR identified any 

12           particular areas of concern that need to be 

13           fixed or adjusted should there be another 

14           421-a-type plan?  

15                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I would say 

16           that in the proposal from last year, and sort 

17           of consistent to this year, there are some 

18           changes around reporting.  There are changes 

19           around affordability.  There were obviously 

20           parts of the program that people didn't feel 

21           were affordable enough, and so some changes 

22           to those.  

23                  So yes, I would say that I think 

24           there's -- has been and sort of continues to 


                                                                   28

 1           be proposals out there for modifications to 

 2           the program in order for it to be reenacted.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Do you think 

 4           that commercial conversions should include 

 5           affordable housing, and how much?

 6                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So the 

 7           Governor has proposed a tax exemption for 

 8           commercial conversions in the City of 

 9           New York that would create affordable housing 

10           in them.  So yes, we certainly do agree with 

11           that.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  But what 

13           percentage of these buildings?  

14                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  It's -- as 

15           proposed, 20 percent.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  And do you 

17           think that's enough?  

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I think that 

19           commercial conversions are challenging.  

20           Right?  All the buildings are very different.  

21           And what it takes to convert them from a 

22           commercial building to residential, I think 

23           the economics can be hard for those buildings 

24           to be sort of economically viable.  


                                                                   29

 1                  So we felt that that was a good 

 2           proposal.  But as I said, it's -- it's a -- 

 3           because all the buildings are so different, 

 4           it's a hard thing to model sort of the 

 5           finances of those buildings.  

 6                  But yes, we felt comfortable with 

 7           20 percent.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  So the 

 9           vacancy rate and the number of apartments 

10           registered with ORA has dropped.  In '23 

11           there were 996,600 rent-stabilized units.  

12           And what are -- how many are there now?  

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Well, the 

14           registrations come in on a rolling basis, so 

15           that number changes, you know, sort of week 

16           by week and month by month as people continue 

17           to register.  I don't have the current number 

18           off the top of my head.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  But there 

20           are fewer vacant than there were -- 

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Oh, yes.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  And why is 

23           that?

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Our -- I 


                                                                   30

 1           mean, we believe that the spike that we saw 

 2           two years ago was due to the pandemic, and we 

 3           are back to historic norms for vacancy in the 

 4           system.  And this is apartments that are 

 5           vacant as of April 1st each year.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Okay.  Can 

 7           you tell me how much -- of the $4.5 billion 

 8           five-year Housing Plan, how much of the money 

 9           has been spent?  

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We can give 

11           you sort of a breakdown probably program by 

12           program.  

13                  When we laid it out initially, we 

14           assumed that we would spend, you know, sort 

15           of on average about 20 percent of it each 

16           year.  But some of our programs, especially 

17           when they're new -- like, for example, our 

18           homeownership program we started last year, 

19           we didn't spend any of that money last year.  

20           We are starting to spend that this year, so 

21           some of it has lagged.

22                  But we can get you a 

23           program-by-program spend.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Okay.  How 


                                                                   31

 1           long are PARs taking to deal with?  Because I 

 2           have some constituents waiting two years for 

 3           any kind of decision from HCR, which puts 

 4           them in a funny position.

 5                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah.  So I 

 6           guess I would say in the case of PARs, they 

 7           are all different, right, because they're 

 8           very fact-specific and case-specific.  

 9                  I don't know what our sort of average 

10           time is by type, but we'd be -- we'd be happy 

11           to circle back with you if there's specific 

12           types that you're -- if you want to know how 

13           long the PARs are taking, we can follow up.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Okay.

15                  How many people are employed in the 

16           Tenant Protection Unit?  

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We have 25 

18           current employees.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  And are 

20           there allocations for more?  

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.  We're 

22           currently hiring.  As you recall from the 

23           budget last year, we expanded up into the 

24           Hudson Valley.  And so we are still doing 


                                                                   32

 1           some recruiting to get staff to work in that 

 2           part of the state.  

 3                  But we are actively looking for 

 4           people.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  So in terms 

 6           of keeping tenants in their homes and 

 7           providing advice to homeowners, there are 

 8           NPPs and RPPs that the Governor cut the 

 9           funding and the Legislature added millions of 

10           dollars.  

11                  Isn't it worthwhile to fund that?  Why 

12           didn't the Governor fund that?

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  The program 

14           is back funded at its traditional sort of 

15           base amount.  And we will continue to 

16           administer those contracts as funded in the 

17           budget process.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  I know you 

19           will, but why wasn't the -- why weren't these 

20           programs important enough for the Governor to 

21           fund?  Because they are clearly successful; 

22           they are oversubscribed.  And they need a lot 

23           more money to keep people in their homes.

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I think we 


                                                                   33

 1           would look forward to working with the 

 2           Legislature if you want to add additional 

 3           funding to those programs.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 6                  To the Senate.

 7                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Thank you.  

 8                  It's good to see you here, and 

 9           Team HCR.  I think we have some 

10           representatives from the Governor's office 

11           here as well.

12                  Just a few questions about some of the 

13           funding items that were included last year 

14           and again, as you noted in the prior 

15           testimony, partly as a response to some 

16           legislative adds.

17                  But the -- there's $50 million in -- 

18           in multiple -- most years we've added money 

19           for Mitchell-Lama assistance in capital, on 

20           the capital side.  Last year there was 

21           $50 million.  This year there's nothing in 

22           the Executive Budget for that.  

23                  Can you just talk about the status of 

24           past capital allocations for Mitchell-Lamas 


                                                                   34

 1           and sort of whether you have money on hand or 

 2           whether -- how much of an additional need 

 3           there might be for that?

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.  As I 

 5           had mentioned, we -- in the course of the 

 6           first Housing Plan we started with I think it 

 7           was 125 or $150 million, and then we got a 

 8           series of legislative adds -- 100, 125, 25.  

 9           And so we -- and then we started the second 

10           Housing Plan two years ago with 150.

11                  So we have actually, in the last year 

12           or two, still been spending down the money 

13           from the first Housing Plan, spending down 

14           those legislative adds.  So at this point we 

15           haven't actually touched a dollar of the new 

16           Housing Plan, 150 million.  

17                  So we will begin this year to spend 

18           that down.  And, you know, certainly we'll 

19           continue to spend as needed.  And if we need 

20           additional funds, we will come back and ask 

21           for that.

22                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  And how many 

23           projects have been funded through that -- 

24           Mitchell-Lama projects have been funded 


                                                                   35

 1           through that in the past?  

 2                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We 

 3           haven't -- I don't have a specific number on 

 4           that, but we can get you a list of everything 

 5           we've financed.  

 6                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Both the number and 

 7           a list of projects.

 8                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah, 

 9           absolutely.

10                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  I appreciate it.

11                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.

12                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  And just -- I'll 

13           just say I share my colleague Linda 

14           Rosenthal's concern about the lack of funding 

15           for HOPP and reductions in Neighborhood and 

16           Rural Preservation Programs and also 

17           something that isn't directly in your 

18           bailiwick, but the reduction in funding for 

19           legal services for people facing eviction.  

20           And again, that I assume will be a subject of 

21           negotiations in the next month or so.

22                  I want to talk a little bit more in 

23           detail about the Pro-Housing program.  So you 

24           said you've received a total of about 


                                                                   36

 1           120 applications and about 20 have been 

 2           approved so far.  Have any been rejected?

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  No, no one's 

 4           been rejected.

 5                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Okay.  Is there a 

 6           deadline by which people need to apply if 

 7           they want to receive --

 8                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So we didn't 

 9           start the program with a deadline because we 

10           didn't feel that we were -- you know, we 

11           wanted people to take their time and, if they 

12           have to go through to pass a resolution, to 

13           have the time to do that.  

14                  I think there's certainly -- everybody 

15           loves, you know, a deadline.  It does get 

16           people to take action.  But I think at this 

17           point, given that we have a hundred 

18           communities that we're working with, I don't 

19           think we feel the need to impose a deadline, 

20           and we'll just keep working with those 

21           communities to get them through the process.  

22                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Okay.  And is 

23           Pro-Housing certification sort of a permanent 

24           status?  Does it expire?  Does it need to be 


                                                                   37

 1           renewed?  

 2                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So one of 

 3           the key parts of this that, you know, may not 

 4           be so obvious in sort of the three-step 

 5           process, is submission of data.  And so we 

 6           are working to get that data up into a 

 7           statewide database so there's more 

 8           transparency about zoning and also about 

 9           building permits across the state.  

10                  So localities will have to submit us 

11           permit data every year to maintain their 

12           status, and we will then keep that in this 

13           sort of transparent database so that we can 

14           see housing growth over the state across 

15           time.

16                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:   So in principle, 

17           if a locality failed to provide data -- you 

18           know, maybe there could be some change in the 

19           political control or administration of a 

20           locality -- if they chose not to continue to 

21           submit data, at some point they would cease 

22           to be considered Pro-Housing for these 

23           programs.  

24                  So this is a program, as you noted, 


                                                                   38

 1           that was created by kind of executive action 

 2           during the summer.  We have heard questions 

 3           about the legal authority to make -- to 

 4           condition these existing programs on 

 5           pro-housing certification.  

 6                  Can you just talk about how the 

 7           programs that are the subject of this were 

 8           selected and kind of what the legal authority 

 9           is to do that?

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.  

11                  We were looking at discretionary state 

12           funding programs, so not things that go by 

13           formula or like federal pass-throughs.  So we 

14           were looking at discretionary programs that 

15           municipalities apply for, because this is a 

16           municipality-based program, not sort of 

17           project-specific, unlike other things that we 

18           fund at the state.

19                  So we looked at a series of programs, 

20           the ones that are sort of outlined in the 

21           budget include DRI and NY Forward as well as 

22           one at DOT, and selected a series of programs 

23           that we thought made sense and were important 

24           and we feel that the language in the budget 


                                                                   39

 1           give us the legal authority to do the 

 2           conditioning.

 3                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  And the language in 

 4           the budget applies to some of the programs 

 5           but not others, is that right? 

 6                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Only the 

 7           ones that had reappropriation language that 

 8           actually went into the budget.  But we can 

 9           still do it on the others, they just didn't 

10           have reappropriation language.

11                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  I see.  So the 

12           budget seeks authority to condition those for 

13           those specific programs but not for -- the -- 

14           the deciding factor on whether that language 

15           included in the budget is whether those 

16           programs would otherwise have been mentioned?  

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Were 

18           otherwise in the budget for appropriation, 

19           yeah.

20                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Okay.  I think 

21           probably some clarity in that would be 

22           useful.

23                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Okay.

24                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  The RUSH program -- 


                                                                   40

 1           and I'm going to resist jokes about these 

 2           rock-and-roll bands from Canada, but -- 

 3           although -- because I've gotten them out of 

 4           my system in the last couple of weeks.  

 5                  But just there are three sites chosen 

 6           that are specifically mentioned in the budget 

 7           documents, but there's been talk about other 

 8           sites that might -- that the Governor has 

 9           talked publicly about:  A former prison in 

10           Dutchess County, Creedmoor in Queens.  

11           There's been talk generally about MTA sites 

12           that might be appropriate for conversion to 

13           housing.  

14                  Can you just talk about the choice of 

15           the three sites that are mentioned and kind 

16           of what the sort of potential future of this 

17           program is over the coming year?  

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.  

19                  As you may recall, in July when the 

20           Governor did the EO announcements, part and 

21           parcel to that was sort of a call to the 

22           agencies around public sites and her effort 

23           to, you know, make sure she's contributing to 

24           the overall housing supply needs in every way 


                                                                   41

 1           that she can.  

 2                  So there has been a very robust effort 

 3           with the agencies to look through sites that 

 4           can be made available for housing.  The sites 

 5           are not finalized, but there are -- we have 

 6           been looking, as you mentioned, at MTA sites, 

 7           at SUNY sites, at state prisons and other 

 8           state facilities.  And then the funding is 

 9           there to pay for infrastructure that's needed 

10           to make those sites developable.

11                  The couple of cites that you mentioned 

12           that are in the budget language this year are 

13           the ones that needed some technical changes 

14           to their statutory language in order to be 

15           able to facilitate the development of housing 

16           there.  But that's primarily why they're 

17           mentioned, because they needed legislative 

18           changes.

19                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  And you and I had 

20           the opportunity to have this conversation 

21           offline, but there's a $250 million 

22           allocation for this program.  If my 

23           understanding is correct, that's not 

24           necessarily earmarked for these three 


                                                                   42

 1           specific sites, it's for a broader program to 

 2           reuse state sites.  

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Correct.  

 4           It's to get at the overall 15,000 units that 

 5           we are hoping to produce on state-owned 

 6           sites.

 7                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Okay.  And could 

 8           the administration provide additional -- you 

 9           know, a list of potential sites that -- I 

10           think it would just be helpful in considering 

11           an allocation if we actually knew where we 

12           might be -- you know, might be considering 

13           doing the work.

14                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I'm sure we 

15           can get back to you on that.  We have a -- as 

16           I said, there is not a final list of sites.  

17           We are sort of working through -- there's a 

18           lot of state-owned sites to be -- 

19                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  It will probably 

20           never be final, but yeah.  

21                  I mean, I think people were surprised 

22           that there are SUNY sites but only in 

23           Suffolk County, when obviously SUNY has a lot 

24           of land in a lot of other places.  And the 


                                                                   43

 1           same with the MTA.

 2                  And there's no -- there's not much 

 3           language in here about what would happen at 

 4           the sites that are enumerated.  There's talk 

 5           about housing with respect to a DOT site that 

 6           says "Uses approved by the DOT commissioner."  

 7           I think the commissioner in that reference is 

 8           the DOT commissioner, not you.

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I believe 

10           so.

11                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Is there a point 

12           where we flesh out -- I mean, will there be 

13           affordability requirements, will there be 

14           other -- I mean, it's very vague for a 

15           quarter-billion-dollar allocation at this 

16           point.

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes, I guess 

18           I would say a couple of things.

19                  One is we felt it was important to 

20           make sure we had funds so we could know that 

21           we could move forward on sites that actually 

22           need infrastructure improvements to make them 

23           sort of ready to be developed for housing.

24                  I would say that we have found, in 


                                                                   44

 1           working in partnership with ESD, that sort of 

 2           conditions are different on all the sites and 

 3           in all the communities in terms of what gets 

 4           produced.  So I don't think there's sort of a 

 5           single answer for what kind of housing we 

 6           would expect in any of these sites.  I think 

 7           it's going to be a conversation, you know, in 

 8           the local communities about what's -- about 

 9           what gets built.

10                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  But just in the 

11           course of budget negotiations, do you think 

12           the administration would be willing to have a 

13           negotiation about what the sort of parameters 

14           of this are going to be before we --   

15                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I don't 

16           generally sit at those negotiating tables, 

17           Senator, but I suspect those questions will 

18           come up.

19                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  We'll have you 

20           appear as a special guest, a star at those 

21           tables.  

22                  The -- oh, just one more question 

23           about that.  The DOT proposal is quite 

24           specific, as there are subparts -- there's 


                                                                   45

 1           Subpart C, which is eligible for conveyance 

 2           and Subparts A and B are for ground lease 

 3           only.  Do you have a sense of how that 

 4           proposal is structured and why?  

 5                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I believe -- 

 6           I'm not totally sure which subparts are 

 7           which, but that the language is there to 

 8           provide flexibility in how disposition can 

 9           happen, whether that's a real property 

10           transfer versus a subleasing of a portion of 

11           a larger site.  

12                  So I think that language is getting at 

13           that, but we can follow up with you on more 

14           specifics.

15                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Okay.  And just one 

16           more question about this.  

17                  The $250 million, the capital goes 

18           through the Empire State Development 

19           Corporation rather than the housing agency.  

20           Is there -- I mean, understanding that ESD 

21           might be helping structure the property 

22           transactions and other things, but why would 

23           we give another agency $250 million rather 

24           than providing it -- you know, you're 


                                                                   46

 1           managing billions of dollars in capital to 

 2           provide housing.  Why wouldn't you be the 

 3           appropriate agency to manage that as well?  

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So it's not 

 5           a subsidy for housing, it is funding to pay 

 6           for roads and water and sewer or to do 

 7           demolition on buildings or other types of 

 8           work that isn't generally things that we 

 9           would pay for through our typical programs.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

11                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Thank you.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

13                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Can I just -- we 

14           also -- just to note, we've also been joined 

15           by Senator Robert Jackson.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

17                  And on the Assembly side, we've been 

18           joined by Assemblymembers Levenberg, Lucas 

19           and Kelles.

20                  And we go to the ranker on Housing -- 

21           well, the substitute ranker on Housing, 

22           Assemblyman Keith Brown, for five minutes.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  I'm going to 

24           do my best job impersonating Mike 


                                                                   47

 1           Fitzpatrick.  So --

 2                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Just quickly, we've 

 3           been joined on our side by Senator Jack 

 4           Martins.  Thank you.  

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Good 

 6           afternoon, Commissioner.  How are you today?

 7                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Good, thank 

 8           you.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  In your 

10           opening -- I only have five minutes, so I'm 

11           going to ask a lot of quick questions, and if 

12           you'd keep your answers as short as possible.  

13                  So in your opening you mentioned that 

14           housing was driving up costs and driving 

15           people out of New York State.  I would just 

16           add a qualifier to that, that I also believe 

17           it's high taxes and the high cost of living 

18           that go along with that.

19                  With regard to the repurposing of real 

20           property at SUNY campuses -- namely, 

21           Farmingdale and Stony Brook on Long Island -- 

22           you mentioned you'll be working in 

23           conjunction with ESD.  And it was kind of 

24           vague in terms of what type of housing uses 


                                                                   48

 1           would be -- that you anticipate building 

 2           there, and how many units will be there and 

 3           who will be eligible to live at those 

 4           locations.  

 5                  Have there been any discussions with 

 6           you and ESD about that?  And have you had any 

 7           discussions with the supervisor of either 

 8           Huntington or the Township of Southampton, 

 9           where they're located?  

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I think the 

11           idea with the state sites generally is that 

12           there are going to be conversations at the 

13           local level about what gets built there.  So 

14           there is no sort of master plan for the sites 

15           already about what's getting built in each 

16           place.  This is just the beginning of a 

17           longer process.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Along those 

19           lines, my understanding is President Nadler 

20           of SUNY Farmingdale has asked for housing 

21           specifically for staff and for professors.  

22           So is that the idea of building the housing 

23           there, or is it for some workforce housing or 

24           affordable housing of some type?


                                                                   49

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I admit I 

 2           was not involved in any conversations with 

 3           the chancellor there and what they're looking 

 4           for, so I wouldn't be able to speak to that.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Okay.  And 

 6           then I saw somewhere in the budget it 

 7           indicated eliminating SEQR review from some 

 8           of these housing proposals.  Is it related to 

 9           the SUNY property itself?  

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I'd have to 

11           get back to you on that.  I'm not sure that 

12           there is any SUNY-specific SEQR changes.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Well, some 

14           elimination of SEQR review was in the budget 

15           somewhere related to housing.  And if you 

16           could get back to me and --

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  -- find out 

19           where that is, that would be important for us 

20           to know.

21                  Just in general, with the last 

22           question on this topic, how would any 

23           affordable housing or workforce housing -- 

24           how would they mix with the student 


                                                                   50

 1           population that are located on those 

 2           campuses?  Or would they be allowed to mix?  

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I think 

 4           there have been some successful examples 

 5           actually on some other SUNY campuses where 

 6           they have built senior housing, for example, 

 7           or other types of housing.  

 8                  I mean, they're not building it sort 

 9           of in the middle of their campus, right?  

10           These campuses tend to be quite large and 

11           have parcels that are sort of far away from 

12           the sort of the central hub of the campus.  

13           So I think this -- I don't think these are 

14           intended to be housing units that are sort of 

15           built in the middle of the campuses as much 

16           as utilizing the land that they have 

17           available.  

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Okay.  And a 

19           question that Senator Mattera had asked me to 

20           ask.  

21                  Relative to Southampton, has there 

22           been any discussion about possibly building a 

23           hospital on the Southampton campus?  

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I'm not 


                                                                   51

 1           aware of those discussions.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Okay.  

 3           Switching gears to Pro-Housing Community 

 4           designation, there's no mention anywhere of 

 5           transit-oriented development housing.  Was 

 6           that on purpose, or is more to come?

 7                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We would be 

 8           delighted for localities to, you know, rezone 

 9           around their transit hubs for residential 

10           density.  It's certainly something we've been 

11           talking about for the last year.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Right.  And 

13           interestingly, when it comes to this, this 

14           was by Executive Order of the Governor No. 30 

15           in July.  But there was supposed to be some 

16           language mandating -- but it's not listed in 

17           the program -- that would require the 

18           certification that would -- it had to be in 

19           place in order to receive those funds, such 

20           as DRI and Main Street money, et cetera.

21                  So it's not in this budget.  Do you -- 

22           is there going to be an amendment that comes 

23           out later on?

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  No, there is 


                                                                   52

 1           language in the budget that says these funds 

 2           may be conditioned upon certification of the 

 3           Pro-Housing -- 

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  May be 

 5           conditioned, but not mandatory.

 6                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I believe 

 7           that language allows us to make it a 

 8           requirement.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Okay.  So -- 

10           and then what about municipalities that 

11           received DR money already?  Are they 

12           grandfathered in?  Is it going to become 

13           effective in Round 8?

14                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  It would be 

15           for the prospective rounds.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Okay.  And 

17           then I took a look at the resolution just in 

18           case some of my municipalities want to adopt 

19           it, and the language is pretty vague.  Right?  

20           It's kind of aspirational, not mandatory.  

21                  So again, my question related to 

22           eliminating SEQR.  But the one question I had 

23           was No. 4 it says "increasing development 

24           capacity for residential uses."  Could you 


                                                                   53

 1           explain what was meant by that?  Because 

 2           that's a little vague.

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I think it 

 4           depends on the locality.  That can mean 

 5           different things.  But for some places, that 

 6           could be investments in something like water 

 7           and sewer and roads, and in other places it 

 8           could be schools.  I think it's making sure 

 9           that localities are investing in being able 

10           to accommodate additional housing growth in 

11           ways beyond just the housing.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Okay.  I 

13           have 20 seconds left.  

14                  So Blue Buffers Buyout Program.  We 

15           have a couple of peninsulas in my district, 

16           Asharoken being one of them.  How would 

17           homeowners' purchase price be related to fair 

18           market value?  And then how would it relate 

19           to the tax rolls?  Would the tax rolls be 

20           based on vacant value?

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We'd be 

22           happy to follow up with you.  That's a rather 

23           detailed question for five seconds.  

24                  But we have had a program like this in 


                                                                   54

 1           the Governor's Office of Storm Recovery, and 

 2           so we can talk through how those programs 

 3           worked in the past and how we're thinking 

 4           about it going forward.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Thank you 

 6           very much.

 7                  Thank you, Chair.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 9                  To the Senate.

10                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  {Mic off; 

11           inaudible.}

12                  SENATOR HELMING:  Thank you, 

13           Senator Kavanagh.

14                  Thank you, Commissioner, for your 

15           testimony.  

16                  I also want to thank you because your 

17           office and you personally are always 

18           available and ready to answer questions, so I 

19           really appreciate that.

20                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Thanks.

21                  SENATOR HELMING:  The most recent time 

22           I think we spoke was back in July surrounding 

23           the flooding incident that occurred 

24           throughout the state.  But in my district in 


                                                                   55

 1           Ontario County -- again, I appreciate the 

 2           responsiveness.  Unfortunately, some of the 

 3           response we got about how can we assist 

 4           homeowners who are impacted or renters who 

 5           are impacted by the flooding, their homes 

 6           were devastated, it took a long time for the 

 7           Governor to come out with an announcement 

 8           that there will be funding available.  

 9                  And then, unfortunately, most of my 

10           residents didn't qualify.  It was the 

11           Emergency Homeowner Assistance program.  And 

12           there was discussion at that time that we 

13           need the language, work with the feds to get 

14           the criteria changed.

15                  Has there been any progress?

16                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I don't 

17           think we've had a lot of progress with the 

18           federal government changing their process and 

19           standards.

20                  SENATOR HELMING:  Is there anything 

21           in -- realizing this is going to be a problem 

22           that continues, is there anything in the HCR 

23           portion of the budget that would allow us to 

24           be more responsive and to help more people?


                                                                   56

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.  So we 

 2           put $40 million in the budget this year in a 

 3           program called Resilient and Ready -- I might 

 4           have flipped the words, it might be -- but 

 5           it's called something like Resilient and 

 6           Ready.  

 7                  And the idea there is to be able to 

 8           make both proactive investments and 

 9           resiliencies -- so getting people to put 

10           their mechanicals above-grade or working with 

11           putting in basement vents, the types of 

12           things that people often need in their homes 

13           before a flood happens.

14                  So we are really looking forward to 

15           that rolling out and being available.

16                  SENATOR HELMING:  I'm going to move 

17           on.  I -- so many questions, so little time.

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sorry.  

19           That's okay, yeah.

20                  SENATOR HELMING:  But just moving on 

21           to rent-stabilized apartments.  I've seen so 

22           many examples of apartments that are in poor 

23           condition, and the reason boils down to 

24           because the monthly rent isn't enough -- 


                                                                   57

 1           doesn't generate enough revenue for the 

 2           landlord to afford investment in revitalizing 

 3           these units.  

 4                  I know this personally.  I live in 

 5           what I lovingly refer to as the Great White 

 6           Money Pit, an older home that the cost in 

 7           repairs, maintenance is just out of control.  

 8                  And what I've witnessed seems to be 

 9           supported by HCR's annual report on 

10           rent-regulated housing.  These reports 

11           suggest there's been a dramatic drop-off in 

12           total dollar value of major capital 

13           improvements applied for and granted to 

14           owners of multiple dwellings over the last 

15           five years.

16                  What are we doing to address that?

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We have seen 

18           certainly a drop in applications of different 

19           types in the overall rent-stabilized stock.  

20                  And certainly I have read, you know, 

21           articles similar to how you mentioned about 

22           apartments needing large amounts of 

23           investment.

24                  You know, we have a series of programs 


                                                                   58

 1           that we have available at HCR that property 

 2           owners can access in order to make capital 

 3           investments into their properties for roofs 

 4           and boilers and windows and those types of 

 5           investments.  And we always encourage owners 

 6           of rent-stabilized properties to come take 

 7           advantage of those.

 8                  So, you know, we will continue to do 

 9           that.  And obviously if there are specific 

10           owners that are in need or buildings in need, 

11           we're happy to work with them directly.

12                  SENATOR HELMING:  Thank you. 

13                  And I'll just add that, you know, the 

14           incredible burden of putting more and more 

15           regulations on people -- the fact that we pay 

16           some of the highest property taxes in the 

17           state -- none of that is happening.  And I 

18           hope that we're considering that when we look 

19           at policies, when we look at programs.  

20                  Real quick, in the proposed budget the 

21           Governor is advocating for taking money away 

22           from various housing programs.  We heard 

23           about HOPP, we heard about Rural 

24           Preservation.  But programs that have been 


                                                                   59

 1           affected in my district also include the land 

 2           banks.  We had extensive conversations about 

 3           this in the past.  Is it true that 

 4           $10 million is being removed from land banks?

 5                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  No.  I 

 6           believe there was a legislative add last year 

 7           that just didn't get renewed.  

 8                  But we still have over $20 million of 

 9           land bank money that --

10                  SENATOR HELMING:  Not enough.

11                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  -- that we 

12           will spend this year, so.

13                  SENATOR HELMING:  We need more.

14                  Some of my colleagues touched on this.  

15           Part P of ELFA allows the repurposing of 

16           properties owned by SUNY and DOT.  Are these 

17           properties going to be used for residential 

18           purposes?

19                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.  The 

20           idea is to utilize properties for 

21           residential --

22                  SENATOR HELMING:  Thank you.  And will 

23           the state have to conform to local zoning 

24           codes with those properties?


                                                                   60

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I think in 

 2           the case of SUNY -- we could follow-up with 

 3           you specifically on those sites.  I don't 

 4           know their zoning well enough to answer that.

 5                  SENATOR HELMING:  I appreciate that.

 6                  But again, it seems like the Governor 

 7           tries to strip away local decision-making, 

 8           and I would hate -- I would not support that 

 9           on the SUNY campuses or state-owned 

10           properties.

11                  Really quick -- I only have a couple 

12           of seconds, but I need to put in a plug on 

13           this Pro-Housing certification.  Look, my 

14           rural communities are struggling.  The 

15           counties got stripped of their EFMAP funding, 

16           millions and millions of dollars, last year.  

17           They don't have money -- unless they raise 

18           property taxes -- to put into wastewater 

19           treatments, water treatment plants, sewer 

20           infrastructure, public drinking water.  And 

21           then for them to be penalized, municipalities 

22           and counties and everyone else, on top of 

23           that for the Downtown Revitalization funding 

24           and everything else, it's bad.


                                                                   61

 1                  If you want more development, more 

 2           housing, we need to do more to invest in 

 3           infrastructure.

 4                  And small communities can't compete 

 5           with the large communities on the grant 

 6           programs --

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senator?

 8                  SENATOR HELMING:  That's a response I 

 9           get all the time.  But it doesn't work.  They 

10           don't have the manpower.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank -- thank 

12           you, Senator.

13                  We go to Assemblyman Ra, ranker on 

14           Ways and Means.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

16                  Commissioner, so according to the 

17           annual report from your agency on 

18           rent-regulated housing there's been a 

19           dramatic drop-off in the total value of major 

20           capital improvements applied for and granted 

21           to owners of multiple dwellings over the last 

22           five years.  Are you concerned about this 

23           lack of investment in the aging affordable 

24           housing stock?


                                                                   62

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I think we 

 2           want to -- you know, always want to make sure 

 3           that owners, where it's needed, are making 

 4           investments in the housing stock.

 5                  We haven't seen sort of a rise in 

 6           service cases or something that you might see 

 7           as a sort of counter-reflection to lack of 

 8           MCIs, so we don't have, I think, a cause for 

 9           concern based on that data.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Do you think that the 

11           $15,000 cap over a 15-year period makes sense 

12           given the age of these units and the work 

13           that may be necessary on them?  

14                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I would say 

15           that we certainly hear from a lot of owners 

16           that that is not enough and that many 

17           apartments need more investment than that.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  And my 

19           understanding is just last Thursday New York 

20           City released their most recent housing and 

21           vacancy survey, and it had the first increase 

22           in 35 years in dilapidated housing conditions 

23           in rent-regulated housing, which the number 

24           had been continuously going down up until 


                                                                   63

 1           about three years ago.  

 2                  So what role do you envision for HCR 

 3           in ensuring the viability of this 

 4           rent-regulated housing?  

 5                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Well, 

 6           certainly we work collaboratively with the 

 7           City of New York, who enforces the Housing 

 8           Maintenance Code, which is really sort of the 

 9           source of sort of the conditions inside the 

10           city's rent-stabilized stock.

11                  And for our part, we will make sure, 

12           as I said, either whether it's in service 

13           cases or other cases like that, that they are 

14           responded to quickly so that we make sure 

15           that the housing stays habitable.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  One of the things 

17           that's come up in recent days was regarding 

18           New York Community Bank and the ability of 

19           rent-stabilized buildings to obtain 

20           refinancing.  

21                  Is that a concern for the department?  

22           And, you know, what are we looking at to try 

23           to make sure that that financing is 

24           available?


                                                                   64

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I would say 

 2           a couple of things.  

 3                  Certainly for the housing that we 

 4           finance, we are working on sort of 30 -- we 

 5           lend on 30-year fixed rate mortgages.  So for 

 6           our portfolio, the change in interest rates 

 7           that impacted a lot of the New York Community 

 8           Bank and other type of banking loans that you 

 9           read about doesn't affect our direct 

10           portfolio.  

11                  I think certainly for lots of 

12           rent-stabilized buildings who have 

13           longer-term debt on them, the sort of rate 

14           increase -- recent increases, you know, don't 

15           necessarily impact their operating expenses.  

16                  We obviously don't have a lot of 

17           control over owners who take out loans that 

18           have shorter terms and therefore are subject 

19           to interest rate risk.  But we are happy -- 

20           again, sort of as I mentioned before, we're 

21           happy to work with those owners should they 

22           want to come to us for financing that is more 

23           long-term and fixed-rate.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  And just back in 


                                                                   65

 1           terms of MCIs, you know, the current rate of 

 2           return, is that going to be enough when 

 3           rent-stabilized buildings have to be able to 

 4           make the investments that are required of 

 5           them to comply with the new building emission 

 6           reductions that are required under Local Law 

 7           97?  

 8                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Look, 

 9           our role in this obviously is to enforce the 

10           law and to process MCI applications as they 

11           come in.  

12                  We certainly have heard, and I think 

13           the city is very acutely aware of the 

14           challenges of Local Law 97 and what 

15           incentives or tools may be needed to make 

16           sure that buildings can make those 

17           investments to meet those goals.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  And then just 

19           lastly, going to a different topic, the 

20           Pro-Housing designation.  You know, one of 

21           the issues that I'm hearing from many local 

22           governments -- and I have a local government 

23           within my district who has received the 

24           designation, and they've built a lot of 


                                                                   66

 1           housing in recent years.

 2                  But there's also a lot of places on 

 3           Long Island that need sewers and all kinds of 

 4           other infrastructure.  So, you know, trying 

 5           to get the designation on the front end may 

 6           be more difficult if they're not able to 

 7           access the funding that they're going to need 

 8           to do those types of infrastructure 

 9           improvements to allow for them to build.

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah, I 

11           would just say that there is no sort of 

12           water/sewer type infrastructure money that is 

13           limited or conditioned.  The funding that's 

14           conditioned is other sort of state 

15           discretionary dollars.  

16                  And we would, you know, certainly be 

17           happy to work with those communities in your 

18           district that need additional resources.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  Thank you.  

20                  And -- well, since I still have 

21           30 seconds.  

22                  (Laughter.)

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  So you mentioned 

24           the -- right, it says that it may be 


                                                                   67

 1           conditioned.  So -- but it's basically the 

 2           intention that those -- all those different 

 3           grant programs will be conditioned on having 

 4           that designation going forward?  

 5                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes, the 

 6           language gives us the authorization to make 

 7           the conditional -- to make it a requirement.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  And that's the 

 9           intention of the agency, is to make a 

10           requirement?  

11                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  

13                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

14                  We've been joined by Assemblywoman 

15           Chandler-Waterman and Assemblyman Al Taylor.

16                  Now we go to the Senate.  

17                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Next up for 

18           questions we'll have Senator Myrie.

19                  SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.  

20                  Good morning --

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Good 

22           morning.

23                  SENATOR MYRIE:  -- and thank you for 

24           coming.  Happy Valentine's Day.  


                                                                   68

 1                  I'd like to align myself with the 

 2           Governor's efforts to aggressively but 

 3           responsibly build our supply.  I think that 

 4           is something that we all should be focused 

 5           on, and we stand ready to get that across the 

 6           finish line.  

 7                  But I'm also looking at this report I 

 8           think just published today by Comptroller 

 9           DiNapoli entitled "The Housing Insecurity 

10           Crisis."  And the report notes that evictions 

11           were up, post the moratoria ending, about 

12           180 percent -- and so many more New Yorkers 

13           are being put out -- but it's still 

14           27 percent less than pre-pandemic levels 

15           because of what we did in the Housing 

16           Stability and Tenant Protection Act.  

17                  So I would urge all of us, as we're 

18           having this conversation about housing, to 

19           ensure that tenant protections remain at the 

20           fore of that conversation because we see the 

21           real-life impact on that.

22                  I'd also note that it is my 

23           understanding there's no capital funding for 

24           NYCHA in the Executive Budget.  I know we 


                                                                   69

 1           were all appalled by the allegations that we 

 2           saw last week by the U.S. Attorney's office.  

 3           I would hope that as we go through this 

 4           budget process that NYCHA and public housing 

 5           residents both in and outside of New York 

 6           City will not be forgotten.  

 7                  But I want to get to my main and only 

 8           question -- and some of my colleagues have 

 9           spoken about this before -- in regards to 

10           repurposing of SUNY property.  In my district 

11           I have a large SUNY property that you may 

12           have heard of, the Downstate Medical Center.  

13           And as proposed by the chancellor, there is a 

14           so-called transformation plan that includes 

15           in that, hypothetically, some type of 

16           housing.  

17                  That would have to go through your 

18           agency.  And I'm wondering if anyone in the 

19           chancellor's office or the Governor's office 

20           has discussed housing on SUNY Downstate.

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  My 

22           understanding is that those plans and 

23           conversations are very preliminary, so I'm 

24           not aware of any specifics on housing for 


                                                                   70

 1           that site other than what's sort of been 

 2           reported and discussed.

 3                  SENATOR MYRIE:  Okay.  Thank you.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman 

 5           Dilan.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN DILAN:  Thank you, 

 7           Madam Chair.

 8                  And to Commissioner Visnauskas, good 

 9           to see you.

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  You too.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN DILAN:  I just have a 

12           brief question around a program that looks to 

13           be new in this year's budget, and that's the 

14           creation of a new tax abatement for rental 

15           construction housing, which I believe is 

16           where tax policy should be directed because 

17           that's where the demand is.  And your 

18           housing -- or the city's housing vacancy 

19           survey even states that.

20                  But I wanted to know -- and I asked 

21           this of the Tax commissioner earlier.  She 

22           said it would be more appropriate for you.  

23           Can you give us more details about how this 

24           tax abatement program would work?  Like 


                                                                   71

 1           what's the level of abatement?  For how long?  

 2           How deep are the AMI levels?  

 3                  And I see it's subject to some 

 4           negotiations in the MOU.  Could you just 

 5           explain that as best you can?

 6                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.

 7                  So, you know, as you will recall, we 

 8           have proposed a version of this tax exemption 

 9           last year that was not successful.  And so 

10           this year we came back and have a sort of a 

11           slightly different structure where there are 

12           certain things in the proposal that are kind 

13           of clear, and then we left a lot of sort of 

14           variables sort of more to be figured out 

15           either through the budget process or in 

16           consultation with the city.

17                  So as you mentioned, so for 485-x, 

18           which is where we are in the numbering this 

19           year, the proposal would be for new 

20           construction of rental housing in New York 

21           City, and then it sets sort of a specified -- 

22           a to-be-specified percentage in AMI that we 

23           imagine would work consultively with the City 

24           of New York to finalize what that is.  It is 


                                                                   72

 1           their tax incentive program that they 

 2           implement.  We very much want their sort of 

 3           input on this as we go through the process.

 4                  I would say that the city designed 

 5           their mandatory inclusionary program, which 

 6           creates permanently affordable housing, to 

 7           work in conjunction with the tax exemption.  

 8           So that's sort of another reason why we left 

 9           it a little more open this year for sort of 

10           consultation with them and to be worked out 

11           through the process.

12                  The thing that is in there that is 

13           consistent with from years past is that the 

14           units would be permanently affordable.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN DILAN:  Okay.  This 

16           doesn't say the level of abatement that 

17           potential developers would see at this point?  

18           That's subject to negotiation?

19                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So those I 

20           think are left to be worked out as part of 

21           this process or in consultation with the 

22           city.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN DILAN:  So in theory we 

24           could pass this and not know the level of the 


                                                                   73

 1           abatement, not know the details, and it would 

 2           be subject to the city even though we voted 

 3           on it, we passed it?

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I mean, I 

 5           think it can get worked out in the budget 

 6           process or, if not, it would defer to the 

 7           City of New York to figure out what they 

 8           believe works with their mandatory 

 9           inclusionary program and their other goals 

10           for their housing program.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN DILAN:  Okay.  Thank you.

12                  Thank you, Madam Chair.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senate?

14                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Next up, 

15           Senator Hoylman.

16                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Good morning.  

17           Nice to see you.  

18                  Thank you for your succinct answers.  

19           It really has moved the conversation along.

20                  Are we keeping track, Commissioner, of 

21           vacant apartments?

22                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So our 

23           system requires that landlords register the 

24           status of their apartments on April 1st of 


                                                                   74

 1           every year.  And so we know the status of the 

 2           rent -- I assume you mean the rent-stabilized 

 3           stock.  We know the status of the apartments 

 4           in the rent-stabilized stock -- we know the 

 5           status as of April 1st each year.

 6                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Is there a 

 7           trend line that you can share with us in 

 8           terms of vacancies?

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We -- as I 

10           had mentioned before, there was a bit of a 

11           spike in post-pandemic in 2021, but we are 

12           today back to certain normalized levels of 

13           vacancy, which is about sub 40,000 units as 

14           of that April 1 deadline, which is sort of a 

15           historical norm.

16                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  And can we 

17           hold landlords to account for those vacancies 

18           in any way that you know?

19                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Well, 

20           generally we see that in a -- like a 

21           subsequent registration year the units that 

22           are vacant are different units.  So it isn't 

23           units that are being vacant -- or that are 

24           being held vacant for multiple years, they 


                                                                   75

 1           are just vacant at that moment in their cycle 

 2           and oftentimes are then rented when it comes 

 3           to the next cycle.  

 4                  So I'm not sure if that answers your 

 5           accounting ability.

 6                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Yeah.

 7                  And how about NYCHA?  Are you 

 8           following vacancies in NYCHA developments?

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  No, I don't 

10           have any awareness of vacancies in NYCHA.

11                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  And why is 

12           that?

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We don't 

14           oversee NYCHA.

15                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  So that 

16           information is not shared with the state 

17           housing authority at all.

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  No.  I mean 

19           they're regulated by the federal government, 

20           right, and they report in to the city 

21           administration.  So we don't receive data on 

22           their apartments as a whole.

23                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Speaking of 

24           the city, how closely are you working with 


                                                                   76

 1           the city administration on the mayor's City 

 2           of Yes proposal?

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We have a 

 4           very collaborative relationship with HPD and 

 5           HTC on our housing pipelines.

 6                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Is there 

 7           anything in his legislation agenda that you 

 8           think is a must-do on the part of the 

 9           Legislature?  

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I mean, I 

11           think this -- we and the city have sort of 

12           consistently, I think, in our conversation 

13           about supply talked about the need for a tax 

14           incentive for new construction of rental 

15           housing, we've talked about a tax incentive 

16           for commercial housing.  We would very much 

17           like to see some authorization for 

18           legalization of basement apartments in 

19           New York City as well as a removal from the 

20           state law of the residential density cap so 

21           that the city can make decisions themselves 

22           about where to have residential density.

23                  So I think we are aligned on all of 

24           those -- you know, our sort of supply package 


                                                                   77

 1           this year as it relates to New York City.

 2                  (Interruption by protestors.)

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Please sit 

 4           down.  

 5                  (Protestors continue.)

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  You are out of 

 7           order.  Please -- please sit down so we can 

 8           continue our hearing.

 9                  (Protestors continue.)  

10                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  I would -- 

11           please -- please respect the hearing.  We 

12           would just --  

13                  (Protest continues.)  

14                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Plea -- plea -- 

15           I would just like to clarify for the -- 

16                  (Protest continues.)

17                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We're going to 

18           take a --

19                  (Protest continues.)

20                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Every person -- 

21           not to get a back-and-forth, but every 

22           individual or organization that requests -- 

23           every individual or organization that 

24           requested to testify at this hearing and 


                                                                   78

 1           submitted their testimony according to the 

 2           rules posted on the Assembly and Senate's 

 3           websites, are listed to testify today.

 4                  (Overtalk.)

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  If people 

 6           failed -- if people failed to submit their 

 7           testimony, they can submit in writing by the 

 8           end of today and it will be posted on the 

 9           Assembly/Senate's websites. 

10                  (Protest continues.)  

11                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Can we give 

12           Senator -- can we add another minute to the 

13           time clock.

14                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Thank you.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

16                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Thank you very 

17           much.  

18                  In the Pro-Housing Community program, 

19           is there anything to incentivize localities 

20           to streamline their approvals process?

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Look, in the 

22           resolution -- so you can get certified one of 

23           two ways, right?  One is you're either 

24           growing, which we would like to think is a 


                                                                   79

 1           reflection that you have a good system.  

 2                  Or the other is you've passed a 

 3           resolution and the resolution has a series of 

 4           affirmative statements, and one is about 

 5           reducing barriers to housing or reducing 

 6           regulations.  

 7                  So we are hoping that as communities 

 8           want to apply and certify, that they will be 

 9           doing those things.

10                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Are you 

11           assisting them with ideas on how to do that?  

12                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We are -- 

13           you know, we generally make ourselves 

14           available.  We've been doing a lot of 

15           webinars and a lot of outreach.  And I myself 

16           have gone out to a lot of meetings and talked 

17           to people.  

18                  So we will make ourselves as available 

19           as we can be to provide guidance on whatever 

20           it is they need from us.

21                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  And what's 

22           your enforcement mechanism to ensure that the 

23           locality is in fact doing what they say 

24           they're doing?


                                                                   80

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Well, as you 

 2           know, we're in a carrot, not stick, 

 3           structure.

 4                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Yes.  So once 

 5           you give them the carrots, what do you do?  

 6                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  It is just a 

 7           carrot structure so that -- the idea is that 

 8           they get certified.  They are then eligible 

 9           to apply -- 

10                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Can you claw 

11           back any of the grants or rewards if in fact 

12           they renege?

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Well, there 

14           is no -- once you get certified, you have to 

15           submit us your data on an ongoing basis to 

16           remain certified.  So if you are awarded, 

17           then you would receive that award, we 

18           wouldn't take it back.  But going forward, 

19           you would then not be eligible for future 

20           rounds of grants.

21                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  So it's an 

22           annual --

23                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  -- 

24           certification.


                                                                   81

 1                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Thank you.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 3                  We go to Assemblyman Epstein.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Thank you, 

 5           Commissioner, for being here.  It's good 

 6           seeing you. 

 7                  I just want to lift up my colleagues 

 8           about HOPP and HA -- MMP, trying to get those 

 9           back in the budget this year.  Obviously 

10           those are critical for our communities.  HAVP 

11           as well, trying to get that in the budget as 

12           well.  

13                  I appreciate what you're saying around 

14           kind of legalization of basements and giving 

15           the city more authority.

16                  I want to talk about expiring 421-a 

17           units.  So we've seen a lot of units come 

18           offline, pre-2013 units that aren't 

19           permanently affordable.  What is HCR doing 

20           about preventing losing all those affordable 

21           housing units that are 421-a from leaving the 

22           system and losing thousands -- by 2026 it 

23           looks like we're going to potentially lose 

24           tens of thousands of affordable units in the 


                                                                   82

 1           city.

 2                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So our sort 

 3           of greatest tool is that we have preservation 

 4           financing programs available, so that when 

 5           people want to take advantage of our low-cost 

 6           funding that we have, that they use that to 

 7           make renovations and then are back in our 

 8           regulatory structure.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Yeah, so the 

10           vast majority of developers have chosen not 

11           to take you up on those tools.  So what other 

12           options -- I mean, we're worried, obviously, 

13           about thousands in my district and thousands 

14           across the city.  Is there anything else we 

15           can do to try to not lose these units?

16                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I mean, 

17           look, I think the best tool we have is for 

18           buildings that were developed through the 

19           inclusionary program, they are permanent.  

20           And for projects that we'll get ideally 

21           financed by a new tax exemption, they will 

22           also be permanently affordable and we won't 

23           be facing that issue.

24                  It is a common one certainly in city 


                                                                   83

 1           and state financing where we were also 

 2           traditionally financing things for 30 years 

 3           and at the end of that dealing with an 

 4           expiring-use issue.  So we try to proactively 

 5           work with as many buildings as we can, but we 

 6           don't have a lot of tools besides that.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  So just on the 

 8           permanent affordability, what percentage of 

 9           the new units that you're doing are 

10           permanently affordable housing when there is 

11           affordable housing units in the project?

12                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I'd have to 

13           get back to you on that because we have a 

14           fair amount of overlap in New York City and 

15           not, so I don't know the percent.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  So I know one of 

17           my colleagues mentioned public housing.  Not 

18           just NYCHA, but capital money for authorities 

19           outside New York City, it would be great to 

20           see something there to ensure we have 

21           resources for public housing authorities in 

22           and outside.  

23                  But also there's the operating rent.  

24           We provided some rent assistance last year to 


                                                                   84

 1           avoid a lot of evictions.  Didn't see 

 2           anything on rent arrears either.  I'm 

 3           wondering what the logic is to try to avoid 

 4           some of those evictions, especially of these 

 5           really low-income tenants.

 6                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So we have a 

 7           series of tools that we work with with our 

 8           building owners to, where they're having 

 9           tenants who are not paying rent and they are 

10           having cash-flow issues, we are sort of using 

11           every tool we can.  We've been actively 

12           releasing Section 8 and project-based Section 

13           8s or projects to help stabilize them.  We 

14           are proposing this insurance discrimination 

15           bill to cut down on costs on the other side 

16           and --

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  We've heard both 

18           from public housing authorities as well as 

19           our nonprofit housing providers that they 

20           just need the rent payment.  So is there a 

21           way to potentially think about that for this 

22           year as well, for additional rent payments 

23           for --

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I think we 


                                                                   85

 1           would continue to work with you all on that.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Great.

 3                  And just finally, I'm wondering if 

 4           there's a path forward just on the 12-FAR 

 5           issue.  I didn't see anything about 

 6           permanently affordable on the 12-FAR issue.  

 7           Is there any plan for permanent 

 8           affordability?  

 9                  And I guess you may not have time to 

10           answer, but --

11                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah, look, 

12           I think the idea there is to really give the 

13           city the tools to rezone and they can include 

14           permanent affordability where that can be --

15                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We need to go 

16           to the Senate now.  Thank you.

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Thanks.

18                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator Brisport.

19                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you.

20                  And thank you, Commissioner, for your 

21           testimony.  

22                  A few quick questions about 

23           rent-stabilized units.  When a tenant files 

24           an overcharge complaint with HCR, typically 


                                                                   86

 1           how long does the process take for HCR to 

 2           make a decision?

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I don't know 

 4           that I have an average time for you.  The 

 5           cases can be very different.  So some cases 

 6           get resolved very quickly and some cases take 

 7           a very long time.  And, you know, it does not 

 8           make us happy that it takes a long time to 

 9           resolve those cases.  

10                  But I'd be happy to get back to you on 

11           specifics if there's certain cases you're 

12           concerned about.

13                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you.

14                  And my understanding is that the 

15           lookback went from four years to six years 

16           due to that change.  Have there been any 

17           changes in the amounts of complaints that 

18           have been filed with HCR?

19                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I don't 

20           think that we have seen an uptick there.  It 

21           certainly is also one of the things that 

22           makes the case processing take a little 

23           longer, because we have to go back even 

24           longer on those.


                                                                   87

 1                  But I could get back to you on that.

 2                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Okay.

 3                  And is HCR tracking rent-overcharge 

 4           complaints being filed against the same LLCs?

 5                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I don't 

 6           believe that we do that because we handle all 

 7           of our cases individually, not sort of in a 

 8           batched or by owner way.

 9                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Okay, thank you.

10                  And I have some questions as well 

11           about the 500 million in capital funds for 

12           state-owned property.

13                  Have sites been selected already, or 

14           is that published?

15                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  No.  So 

16           there's a series of sites that we are working 

17           on, when the Governor called all the agencies 

18           to come forward with sites, but the list has 

19           not been finalized.  

20                  But we are working through a lot of 

21           sites to see which ones can get developed the 

22           quickest, which can provide the most housing, 

23           which need the least amount of capital to 

24           become sort of ready for housing -- those 


                                                                   88

 1           types of questions.

 2                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Okay.  I'll bring 

 3           up 1024 Fulton Street in Clinton Hill, 

 4           Brooklyn, in a state-owned site.  It's slated 

 5           for demolition for the health and safety of 

 6           the pedestrians there through the OGS budget.  

 7           But it is state-owned property in a rapidly 

 8           gentrifying community with a deep need for 

 9           affordable housing.  

10                  Based on what you're hearing, would a 

11           site like that qualify for the capital funds?

12                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes, we 

13           would love to see that site become affordable 

14           housing and have been looking -- watching it 

15           for a little while.  So we would look forward 

16           to doing that there.

17                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you so much.

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yup.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman 

20           Gallahan.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Thank you, 

22           Madam Chair.

23                  Thank you, Commissioner, for your 

24           testimony today on this lovely Valentine's 


                                                                   89

 1           Day.  

 2                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I like your 

 3           red shirt.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Last July the 

 5           Governor issued an executive order, No. 30, 

 6           which you're familiar with I'm sure, which 

 7           created the Pro-Housing Community program.  

 8           And under this, several capital fund programs 

 9           would give preference to municipalities that 

10           applied for such programs if they'd been 

11           certified by the Division of Homes and 

12           Community Renewal as a pro-housing community.  

13                  My question is, have municipalities 

14           raised any concerns or questions about the 

15           certification process or requirements?  

16                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I would 

17           say -- you know, as I mentioned before, we 

18           have 20 communities that have been certified 

19           so far, and we have about another hundred 

20           that we're working with.  And I think to the 

21           extent they've raised questions, they've been 

22           in the context of a productive conversation 

23           we're having with them, either in a sort of 

24           webinar that we're running or an individual 


                                                                   90

 1           phone call.  So we are trying to be able to 

 2           help communities work through the process.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Were there any 

 4           really specific concerns that they had that 

 5           you can share with us?

 6                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I don't know 

 7           that we -- I would say the concerns were more 

 8           questions about, you know, which forms, where 

 9           to apply, where to put certain sets of data.  

10           And so we just help clarify things for 

11           people.  I don't think we've gotten any 

12           concerns particularly.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Okay.  And did 

14           the Empire State Development, the Department 

15           of State or the Department of Transportation 

16           ask for their programs to become wrapped up 

17           in this certification at all?  

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I believe 

19           the decision was made by the Governor's 

20           office, in consultation with the agencies.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Thank you.  

22                  And last week the Governor hosted a 

23           roundtable announcing those first 20, which 

24           you mentioned earlier, they've been 


                                                                   91

 1           certified.  She referred to the state as 

 2           being a partner and local governments don't 

 3           want sticks, they want carrots to be 

 4           encouraging the housing growth.  

 5                  My question is, how many of the 

 6           933 towns, 62 cities, and 533 villages in 

 7           New York do you anticipate applying to become 

 8           certified?  And how many do you anticipate 

 9           would become certified?  

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  That's a 

11           great question which we don't know the answer 

12           to.  But we are basically ready, willing and 

13           able to work with all the communities that 

14           want to come forward who want to apply for 

15           the discretionary funds that are available 

16           and become certified as a part of that.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Thank you.  

18                  And have any of the larger 

19           communities -- Rochester, Buffalo, 

20           Hempstead -- applied yet?

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.  We are 

22           working with several of those and some other 

23           additional larger cities too.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  The programs 


                                                                   92

 1           which are proposed to be subject to the 

 2           pro-housing certification are the Downtown 

 3           Revitalization Initiative, NY Forward, 

 4           New York Main Street, Regional Council 

 5           Capital Fund, the Market New York capital 

 6           grants, Long Island Investment Fund, 

 7           Mid-Hudson -- it goes on and on -- Modern 

 8           Transportation.  

 9                  When will these discretionary programs 

10           be considered -- be considering the 

11           Pro-Housing certification when reviewing the 

12           application?  

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So they will 

14           be for the round that comes out this year, 

15           which many of those will start sort of -- 

16           after budget season, those will start to -- 

17           the applications will start to roll out.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Okay.  And is 

19           the current Round 7 of the Downtown 

20           Revitalization Initiative and Round 2 of the 

21           NY Forward considering certification for 

22           their -- they're being considered for their 

23           awards?  

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I can't 


                                                                   93

 1           remember which round we're on, but it would 

 2           be for whatever round is going to be released 

 3           this year.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Okay.  Thank 

 5           you very much.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  To the Senate.  

 7                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator Salazar.

 8                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  Thank you.  

 9                  Good to see you, Commissioner.

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Hi.

11                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  So I have a question 

12           about rent overcharge claims being processed.  

13                  Is the large backlog of rent 

14           overcharge claims or complaints that still 

15           need to be processed by HCR due to 

16           insufficient capacity at the agency or other 

17           causes that we should know about?  

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I would say 

19           a couple of things.  We -- I have said here 

20           many times in the past it is hard to hire.  

21           And so we had had -- we'd had sort of a 

22           limited-head-count sort of pre-pandemic.  We 

23           got much-needed relief from the Legislature,  

24           we got a big head-count jump right before we 


                                                                   94

 1           went into COVID when we had a hiring freeze 

 2           and -- so it's been very challenging to hire.  

 3                  We have been aggressively hiring for 

 4           the last two years as a state agency.  And as 

 5           a part of our agency that has specifically 

 6           sort of a lot of retirements all the time, 

 7           too, it often feels like we are hiring to 

 8           keep pace with our retirements even though 

 9           we're trying to hire to actually add 

10           additional heads.  

11                  So we currently have probably for -- 

12           somewhere on the order of maybe 30 additional 

13           people that we're hiring for still to get our 

14           capacity up.  

15                  So to answer your question, part of 

16           the backlog is our need to keep expanding our 

17           hiring, and it's challenging in the civil 

18           service, and in general it's hard to hire.

19                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  What can we in the 

20           Legislature -- particularly, of course, 

21           through the budget process -- do to help 

22           address that backlog?  

23                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Short of 

24           coming to work at --


                                                                   95

 1                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  Yes.

 2                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  It's a great 

 3           question.  We are trying to -- have been very 

 4           focused on this for the better part of the 

 5           last nine months and sort of coming out of 

 6           COVID and other legislative changes to make 

 7           that our -- getting the hiring completed as 

 8           quickly as we can.  

 9                  A key part, we've been working with 

10           Department of Civil Service to get changes 

11           there that we need to how the jobs are 

12           classified and the requirements that are 

13           needed for employees, sort of adjusting that 

14           to be more appropriate so that we get more 

15           applicants.  

16                  So I'm not sure there's anything the 

17           Legislature can do right now other than, you 

18           know, keep us on our toes that we're doing 

19           what we say we're going to do.

20                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  Thank you.

21                  And while -- as you know, while 

22           waiting for a rent overcharge complaint to be 

23           processed, a rent-stabilized tenant can often 

24           be forced to move out before the claim is 


                                                                   96

 1           even determined.  

 2                  What recourse is there for tenants in 

 3           those situations if ultimately it is 

 4           determined that they had a -- their claim was 

 5           legitimate?  

 6                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We try to 

 7           do -- and we are also very appreciative when 

 8           members of the Legislature sort of signal for 

 9           us ways that we can jump in and assist.  

10                  But I would say, you know, we try to 

11           make sure that we are in contact with tenants 

12           as much as we can so that they understand 

13           what their rights are while they're there or 

14           if they leave.  We'd be happy to sort of 

15           follow up with you on that if you think 

16           there's other ways and other things we can be 

17           doing.

18                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  Thank you.  

19                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblywoman 

20           Lucas.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Thank you, 

22           Chair.  

23                  Good afternoon to everyone.  

24                  How are you doing, Commissioner?


                                                                   97

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Hi.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  I just wanted to 

 3           ask two quick questions.  

 4                  With the recent settlement by 

 5           Mayor Adams on the community board 

 6           preference, what is it that you think that 

 7           the state and your agency can do to protect 

 8           fair housing while protecting community 

 9           members who negotiate each project in their 

10           communities?  

11                  Can you hear me?  Okay, one-two, 

12           one-two.  Can we stop my time?  (Pause.)

13                  How's this?

14                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Much better.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Okay.  Can I 

16           have 7 seconds back, please?

17                  (Laughter.)

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  With the recent 

19           settlement by Mayor Adams on the community 

20           board preference, what is it that you think 

21           that the state and your agency can do to 

22           protect the -- fair housing while protecting 

23           the community members who negotiate each 

24           project in their communities?  


                                                                   98

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I would say, 

 2           you know, we are very committed to fair 

 3           housing at the state.  We last year published 

 4           our Fair Housing Matters report that's up on 

 5           our website and has a series of 

 6           recommendations.  

 7                  And we are working ourselves, we work 

 8           with the Attorney General's office, we work 

 9           with legal agencies across the state to make 

10           sure that fair housing is followed.  We have 

11           a lot of wonderful changes to our processes 

12           to make sure that tenants have better access 

13           and rights when it comes to lotteries and 

14           things like that.  

15                  I think with respect to the litigation 

16           of the city-run community board preference, 

17           you know, we will follow the city's lead and 

18           coordinate for the case on the community 

19           board preference.

20                  But we, you know, have other efforts 

21           in our marketing that make sure that we are 

22           reaching people in order so that they have 

23           access to our apartments.  So we take fair 

24           housing very seriously.  


                                                                   99

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Yeah, it sounds 

 2           likes we're going to have a longer 

 3           discussion.

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Also I know that 

 6           you and your team are committed to building 

 7           capacity with MWBEs that work with your 

 8           agency with the renewal of 15-A.  

 9                  What is it that your agency will be 

10           doing to advance this program while looking 

11           to build a future -- more capacity in the 

12           future?

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So we've 

14           made a lot of changes to our programs to 

15           create better access for MWBEs to our 

16           programs.  

17                  And we will continue, you know, to do 

18           that to make sure that we can increase the 

19           number of projects that are going to MWBEs 

20           both in downstate and really across the 

21           state.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Okay.  And just 

23           for the record, I've been working with your 

24           office around -- as it relates to the 


                                                                   100

 1           9 percent tax credit and diversity in the 

 2           program.  And I'd like to just make sure on 

 3           record that we can continue that discussion 

 4           about expanding diversity for that particular 

 5           program.

 6                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Absolutely.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Thank you.

 8                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  So we're going to 

 9           go to Senator George Borrello.

10                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Thank you, 

11           Mr. Chairman.

12                  Commissioner, thank you for being 

13           here.  

14                  Let me start off by saying that I 

15           really appreciate the engagement with your 

16           agency in my district.  You guys really are 

17           great communicators.  We appreciate that.

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Thanks.

19                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  But I want to talk 

20           a little bit about right now there's a report 

21           recently in Politico that since the end of 

22           the pandemic, New York has paid out 

23           $3 billion in rent assistance to tenants, and 

24           yet there are still hundreds of thousands of 


                                                                   101

 1           tenants that are in arrears.  

 2                  Let's face it, the state did a pretty 

 3           poor job of verifying whether these folks 

 4           actually had a real hardship.  I heard from 

 5           property owners across my district that, you 

 6           know, there was no hardship experienced by 

 7           their tenants, they just stopped paying their 

 8           rent.

 9                  You know, we have a huge hole there.  

10           What does the Governor think we should do to 

11           resolve this?

12                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Look, I 

13           think what I can say is that I certainly hear 

14           that from a lot of our owners, that it's a 

15           very frustrating environment when tenants who 

16           can pay their rent don't pay their rent.  

17                  And obviously there's a lot of tenants 

18           who have hardship and can't pay their rent, 

19           and certainly I think our building owners -- 

20           and we see it -- a little bit of our 

21           portfolio feels stress, obviously economic 

22           stress from both rising costs and decreased 

23           revenues.

24                  For our part, you know, we work really 


                                                                   102

 1           closely with our owners and we're trying to 

 2           provide them relief whenever we can, to make 

 3           sure that they can stay economically viable.  

 4           And as I sort of said before, I think we 

 5           would make ourselves available to any sort of 

 6           building owner that needed relief that we can 

 7           provide in the forms of subsidy financing for 

 8           capital repairs or other types of work to 

 9           help them out.

10                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Thanks.  Let me 

11           move on to another question.

12                  So workforce housing -- great concept.  

13           The idea that being able to ensure that 

14           people that are working on the low end of the 

15           income scale are actually able to have 

16           affordable housing near where they work.

17                  The problem is I kind of think of it 

18           as a myth in our area.  Every time we have a 

19           workforce housing project in my area, over 

20           the course of two or three years, the four 

21           years that it takes, inflation hits and the 

22           next thing you know, the application process 

23           that they applied for, it goes from workforce 

24           housing to affordable housing.  And now we're 


                                                                   103

 1           not really accomplishing the goal of ensuring 

 2           that people that want to work and live in the 

 3           areas that they work in -- that might be 

 4           otherwise unaffordable -- are actually 

 5           getting that housing.  

 6                  What's being done about that?  Can't 

 7           we put some type of inflation adjuster into 

 8           these applications?

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.  Are 

10           you saying that something that is sort of 

11           middle-income becomes low-income?  Or 

12           something that's --

13                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Yes.  Yes.  Yeah, 

14           exactly.  Something essentially that -- you 

15           know, we just had one recently where a 

16           project in my district, they put it in a 

17           certain level and then over the course of 

18           four years, inflation was huge.  Now all of a 

19           sudden that application -- that limit, income 

20           limit became -- went from being workforce to 

21           low-income housing --

22                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I see.

23                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  -- which defeats 

24           the purpose.


                                                                   104

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Look, we 

 2           have a couple of programs that allow for 

 3           averaging, which is one tool that we use to 

 4           allow for a variety of incomes to be -- and 

 5           rents to be met on an average.

 6                  We also have a series of middle-income 

 7           programs that specifically target those 

 8           middle-income ranges so they're not 

 9           low-income.  

10                  So I guess I'd be happy to sort of 

11           talk with you more specifically about whether 

12           there's certain AMIs that you're not to 

13           target because of our financing or other ways 

14           that we could make sure that happens.

15                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Well, we can follow 

16           up on that.  But I appreciate that.  Thank 

17           you.

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah, okay.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We go to 

20           Assemblymember Tapia.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TAPIA:  (Mic off; 

22           inaudible.)  I represent part of the Bronx.  

23           And as we know, I mean one of the poorest 

24           boroughs in the whole State of New York.  And 


                                                                   105

 1           one of the issues that I see every single day 

 2           in my community is how and what steps are you 

 3           taking in regards to ensure that landlords 

 4           and property owners do not discriminate based 

 5           on the source of income?  And specifically 

 6           when we're talking about voucher-holders.  

 7                  And that happens many times that those 

 8           people that are in shelters with families and 

 9           that are waiting and looking like crazy for 

10           an apartment are negated the opportunity in 

11           discriminating by the landlords.  And they -- 

12           many times they lose those vouchers and they 

13           have to start the program all over again, and 

14           they continue in those shelters with their 

15           families when they deserve and they've been 

16           approved.

17                  And I would love to know what are we 

18           doing right now to prevent that and to make 

19           sure that that's not continue happening the 

20           way that it's happening.

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  It's a great 

22           question and certainly a topic that's of 

23           great concern to us.

24                  Look, we're very thankful to the 


                                                                   106

 1           Legislature for passing the source of income 

 2           discrimination law that we have, and it's on 

 3           the books as the law in New York State that 

 4           you cannot do that.  But nonetheless, we 

 5           certainly are aware that it still happens.

 6                  We are -- this year in the budget 

 7           you'll see, as a follow-up to last year, 

 8           there is $2 million for fair housing testing.  

 9           And we work with legal organizations across 

10           the state who are doing testing to root out 

11           where there is sort of consistent patterns of 

12           source-of-income discrimination.  So that is 

13           one of our best tools.

14                  We're also working with the Division 

15           of Human Rights to make sure that they are 

16           staffed up to make sure that they can address 

17           cases of source-of-income discrimination as 

18           well there.

19                  So happy to keep working with you if 

20           there's other ways you think we can be 

21           working to combat that.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TAPIA:  I think so.

23                  I also have this thing -- because, for 

24           example, my district is -- the median income 


                                                                   107

 1           is 39,000 and per capita is 18,000.  And I 

 2           just want to weigh in on what my colleagues 

 3           from the Senate said.  And now I have new 

 4           buildings that started before I was elected.  

 5           And they are -- the median income that 

 6           they're offering for those buildings in that 

 7           neighborhood, in those neighborhoods that are 

 8           in my district is just starting at $107,000 

 9           for the lottery.  And that is for a studio.  

10           That's the minimum that you have to work -- 

11           to earn.

12                  And I wonder -- I mean, that's -- 

13           that's just -- that is fostering -- that is 

14           fostering gentrification.  Because, I mean, 

15           who -- my -- my district cannot live there.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

17                  Before we go to the Senate, just want 

18           to acknowledge we were joined a while ago by 

19           Assemblyman Meeks, who snuck in behind me.

20                  Next we go to Senator Cleare.

21                  SENATOR CLEARE:  Thank you.

22                  Good to see you, Commissioner.

23                  And I'm going to just follow right up 

24           with what my colleague was just asking about.


                                                                   108

 1                  Earlier you mentioned 20 percent of 

 2           the housing is being planned for 

 3           affordable -- for affordable living.  And 

 4           that -- this is a statement but also a 

 5           question.  That is not nearly enough.  Over 

 6           50 percent of my district, even with the 

 7           aggressive gentrification that's already 

 8           taking place, over 50 percent of my district 

 9           is paying more than 30 percent of their 

10           income in rent.

11                  And this particularly affects the 

12           Black community in New York, where the 

13           average median income is only $43,000 in 

14           New York City and is only $53,000 in the 

15           state.

16                  What is HCR, what is the state 

17           planning to do?  What is the best approach?  

18           It's not about, in my view, just building 

19           more housing.  It has to be more of a certain 

20           kind of housing.  Because if we continue to 

21           build housing that people can't afford, all 

22           we're doing is displacing and continuing the 

23           exodus of people and particularly the Black 

24           community that has left in the hundreds of 


                                                                   109

 1           thousands that have been forced to leave 

 2           New York State.

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So I would 

 4           say one of the things we see and have seen in 

 5           the last, you know, five and more years is a 

 6           real increase in rents and a real extreme 

 7           increase in house prices.  And that is making 

 8           New York even more unaffordable.  

 9                  And we know, and the data proves this, 

10           that when there is more supply, that the 

11           prices come down.  So we are very focused on 

12           supply this year because every study has 

13           shown that the more housing that can get 

14           built, the more either price increase will 

15           slow or prices will -- that price inflation 

16           will slow down.  And we have to have that, 

17           because there is not enough apartments, the 

18           apartments are there --

19                  SENATOR CLEARE:  I don't disagree that 

20           we need apartments.  We need more housing.  

21           But we need more of a certain type of 

22           housing.  Never has anyone walked into my 

23           office and said, Senator Cleare, you know 

24           what you've got to do, you've got to get us 


                                                                   110

 1           some more luxury housing.

 2                  (Laughter.)

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So I would 

 4           say, for our part, we spend every dollar that 

 5           we get from the federal government on 

 6           affordable housing.  We cannot build any more 

 7           housing than we finance at HCR, and the city 

 8           is somewhat in the same position, because we 

 9           get these two resources from the federal 

10           government in the form of tax credits -- 

11           that's the primary source that we use for new 

12           construction, and we are spending every 

13           dollar of it we get every year, and we can't 

14           do any more, so --

15                  SENATOR CLEARE:  They only give me a 

16           little bit of time.

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.

18                  SENATOR CLEARE:  So I have a bill -- 

19           I'd like to talk to your office about it, 

20           because I think the state should be 

21           providing -- developing and providing 

22           housing.  We cannot continue to ask 

23           developers to create affordable housing.  

24           That's not what they do.  They develop for 


                                                                   111

 1           profit.  

 2                  And we have to find a way for us to -- 

 3           the best housing is Mitchell-Lama, that we 

 4           created.  We need to go back to that model.  

 5                  And I'll just ask these really 

 6           quickly.  What portion of the -- any of this 

 7           housing is being dedicated to seniors, the 

 8           fastest-growing population?

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So we 

10           finance a large amount of senior housing in 

11           our portfolio.  I don't have the exact number 

12           off the top of my head, but I can get that to 

13           you.

14                  But we have a very strong supportive 

15           housing and senior housing portion of the 

16           work that we do.

17                  SENATOR CLEARE:  And if you could send 

18           this to me, I'd like more information on the 

19           first-time homeowners program, if we can get 

20           an update on how many people have been 

21           helped --

22                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.

23                  SENATOR CLEARE:  -- and are there 

24           plans to expand it.


                                                                   112

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah, 

 2           absolutely.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 4                  We go to Assemblywoman Levenberg.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  So thank you 

 6           very much, Commissioner and Madam Chair.  

 7                  In your testimony you refer to the 

 8           proposed $500 million in capital funds 

 9           dedicated to developing up to 15,000 housing 

10           units on state-owned property.  Senator 

11           Kavanagh had asked about state-owned sites 

12           which might be considered for development.

13                  If a municipality has a site which 

14           they'd like considered, can you explain what 

15           the process and criteria for HCR's evaluation 

16           of suitability and availability would be?

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.

18                  I mean, we'd be happy to work with any 

19           municipality that has a site that they're 

20           looking -- from our parochial perspective for 

21           affordable housing, we'd be happy to work 

22           with them.  

23                  I think for the larger state fund, it 

24           is targeted towards state-owned sites, but I 


                                                                   113

 1           don't know that we have been approached by 

 2           any municipality that wanted to talk about 

 3           their municipally owned sites.  Though I 

 4           think we'd be open to having that discussion.  

 5           We are really trying to get more housing 

 6           built everywhere, so ...

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  Just a quick 

 8           advertisement, which is that hearing from 

 9           everybody about infrastructure that is making 

10           communities suitable for building more 

11           housing, I think having both more money for 

12           AIM, Aid to Municipalities, as well as more 

13           money -- as well as consideration of a 

14           New York State Bank would go a long way to 

15           helping finance all of the needs that we 

16           have.

17                  Also the Comptroller's just released 

18           report recommended that the state provide 

19           planning and logistical support to localities 

20           for review of zoning and other actions to 

21           facilitate development.

22                  Feedback that we've received from 

23           Westchester Municipal Officials Association 

24           and others, and "we" being actually 


                                                                   114

 1           Assemblyman Burdick and I, is that the lack 

 2           of such support is a major hurdle.  And I 

 3           recognize that your department has considered 

 4           this before.  But could you please explain 

 5           how such support might be provided other than 

 6           these hard-to-secure planning grants?

 7                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So we have 

 8           a -- in the budget there are some additional 

 9           FTEs for us specifically for the Pro-Housing 

10           Communities.  So we would anticipate that 

11           some of those additional staff could be 

12           liaisons for municipalities who need 

13           assistance.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  So to help 

15           them in the actual application process as 

16           well as --

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah, I 

18           would think -- I would say right now we are 

19           trying to help people in the application 

20           process actively.  Currently I think if 

21           people need beyond that additional work we're 

22           happy to sort of take that in and figure out 

23           how we can help them.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  Okay, great.  


                                                                   115

 1           All right.

 2                  And then finally, you know, just if 

 3           there's anything in particular that expands 

 4           funding for "missing middle" housing, which 

 5           is something that we talk a lot about again 

 6           in the suburbs.  I don't know if you have any 

 7           thoughts about that.  And I know that 

 8           Assemblyman Burdick's going to talk a little 

 9           bit about some of our legislative ideas also.

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah, we 

11           want to continue to make sure that developers 

12           in places like your district are aware that 

13           we actually have a lot of resources for 

14           middle-income housing.  We have a tax credit 

15           that supports it.  We have a funding capital 

16           program that supports it and not everyone is 

17           sort of aware that that exists and they go 

18           right to some of the other funding programs.

19                  So we are happy to continue working 

20           with you to make sure they're aware we have 

21           that and they can make themselves -- you 

22           know, use it for housing in your district.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  Thank you 

24           very much.


                                                                   116

 1                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  So next we have 

 2           Senator Jackson.

 3                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Good afternoon, 

 4           Commissioner, and to your staff.  Thank you 

 5           for coming and addressing the issues and 

 6           concerns.

 7                  I have one primary big concern.  I 

 8           will mention it to you now, and I want to 

 9           follow it with your staff.  But the survival 

10           of the Amalgamated Housing Cooperative in the 

11           Bronx.  I'm sure you know about that.

12                  They're -- in my opinion are on the 

13           verge of bankruptcy, and they need all of the 

14           help they can get.  So as the State Senator 

15           that represents them, I want to work with you 

16           and your team in order to help them survive.  

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes, we're 

18           absolutely happy to do that.  And we are 

19           working with all of our Mitchell-Lamas that 

20           are having challenges.  We're working very 

21           closely with them to make sure they can get 

22           stabilized.

23                  SENATOR JACKSON:  The 31st Senatorial 

24           District; Cordell, the 30th; and I think 


                                                                   117

 1           Gustavo Rivera -- they are all under the 

 2           average wealth of the community.  In essence, 

 3           the majority of the people are working, 

 4           trying to survive.  

 5                  And so my question to you is:  Under 

 6           the community-controlled affordable housing, 

 7           would Amalgamated fall under that since it's 

 8           basically people that have a limited amount 

 9           of money invested into co-ops?

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We have a 

11           Mitchell-Lama funding program, so that would 

12           probably be where we would most likely direct 

13           them to in terms of resources at our agency, 

14           is the Mitchell-Lama funding program.

15                  SENATOR JACKSON:  And would they be 

16           able to receive help under the homeowner's 

17           stabilization fund?  I mean, I'm looking at 

18           every opportunity that they can borrow money 

19           or get grants in order to survive.

20                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I would say 

21           we'll be happy to follow up with you on sort 

22           of the resources we have specifically for 

23           Amalgamated and how we can best get them the 

24           investment they need to make their capital 


                                                                   118

 1           repairs.  We have been working with them very 

 2           closely for quite some time.

 3                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Now, good-cause 

 4           eviction, there's been a bill that's been 

 5           pending in the State Senate since basically 

 6           we got into -- when I say "we," the Democrats 

 7           took leadership of the Senate.

 8                  Do you support good-cause eviction 

 9           that tenants should be able to renew their 

10           lease without being thrown out and have a 

11           good reason to evict them as the only way to 

12           have eviction?

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I would 

14           say -- and, you know, the Governor has been 

15           very clear about this -- that we want to make 

16           sure that as we go into this budget season we 

17           are incredibly focused on housing supply.  We 

18           were very focused on it last year, and we are 

19           back again talking about the importance of 

20           that to relieving pressure in the -- it's the 

21           absolute main tool that we need to relieve 

22           pressure in the housing stock.  

23                  And, you know, going back to the 

24           Housing Vacancy Survey and the level of 


                                                                   119

 1           production in the city has dropped from the 

 2           lapsing of the tax incentives, and we just 

 3           aren't keeping up also in terms of, you know, 

 4           people moving into New York City and yet the 

 5           housing that's available.

 6                  So I think we will -- you will 

 7           consistently hear us talking about housing 

 8           supply as our number-one issue for the budget 

 9           season.

10                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Thank you.

11                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Thanks.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We go to 

13           Assemblyman Braunstein.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you, 

15           Commissioner.  

16                  I want to talk about the RUSH program.  

17           So with the RUSH program, you're asking for 

18           $500 million over two years to be 

19           appropriated to UDC.  UDC has statutory 

20           authority to use general project plans to 

21           override local zoning.  Is the expectation 

22           for these state properties that UDC is going 

23           to use GPPs to override the local zoning?

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Well, I'd 


                                                                   120

 1           say a couple of things.

 2                  So GPP can be used for disposition 

 3           only.  It's not always used for rezoning.  

 4           That would be the example in the Gowanus 

 5           pilot that we were -- was in the news a bit 

 6           this week where it was used just to provide a 

 7           tax exemption only.  So I would just 

 8           distinguish that it isn't always for 

 9           rezoning.  

10                  But to the larger question, I don't 

11           know that we have clarity yet across -- 

12           depending on which sites end up being the 

13           most appropriate, whether or not ESD would 

14           need to be involved for disposition or 

15           rezoning or whether they wouldn't need to be.

16                  So I don't think we know the answer to 

17           that yet.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  So I 

19           represent the Creedmoor site in 

20           Eastern Queens, and there's already a 

21           proposal that's been released.  Is it 

22           anticipated that ESD is going to be using a 

23           GPP for that project?

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I believe 


                                                                   121

 1           they will use GPP for disposition.  And I 

 2           would -- yeah, I would think -- I think the 

 3           plan is to use it for the rezoning framework 

 4           there also.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  So if 

 6           we were to approve this funding for future 

 7           unspecified projects, it's anticipated that 

 8           the administration will use GPPs as well to 

 9           override local zoning?  Because you're doing 

10           it with Creedmoor, right?

11                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Well, I 

12           think in Creedmoor it has to go through some 

13           process in order to get rezoned in order to 

14           get disposed of.

15                  But I wouldn't say it's for sure that 

16           all the sites that are in the 15,000 would 

17           necessarily use a GPP or, if they did, that 

18           they would use it for rezoning.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  If they were 

20           using a GPP moving forward, would the 

21           administration seek approval of local 

22           legislators to make sure that they and the 

23           community are comfortable with the project?

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah, I 


                                                                   122

 1           mean, I don't -- I think the idea and the 

 2           intent here is to make sure that -- and 

 3           because the sites are so different and 

 4           they're all sort of in different localities, 

 5           that there has to be a conversation at the 

 6           local level about what gets built there.  So 

 7           I think that is very much anticipated to be 

 8           part of the process.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  I 

10           mean, because in Eastern Queens we've -- we 

11           had a conversation that consisted of the 

12           community making recommendations, Zooms with 

13           ESDC.  The community recommended a thousand 

14           units, various types of housing.  ESDC came 

15           back with 2800 units, eight-story buildings, 

16           completely out of context with the rest of 

17           the surrounding community.

18                  So, you know, having Zoom meetings and 

19           having people offer opinions is not the same 

20           as having an agreement with the local 

21           community.

22                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Understood.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  So given my 

24           experience with Creedmoor so far, I just have 


                                                                   123

 1           concerns about giving this authority for 

 2           unspecified projects moving forward, and I 

 3           imagine some of my colleagues would as well.

 4                  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senate?

 6                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator May.

 7                  SENATOR MAY:  Hi, Commissioner, good 

 8           to see you.

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Hi.  You 

10           too.

11                  SENATOR MAY:  Let me start just by 

12           saying that there's quite a bit in the 

13           Governor's budget about housing for New York 

14           City, but I hope that doesn't mean you're 

15           taking your eye off the ball on upstate.  

16                  Senator Cleare had a very strong and 

17           important message about the need for 

18           affordable housing in her district.  We had a 

19           hearing in December about concentrated 

20           poverty in our upstate cities.  And one of 

21           the messages we got is that if you build a 

22           hundred percent affordable, that actually 

23           contributes to more concentrated poverty.  

24           But if you can have mixed-income development, 


                                                                   124

 1           that is much better for shifting the 

 2           character of the neighborhood.

 3                  So are there ways that the state can 

 4           use its granting powers to help us with more 

 5           mixed-income housing?  Because what we are 

 6           finding is there's not that much flexibility 

 7           in the funding that's out there.

 8                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes, 

 9           absolutely.  And we'd be happy to work with 

10           you sort of more specifically on projects if 

11           you feel like they are -- need a little 

12           pushing to get sort of the income mix to be 

13           different than what it is.  We're happy to 

14           work with you on that.  

15                  We have a series of programs, we have 

16           tweaked them over time to try to get at more 

17           middle-income housing.  It tends to be -- you 

18           know, it's harder to finance.  There's sort 

19           of like a box for low-income and there's a 

20           box for market, and the middle can be more 

21           challenging.  

22                  But we have tried, with our state tax 

23           credits and with our middle-income program 

24           and a series of tools to try to drive a 


                                                                   125

 1           little more of that where the market can 

 2           support it and where it makes sense.  

 3                  If there's other ways you think we 

 4           should be looking at that, we're happy to 

 5           work with you on that.

 6                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  

 7                  And I guess in my office we're focused 

 8           on trying to come up with ways to make it 

 9           more affordable to develop housing, to reduce 

10           some of the regulatory barriers and just the 

11           costs of the lawsuits that come up when 

12           people try to do developments in certain 

13           areas.

14                  So one of those is about reforming the 

15           SEQR process in housing.  And I talked with 

16           the DEC commissioner about this.  I don't 

17           know if your office is at all involved in 

18           that process of trying to shift it.  I was 

19           hearing from the groups that are here today 

20           from the neighborhood development 

21           organizations that they're really in favor of 

22           that.

23                  So can you say anything about where 

24           you are on that?  


                                                                   126

 1                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes.  I'm 

 2           sure you may have heard from the DEC 

 3           commissioner they are starting to make some 

 4           changes in their process that will occur 

 5           during this year.  And I think we look 

 6           forward to that being the beginning of a 

 7           series of changes that can get made to make 

 8           it easier.  

 9                  And the City of New York is also 

10           proposing some changes which will provide 

11           sort of a guide path also for other changes 

12           that we could make at the state level.  

13                  So we will continue to work with you I 

14           think on getting changes on that -- on SEQR 

15           as best we can.

16                  SENATOR MAY:  I look forward to it.  

17           Thank you.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblywoman 

19           Lee.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  Hi, Commissioner.

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Hi.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  So earlier you 

23           mentioned the vacancies for the number of 

24           vacant units for rent-stabilized apartments 


                                                                   127

 1           was around 40,000, and that includes 

 2           apartments that are offline in that.

 3                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So the thing 

 4           that we track at HCR which is different than 

 5           what's in the age for the city's HVS survey 

 6           is landlords register with us, but the status 

 7           of their apartment is on April 1st -- what 

 8           the status is as of April 1st each year.  And 

 9           so, you know, at any given time on April 1st 

10           a certain number of apartments are in between 

11           tenants.

12                  So we are back to historic norms for 

13           what we see as apartments registered as 

14           vacant on April 1st.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  Got it.

16                  And that's 40,000?

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I can get 

18           you the exact number of it.  It's sub -- I 

19           believe it's sub 40,000.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  Okay.

21                  In my district I have a large number 

22           of rent-stabilized and rent-controlled units, 

23           and I'm hearing from building owners that, 

24           one, it's just getting difficult to maintain 


                                                                   128

 1           their buildings because of higher insurance 

 2           and property taxes, as well as bringing up 

 3           older units that become vacant up to code.

 4                  And, you know, this is an important 

 5           amount -- an important supply for my 

 6           communities.  Do you have some solutions for 

 7           how we can help support getting more of these 

 8           apartments online that already exist?

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Absolutely.  

10           I mean, we certainly hear some of those same 

11           challenges.  I don't know that they sort of 

12           are reflected in the data so clearly, but we 

13           certainly hear them anecdotally.

14                  As you'll recall, the J-51 tax 

15           exemption was passed last year which does 

16           provide a tax exemption for owners in order 

17           to be able to make investments in their 

18           properties.

19                  We also are passing a source of income 

20           for insurance bill this year, which there 

21           is -- people are seeing really big spikes in 

22           their insurance.  We're hoping that will 

23           bring some of the cost down for insurance, 

24           especially buildings that have affordable 


                                                                   129

 1           tenants in them.

 2                  So, you know, we are trying with the 

 3           tools that we have, that we can, to try to 

 4           relieve some of that pressure.  Again, as 

 5           I've said before, I think people are 

 6           certainly welcome to come talk to us about 

 7           financing if they'd like to take out a loan 

 8           from us that we can provide for them to make 

 9           capital repairs on their buildings.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  Maybe a fund to 

11           help support improvements as well would be 

12           helpful.

13                  I also have large ethnic communities 

14           in my district.  I have a large Latino 

15           population and a large Asian population.  

16           These are, you know, households that are 

17           multigenerational and like to -- they want to 

18           live together.  So the grandparents, the 

19           parents, the children.  

20                  And I'm hearing from builders that 

21           it's very difficult to get financing for 

22           buildings with multi-bedroom apartments.  

23           Studio and one-bedroom apartments are, you 

24           know, easy, buildings with lots of studios 


                                                                   130

 1           and one-bedrooms, but it's harder to get the 

 2           financing when you have three-bedroom 

 3           apartments and the like.

 4                  What can we do to help with that 

 5           financing to support that?  Not just studios 

 6           and one-bedrooms.  We need to be able to make 

 7           sure that our families can stay in the 

 8           neighborhoods where they are.

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  You know, 

10           it's interesting, I actually haven't heard -- 

11           you know, we don't do a lot of sort of 

12           market-rate financing.  So I'm not as 

13           familiar with what maybe the banks might be 

14           saying to developers about that.

15                  But happy to sort of do a follow-up 

16           and see where there's a way we could be 

17           helpful if we can.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  And it's for 

19           affordable housing as well.

20                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Oh, for 

21           affordable.  Oh, well, we certainly 

22           finance threes and fours.  So we should 

23           follow up and talk about that.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  Thank you.  


                                                                   131

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senate?  

 2                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator Comrie.

 3                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Good afternoon, 

 4           Commissioner.

 5                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Hi.

 6                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Happy Valentine's 

 7           Day.

 8                  Just to follow up, you mentioned 

 9           hardship for folks that are in 

10           rent-stabilized units.  Do you know what the 

11           total amount of vacant units are in the 

12           rent-stabilized stock?  

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So we track 

14           vacancies as of April 1st each year.  

15           landlords have to report to us the status of 

16           the apartment on that date.  And we are back 

17           to roughly historic sort of pre-COVID norms 

18           for vacancy in the rent-stabilized stock.

19                  SENATOR COMRIE:  You don't know what 

20           that number is, though? 

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Oh, yeah, 

22           sorry.  It's sub 40,000 units, which is where 

23           it has historically been for the system.

24                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Okay.  I have a bill, 


                                                                   132

 1           along with an Assembly companion bill, to 

 2           work on the rent-stabilized units, S6352C, 

 3           which would work on making sure that we could 

 4           come up with realistic numbers for that.  

 5                  Have you had a chance to look at that 

 6           bill?  

 7                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I haven't 

 8           read it, but I'm familiar.

 9                  SENATOR COMRIE:  You mentioned that 

10           you can do some help for people that are in 

11           that situation if they need to get loans.  

12           How many loans have you actually granted?  

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So as I was 

14           saying, we're happy to provide loans to 

15           rent-stabilized building owners who need 

16           low-cost loans to make building repairs --

17                  SENATOR COMRIE:  How many have you 

18           actually granted?  

19                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We have 

20           worked with the associations.  We've not had 

21           a lot of interest from them in loans from us.  

22           So we have not done -- I would have to go 

23           back and check if we have done any.  But they 

24           have not expressed interest in getting 


                                                                   133

 1           low-cost financing from us.

 2                  SENATOR COMRIE:  You mentioned that 

 3           you're having problems getting staffing up.  

 4           Were you able to improve your technology over 

 5           the last few years to be able to get better 

 6           computer systems?

 7                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We have in 

 8           some places and not in others.  But we have 

 9           active procurements in all the places where 

10           we are very behind and will be bringing on 

11           new systems this year.

12                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Okay.  You mentioned 

13           you're creating and preserving 40,000 

14           affordable homes.  Do you have a breakdown on 

15           what was created and what was preserved?

16                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Our number 

17           for the 40,000 is about -- a little less than 

18           10,000 new.  It's a little more than 20,000 

19           preserved.  And then the difference would be 

20           homeownership, but I can't do the math in my 

21           head that quick.  

22                  SENATOR COMRIE:  And how many of those 

23           homes were done with minority developers?  

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We can get 


                                                                   134

 1           back to you with that.  We are trying to make 

 2           great efforts to up the number of MWBE 

 3           developers that we work with across our 

 4           different programs.  So be happy to circle 

 5           back on that.

 6                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Okay.  Then also how 

 7           much MWBE procurement or contracting have you 

 8           done within your agency?  Supplies and 

 9           everything else.  

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yup.  So our 

11           -- you know, the state's goal is 30 percent.  

12           Our -- I think last year as an agency we were 

13           at 29 percent.  We are generally one of the 

14           top agencies to meet the 30 percent goal.  We 

15           will exceed it in procurement.  I think we 

16           are north of 60 percent in our procurement on 

17           MWBEs.  And happy to provide you more sort of 

18           detailed information if it's helpful.

19                  SENATOR COMRIE:  I only have 

20           25 seconds, so I just want to concur with 

21           what Assemblyman Braunstein said about 

22           Creedmoor and making sure those numbers are 

23           right and fit the context of the community, 

24           and that the agency doesn't make a large 


                                                                   135

 1           shift from what they promised us in the 

 2           beginning.  

 3                  And also, with Senator Cleare, the 

 4           need for the state to build housing directly 

 5           is more important than ever.  And I would 

 6           hope that we can delve down, and I want to 

 7           work with Senator Cleare to get back to a 

 8           statewide Mitchell-Lama development plan.  We 

 9           can't have developers making affordable 

10           housing.  They just can't afford it.  The 

11           state can do it.  We need to make it happen.

12                  Thank you.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you, 

14           Senator.  

15                  We go to Assemblymember 

16           Chandler-Waterman.  

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  All 

18           right.  Thank you so much, Chair.  

19                  Thank you, Commissioner.  It's always 

20           a pleasure to work with you and your team.  

21           Thank you for the support on the ground in 

22           our community meetings.  

23                  I want to talk about Mitchell-Lama 

24           co-ops -- Vital Brooklyn Utica Crescent -- 


                                                                   136

 1           and faith leaders in housing development.  

 2                  So does your agency have jurisdiction 

 3           over Mitchell-Lama?

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We do over 

 5           some, and the city does over others.  But 

 6           yes.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

 8           Okay.  So ERAP.  So shareholders apply for 

 9           ERAP, they're allowed to go through the 

10           process, payment goes to the management 

11           company, then they're told they don't 

12           qualify, money is taken back.

13                  What can be done to rectify this and 

14           find a solution to assist shareholders in 

15           arrears and management to navigate?

16                  And then also, what contributions are 

17           we doing for Mitchell-Lama as a whole, and 

18           how we're supporting them and making sure we 

19           are investing as we started, what we did 

20           prior.

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.  So 

22           ERAP specifically, OTDA operates that program 

23           so I can't -- I don't know the specifics of 

24           how many Mitchell-Lamas have applied for 


                                                                   137

 1           that.

 2                  We certainly work really closely with 

 3           our Mitchell-Lamas to make sure, you know, if 

 4           they run into trouble -- they are privately 

 5           owned and privately managed, and we are there 

 6           to assist them when they need us.  And 

 7           especially when they need capital repairs, we 

 8           want to make sure that they're -- they have 

 9           support in that.  

10                  And we have $150 million in our 

11           Housing Plan that we haven't actually 

12           accessed yet.  We will start -- we have been 

13           using old appropriations and we will now 

14           start to spend that down this year to help a 

15           series of Mitchell-Lamas that need help with 

16           capital repairs.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  All 

18           right.  So I look forward to working with you 

19           with that.

20                  Vital Brooklyn Utica Crescent, with 

21           the affordable project, that's now going to 

22           be built in two years in my district.  The 

23           community preference, right, I know was 

24           50 percent.  It was changed due to the city 


                                                                   138

 1           settlement.  Does that apply to that project, 

 2           being it was done before the settlement came?  

 3           Did the community preference change, the 

 4           percentage?

 5                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  My 

 6           understanding is that the litigation would 

 7           apply to anything that happens after the 

 8           decision was made, so I believe it would 

 9           apply.  But we can get back to you on that.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

11           Okay.  Faith leaders.  What plan for 

12           supporting faith leaders to be able to be at 

13           the table for building affordable housing?

14                  We have a perfect project that's being 

15           done -- it's called Ebenezer -- in my sister 

16           colleague Nikki Lucas's district.  We would 

17           like to see more of that with our faith 

18           leaders.  How can you support or do you have 

19           a plan to help faith leaders to be part of 

20           development?

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  We work with 

22           faith organizations across the state, from 

23           Brooklyn to Buffalo, to develop property, 

24           their property for affordable housing.  So 


                                                                   139

 1           we'd be happy to work with you if there's 

 2           specifics in your district.  It's certainly 

 3           something we -- is a part of our work that we 

 4           really are proud of.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

 6           Okay.  And senior housing.  I know that we're 

 7           going to have some percentage of senior 

 8           housing -- how much in that Utica Crescent 

 9           project will be allocated to the older 

10           adults?

11                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I don't have 

12           the exact numbers for that specific project, 

13           but happy to follow up with you.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

15           Okay.  Any other senior housing that you can 

16           discuss with us now?

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So we have a 

18           program specifically for senior housing.  So 

19           we fund it in New York City and in the rest 

20           of the state we have, in any given year, you 

21           know, a number of projects that are 

22           specifically for seniors.  We'll be happy to 

23           get you that list of projects if that's 

24           helpful.


                                                                   140

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

 2           Okay.  Thank you.  And we did it in exactly 

 3           3 minutes.  Thank you so much.  Appreciate 

 4           you.

 5                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yup.  Yeah, 

 6           thanks.  

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So there are no 

 8           more Senators, so we're going to the 

 9           Assemblymembers.  Assemblyman Burdick, who 

10           will be followed by Assemblywoman Simon.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  Thank you.  

12                  Thank you for the great work that 

13           you're doing.  

14                  And I want to mention my agreement 

15           with Senator May in advocating for 

16           mixed-income housing, and also would like to 

17           add my support for good-cause eviction.

18                  Further to the Comptroller's housing 

19           report it recommends that each local 

20           government should conduct a review of local 

21           zoning rules and other actions.  And that 

22           recommendation seems to align with what the 

23           Governor wants to do.  And as my colleague 

24           Assemblywoman Levenberg had mentioned, she 


                                                                   141

 1           and I are working on a package of housing 

 2           bills, some of which already have been 

 3           introduced.  They do not include construction 

 4           mandates but would require localities to take 

 5           action, including assessing need, updating 

 6           comprehensive plans if warranted, adopting an 

 7           actual housing plan to address community 

 8           need, and promoting climate-informed smart 

 9           growth and transit oriented development.  

10                  We would welcome feedback outside of 

11           this hearing.

12                  The New York City watershed 

13           regulations also -- and I think I've 

14           mentioned this to you -- are a hurdle for 

15           many localities that need to build out 

16           infrastructure.  And of course we are keen on 

17           protecting, you know, precious water 

18           resources.  But would really like to see your 

19           thoughts and your help on how we can meet 

20           both needs, and would appreciate your 

21           comments.  

22                  My only other question at this 

23           juncture is in a Zoom meeting we had with you 

24           and your staff, we had talked about how we 


                                                                   142

 1           might be able to increase the number of units 

 2           under the five-year affordable housing plan.  

 3           And you mentioned that some of those come 

 4           from federal dollars, but others might be a 

 5           possibility.  Would appreciate it if you can 

 6           identify what programs might be expanded.

 7                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Sure.  Thank 

 8           you for the question.  And we're happy to 

 9           work with both you and Assemblywoman 

10           Levenberg to advance legislation that 

11           increases housing supply across the state, as 

12           is very much our focus in general, and 

13           specifically for the next six weeks.  So 

14           happy to work with you on those bills that 

15           you're proposing.

16                  I think in terms of our ability to 

17           expand the work that we do -- and I have said 

18           this before -- you know, we spend every 

19           dollar we get from the federal government 

20           that is on our new construction --

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  But are there 

22           any specific programs that maybe it's through 

23           state dollars that might work?

24                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I think that 


                                                                   143

 1           for -- two things.  One is I think for new 

 2           construction, we need federal dollars for new 

 3           construction.  They are incredibly valuable.  

 4           And there is potentially movement at the 

 5           federal level right now to get some increased 

 6           capacity there, which we are excited about.

 7                  I think on the state funding programs, 

 8           those would probably be more around investing 

 9           in smaller homes or in smaller buildings and 

10           doing sort of more renovation and sort of 

11           capital improvement type work.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  Maybe if we 

13           could pursue that offline.

14                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yup.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  And on watershed 

16           regulations?

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I don't have 

18           a lot of expertise in watershed regulations.  

19           I would defer to Commissioner Seggos for most 

20           issues around that.

21                  But happy to continue discussion with 

22           you as those things overlap with housing.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  Thanks so much.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  


                                                                   144

 1                  We go to Senator Martins.

 2                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Good to see you 

 3           again.  How are you?

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Hi.  You 

 5           too.  Good, thanks.

 6                  SENATOR MARTINS:  You had mentioned 

 7           earlier that there were a series of sites 

 8           that needed statutory approval in their 

 9           authorization; therefore, they're identified 

10           in the budget as potential sites for housing.  

11           They include some sites on Long Island.  

12                  To me, that means there are other 

13           sites that didn't require statutory approval.  

14           Can you speak to that, whether or not there 

15           is in fact a list of other sites across the 

16           state that are state-owned, MTA-owned or 

17           SUNY-owned properties that are being 

18           evaluated for housing?  

19                  And if that list exists, is it 

20           available for us to review?

21                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So I think 

22           we'll get back to you on sort of the list 

23           available for review.  

24                  But I would say sort of writ large, 


                                                                   145

 1           there is a long list of sites and we are 

 2           working through which are most appropriate 

 3           for housing, which have the least number of 

 4           barriers in terms of how much infrastructure 

 5           they might need to have housing built on 

 6           them, so how quickly can we get them sort of 

 7           housing-ready.  And the RUSH funding that's 

 8           in the budget is meant to pay for 

 9           infrastructure or for -- you know, for roads, 

10           for water/sewer, for demolition, things like 

11           that. 

12                  We don't need statutory authority for 

13           most state-owned sites.  The state has the 

14           ability to dispose of property through the 

15           UDC, and we would use ESDC for that.  

16                  So what you see in the budget around 

17           SUNY is really some -- a tweak to allow them 

18           to land-lease portions of their property.

19                  SENATOR MARTINS:  I understand -- no, 

20           I understand that.  And that's precisely the 

21           point of the question, is that allowing the 

22           opportunity for our local communities and 

23           certainly us as representatives to understand 

24           which sites are being evaluated and frankly 


                                                                   146

 1           prioritized would be very helpful.

 2                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yup.

 3                  SENATOR MARTINS:  As you know, I 

 4           represent a district on the North Shore of 

 5           Nassau County, and so there are probably a 

 6           series of areas that could be impacted.  And 

 7           certainly the sooner we know, the sooner we 

 8           can prepare for those.

 9                  I share a great village with 

10           Assemblyman Ra that received a grant this 

11           year.  Very happy to say they're doing 

12           wonderful work, built over a thousand units 

13           before the carrot -- didn't need the stick.  

14           But they're very happy to get that funding.  

15                  One of the themes that we get 

16           oftentimes is the lack of a quick response 

17           when these municipalities have a question, 

18           and therefore projects are delayed.  And it's 

19           just more of a comment than anything else.  I 

20           understand.  If you can look into that, that 

21           is -- the turnaround time would make a huge 

22           difference in terms of getting projects in 

23           the ground and actually building the housing, 

24           and it really should be something.  


                                                                   147

 1                  And to piggyback on Senator Comrie, 

 2           you know, we've mentioned quite often today 

 3           the need to incentivize landlords to invest 

 4           in making major capital improvements.  We 

 5           understand that the housing stock in many 

 6           instances is not where it should be.  And yet 

 7           these low-interest loans are not getting 

 8           people's attention.  Why?

 9                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I mean, I 

10           think in general private landlords want to 

11           work with the private financial market, they 

12           don't want to take out loans from us.  And 

13           given where interest rates are, I think 

14           that's challenging at this time.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

16                  We go to Assemblywoman Simon.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Thank you.  

18                  It's good to see you again.  

19                  So I have a couple of questions, and 

20           some of my colleagues have asked similar 

21           questions.  And so one of the concerns we 

22           have is -- or at least I have -- is 

23           converting the commercial property to 

24           affordable housing where it's 80/20.  Now, 


                                                                   148

 1           there is a subset that is lower.  But one of 

 2           the -- and I know you're focused on supply.  

 3           But in my district we've had an increase of 

 4           supply like crazy.  Very little of it is 

 5           affordable.  

 6                  And I will tell you I have a neighbor 

 7           who was in a converted building from factory 

 8           to -- and 22 years later got an affordable 

 9           unit.  

10                  And so the challenge really is the 

11           supply of the affordable units.  It doesn't 

12           mean we don't need more, but we also need 

13           really to look at affordability.  So I'm glad 

14           this year the Governor is talking about that, 

15           which is a big change from last year.  But 

16           the real analysis is how much.

17                  And the other is the types of 

18           apartments that are being built.  We have a 

19           lot of studios and one-bedrooms.  You can't 

20           keep a family -- if you have two kids, you're 

21           going to end up moving to the suburbs because 

22           you can't find a three-bedroom apartment.  We 

23           really tried to control for that at 

24           Atlantic Yards.  We got a few of those units.  


                                                                   149

 1           As you know, they're still not built.  

 2                  But what -- you know, this really is a 

 3           critical issue in terms of people leaving.  

 4           If they're leaving, they're leaving and going 

 5           to Maplewood, New Jersey.  I know that's 

 6           where half of my district -- my neighborhood 

 7           went, to Maplewood, New Jersey, because they 

 8           had two kids.  

 9                  So how can we change that approach?  

10           Because that affordability needs to be more 

11           permanent, and it needs to be deeper.  And we 

12           need more of those units.

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I've never 

14           been to Maplewood, but I agree that we want 

15           people to --

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  It's a lovely -- 

17                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  -- stay in 

18           Brooklyn, and we want them to stay in 

19           New York City and in New York State.

20                  Look, I would say, you know, since we 

21           were together this week celebrating 18 

22           projects that are going to start construction 

23           in the Gowanus area to create over 5,000 

24           housing units, including 1400 very low, 


                                                                   150

 1           permanently affordable housing --

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Yes.  We have 

 3           exceptions.

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Well, I 

 5           think that's sort of -- that's the map, 

 6           right?  We have this great example of, with a 

 7           tax exemption in place -- or that was not in 

 8           place, but with the ability to sort of 

 9           replicate that through the process, so the 

10           Governor announced in July we are now going 

11           to create 1400 very low income, permanently 

12           affordable housing units in your district, 

13           and we want to be doing that everywhere we 

14           can to create the affordable units and to 

15           create the rest of the supply to help tamp 

16           down prices.  

17                  So, you know, I think we would hope to 

18           continue that conversation about how we need 

19           that in other areas of the city.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Well, we're 

21           getting a lot, but we need -- it's the mix.  

22           And that's the real challenge.  Because we 

23           have plenty of luxury housing.  That's what, 

24           you know, they want to build.  People will 


                                                                   151

 1           move in, but we're displacing people.  

 2                  And, you know, we've had a lot of 

 3           displacement.  In my district in particular, 

 4           we lost most of the Puerto Rican community 

 5           because they rezoned Fourth Avenue.  Atlantic 

 6           Yards we've, you know, displaced 25 percent 

 7           of the African American community.  So we 

 8           need to be careful about how we do that.  

 9           That's my concern.

10                  Thank you.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

12                  Assemblymember Taylor.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN TAYLOR:  Thank you, 

14           Commissioner.  Thank you, Madam Chair.

15                  Wow, I just sound like a broken record 

16           here, so I don't want to do that.  But 

17           there's this old saying:  If you build it, 

18           they'll come to it.  However, if you don't 

19           build it, they're going to get forced out.  

20           And I think that's happening across the 

21           state, especially in the city.  

22                  So I want to be wise with my time.  

23           There are three things that are really, 

24           really important to me in my district in 


                                                                   152

 1           particular.  One, can we do more vouchers but 

 2           increase the cost, the amount of the 

 3           vouchers?  That may be helpful.  We certainly 

 4           want to watch out for those that are 

 5           discriminated against that.  

 6                  The other one is Wilson Major Morris 

 7           is a community center in my community that is 

 8           available -- and I have this in the budget 

 9           ask -- but they want to do housing.  So that 

10           would be a great collaboration.  If we could 

11           talk about that offline, that would be great.

12                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Absolutely.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN TAYLOR:  The other thing 

14           that I am just losing my mind about is 

15           Mitchell-Lama.  

16                  Esplanade Gardens, they had a 

17           $150 million investment in capital 

18           improvement, and the place looks like they've 

19           done diddly in there.  I mean, it looks good 

20           in the area, you've got blue lights on top of 

21           the building, but you have no electricity in 

22           some places.  You have boilers that are 

23           inadequate.  You have water that looks like 

24           it's brown most of the time.


                                                                   153

 1                  So the residents are at wits' end, 

 2           coupled with the fact that they have these 

 3           increases that they have to pay.  They have a 

 4           loan they have to pay back.  And no one seems 

 5           to care about them.  That's my understanding.  

 6           Why?  Because during COVID the Governor 

 7           allowed -- not this Governor, the previous 

 8           Governor allowed the capital work to go on 

 9           but no one watched what happened.  It was 

10           deplorable the way the people had to live.  

11           And they have not been made whole.  

12                  These folks who are in here, this is 

13           their sunrise -- the sun is setting on a lot 

14           of their lives, and they can't even stay 

15           there anymore.  And I see no help, no relief, 

16           and I am pissed to the highest.  I just want 

17           to say that.

18                  The other issue that I want to put out 

19           here really quickly is, is it possible that 

20           the state can consider bonds and let us 

21           build?  When I say "us," get people to build.  

22           Because the folks that are doing it right 

23           now, there's a gain associated with it.  And 

24           I think we have to just stop, look back.  


                                                                   154

 1           There are a lot of things that they're doing 

 2           well, but we can do more.  

 3                  Essentially what my colleague just 

 4           said.  If we build three bedrooms, if we 

 5           don't change that narrative, then we already 

 6           know what we're going to get.  It's a 

 7           self-fulfilling prophecy.  If you build it, 

 8           that's what you're going to get:  one 

 9           bedroom.  Who's coming?  Single families.  

10           Single persons.  But if you build it, you 

11           want to keep families, what New York has been 

12           the bread and butter of the world about?  

13           Keep building families.  And that's what it's 

14           all about.  

15                  So I'll leave you time to -- oh, 

16           shoot.  Sorry.  We'll have to talk offline.  

17                  (Laughter; inaudible overtalk.)

18                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Look, I 

19           would say sort of on the -- I'm not sure 

20           which thing to answer there.  

21                  But I would say on the Mitchell-Lamas, 

22           we continue to work with all the 

23           Mitchell-Lamas to make sure that -- you know, 

24           they are privately owned and privately 


                                                                   155

 1           managed, but we are there to support them to 

 2           make sure they can get access to -- 

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN TAYLOR:  They need 

 4           oversight, they need critical -- because 

 5           right now it's almost criminal some of the 

 6           stuff that's happened there.  And everybody 

 7           said, you know, they have ability to do -- 

 8           they have not done a job well.  They're not 

 9           real estate people.  They don't own.  And I 

10           appreciate -- I apologize for cutting you 

11           off.  But they don't know how to do the job.  

12           And no one's making sure that the job is done 

13           correctly.  That's my bone to pick.

14                  Can we talk afterwards?

15                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Absolutely.  

16                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you, 

17           Assemblyman.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN TAYLOR:  Thank you, 

19           Commissioner.  I apologize.

20                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  That's all 

21           right.  

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman 

23           Meeks.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  Thank you, 


                                                                   156

 1           Madam Chair.  

 2                  Commissioner, thank you for joining us 

 3           today.

 4                  I have a question or concern.  I'm 

 5           from Rochester, New York.  And often we deal 

 6           with the Tale of Two Cities.  We've made some 

 7           strides in the space of new housing, but I 

 8           think we also need to keep in mind existing 

 9           housing stock and the many in our community 

10           who are on fixed incomes, struggling to stay 

11           afloat, and need assistance sometimes with 

12           things as simple as a new roof or improved 

13           windows.  

14                  But with these new developments that 

15           come about, often mixed-income or low-income 

16           housing, I think we need to be mindful about 

17           the opportunities that we could provide our 

18           community.  All too often we see majority 

19           white men come into the community, build 

20           these projects up, and then you have BIPOC 

21           communities that live there.  

22                  So it's like here is something new, 

23           something different for you all to live in.  

24           However, we don't afford these communities 


                                                                   157

 1           the opportunity to generate wealth in 

 2           building these type of projects, and we 

 3           continue to see the fact that we have 

 4           communities such as three of the poorest top 

 5           five zip codes in Rochester in my district.  

 6                  And I think we need to capitalize on 

 7           these opportunities.  How could you support 

 8           such an effort and be intentional when it 

 9           comes to project labor agreements to assure 

10           that members of the community have an 

11           opportunity to generate wealth?

12                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So I would 

13           say a couple of things, one sort of relate -- 

14           not so directly related and one directly 

15           related.  

16                  One is we launched the Homeowner 

17           Stabilization Fund, and we are going to be 

18           working in Rochester in areas of high 

19           homeowners of color, also high levels of 

20           housing distress, because we want to make 

21           sure that those historic neighborhoods in 

22           places like Rochester that have a lot of 

23           oftentimes elderly Black and brown 

24           homeowners, but who have a lot of distress in 


                                                                   158

 1           their houses, are getting assistance to be 

 2           able to make repairs to roofs and boilers and 

 3           any other type of sort of capital they need 

 4           so they can stay stably housed in those 

 5           communities.  

 6                  So I think that's important for us too 

 7           in your sort of Tale of Two Cities narrative.

 8                  I think on the other side, you know, 

 9           we make sure -- we are -- have made changes 

10           to our programs to get more MWBE developers 

11           in them, to sort of your point about who's 

12           building the buildings we're talking about.  

13                  And we also enforce our MWBE in the 

14           contracting to make sure that the contracts 

15           that we are -- that are sort of by extension 

16           being let out through the projects that we're 

17           financing are going to MWBE contractors.  You 

18           know, there are not as many -- in some parts 

19           of the state there are more or less MWBE 

20           contractors, so we are sometimes less or more 

21           successful in that effort, depending on where 

22           we're working.  

23                  But, you know, I would also say we'd 

24           be happy to work with you if you think 


                                                                   159

 1           there's other things we could be doing to get 

 2           a bigger impact there.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  Yeah, I would love 

 4           to work with you in that space, because there 

 5           are things that we could do even as they 

 6           relate to our high schools and educational 

 7           opportunities to, you know, bring about like 

 8           co-ops and training opportunities for some of 

 9           our youth in the community as well as adults.

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Great.  I 

11           think the commissioner of Labor will be 

12           delighted to partner with us on that also.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  Thank you.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

15                  We go to Assemblywoman Kelles.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Thank you so 

17           much for being here.

18                  Just one thing I want to mention off 

19           the top, I see that HOPP, first-time 

20           homeowners and land banks were cut.  I know 

21           this was a legislative add.  I'd love for us 

22           to stop playing that game back and forth, 

23           honestly.  We're a team.  Let's be a team.  

24           I'd love to see these back in the 30-day 


                                                                   160

 1           amendments.

 2                  Next, how long does it take to build a 

 3           new housing development?

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  That sort of 

 5           varies, depending on the scale of the 

 6           building.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  A range.

 8                  What I'm reading is 47 years 

 9           nationally.  Does that sound about right to 

10           you?

11                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  For a 

12           construction?

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Yup.  No, for 

14           the process.

15                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Oh.  I -- 

16           some projects go faster and some take a very 

17           long time.  It depends on --

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  I have one, for 

19           example, in my district:  10 years, still not 

20           done.  It was going to be affordable.  It's 

21           now luxury.  Perfect example.

22                  It takes two years, on average, to get 

23           through SEQR.  This isn't a solution to the 

24           affordable housing crises that people are 


                                                                   161

 1           facing right now.  

 2                  I just want to point out like we can 

 3           talk about it, it's part of the process for 

 4           sure.  It is absolutely not a solution to 

 5           people not being able to afford their -- 

 6                  So, you know, we're looking at -- the 

 7           Comptroller right now just released a 

 8           report -- I just want this on record:  Cost 

 9           burdens are the primary driver of housing 

10           insecurity.  New York consistently ranks as 

11           one of the states with the highest cost 

12           burden.  Rates of rental cost burdens have 

13           increased across all cost levels.  

14           Significant racial disparities among 

15           households suffering from household 

16           insecurity.  Housing insecurity among 

17           New York's seniors exceeds the national 

18           average.  Evictions have been higher in 

19           New York than the national average.  

20           New York's rate of homelessness, about five 

21           per thousand, was highest among all states.  

22                  Developing new housing is not going to 

23           address this crisis.  It's just not.  That is 

24           a now thing.  If housing takes a couple of 


                                                                   162

 1           years, that will solve future problems.  I'm 

 2           totally with you, great.  I'd love to see the 

 3           faith-based housing also in this budget; that 

 4           would be amazing.  That's a Cunningham bill.  

 5           But we do need those renter protections.

 6                  You talked about renter arrears, 

 7           Section 8, that we're helping with Section 8.  

 8           But I did want to give some statistics.  

 9           Essex, which is one of our counties, their 

10           average wait time to get the Housing Access 

11           Voucher Program {sic} is 11 years.  My 

12           town -- my district, three years.

13                  Just, again, it's a problem.  And that 

14           about 50 percent of those who get the Housing 

15           Access Voucher Program {sic} in New York City 

16           can't find a unit within the six months that 

17           they have to find it, and then they lose it 

18           and go back to the end of the line.  It's not 

19           a solution in and of itself.  

20                  We have HAVP, the Housing Access 

21           Voucher Program, to supplement that.  Do you 

22           support that, supplementing this?

23                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Look, I 

24           definitely would say that -- I would, at the 


                                                                   163

 1           risk of disagreeing, say that we really -- 

 2           this really is a supply issue.  And we have 

 3           to be focused on supply.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  I hear you, but 

 5           supply is years in the building.  It's not 

 6           going to affect those who are being evicted 

 7           right now.

 8                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  If we don't 

 9           start building today, this problem is never 

10           going to go away.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  We can do both 

12           at the same time.  We can walk and chew gum 

13           at the same time.  I really do believe that.  

14           We're really, really powerful as a state.  

15           And we're innovative.

16                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I agree.  

17           Look at the case of vouchers.  There would 

18           not be a place that a voucher-holder in 

19           New York City could even -- there's 

20           functional zero vacancy, right?  So it's a --

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Good cause, 

22           HAVP, TOPA.  Love to see those -- love to see 

23           your support on them.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.


                                                                   164

 1                  We go to the Senate.  

 2                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Yes, I think I'm 

 3           the last Senator today for this witness.  

 4                  So, first of all, thank you for your 

 5           patience and your testimony and your 

 6           thoughtful answers, and for all the walking 

 7           and chewing gum you do all year round.

 8                  Just a couple of questions that some 

 9           of my colleagues have asked that we do 

10           follow-up on.  

11                  First of all, the Homeowner 

12           Stabilization Fund, I understand there are 10 

13           communities that have received that funding.  

14           Can you tell us which 10 communities?  

15                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  I can't name 

16           them all off the top of my head, but they are 

17           going to our board for approval tomorrow.  

18           We've already funded Buffalo, and the other 

19           nine will go to our board tomorrow for -- but 

20           I'm happy to send you what the list is, I 

21           just can't recite them.  I know it's Utica 

22           and Hempstead and Buffalo and -- 

23                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Presumably they'll 

24           be in the public -- they'll be public as of 


                                                                   165

 1           tomorrow and --

 2                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yes, we can 

 3           send it -- yes, we can send it to you today.

 4                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  One of my Senate 

 5           colleagues was asking.

 6                  Just -- I want to circle back to the 

 7           pro-housing conversation and just we -- you 

 8           and I had -- again had a chance to have this 

 9           conversation offline.  But just for those 

10           present and for those listening, New York 

11           City is not currently an applicant for 

12           Pro-Housing status.

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  They have 

14           not applied yet.

15                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  They have not 

16           applied, right.  

17                  So if we were to do what's in this 

18           budget, the expectation is that the City of 

19           New York would become ineligible for some of 

20           the programs that are referenced, like the 

21           Downtown Revitalization Initiative, unless 

22           they proceed to --

23                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Yeah, they 

24           need to apply and get certified before that 


                                                                   166

 1           application program opened up.

 2                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  All right.  So 

 3           that's obviously a conversation I think some 

 4           of us from the city should have with the city 

 5           as well.

 6                  I also just want to, just for -- this 

 7           has been talked about in various ways a 

 8           couple of times, but just to make sure we're 

 9           crystal-clear on the 40,000 vacancies.  

10           Forty-thousand vacancies is the number of 

11           apartments that were vacant as of April 1st 

12           of this year?  That's the two thousand --

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Of the --

14                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  I'm sorry, forgive 

15           me, obviously not April 1st this year.  

16                  April 1, 2023.  And that represents 

17           about 4 percent of the housing stock.  And 

18           the longstanding standard in New York State 

19           for what constitutes a housing emergency is 

20           an excessively low vacancy rate that is below 

21           5 percent.  That's been the legal standard 

22           for a long time.  

23                  So to the extent we're seeing vacant 

24           apartments, based on your survey, it's a 


                                                                   167

 1           snapshot of units that most of which will be 

 2           rented up promptly, they're just available 

 3           for rent as of that moment, and that number 

 4           is not out of the norm, does not reflect -- 

 5           although there does seem to be some 

 6           warehousing and there does seem to be some 

 7           dilapidated apartments.  And we've had 

 8           proposals to deal with that.  

 9                  But that does not represent any 

10           increase that we should be addressing of 

11           vacancies that's cropped up in the system 

12           over the last few years.

13                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Correct.  

14           For us, it sort of aligns with the historic 

15           norm, so. 

16                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Great.  

17                  Okay, thank you.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  And to close up 

19           this panel, for her second round, 

20           Assemblywoman Rosenthal.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Thank you.  

22                  The first thing, I want to thank HCR 

23           and the Governor for working together with 

24           the Stop Croman Coalition and my office to -- 


                                                                   168

 1           well, he owes five hundred -- more than 

 2           $500,000 in fines.  And you did a great job 

 3           investigating --

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Thank you.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  -- all of 

 6           his misdeeds, but he continues to perpetrate.  

 7                  I also want to shout out Mike Barrios, 

 8           who's been a long-time employee who's just 

 9           wonderful.

10                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Thank you.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  I want to 

12           get on the record that after we passed HSTPA 

13           in 2019, some landlords said:  "We are going 

14           to let our apartments fall into disrepair."  

15           I just want to get that out there; it's a 

16           deliberate tactic by some landlords.

17                  I want to know, how much affordable 

18           housing do you think we need?  Because 

19           there's been talk about 800,000 units needed 

20           across the state, but there hasn't been 

21           delineation of how much of that needs to be 

22           affordable.  And also by county, how much do 

23           you think?  And at what AMI bands?  

24                  We can have a longer conversation, but 


                                                                   169

 1           I wonder about your thoughts on that.

 2                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Look, I 

 3           would say -- and you heard me say this 

 4           before, right -- we take every resource we 

 5           get and stretch them as far as we can get to 

 6           make sure that we can finance as much 

 7           affordable housing, whether that's new 

 8           construction, preservation, investing in 

 9           single-family homes, really -- providing 

10           mortgages to first-time homebuyers.  Right?

11                  We are across working in manufactured 

12           home parks sort of across the board trying to 

13           get at affordable housing in every -- you 

14           know, not just a multifamily rental building, 

15           but really other types of affordable housing 

16           that might not be as -- you know, sort of 

17           come to mind as quickly.

18                  So we are doing that everywhere we 

19           can.  We have always sort of a pipeline 

20           that's bigger than we can meet with the 

21           resources we have from the -- sort of the 

22           base resources we have from the federal 

23           government as it relates to new construction 

24           of multifamily housing.  Until we get sort of 


                                                                   170

 1           relief from the federal government, that's 

 2           sort of hard to increase.

 3                  I don't know that we have a number on 

 4           what the right number is.  Our projections 

 5           are really looking at job growth and 

 6           population growth and saying, you know, over 

 7           the next 10 years if we do the same thing we 

 8           did for the last 10, we could expect 400,000 

 9           units -- and we really need more like 

10           800,000.  We're already behind, right, 

11           because 421-a has expired --  

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Yes, but I 

13           mean --

14                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  It's 

15           expired, and we're not producing --

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  -- 

17           affordable.  And there's not just one tool, 

18           which is relying on developers who are in the 

19           business of making a profit.  And that's 

20           their business, but we overly rely on them to 

21           produce affordable housing.  And, you know, 

22           we're sort of under the gun here with that.

23                  Other question -- so in Congress 

24           there's a LIHTC bill to increase -- or a 


                                                                   171

 1           LIHTC discussion and bill.  How do you think 

 2           the state would use all of those credits were 

 3           we to get them?  

 4                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  So there's 

 5           two pieces to it.  One is an increase in our 

 6           9 percent low-income-housing tax credit.  So 

 7           we will -- if the bill passes, we will award 

 8           more projects those credits and we will do 

 9           more projects each year with that.  

10                  On the bond side, sort of similarly, 

11           we will -- it will increase our capacity to 

12           close more deals each year.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Thank you.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

15                  So Commissioner, that is it for --

16                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Thank you.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  As Senator 

18           Krueger says, we have not run out of 

19           questions, we've run out of members' time to 

20           ask questions.  

21                  (Laughter.)

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So thank you 

23           for being here.  There may be a few times 

24           that you didn't have a full opportunity to 


                                                                   172

 1           answer questions, so we look forward to 

 2           anything in writing from you so we can 

 3           distribute to members.  

 4                  And just continue to thank you for 

 5           being here and look forward to continuing to 

 6           work with you.

 7                  COMMISSIONER VISNAUSKAS:  Great.  

 8           Thank you very much.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So we will now 

10           begin the nongovernmental portion of the 

11           hearing.  People are -- the witnesses will be 

12           in several different panels.  And we will be 

13           starting with -- the first panel is Panel A.  

14           And Assemblyman Burdick, why don't you talk 

15           to the commissioner outside.  

16                  We will start with New York State 

17           Association for Affordable Housing; 

18           Neighborhood Preservation Coalition; the 

19           Community Preservation Corporation; New York 

20           State Public Housing Authority Directors 

21           Association, and Pratt Center for Community 

22           Development on behalf of Basement Apartments 

23           Safe for Everyone.

24                  And for those leaving the hearing, 


                                                                   173

 1           please do so -- to the extent you want to 

 2           have a conversation, please do that in the 

 3           hallway so that we can continue on our long 

 4           hearing and people can get home for 

 5           Valentine's Day -- or Valentine's Night.

 6                  Can members take their conversation 

 7           with the commissioner out in the hall so we 

 8           can continue with our hearing?  Thank you.

 9                  So if we can -- just a reminder, three 

10           minutes for presentation.  Your remarks have 

11           been received, reviewed by members, posted on 

12           our websites.  

13                  And with that, if we could start with 

14           Jolie Milstein.

15                  MS. MILSTEIN:  Thank you.

16                  Good afternoon, Chairs Weinstein, 

17           Kavanagh, Rosenthal, and other honorable 

18           members of the Legislature.  I'm Jolie 

19           Milstein, president and CEO for the New York 

20           State Association for Affordable Housing.  We 

21           represent more than 400 members statewide who 

22           play a critical role in the financing, 

23           construction and operation of affordable 

24           housing.


                                                                   174

 1                  Thank you for the opportunity to 

 2           testify regarding Governor Hochul's 2025 

 3           Executive Budget for housing.  

 4                  We'd like to thank the Governor and 

 5           the Legislature for previously enacting and 

 6           continuing a $25 billion, five-year 

 7           Housing Plan to create and preserve 

 8           100,000 new and preserved homes.  NYSAFAH 

 9           members have been employing these resources 

10           to help address the housing affordability and 

11           supply crisis across our state.  

12                  And despite our successes, 

13           pandemic-related consequences continue to 

14           significantly impair affordable housing 

15           property operations and financial stability.  

16           We ask that $250 million be approved for a 

17           new affordable housing relief fund to provide 

18           needed capital monies and debt restructuring 

19           to ensure at-risk properties remain available 

20           to tenants.  

21                  High interest rates, rising insurance 

22           costs and rent arrears have forced projects 

23           to absorb additional debt and placed them in 

24           severe financial and physical distress.  Last 


                                                                   175

 1           year the 391 million that was included in the 

 2           enacted State Budget for the payment of 

 3           rental arrears for tenants in public 

 4           housing -- including NYCHA -- and federal 

 5           Section 8 voucher holders was appreciated, 

 6           but we really need an additional $250 million 

 7           investment in a new fund for at-risk 

 8           properties that will complement the 

 9           Legislature's prior-year commitment.

10                  We also ask that you support the 

11           Executive Budget proposal to prohibit 

12           insurance-related discrimination against 

13           affordable housing, housing in urban areas 

14           where crime rates are higher, and against 

15           landlords that rent to Section 8 voucher 

16           holders. 

17                  Increased insurance premiums, combined 

18           with a lack of availability of property and 

19           casualty insurance are endangering affordable 

20           housing.

21                  We further urge you to authorize a 

22           three-year pilot program that would carve out 

23           affordable housing from the Scaffold Law, to 

24           measure the impact lower insurance rates will 


                                                                   176

 1           have on affordable housing production.  The 

 2           existing Scaffold Law has contributed to 

 3           skyrocketing insurance rates and has driven 

 4           most insurance companies from the New York 

 5           market, adding substantial costs to general 

 6           liability coverage for affordable housing 

 7           developments.

 8                  We ask that you amend the law to allow 

 9           the State Historic Tax Credit to be sold to a 

10           different investor from the federal historic 

11           tax credit.  This will increase the 

12           attractiveness of the State Historic Tax 

13           Credit and its value, bringing greater 

14           private investment to affordable housing 

15           projects.

16                  And we ask that you enact an 

17           as-of-right tax benefit to replace the 421-a 

18           abatement.

19                  Thank you for the opportunity to 

20           testify today and for your consideration of 

21           our budget request.  I welcome your 

22           questions.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

24                  Everybody else should pay attention to 


                                                                   177

 1           the clock.

 2                  MS. MILSTEIN:  Was that good?  I 

 3           practiced.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Mark Streb, 

 6           Neighborhood Preservation Coalition.  

 7                  MR. STREB:  Good afternoon.

 8                  First I'd like to start off by saying 

 9           thank you to each and every one of you for 

10           your incredible support of the frontline 

11           not-for-profit housing workers during this 

12           housing crisis.  It is your steadfast support 

13           of the Neighborhood Preservation Program that 

14           allows essential services to be provided.  

15           These boots-on-the-ground community leaders 

16           are often the difference between a family 

17           living in a home versus a shelter versus the 

18           streets.  The incredible value of that cannot 

19           be overlooked.

20                  For this year's budget, $18.34 million 

21           is requested to fund the Neighborhood 

22           Preservation Program.  That is a 4 percent 

23           increase from last year's allotment.  

24           Additionally, the Neighborhood Preservation 


                                                                   178

 1           Coalition seeks a carveout of $260,000.

 2                  This program was originally created as 

 3           a response by the forward-thinking State 

 4           Legislature to the recognition that 

 5           Neighborhood Preservation Companies face 

 6           significant challenges due to inadequate 

 7           funding.  These not-for-profit housing 

 8           organizations play a crucial role in 

 9           addressing the escalating demand for 

10           affordable housing community services.  Their 

11           services range from housing counseling to 

12           home improvement and rehabilitation projects 

13           to food programs to eviction protection.

14                  Unbelievably, Governor Hochul's 

15           proposed budget presents a concerning 

16           reduction of $4.8 million from last year's 

17           funding, lowering the NPP allocation to 

18           12.83 million.  This decrease will severely 

19           impact vital services provided.  Cuts aren't 

20           carrots.  Cutting funding for the frontline 

21           workers fighting the housing crisis is wrong 

22           and must be reversed.  Families' and 

23           children's lives will be negatively affected 

24           if this draconian cut is instituted.


                                                                   179

 1                  In addition to the program's human 

 2           capital is the economic development 

 3           investment of this program.  By working with 

 4           the community in leveraging other resources, 

 5           this program's return on investment is over 

 6           13 to one.  The money is put back into the 

 7           neighborhoods.  It's put into the 

 8           communities.  

 9                  In addition to this fantastic return 

10           on investment, the local not-for-profits must 

11           provide matching funds of 33 percent -- a 

12           true testament that this program is 

13           community-driven from the very neighborhoods 

14           that it serves.

15                  The urgency of the housing crisis 

16           can't be overstated.  Half of renters and a 

17           significant portion of homeowners in New York 

18           State are burdened by housing costs, with 

19           low-income households bearing the brunt of 

20           this burden.

21                  In closing, I will repeat my request 

22           that the Neighborhood Preservation Program be 

23           funded at $18.34 million, with a $260,000 

24           carveout for the Neighborhood Preservation 


                                                                   180

 1           Coalition.  

 2                  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Community 

 4           Preservation Corporation.

 5                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  Thank you, Committee 

 6           Chairs Rosenthal and Kavanagh and other 

 7           distinguished members of the New York State 

 8           Senate and Assembly, for the opportunity to 

 9           speak today.

10                  My name is Erin Burns-Maine, and I'm 

11           senior vice president for policy and 

12           government affairs at the Community 

13           Preservation Corporation.  On behalf of CPC, 

14           I'd like to express gratitude to Governor 

15           Hochul's administration, Commissioner 

16           Visnauskas, and the Senators and 

17           Assemblymembers who continue to advance 

18           housing solutions here in New York State.  

19                  Today our affordable housing crisis is 

20           ongoing, and the impacts are being felt by 

21           all New Yorkers.  Renters are pinched by the 

22           high rents and limited supply.  Statewide, 

23           the percentage of renters who pay more than 

24           30 percent of their income reached 51 percent 


                                                                   181

 1           last year.  The recently released New York 

 2           City Housing Vacancy Survey revealed the 

 3           city's vacancy rate had fallen to 

 4           1.4 percent, as we've talked about today, and 

 5           it's far below the range of 5 to 8 percent 

 6           that signifies a healthy housing market.

 7                  The situation is bleak for buildings 

 8           as well.  As expenses have grown considerably 

 9           while collections remain below pre-pandemic 

10           levels in a high-interest-rate environment, 

11           affordable and rent stabilized buildings have 

12           seen intensifying pressure on operations, 

13           leading to tightening debt service coverage, 

14           deferred maintenance, tax and water/sewer 

15           arrears and mortgage delinquency.  

16                  From CPC's work managing a large 

17           mortgage portfolio for affordable housing, 

18           we've seen delinquencies double over the last 

19           several years, dramatically increasing the 

20           amount owed.  We've also seen per-unit 

21           insurance premiums increase an average of 

22           17 percent a year since 2020, resulting in an 

23           over 50 percent increase on pre-pandemic 

24           rates.  


                                                                   182

 1                  Tenants and owners need help 

 2           navigating these complicated times.  And just 

 3           as no one factor causes the housing crisis, 

 4           no one solution will fix it.  

 5                  We support the Governor's proposal to 

 6           prioritize competitive programming funds for 

 7           communities that can demonstrate their 

 8           commitment to identifying and removing 

 9           impediments to housing growth, thereby 

10           driving investments in communities that 

11           welcome new construction.  The Pro-Housing 

12           Community program would reward communities 

13           and help to grow the state's housing supply.  

14                  We are also encouraged by the 

15           Governor's proposal to prohibit insurance 

16           carriers from raising premiums on property 

17           owners based on a tenant's source of income, 

18           the existence of affordable housing units, or 

19           the receipt of government assistance.  We 

20           encourage the Legislature to pass this 

21           legislation to ensure that the criteria 

22           informing insurance underwriting decisions 

23           does not discriminate against affordable 

24           housing properties and their tenants.


                                                                   183

 1                  We also are looking for the 

 2           Legislature to help convene stakeholders and 

 3           experts from across the housing field to work 

 4           towards creative solutions to address the 

 5           rising cost of insurance across the state 

 6           that, absent meaningful action, will continue 

 7           to plague affordable housing providers and 

 8           developers.

 9                  But the single most important tool 

10           needed to facilitate the development needed 

11           to meaningfully increase supply is the 

12           restoration of an as-of-right tax incentive 

13           for multifamily housing development.  We call 

14           on the Legislature to enact 485-x.  421-a was 

15           not perfect.  However, this program has -- I 

16           will stop there -- has been improved.

17                  Thank you.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

19                  William Simmons?

20                  MR. SIMMONS:  Thank you.  I come 

21           before you to discuss NYSPHADA's budget 

22           request for this fiscal year.  

23                  Over the last several years, NYSPHADA 

24           has worked closely with our partners in the 


                                                                   184

 1           state -- HCR, the Governor's office and the 

 2           Legislature -- to urge public housing 

 3           authorities to rethink how they rehabilitate 

 4           public housing stock in need of 

 5           modernization.  Many of our authorities are 

 6           considering RAD projects and pursuing 

 7           innovative alternatives to repurpose their 

 8           facilities.

 9                  NYSPHADA is very grateful for the 

10           Legislature and the Executive for their 

11           incredible support in the past several budget 

12           cycles to help modernize and rehabilitate our 

13           aging facilities.  We are expecting more 

14           housing authorities to pursue major upgrades 

15           and Rental Assistance Demonstration projects 

16           in the years to come.  Therefore, we 

17           respectfully request that the Legislature and 

18           the Executive set aside $150 million in this 

19           year's budget for public housing authorities 

20           outside of New York City for substantial and 

21           moderate rehab and/or the demolition and 

22           replacement through the construction of 

23           public housing authorities developments 

24           outside of New York City. 


                                                                   185

 1                  We have taken advantage of over 

 2           $250 million in the last five years to help 

 3           public housing authorities across New York 

 4           State modernize their facilities.  We want to 

 5           continue that momentum for our public housing 

 6           authorities and provide the highest quality 

 7           of life for all of our residents.  Several of 

 8           our authorities have undergone renovations 

 9           utilizing New York State tax incentive 

10           programs, including the following:  Albany, 

11           Amsterdam, Auburn, Buffalo, Freeport, Geneva, 

12           Glens Falls, Greenburgh, Herkimer, Ithaca, 

13           Kingston, New Rochelle, New Hempstead, 

14           Rochester, Rome, Saratoga Springs, 

15           Schenectady, Troy, Utica, White Plains and 

16           Yonkers.

17                  In addition to our budget request, we 

18           want to address an issue pertaining to 

19           insurance discrimination.  Insurance 

20           discrimination is becoming an ever-growing 

21           issue in the affordable housing market.  As 

22           public housing authorities continue to 

23           transition to RAD, we are more concerned 

24           about the growing threat of insurance 


                                                                   186

 1           discrimination.  

 2                  Therefore, NYSPHADA strongly supports 

 3           the passage of Senator Brian Kavanagh's bill 

 4           to address housing discrimination practices 

 5           by insurance companies for low-income 

 6           residents.  This bill prohibits insurance 

 7           discrimination for affordable units -- as 

 8           well as Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal's bills 

 9           that will address this issue as well, 

10           prohibiting insurance companies from 

11           requesting information on or discriminating 

12           against buildings for the use of rental 

13           subsidies in such buildings.

14                  We therefore agree to support these 

15           legislations and hope that we can get some 

16           assistance with this unlawful discriminatory 

17           practice.

18                  Thank you.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

20                  And last, Sylvia?

21                  MS. MORSE:  Thank you.

22                  Good afternoon, Chair Weinstein, 

23           Chair Kavanagh and all members of the Senate 

24           and Assembly here today.  Thank you for the 


                                                                   187

 1           opportunity to address the fiscal '25 

 2           Executive Budget proposals on housing.

 3                  I'm Sylvia Morse, speaking on behalf 

 4           of Basement Apartments Safe for Everyone, or 

 5           BASE, a coalition of policy, legal services 

 6           and community organizations dedicated to the 

 7           safety and affordability of basement and 

 8           cellar apartments in New York City.

 9                  We strongly support Education, Labor 

10           and Family Assistance Article VII, Part S, to 

11           enable New York City to create a program to 

12           safely legalize existing basement and cellar 

13           dwelling units.

14                  Basement and cellar apartments are a 

15           critical part of the city's low-income 

16           housing stock, home to tens of thousands of 

17           New Yorkers, and concentrated in areas that 

18           are majority people of color and where rent 

19           burden and poverty rates are higher than 

20           citywide.  

21                  Yet because these homes are not 

22           legally recognized, there are no regulations 

23           or resources available to ensure their safety 

24           and affordability.  Current law prevents 


                                                                   188

 1           upgrades to better protect tenants in the 

 2           event of fire or the growing risk of 

 3           flooding, as tragically shown by the deaths 

 4           of 11 New Yorkers in subgrade units during 

 5           Hurricane Ida.  The city's only regulatory 

 6           tool is a vacate order, which can result in 

 7           immediate homelessness for tenants with few 

 8           housing options, and destabilizing fines and 

 9           loss of income for low- and moderate-income 

10           homeowners.  

11                  This legislation would grant New York 

12           City local control to establish safety 

13           standards for below-grade apartments and 

14           create a program to existing units into 

15           compliance.  It would not automatically 

16           legalize any basement or cellar apartment.

17                  This citywide program would build on 

18           the city's East New York basement conversion 

19           pilot program, which established eligibility 

20           criteria and safety standards agreed upon by 

21           a multi-agency task force.  

22                  Specifically, this legislation would 

23           make basement and cellar conversions feasible 

24           and affordable by addressing duplicative and 


                                                                   189

 1           outmoded regulatory barriers in New York 

 2           State's Multiple Dwelling Law, or MDL.  Under 

 3           current law, basement apartments in two- and 

 4           three-family homes would become subject to 

 5           MDL upon conversion.  

 6                  In two-family homes, the whole 

 7           building may be newly subject to the MDL, 

 8           requiring costly renovations unrelated to 

 9           basement safety.  In the East New York pilot, 

10           the MDL drove up conversion costs by 

11           prohibitive six-figure increases.  This 

12           effectively barred two-thirds of pilot 

13           applicants from the program, and we estimate 

14           that the MDL may prevent much-needed safety 

15           upgrades in half of potentially eligible 

16           units.

17                  There's precedent for this 

18           legislation.  The Legislature has passed 

19           similar exemptions for loft conversions.  And 

20           the proposed reforms to MDL are narrow but 

21           imperative for housing safety in New York 

22           City.  Without regulatory relief, basement 

23           and cellar units will persist in the informal 

24           housing market and remain beyond oversight.  


                                                                   190

 1           Homeowners will be prevented from making 

 2           safety upgrades, and tenants will be left 

 3           vulnerable to hazardous conditions, eviction, 

 4           or to life-threatening disasters like 

 5           Hurricane Ida.  

 6                  The power to bring safety measures to 

 7           New York City's basement and cellar 

 8           tenants -- or leave them in unsafe 

 9           conditions -- rests with this Legislature.

10                  Thank you.  

11                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

12                  We'll go to Assemblywoman Rosenthal 

13           first, three minutes.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Thank you.

15                  I'd like to thank all of you for your 

16           wonderful work.

17                  I'm wondering if you've had 

18           conversations with the Governor or her team 

19           about the needs that you've just talked 

20           about, and if there is some sense of 

21           understanding that we can't just rely on the 

22           Legislature to play that game every year to 

23           add funding for your necessary work.

24                  MR. STREB:  Thank you, Assemblywoman.


                                                                   191

 1                  Yes, every year, you know, when the 

 2           cycle starts, you know, back in November, 

 3           December, we reach out to DOB, we reach out 

 4           to our partners at HCR and have this 

 5           conversation.  Because it's too important of 

 6           an issue to make everybody go back and forth.

 7                  The thought or the difficulty it puts 

 8           on these people that are boots on the ground, 

 9           providing these services, knowing that their 

10           funding may be cut -- and all they do is work 

11           really hard to provide services.

12                  So we try every year and thankfully to 

13           everyone here, you guys see fit that this 

14           funding is recognized and important.

15                  Thank you.

16                  MS. MILSTEIN:  Thank you for the 

17           question, Chair Rosenthal.  

18                  Yes, we start early, probably at the 

19           end of session last year, with reaching out 

20           to the second floor, to HCR, and bring our 

21           members.  We've been meeting with the second 

22           floor and many of you over the last six 

23           months because we know that it's a lot to 

24           ask, and we want to make sure that we answer 


                                                                   192

 1           any questions regarding these requests.  And 

 2           we continually reach out to the second floor 

 3           and to HCR staff to make sure that we're all 

 4           on the same page with the necessity of 

 5           providing this funding and are available to 

 6           answer any questions.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Anyone else?

 8                  MR. SIMMONS:  Yes.  Thank you for the 

 9           question.

10                  We -- you know, as I recognized in my 

11           opening comments, we work very, very closely 

12           with HCR and have been able to get a number 

13           of great projects completed throughout 

14           New York State with the dollars.

15                  It's been my understanding that there 

16           are some monies left over from the 

17           250 million, but most of those dollars are 

18           spoken for.  Buffalo and Syracuse, where I'm 

19           the executive director, we have large, 

20           transformative projects that will be looking 

21           for some future dollars in the near future 

22           and would not want that momentum to stop.

23                  And so yes, we really have been 

24           working closely with HCR over the past five 


                                                                   193

 1           years and looking forward to working with 

 2           them over the next five.

 3                  Thank you.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Thank you.

 5                  One of the themes of this hearing has 

 6           been the need for affordable housing with 

 7           people who are homeless and people being 

 8           priced out of the state.  And so denying the 

 9           groups in front of me enough funding to keep 

10           people housed is insane.

11                  Thank you.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senate.

13                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  So I'll just begin 

14           with a few questions, and a couple of my 

15           colleagues also have questions today.

16                  So just for starters with the -- I 

17           guess just start with Ms. Milstein and your 

18           affordable housing relief fund.  Can you just 

19           a little -- I think this is going to be new 

20           for some members of the panel, and perhaps 

21           others watching.  Can you just talk a little 

22           bit more about, you know, you mentioned it's 

23           partly because of arrears that built up and 

24           other constraints during COVID.


                                                                   194

 1                  Can you just talk a little bit more 

 2           about how that would work and sort of why 

 3           existing HCR programs are not adequate to 

 4           address that?

 5                  MS. MILSTEIN:  Yes, thank you for the 

 6           question, Chair Kavanagh.  

 7                  We have been working closely 

 8           throughout the pandemic with our members and 

 9           with HCR to do everything we can to triage 

10           the lack of revenue coming in to support 

11           these buildings because of delays in the ERAP 

12           program and people misunderstanding what 

13           their liability and their responsibility is 

14           to pay the rent.  

15                  At the same time, we have supply chain 

16           problems, we have rising interest rates, we 

17           have insurance costs and other operating and 

18           maintenance expenses going through the roof 

19           during the same time.  So revenues are going 

20           down, expenses are going up.  And in the best 

21           of times those revenues are fixed.

22                  So we've been working with HCR -- and 

23           in fact NYSAFAH is just now drafting a term 

24           sheet for how this might all work -- to 


                                                                   195

 1           understand that for projects that aren't in 

 2           line yet for recapitalization, which would 

 3           typically happen with our stock at Year 15 or 

 4           Year 30.  These projects are newer than that, 

 5           and they didn't anticipate in years past that 

 6           they would need this influx of capital to 

 7           maintain the building, to replenish reserves 

 8           and to just keep the building from 

 9           foreclosure.

10                  So we understand that we would -- 

11           we've proposed that we would have a per-unit 

12           cap, a per-building cap.  This isn't meant 

13           for substantial rehabilitation.  This is 

14           meant to get these buildings that experienced 

15           problems during COVID to get through this 

16           period of distress, back on their feet and 

17           make it to the regularly cycled reinfusion of 

18           capital in 15 years.

19                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  And this would 

20           be -- it would be a pool of funding, 

21           $250 million of capital funding, that then 

22           effectively HCR would come up with some kind 

23           of a program for people to articulate the 

24           particular needs for their building and --


                                                                   196

 1                  MS. MILSTEIN:  That's right.  There 

 2           would be -- HCR would establish the criteria 

 3           to qualify for what we see as a forgivable 

 4           loan over like 10 years.  So, you know, we're 

 5           really thinking with HCR about how to 

 6           structure this so it makes sense, so we're 

 7           not overspending, but we're really taking the 

 8           buildings that are most at risk first and 

 9           prioritizing the needs.

10                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Okay.  And three 

11           minutes goes fast, so I'll just take a minute 

12           to thank our other four panelists.  You know, 

13           we work very closely with each of your 

14           organizations.  You know, thank you for your 

15           testimony today and for all the work you do.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

17                  We go to Assemblyman Epstein.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Yeah, thank you 

19           all for being here.

20                  Just for NYSAFAH and CPC, do you agree 

21           to a permanent affordability requirement to 

22           exceed 12 FAR, like MIH?

23                  MS. MILSTEIN:  It certainly makes 

24           sense to us.  We're not a part of the 


                                                                   197

 1           conversation, but look, we really want to 

 2           return autonomy to New York City over their 

 3           land use, and we're in favor.  And obviously 

 4           we care about affordability, but we haven't 

 5           really examined what the criteria would be to 

 6           have that move forward.

 7                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  We'd be happy to be 

 8           part of that conversation as well.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  So at this point 

10           do you have a public position on MIH 

11           exceeding 12 FAR?

12                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  We're supportive of 

13           the current proposal on the FAR cap, but we'd 

14           love to be part of the conversation to work 

15           out those details.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  So just if I can 

17           turn our attention to 421-a.  You'd even 

18           mentioned labor standards for 421-a, so I'm 

19           wondering what requirements or labor 

20           standards are you saying?  The Governor 

21           didn't really put much in about labor 

22           standards, and it's been a long conversation 

23           about that as well as permanent 

24           affordability.


                                                                   198

 1                  If you'd quickly -- I don't have a lot 

 2           of time unfortunately.

 3                  MS. MILSTEIN:  Anybody else want to 

 4           take that one?

 5                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  There's a level of 

 6           detail that needs to be worked out for the 

 7           485-x proposal.  And I -- you know, and given 

 8           the time allotted, I don't know that we can 

 9           roll up our sleeves and dig into all of it.  

10                  But as was raised earlier, I think 

11           during budget, to make sure that we figure 

12           out the AMI levels to make sure that we get 

13           the financing to work, that it pencils, that 

14           we are creating the units that need to be 

15           created.

16                  What I would say is I think throughout 

17           this hearing today we've heard time and time 

18           again about the low vacancy numbers.  We know 

19           that 51 percent of HPD's pipeline last year 

20           was -- those were 421-a housing starts.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  And labor 

22           standards too, across-the-board labor 

23           standards?

24                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  So again, so I -- I 


                                                                   199

 1           can't get into the details of labor 

 2           standards right --

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  If it pencils 

 4           out, it pencils out, basically.

 5                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  I would be happy to 

 6           be part of that conversation.  CPC's at the 

 7           table, and we would love to engage and make 

 8           sure it works.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Great.

10                  So just on the BASE, thank you for all 

11           your work as well.

12                  So if we don't do this in the budget, 

13           what authority does the city not have and why 

14           do we need to do it in our state budget?

15                  MS. MORSE:  Right.  So right now 

16           New York City, you know, the rules that are 

17           local that govern basement conversions are 

18           essentially the Housing Maintenance Code, 

19           Building Code, and zoning.

20                  The East New York pilot really is 

21           what -- did what a pilot program is supposed 

22           to do, showed us what the barriers were.  And 

23           what we've seen is that with the Multiple 

24           Dwelling Law, it's effectively impossible to 


                                                                   200

 1           convert basement and cellar units in two- and 

 2           three-family homes.

 3                  So potentially with zoning reforms and 

 4           other efforts at the city level, there could 

 5           be a program that serves single-family homes.  

 6           But tenants who are living in basement or 

 7           cellar apartments would basically have 

 8           different rights or opportunities to make 

 9           their homes safe, depending on whether 

10           they're in single- or two-family homes.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Great.

12                  And just for NPC, clearly we've got to 

13           get the money back in for capital for 

14           New York City, as well as in New York City.  

15           I appreciate you pushing for that.  We need 

16           to make sure that your capital dollars are 

17           with you.  Thank you.

18                  MS. MILSTEIN:  Can I just say thank 

19           you for your leadership on the Martin Act.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

21                  To the Senate.

22                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  There we go.

23                  Senator Comrie.

24                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Thank you all for 


                                                                   201

 1           being here.  

 2                  I just wanted to follow from what you 

 3           said -- you said right now with the 

 4           regulations it's impossible to do ADUs for 

 5           what categories?

 6                  MS. MORSE:  So specifically for 

 7           basement and cellar apartments in two- and 

 8           three-family homes.  It's prohibitively 

 9           expensive and complicated.  

10                  SENATOR COMRIE:  And what have your 

11           costs been estimated for the one-family 

12           homes?

13                  MS. MORSE:  That depends.  I could 

14           share, potentially, follow-up data on the 

15           East New York pilot program.

16                  But the costs for conversions in two- 

17           and three-family homes are double what they 

18           would be in single-family.

19                  SENATOR COMRIE:  My understanding is 

20           that there was only one successful conversion 

21           in that study.  And can you tell us why?

22                  MS. MORSE:  So again, I can share in 

23           detail after this, if it's helpful, the 

24           interim report on the pilot program.  There 


                                                                   202

 1           are a small number of homes going through.

 2                  But the reason that that program has 

 3           not been able to reach more homes is because 

 4           of the Multiple Dwelling Law, which is what 

 5           we're advocating to reform today.

 6                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Okay.

 7                  Different topic.  The need for 

 8           solutions to rehabilitate existing apartments 

 9           and rent-stabilized units is keener than 

10           ever.  And from what I'm told, the 15 grand 

11           cap is just not realistic.  

12                  Have you made any adjustments to come 

13           up with a realistic cap for that, or looked 

14           at our bill that I have with 

15           Assemblyman Burgos to look at how to make 

16           sure we can really get 10,000 units back 

17           online and rent-controlled, rent-stabilized 

18           units?

19                  (No response.)

20                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Okay.  Since nobody's 

21           answering that question, we'll go -- I'll 

22           keep going.

23                  How many minority developers have you 

24           worked with in developing housing?  Or rehab, 


                                                                   203

 1           rehabbed apartments.

 2                  MS. MILSTEIN:  We have a program that 

 3           fosters and mentors MWBE developers.  And 

 4           every year, in fact, we give an award to an 

 5           MWBE developer that's done something 

 6           innovative or new.  

 7                  And we're very proud of the work we 

 8           do.  And CPC has been a leader here too in 

 9           expanding the pool of qualified, capable MWBE 

10           developers in the state.

11                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  Absolutely.  So 

12           through CPC's access initiative, we've 

13           committed $40 million in capital to new 

14           up-and-coming BIPOC developers in New York 

15           State.  

16                  In addition to doing that, we've run 

17           now I think four or five cohorts of a very 

18           successful program that brings resources to 

19           the table, it's a training program, it's an 

20           incubator program that has a curriculum that 

21           gets folks up and going with their projects 

22           and also starts building a network.

23                  SENATOR COMRIE:  How much actually has 

24           been completed, completed projects that 


                                                                   204

 1           are --

 2                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  That's a great 

 3           question.  I'd be happy to follow up with you 

 4           with the exact numbers of developers we've 

 5           engaged and units completed.  Happy to follow 

 6           up.

 7                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Thank you.

 8                  I think that's my time, so -- I could 

 9           go longer.

10                  (Laughter.)

11                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We go to 

12           Assemblyman Braunstein.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you.

14                  I want to talk to Ms. Morse about the 

15           basement apartments.  I just want to share 

16           with you some of my concerns about the 

17           Executive proposal.  

18                  For one, it doesn't seek to reform the 

19           MDL, it just says "the MDL notwithstanding."  

20           So there's questions about what safety 

21           regulations would apply.  Should we just not 

22           withstand the MDL?

23                  The other concern I have is cost.  We 

24           had Commissioner Carrión testify at a hearing 


                                                                   205

 1           in December, and he estimated to convert 

 2           illegal apartments to make them up to code 

 3           would be 300,000 to $500,000 each.  And we're 

 4           talking -- let's -- I don't know, can we 

 5           expect people to be able to pay $300,000 to 

 6           upgrade these units?

 7                  And I also have trouble with only 

 8           illegal apartments, right?  Like right now 

 9           you're someone who's renting your apartment 

10           out illegally, you're probably not paying 

11           taxes on it, you're putting people in harm's 

12           way, and we're going to say to you now the 

13           city's going to give you a low-interest loan 

14           to upgrade your property?  

15                  Whereas the person who lives next door 

16           to you who's been following the rules all 

17           along, perhaps they wanted to move a family 

18           member into their basement -- they're 

19           prohibited from doing it under the Governor's 

20           proposal.  It just seems -- that's troubling 

21           to me that someone who followed the rules 

22           can't do it, but someone who broke the rules 

23           is now getting subsidized so they can fix the 

24           apartment, continue to rent it out and 


                                                                   206

 1           collect revenue.  

 2                  So it's -- the concerns I have is the 

 3           notwithstanding the MDL and now knowing what 

 4           safety rules apply, not having any kind of 

 5           conversations with the fire department and 

 6           those groups.  

 7                  The cost.  Right?  If it's $300,000 to 

 8           upgrade, $30 million will get you, what, a 

 9           hundred units, right?  And we've seen the 

10           challenges you had in East New York. 

11                  And then, finally, the concept of 

12           just -- how do you even prove -- like how do 

13           people prove that they're illegally renting 

14           their apartment?  You know, people see this 

15           coming, should they start renting their 

16           apartment illegally so they can come out and 

17           say, Look, I've been doing this illegally, 

18           now pay for the upgrades?  

19                  The whole concept is something that I 

20           just -- I'm not comfortable with.  And, I'm 

21           sorry, there's 40 seconds to respond.

22                  MS. MORSE:  Sure.

23                  So on the first point, so the 

24           primary -- New York City's housing 


                                                                   207

 1           maintenance code, building code, that's 

 2           really the primary way that New York City 

 3           regulates the safety.  The MDL is another 

 4           layer on top of that that applies to multiple 

 5           dwellings.  So for single-family homes, for 

 6           two-family homes that exist today, they're 

 7           not subject to the MDL.  So they are already 

 8           governed by New York City's robust safety 

 9           regulations.  And that is what would govern 

10           the safety of these newly converted units.

11                  In terms of cost, again, that cost is 

12           being driven up by the challenges of trying 

13           to interpret and comply with this additional 

14           layer of code that's in many cases 

15           duplicative of the MDL.  And it is less than 

16           new construction.

17                  And on the last piece, I would just 

18           say that it --

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  We'll follow 

20           up.  We're out of time.  You did well, 

21           though.  You almost got it all in there.  

22           Thank you.

23                  MS. MORSE:  I tried.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We ran out of 


                                                                   208

 1           time.

 2                  Senate?

 3                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator Cleare?

 4                  (No response.)

 5                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  I don't think we 

 6           have any other Senators.

 7                  No other questions from the Senate.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblywoman 

 9           Chandler-Waterman.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  All 

11           right.  Thank you so much, Chair.

12                  Thank you so much for all the work 

13           that you do to advocate for our landlords and 

14           our tenants.

15                  So I just wanted to ask NPC, Mark 

16           Streb -- I appreciate working with you and 

17           your team, especially within my district, 

18           when it comes to landlord/tenant concerns, 

19           especially with the issue with -- the issue 

20           with ERAP issues with Mitchell-Lama.  We had 

21           a great meeting a week ago about that:  

22           Sinking houses, infrastructure concerns due 

23           to overdevelopment in our community.  

24                  We wish it was all affordable, right, 


                                                                   209

 1           the housing, but we can keep working together 

 2           to reimagine housing.  So I know there's like 

 3           a nearly 5 million cut, right?  What service 

 4           or program would we lose if that cut is in 

 5           effect?  And are you able to leverage 

 6           services with the dollars, you know, you 

 7           receive now?  How does that impact us on the 

 8           ground?  Because I mentioned the things that 

 9           we are doing together.  Are we losing that?  

10           Could you please --

11                  MR. STREB:  Thank you.

12                  Right now each of the Neighborhood 

13           Preservation Companies -- you know, 

14           on-the-ground not-for-profit housing 

15           organizations -- receive roughly $129,723 for 

16           each organization.  And that allows them to 

17           pay for staff, keep the lights on, keep the 

18           phone working.  And that -- when somebody 

19           comes in, you know, a tenant or landlord that 

20           has a problem that they don't know how to 

21           solve or they need help with, that is what 

22           those staff, those organizations do.

23                  So we're $30,000 per company, which 

24           the cut would be -- that equates to not quite 


                                                                   210

 1           a full-time staff person, but it equates to 

 2           20 to 30 hours of staff work a week, and 

 3           that's direct people that wouldn't be 

 4           assisted or helped when they come into the 

 5           office.  

 6                  So it's -- you know, and that is 

 7           roughly a 33 percent cut, 34 percent cut in 

 8           their funding.  And during a housing crisis, 

 9           we should be going the other way.  Last year 

10           was the first year -- thank you again -- that 

11           we actually saw our funding increase to make 

12           up for decades of flat funding, which is a 

13           cut in funding based on the inflation from 

14           the last 20, 25 years.

15                  So people -- services would not be 

16           provided.  New York State HCR, we have a lot 

17           of good programs.  But if we can't get the 

18           programs to the people, they're no good.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

20           Thank you so much.  

21                  And with the basement apartments, we 

22           know that during COVID there was a lot of 

23           regulations with garages and basement 

24           conversions, and we know we're trying to be 


                                                                   211

 1           creative how we do affordable housing.  I 

 2           want to make sure as we make things legalized 

 3           that the constituents are worrying about are 

 4           they going to be overregulated now, is there 

 5           going to be more stuff put on them, more 

 6           burden, because now that it is -- become 

 7           affordable -- how do you answer that?

 8                  MS. MORSE:  So if this legislation 

 9           were passed and New York City were able to 

10           create a basement legalization program, the 

11           only homeowners who would be subject to the 

12           new regulations would be those who applied 

13           and said, I want to bring my basement or 

14           cellar apartment up to code and provide 

15           housing.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

17           We'll talk offline.  Thank you.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

19                  Assemblyman Burdick.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  Yes, thank you.

21                  And thank you all for the work that 

22           you do in this space.  It's incredibly 

23           important.  You folks have been integral in 

24           increasing the supply of housing and 


                                                                   212

 1           particularly affordable housing.

 2                  I don't know if you were following the 

 3           exchanges with Commissioner Visnauskas, but 

 4           you may have heard that my Hudson Valley 

 5           colleague, Dana Levenberg, and I are 

 6           introducing a package of housing bills.  We 

 7           believe they complement the Governor's 

 8           policies and would appreciate your looking at 

 9           them and considering supporting them. 

10                  And we'd appreciate your letting us 

11           know offline the appropriate person we'd 

12           email them to.

13                  And this next question I think is 

14           directed primarily to CPC, and that is that 

15           while we welcome the Governor's proposals to 

16           expand housing, we believe it would be 

17           helpful to have more that is statewide in 

18           scope.  And certainly there are things there, 

19           but what more might you suggest that we do?

20                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  Thank you, 

21           Assemblymember, for that question.

22                  You know, I think that the approach 

23           that was laid out in the Pro-Housing 

24           Communities is something that we're very 


                                                                   213

 1           supportive of.  I think we have to work 

 2           across all levels of government, so there's 

 3           also I think some federal housing resources 

 4           that were raised a little bit earlier 

 5           today -- we were talking about the affordable 

 6           housing tax credit bill and the LIHTC 

 7           expansion.  These are things that would 

 8           definitely support overall housing 

 9           development in New York State and the 

10           provision of housing and subsidies flowing to 

11           the streets.

12                  I'd be happy to speak further and 

13           explore that more.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  That would be 

15           great.

16                  MS. BURNS-MAINE:  We'd be happy to, 

17           yes.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  Any other on the 

19           panel who might add to that?  

20                  (No response.)

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  Good.  No, we'd 

22           be very interested in discussing that further 

23           with you offline.  Thanks so much.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblywoman 


                                                                   214

 1           Lee.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  This question is 

 3           for Mr. Simmons and Ms. Milstein.

 4                  You know, last year in the budget we 

 5           were able to secure $391 million statewide 

 6           for public housing and Section 8 housing to 

 7           fully fund the Emergency Rental Assistance 

 8           Program.  Can you talk about how that's being 

 9           implemented across your developments and 

10           across your members' buildings and, you know, 

11           the benefits you've seen from that funding?

12                  MR. SIMMONS:  Well, in our case the 

13           program's been tremendous.  It's helped out 

14           so many families.  Because especially as you 

15           know, for those families who have to leave 

16           public housing with any arrears, they are no 

17           longer prohibited from participating in the 

18           public housing programs until those arrears 

19           are cleared up.  

20                  So initially, before the program was 

21           implemented, we had families that couldn't 

22           pay their rent, moved out of public housing 

23           and couldn't get into public housing nowhere 

24           else in the country, couldn't even get access 


                                                                   215

 1           to the voucher program.  

 2                  But with those resources, it helped 

 3           many families out tremendously.  It even 

 4           helped out the housing authorities.  

 5           Obviously those dollars went to pay for 

 6           sorely needed staff to maintain the 

 7           properties, and for the physical upkeep.

 8                  And so in Syracuse we had probably 

 9           $2.3 million in arrears.  We were able to 

10           make a big dent in those dollars, and we're 

11           still getting dollars in.  With your help and 

12           so many other Assemblymembers -- even the 

13           administration -- in flowing of the dollars 

14           and how they come to our properties, that 

15           process has been improved with the help of I 

16           know in particular Assemblywoman Chair 

17           Rosenthal helped out some of our public 

18           housing authorities.  

19                  Because oftentimes that resident had 

20           to accept those dollars when they came in, 

21           but many of them moved on and the housing 

22           authority still had that debt.  And the 

23           New York State Assembly, in particular 

24           Assemblywoman Rosenthal, was able to help out 


                                                                   216

 1           the Ithaca Housing Authority, and so many 

 2           received those dollars.  

 3                  So it has helped out tremendously.  

 4           And it -- naturally more would help, but 

 5           yeah, it really was a great program.

 6                  MS. MILSTEIN:  Thank you for your 

 7           question.  NYSAFAH was very involved in 

 8           advocating for those funds.  And we didn't 

 9           stop once the funds were appropriated, we 

10           actually got involved with OTDA.  We were 

11           like a concierge service for public housing 

12           and for affordable. 

13                  And it really -- all of the tenants 

14           who had some sort of subsidy were at the back 

15           of the line, and this money allowed many 

16           subsidized tenants who legitimately suffered 

17           through COVID, to receive those funds.  And 

18           we helped OTDA understand, from the tenant 

19           and landlord side, what was going on.  And we 

20           really intermediated there and got those 

21           funds delivered very quickly and efficiently 

22           to tenants, which went through to landlords.

23                  And now that the money's all been 

24           spent -- there's some slight overhang because 


                                                                   217

 1           of timing -- we really need to make sure that 

 2           those buildings can stay afloat.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 4                  We go to Assemblywoman Kelles to close 

 5           for this panel.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Thank you so 

 7           much.

 8                  First question for Mark, Neighborhood 

 9           Preservation Coalition.  Can you just -- you 

10           touched briefly, but can you give us a 

11           comprehensive list of the projects that you 

12           all do that help keep people in their homes?

13                  MR. STREB:  Thank you.  And thank you 

14           for your support.

15                  The programs that our organizations 

16           provide run the entire gamut.  Not every 

17           organization provides the exact same 

18           programs, but we -- you know, when somebody 

19           comes in and says "I don't have any heat" or 

20           "My landlord's going to evict me" or, you 

21           know, "A tree fell through my roof" or "I 

22           don't have any hot water" -- you know, the 

23           list goes on and on and on.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  So you're the 


                                                                   218

 1           catchall, really, for people to keep them in 

 2           their homes, get them in their homes.

 3                  MR. STREB:  When people need help, 

 4           they come to us and we help them.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Is there any 

 6           other entity in the state that does that?

 7                  MR. STREB:  You know, we have a sister 

 8           organization, you know, the Rural 

 9           Preservation Coalition, the Rural Advocates.  

10           Great organizations.  You know, we do more of 

11           the urban and suburban; they do more of the 

12           rural -- hence the name.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  They're your 

14           counterparts, so it's the --

15                  MR. STREB:  Yes.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  -- the rural 

17           and the neighborhood.

18                  MR. STREB:  Right.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  But there's no 

20           other entity that does that work.

21                  MR. STREB:  No.  I mean, there are 

22           other housing not-for-profits that do not 

23           participate in the Neighborhood Preservation 

24           Program, so those are great organizations 


                                                                   219

 1           also.  So --

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Okay, so 

 3           there's some.

 4                  MR. STREB:  But there's a subset that 

 5           participate in this specific program.  And, 

 6           you know, we all provide different services.  

 7                  Because when somebody comes in, even 

 8           if we don't provide it, we don't say, Oh, 

 9           sorry, we don't provide that service.  We 

10           say:  Let's find out how we can help you.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  So there are 

12           organizations -- you all support each other, 

13           you're a network, but you create a 

14           foundation.  I understand there's 60 RPCs.  

15           How many NPCs are there?

16                  MR. STREB:  We're at around 134 right 

17           now.  They opened it up --

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Okay, so we've 

19           got these 200 organizations that provide this 

20           work, we've got others that do this as well.  

21           You've got an over $10 million cut between 

22           the NPCs and the RPCs in this budget.  This 

23           is used for operating funds, correct?

24                  MR. STREB:  Yes.  This is to allow the 


                                                                   220

 1           doors to stay open -- the heat to be on, to 

 2           pay for administrative costs.  This is a very 

 3           unique program that allows them to provide 

 4           services.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  So it will 

 6           prevent you from being able to expand any of 

 7           those supports and potentially lose staff.

 8                  MR. STREB:  Right.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Okay.  I just 

10           wanted to get a sense of what the impact 

11           would be across the entire state if we 

12           allowed for this 10 million cut.

13                  And the other -- really quickly, and I 

14           apologize for this, I can't get to everyone.  

15           I love that you are all here.  Thank you so 

16           much.  The 150 million for the public 

17           authorities, can you describe a little bit 

18           what all of that would be used for around the 

19           state?

20                  MR. SIMMONS:  Sure.

21                  Well, as I'd mentioned before, as the 

22           executive director for the Syracuse Housing 

23           Authority, we have a transformational program 

24           that takes some 675 units of public housing, 


                                                                   221

 1           repurposes those, and adds on its footprint a 

 2           total of 1,400 of mixed-income and 

 3           market-rate units to deconcentrate poverty 

 4           and repair these units.

 5                  And so we'll be doing this over a 

 6           10-year period of time.  And I think Buffalo 

 7           has the same type of a project.  And there 

 8           are a number of other upstate organizations 

 9           that need to repurpose their properties as 

10           well.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Thank you so 

12           much.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

14                  I want to thank all of the witnesses 

15           in this panel.

16                  And we move on to Panel B:  Legal 

17           Services New York City, Jay Inwald; 

18           Legal Services Access Alliance, Erica Zimny; 

19           Center for New York City Neighborhoods, 

20           Christie Peale; Right to Counsel Coalition 

21           and Community Action for Safe Apartments/New 

22           Settlement, Randy Dillard; and Tenant 

23           Political Action Committee, Michael McKee.

24                  Mr. Burdick, can you please take your 


                                                                   222

 1           seat so we can begin?

 2                  Jay, you can begin.

 3                  MR. INWALD:  Thank you so much.  

 4                  Jacob Inwald from Legal Services NYC, 

 5           director of litigation for economic justice.  

 6           I'm here to talk today about the Homeowner 

 7           Protection Program.  Most of you are familiar 

 8           with it.  

 9                  I am not going to actually read my 

10           testimony because I think you've all really 

11           heard all the particulars.  I want to just 

12           seize on a couple of things that the 

13           commissioner said and address some of those 

14           things.

15                  Regrettably, this is an annual 

16           exercise.  I know we're a couple of weeks 

17           past Groundhog Day, but it really feels like 

18           that.  I do this every year.  I got a 

19           Facebook memory generated this morning, 

20           Here's a memory from seven -- oh, and it was 

21           a press conference that we held in support of 

22           restoring funding for HOPP seven years ago to 

23           the day.  

24                  So if I'm expressing a little bit of a 


                                                                   223

 1           tone of irritation, it is not directed at the 

 2           Legislature.  The Legislature has -- I have 

 3           nothing but gratitude to the Legislature that 

 4           has restored our funding for really more than 

 5           a decade.  But I am a little bit grumpy about 

 6           it because there are better things that I 

 7           could be doing with my time than trying to 

 8           prevent us from being defunded.  

 9                  And the annual threat of our defunding 

10           is not without -- it's not just the 

11           irritation of having to do the advocacy.  It 

12           has real consequences.  These are long, 

13           complex cases.  And when there's a cloud of 

14           uncertainty about whether we continue to have 

15           funding come July, we cannot take new cases.  

16           Right?  It inhibits our case acceptance.  

17           There are people who lose their homes because 

18           of that.

19                  It causes staff attrition, right?  

20           Because there are staff who are at risk of 

21           losing their jobs, and there are other 

22           opportunities that they -- so it is not just, 

23           you know, this game of football without any 

24           consequences.  


                                                                   224

 1                  And it was startling to hear the 

 2           candor of the commissioner to just say, well, 

 3           it was a legislative add.  That to me is not 

 4           a satisfactory policy response for why the 

 5           Governor does not value this program.  So I 

 6           think you're entitled to know why it is that 

 7           the Governor doesn't think that this is 

 8           worthy of funding.  

 9                  I want to also mention the subject of 

10           deed theft.  The commissioner mentioned that 

11           there are provisions in the budget addressing 

12           deed theft.  And I want to point out that as 

13           recently as November 14th the Governor signed 

14           important legislation addressing deed theft 

15           surrounded by two of our clients -- who we 

16           restored their titles to -- and she sang the 

17           praises of Brooklyn Legal Services, only to 

18           two months later propose defunding the agency 

19           that restored over -- almost a decade's worth 

20           of litigation, that homeowner's -- those 

21           homeowners' homes.

22                  So all these protections are great, 

23           but if there are no advocates to actually 

24           vindicate those rights, that's really a 


                                                                   225

 1           problem.

 2                  I know I only have a few seconds left, 

 3           but I also just want to mention this is an 

 4           issue of racial justice.  The mortgage 

 5           default rate for communities of color is 

 6           twice that of what it is for white 

 7           homeowners.  And if you are talking about 

 8           depriving homeowners in need of these 

 9           services, you're talking about depriving, you 

10           know, a few communities in particular.  So 

11           that's also hugely problematic.  And the need 

12           is still really egregious.  We've doubled the 

13           number of clients that we've served over the 

14           past year.

15                  So thank you, and I think I got the 

16           main points in.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

18                  Erica?

19                  MS. ZIMNY:  Good afternoon, Senator 

20           Krueger and Assemblymember Weinstein, Senator 

21           Kavanagh, Assemblymember Rosenthal, and 

22           members of the Legislature and staff here 

23           today.  Thank you for the opportunity to 

24           submit testimony regarding Governor Hochul's 


                                                                   226

 1           fiscal year 2024-2025 Executive Budget as it 

 2           pertains to housing.

 3                  My name is Erica Zimny, and I'm a 

 4           deputy director at the Legal Aid Society of 

 5           Northeastern New York.  Our executive 

 6           director at LASNNY is Nic Rangel, and she is 

 7           a board member of the Legal Services Access 

 8           Alliance.

 9                  The Legal Services Access Alliance 

10           represents the seven largest providers of 

11           free civil legal services outside of New York 

12           City and includes Neighborhood Legal 

13           Services, Legal Assistance of Western New 

14           York, Legal Services of Central New York, 

15           Legal Aid Society of Mid-New York, the Legal 

16           Aid Society of Northeastern New York, Legal 

17           Services of Hudson Valley, and Nassau Suffolk 

18           Law Services.  We collectively serve every 

19           county outside of New York City and employ 

20           nearly 1,000 legal services workers.  

21                  We have two main budget requests we'd 

22           like to present to the committee for 

23           consideration.  

24                  First, continue support for legal 


                                                                   227

 1           services for evictions.  We are grateful for 

 2           Governor Hochul's continued support of 

 3           $35 million in funding in the Executive 

 4           Budget for the Legal Representation for 

 5           Eviction Services Program.  This program is 

 6           also commonly referred to as the Eviction 

 7           Defense and Housing Stability Program, and it 

 8           was created to provide legal services and 

 9           representation for eviction cases outside of 

10           New York City.  

11                  Last year the Legislature appropriated 

12           an additional $15 million to further expand 

13           this program to New York City and other areas 

14           throughout New York, for which we and our 

15           partners are incredibly appreciative.  

16                  The Office for Temporary and 

17           Disability Assistance administers this 

18           program, and this funding has been critical 

19           to assisting struggling New Yorkers.  OTDA, 

20           with expertise in providing services to those 

21           with housing instability, has been an 

22           excellent partner in implementing this 

23           program and serving the public.  With this 

24           state support, the alliance members and 


                                                                   228

 1           partner organizations have helped countless 

 2           individuals navigate through their eviction 

 3           crisis.  

 4                  This funding has been transformative 

 5           for eviction services in New York.  With this 

 6           state investment, all the alliance members 

 7           and subcontracting partners' eviction 

 8           programs have grown, as have the number of 

 9           staff who can provide these legal services 

10           throughout New York.  We have increased the 

11           network of eviction legal services and 

12           expanded representation in underserved areas, 

13           including city, town and village courts in 

14           our rural counties, and all other underserved 

15           tenants.  

16                  Additionally, the alliance is 

17           continuing to develop our partnerships with 

18           local law schools to recruit and train new 

19           lawyers, which will help to create a diverse 

20           and robust pipeline of civil legal service 

21           providers in New York.  We have also hosted 

22           several statewide training programs, attended 

23           by hundreds of legal services attorneys, to 

24           help build out best practices in providing 


                                                                   229

 1           eviction representation in New York.  

 2                  Lastly, with this state support, 

 3           alliance members have obtained a federal 

 4           Technology Initiative Grant to develop a 

 5           statewide online intake portal to increase 

 6           access to legal representation, and also 

 7           created a toll-free hotline that tenants can 

 8           call to be directed to.  

 9                  Thank you.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Next?

11                  MS. PEALE:  Good afternoon.  My name 

12           is Christie Peale, and I am the CEO and 

13           executive director for the Center for 

14           New York City Neighborhoods.

15                  I would like to thank Chairs Krueger, 

16           Weinstein, Kavanagh and Rosenthal for today's 

17           hearing and the opportunity to testify.

18                  I'm here today to call for the full 

19           restoration of the Homeowner Protection 

20           Program, also known as HOPP, at the level of 

21           the previous budget number of $40 million.  

22           And I'd just like to take a moment to add to 

23           some of Jay's comments.

24                  So you probably know that the HOPP 


                                                                   230

 1           network not only has amazing legal services 

 2           partners, as you just heard from, but also 

 3           high-quality housing counselors who serve 

 4           every county across New York State.  We serve 

 5           15,000 families every year, and over the 

 6           course of the decade-plus that we've been 

 7           around, we have served 120,000.  We've helped 

 8           these New Yorkers avoid homelessness, 

 9           crushing debt and displacement.

10                  Just another piece of Jay's point, 

11           43 percent of our clients across the state 

12           are BIPOC New Yorkers.  In New York City, 

13           that percentage is 75 percent.  

14                  We save New York State over 

15           $1.2 billion in value preservation, 

16           property-value preservation, property taxes 

17           and other costs every year.  So while this is 

18           a significant investment in this incredible 

19           network of service providers, we help the 

20           state maintain value, and we help the state 

21           maintain property tax revenue.  Every 

22           million dollars invested in HOPP yields a 

23           return of over $5 million in tax and property 

24           cost savings.


                                                                   231

 1                  If the HOPP funding is not restored, 

 2           we lose a huge number of assets, as you heard 

 3           from Jay, including the statewide toll-free 

 4           hotline, representation at mandatory 

 5           settlement conferences.  And again, I keep 

 6           mentioning property tax payments because I 

 7           think it's a really huge issue across the 

 8           state, and the HOPP network has been really 

 9           significantly impactful in making sure that 

10           municipalities, school boards, every taxing 

11           entity got paid through the Homeowner 

12           Assistance Fund over the past two years, to 

13           the tune of $53 million.  So we are 

14           maintaining revenue and returning revenue to 

15           the state.

16                  To that point, we are also calling on 

17           the state to find additional funding for 

18           direct financial assistance for homeowners.  

19           We're asking for $50 million to help all of 

20           the homeowners who couldn't get assistance 

21           through the Homeowner Assistance Fund.  They 

22           weren't eligible due to federal restrictions, 

23           or we weren't able to get to them.  We served 

24           18,000 families, in partnership with the 


                                                                   232

 1           state, but there are many others who we 

 2           weren't able to help.

 3                  And on the revenue side, I just wanted 

 4           to highlight Chair Rosenthal's vacancy 

 5           registration and tax bill.  This is an 

 6           opportunity to generate revenue.  In 

 7           addition, the End Toxic Home Flipping Act 

 8           could also generate revenue.  We could look 

 9           at affordable title insurance.  We have a lot 

10           of ways that we can generate the revenue that 

11           we need to save New York families.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

13                  Randy Dillard.

14                  MR. DILLARD:  Yes, I'm Randy Dillard.  

15           I'm with the Right to Counsel Coalition, and 

16           I'm also with Community Action for Safe 

17           Apartments.  

18                  I'm here today because I had an 

19           attorney, I went to court in 2013 for 

20           nonpayment, which money I did not owe.  

21           Section 8 did an inspection on my apartment, 

22           and my apartment didn't pass inspection, so 

23           my landlord took me to court.

24                  I'm a single parent with five kids.  I 


                                                                   233

 1           was in court for two and a half years.  And 

 2           if I didn't have an attorney, I wouldn't be 

 3           able to testify for rights for tenants so 

 4           they can get an attorney today, after the 

 5           suffering that me and my kids went through.

 6                  My landlord was a police officer who 

 7           harassed me and my family.  My daughter 

 8           dropped from As and Bs to Ds and Fs because 

 9           she was afraid of going to a shelter.  We 

10           started the Right to Counsel Coalition in 

11           2012.  We won; it took us three years, we won 

12           it.  After we won it, 84 percent of the 

13           tenants got to stay in their homes because 

14           they had legal representation.  Evictions 

15           went down 40 percent, and landlords stopped 

16           suing, taking tenants to court by less than 

17           30 percent.  

18                  Over 20 cities, states and counties 

19           have passed RTC laws since we won in 2017.  

20           Westchester County passed RTC last year.  

21                  Right now over 175,000 tenants 

22           statewide are facing eviction right now.

23                  We have a solution.  We have a 

24           solution.  We are now working with over 100 


                                                                   234

 1           statewide partners to pass statewide right to 

 2           counsel for all New Yorkers.  Our bill is 

 3           S2721, introduced by Senator May, which would 

 4           guarantee the right to a free lawyer for all 

 5           tenants facing eviction across the state.  

 6           We're asking for $260 million in funding this 

 7           year to begin implementing the right to 

 8           counsel.  

 9                  Two hundred sixty million is going to 

10           enable a wholesale change in our courts.  

11           It's going to allow tens of thousands more 

12           tenants to be represented.  It is going to 

13           equip attorneys to fully litigate their cases 

14           and help ensure long-term housing stability 

15           for tenants.  It's going to transform the 

16           workplace conditions for legal providers and 

17           help us to compete nationally, attracting the 

18           next generation of civil legal talent to 

19           New York State.  It will support organizers 

20           who are working hard to ensure tenants know 

21           what their rights are.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

23                  And just a reminder, everybody, your 

24           full remarks -- your written submitted 


                                                                   235

 1           testimony is available on the websites.  So 

 2           not to worry if you run out of time.

 3                  Next, Michael McKee.

 4                  MR. McKEE:  Good afternoon, and thank 

 5           you for the invitation to testify.  My name 

 6           is Michael McKee, and I'm the treasurer of 

 7           the Tenants Political Action Committee.  

 8                  I want to talk about three things.  

 9           First, I want to commend a new bill to you.  

10           Just recently Senator Cordell Cleare and 

11           Assemblymember Emily Gallagher introduced a 

12           bill to create a new social housing 

13           development authority.  This will be a new 

14           state agency to create and manage and 

15           maintain genuinely and permanently affordable 

16           housing.  It is a chance to change the 

17           conversation, to get away from the tired 

18           narrative that the only way we can build 

19           housing is to bribe the private sector to do 

20           it and to give them subsidies to build 

21           market-rate housing, and in return we get a 

22           little bit of supposedly affordable housing.

23                  For 25 years I have heard Andrea 

24           Stewart-Cousins, including before she was 


                                                                   236

 1           elected to the Senate, when she was a member 

 2           of the Westchester County Board of 

 3           Legislators, say "We need a new Mitchell-Lama 

 4           program."  Well, this is it.  

 5                  And we urge you to take this bill 

 6           seriously.  It is not pie in the sky.  It's a 

 7           very serious piece of legislation, and I want 

 8           to commend Senator Cleare and 

 9           Assemblymember Gallagher.

10                  Secondly, I want to talk about the 

11           housing package that is being cooked up at a 

12           leadership level, supposedly to go into the 

13           budget.  From what we have learned about it, 

14           this housing package is totally unacceptable.  

15           I am speaking not only for Tenants PAC, I am 

16           speaking for the entire statewide tenant 

17           movement, including Housing Justice for All.

18                  Number one, the bill includes 

19           apparently an unacceptable version of 

20           good-cause eviction.  

21                  Number two, it includes another 

22           iteration of the failed 421-a program with 

23           yet another numerical moniker, although it 

24           looks to me like the Governor might be 


                                                                   237

 1           running at the end of the alphabet.  

 2                  Finally, and most egregiously, it 

 3           includes the CHIP/REBNY vacancy reset bill, 

 4           which is a new form of vacancy decontrol.  It 

 5           is not about the 10,000 apartments that 

 6           landlords are holding off the market, 

 7           claiming that they cannot afford to renovate 

 8           them.  It would put a target on every 

 9           rent-stabilized tenant's back who has been in 

10           occupancy for 10 years or longer.  It took us 

11           25 years to repeal vacancy decontrol; we are 

12           not about to sit silent while it gets 

13           reimposed.

14                  Finally, I want to call your attention 

15           to problems with the implementation of the 

16           ETPA-Upstate New York.  Kingston and now 

17           Newburgh have opted into the system.  There 

18           are other municipalities in the pipeline.  

19           What happened in Kingston was a disgrace.  In 

20           my written testimony I have a reference to 

21           the chronicle I wrote about this called 

22           "Lessons from Kingston, New York."  It's on 

23           our website.  I urge you to read it.  And I 

24           urge the two Housing Committees to do 


                                                                   238

 1           oversight hearings about what's going on 

 2           here.

 3                  Thank you very much.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 5                  We go to Assemblymember Rosenthal.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Thank you.

 7                  And thank you all for all your great 

 8           work in keeping tenants in their homes, 

 9           homeowners in their homes, and just eking 

10           every -- using every penny that you get.  And 

11           we're going to fight hard to get more for 

12           you.

13                  I wanted to ask Mr. McKee if you could 

14           elaborate about the bill that you mentioned 

15           earlier.

16                  MR. McKEE:  The vacancy reset bill?

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Yes.

18                  MR. McKEE:  Yes.  This bill was 

19           drafted by CHIP, the Community Housing 

20           Improvement Program.  It's lately been taken 

21           over by REBNY, the Real Estate Board of 

22           New York.  I mean, REBNY has a lot more 

23           credibility in Albany.  

24                  It's a very dangerous bill.  It would 


                                                                   239

 1           reimpose a form of vacancy decontrol.  It's a 

 2           wolf in sheep's clothing -- it's a classic 

 3           wolf in sheep's clothing.  And as I said, it 

 4           would apply not just to New York City and the 

 5           three suburban counties, it would apply to 

 6           any future municipality that opts into 

 7           ETPA-Upstate New York.

 8                  This bill would put a target on the 

 9           backs of long-term residential tenants, 

10           anyone who's been in occupancy for 10 years 

11           or longer.  We saw this during the 25 years 

12           that vacancy decontrol was in effect when 

13           landlords had an incentive to get people out.  

14           They had an incentive to harass people and 

15           evict them because they could get a 

16           deregulated apartment.

17                  This would allow them to do the same 

18           thing.  And it's simply not thinkable that 

19           the Legislature would really be thinking 

20           about going down this road.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  I took a 

22           quick look at it earlier.  You know, we saw a 

23           lot of abuse with MCIs and IAIs over the 

24           years that we mostly fixed in the 2019 HSTPA.  


                                                                   240

 1                  But isn't there part of this bill that 

 2           calls for doing this but with very little 

 3           oversight?

 4                  MR. McKEE:  Yes.  I mean, if you were 

 5           going to consider as part of a package 

 6           increasing the amount that owners could spend 

 7           on renovating an apartment upon vacancy, that 

 8           would be one thing as long as you were doing 

 9           it within the framework of the rent 

10           recognition regulation system.

11                  If you want to amend the individual 

12           apartment improvement formula as part of an 

13           overall package that would give a greater 

14           allowance to landlords who want to fix up 

15           those vacant apartments, as long as that's 

16           done within the framework of the rent 

17           regulation system and it does not allow 

18           landlords to reset the rent at market, then 

19           that would not be as objectionable.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Okay, that's 

21           very helpful.  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  To the Senate.

23                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Thanks.

24                  Just I guess to continue -- I'll start 


                                                                   241

 1           where my colleague left off, just to say, you 

 2           know, I think we've all seen the advocacy 

 3           agendas of many organizations this year and 

 4           last year, including, you know, CHIP and 

 5           REBNY, the ones that you mentioned.  But, you 

 6           know, there's not, to my knowledge, any 

 7           particular bill that's being cooked up right 

 8           now that includes, you know, the package that 

 9           you mentioned that is being -- you know, I 

10           think "cooked up" was your term at the --

11                  MR. McKEE:  We only know what we hear, 

12           Senator.  We don't -- we're not privy to 

13           what's going on behind closed doors.

14                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Okay.  I'm just -- 

15           since that has been articulated on the record 

16           here, I'll just articulate my perspective, 

17           which is there is not at this point a bill 

18           that's being cooked up that I'm aware of that 

19           includes the elements that you referred to.  

20           But -- which I guess should be comforting to 

21           you.

22                  I think -- you know, just to say -- 

23           I'll just -- in the interests of time I'll 

24           just say I agree very strongly that we should 


                                                                   242

 1           not have a process where we fight for large 

 2           amounts of money for really essential 

 3           services for homeowners and tenants and then 

 4           in January it's announced that those numbers 

 5           are zero and then we spend about 80 days or 

 6           so returning to the previous numbers.  And 

 7           then you all have to wonder if that cycle 

 8           will be successful each time.

 9                  It is odd, particularly this year with 

10           respect to HOPP, because the Executive Budget 

11           had started having a baseline of $20 million 

12           previously.  So -- but just where -- you 

13           know, we are very attentive to the issues 

14           that arise from that process.  And we're 

15           going to be working to ensure that we, you 

16           know, fully fund these programs.

17                  But -- and just thank you all for 

18           being very effective at using that money for 

19           its intended purpose.  We really appreciate 

20           it.  But I'll stop there.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

22                  We go to Assemblywoman 

23           Chandler-Waterman.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  


                                                                   243

 1           Thank you, Chair.

 2                  I appreciate your advocacy for the 

 3           most vulnerable population, especially Black 

 4           and brown communities, seniors, individuals 

 5           living with mental health conditions.

 6                  But Jacob, Legal Services New York 

 7           City.  Deed theft, right, with our Black and 

 8           brown and our older adults.  Seniors 

 9           experience deed theft and the burden of proof 

10           falls on the seniors to prove that the person 

11           who scammed them and the person who acquired 

12           the property unlawfully were in 

13           collaboration -- like they knew each other, 

14           they knew about it.

15                  In your expert opinion, what needs to 

16           be done or is currently in place to support 

17           our older adults who are being preyed on?  

18           Because I know you mentioned deed theft.

19                  MR. INWALD:  So these are really tough 

20           cases.  There was some legislation that was 

21           passed and signed, which I referenced that 

22           the Governor signed at the end of last year, 

23           that makes some improvements to the process.  

24           But all of these cases first of all represent 


                                                                   244

 1           situations where someone was trying to avert 

 2           foreclosure.  Right?  And had they reached 

 3           members of the HOPP network, they would never 

 4           have fallen for these scams.  So that's the 

 5           most important thing.

 6                  And then this is also the network that 

 7           actually represents those homeowners to 

 8           restore their title.  But these are very 

 9           resource-intensive and difficult cases.  So 

10           every case -- every fact pattern is 

11           different, and the scams are constantly 

12           evolving.  So I can't necessarily, you know, 

13           talk about the burden of proof in one 

14           particular type of instance because they're 

15           constantly, you know, changing in light of 

16           what's going on and --

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  We 

18           can talk offline more about it.

19                  MR. INWALD:  Sure, I'd be happy to 

20           talk to you more about that.  Probably more 

21           than you would ever want to hear.

22                  (Laughter.)

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

24           Okay.  Legal Aid Services -- that's Legal Aid 


                                                                   245

 1           Society, right?

 2                  MR. INWALD:  Legal Services NYC.  And 

 3           we serve all five boroughs.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  So 

 5           I'm talking about Legal Services Access?

 6                  MS. ZIMNY:  The Access Alliance.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

 8           Alliance, right.  That's -- the Legal Aid 

 9           Society falls under you, or no?

10                  MS. ZIMNY:  So Legal Aid Society of 

11           Northeastern New York is a member of the 

12           Access Alliance.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

14           Okay.  And do you all deal with mental health 

15           supportive housing and support of those who 

16           are going through that process?

17                  MS. ZIMNY:  I'm sorry, I couldn't hear 

18           you.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN: 

20           Mental health supportive housing, do you have 

21           jurisdiction or support in that area, of 

22           helping community members fill out the 

23           application to get support, like Form HRA 

24           2210E?  You know, family members are having a 


                                                                   246

 1           lot of issues, when their loved ones are in a 

 2           mental health facility, getting that form 

 3           filled out because they think it's too much 

 4           paperwork in the hospitals.

 5                  So we're trying to figure out what 

 6           support can be given or have you been giving 

 7           to those particular families and those living 

 8           with mental health conditions?  

 9                  MS. ZIMNY:  We have many different 

10           member programs, and so I'd love to talk to 

11           you more offline about that.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

13           Okay, thank you so much.  

14                  And we want to make sure that they are 

15           getting the supportive housing that's needed, 

16           and how we could build a plan to make sure 

17           that families are included in anything.  

18           Because, you know, in order for them to 

19           really recover, they need that support from 

20           their families.  And family members need to 

21           know how to advocate, especially when they're 

22           hospitalized.  And they need to have 

23           sustainable housing.  If you don't have 

24           housing, you don't have food, you don't have 


                                                                   247

 1           shelter, how can you really thrive in the 

 2           community?  

 3                  So thank you all so much for your 

 4           work, and I look forward to working with you, 

 5           especially on these topics.  Thank you.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senate?

 7                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator Jackson.

 8                  SENATOR JACKSON:  So first I want to 

 9           thank you all for coming in.  You are 

10           extremely important for all of the people 

11           that are in court and having attorneys 

12           represent them.  Right to counsel should be 

13           for everyone going into the courts.  

14                  And so to the young man who fought the 

15           system and you're still alive and strong, let 

16           me just say that you have a lot --

17                  MR. McKEE:  Flattery will get you 

18           everywhere, Senator.

19                  (Laughter.)

20                  SENATOR JACKSON:  You have a lot of 

21           people behind you in order to -- for what 

22           you're doing.

23                  So I want to ask Mike, Mike, what do 

24           you consider the definition of good-cause 


                                                                   248

 1           eviction?

 2                  MR. McKEE:  A definition of good-cause 

 3           eviction?

 4                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Yes.  Because I 

 5           asked the commissioner about did she support 

 6           good-cause.  

 7                  And so I'm asking you, what is your 

 8           definition as a housing expert?

 9                  MR. McKEE:  First of all, all it is, 

10           ultimately, is a defense.  It is a defense to 

11           an unfair eviction or an unfair rent 

12           increase.  If a tenant is brave enough -- an 

13           unregulated tenant is brave enough to stay 

14           and fight.

15                  And we know from experience -- I mean, 

16           organizers are always telling tenants:  Do 

17           not self-evict.  And unfortunately, many of 

18           them do because they just either are too 

19           afraid or they can't get a lawyer or they 

20           don't understand their rights.

21                  So to have the real estate lobby 

22           characterize this as universal rent control 

23           or "lease for life" is so hypocritical and so 

24           nonsensical.  


                                                                   249

 1                  But the version that we understand is 

 2           being discussed -- because the Governor has 

 3           strongly opposed this bill ever since she 

 4           became Governor -- and the Legislature has 

 5           for five years in a row failed to pass it, 

 6           leaving half the tenants in this state living 

 7           in unregulated apartments with no defenses of 

 8           any kind to unfair evictions or unfair rent 

 9           increases.  

10                  A valid form of good-cause eviction 

11           must be mandatory, not local option.  It's 

12           absurd to expect that upstate municipalities 

13           are going to have to do this by local option.  

14           And this whole formula that some staff member 

15           cooked up last year about a portfolio size -- 

16           that, you know, a landlord who owns fewer 

17           than X number of apartments would not be 

18           covered by good-cause -- is a loophole so big 

19           you could drive a truck through it.  

20                  Those are unacceptable provisions.  It 

21           has to be mandatory, not local option, and it 

22           has to be for specific units.  Our bill, 

23           which is sponsored by Senator Salazar --

24                  SENATOR JACKSON:  I want to get in one 


                                                                   250

 1           more question.  Thank you --

 2                  MR. McKEE:  -- would exempt one and -- 

 3           two- and three-family homes -- 

 4                  SENATOR JACKSON:  I need to get one 

 5           more question in.

 6                  MR. McKEE:  -- owner-occupied.

 7                  SENATOR JACKSON:  So, Jacob, you 

 8           represent Legal Services of New York.  Do all 

 9           of the tenants going into court have counsel, 

10           yes or no?  And what can we do to make sure 

11           that they get it?

12                  MR. INWALD:  I'm talking about --

13                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Talk into the mic, 

14           please.

15                  MR. INWALD:  I'm sorry, I can't 

16           speak -- I'm talking about the homeownership 

17           services we provide, so I'm not talking about 

18           tenants. 

19                  But it's a continuum of services.  So 

20           some cases we'll represent them for the 

21           settlement conference phase.  Sometimes we'll 

22           just be helping people put in an answer so 

23           that their defenses are preserved.  And in 

24           some instances we're taking on full-on 


                                                                   251

 1           representation defensively in a foreclosure 

 2           case, and in other cases affirmative 

 3           litigation.

 4                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 6                  Assemblywoman Kelles.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  I wanted to 

 8           thank you all.  Thank you for coming, 

 9           committing to this.  And Randy, thank you so 

10           much for sharing your story.  

11                  It seems -- and there's another piece 

12           that irks me a bit about this, is that we 

13           have a pilot.  It has been proven to be 

14           successful.  And now not providing it to the 

15           rest of the state is the ultimate in 

16           inequity.  And it is, I think, inhumane and 

17           unconscionable, since we already have the 

18           data that it works. 

19                  So thank you so much for coming.

20                  MR. DILLARD:  Thank you.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  And I just 

22           wanted to add, thank you so much, Michael, 

23           for the definition for good-cause.  

24                  The one thing that I wanted to add 


                                                                   252

 1           that bothers me about -- as it seems to 

 2           bother you -- is that it is being used to say 

 3           that now no one can evict for any reason.  It 

 4           has nothing to do with that.  It is about, 

 5           you know, the raising -- the unrealistic 

 6           raising of rents, right, like evicting 

 7           without cause.  

 8                  If someone breaks their lease by doing 

 9           something in that lease agreement that they 

10           agreed not to do, that is still cause to 

11           evict.  And those are being conflated, and I 

12           despise that.  So thank you so much for 

13           saying it.

14                  I just wanted to give you an 

15           opportunity, though, to talk a bit about 

16           the -- your comments about a new 

17           Mitchell-Lama program, social housing.  I 

18           want to take that phrase back, because it is 

19           so important that we create diversity of 

20           housing.  We talk about it all the time.  Why 

21           would we not allow for social housing so 

22           well, since it has worked so astoundingly 

23           well throughout the world.  And there's this 

24           amazing bill, as you described, from Cleare 


                                                                   253

 1           and Gallagher.

 2                  Can you talk a little bit about the 

 3           proponents -- the pieces of it that you think 

 4           really stand out that are so critical?

 5                  MR. McKEE:  Well, thank you, 

 6           Ms. Kelles.

 7                  And I just want to -- I think this is 

 8           perhaps the first time we've seen each other 

 9           since we were in Vienna together.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  I think so too.

11                  MR. McKEE:  And both chairs of the 

12           Housing Committee were with us.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Blew my mind.

14                  MR. McKEE:  We spent a week in Vienna 

15           studying their social housing.  I would urge 

16           any member of the Legislature -- maybe it's 

17           time to organize another trip to Vienna with 

18           more of you joining us.  It was amazing what 

19           we saw.  I mean -- beautiful -- 

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Forty-four 

21           percent of the community --

22                  MR. McKEE:  -- public housing built 

23           more than a hundred years ago, still in 

24           operation.  And still run by the City of 


                                                                   254

 1           Vienna.  And 62 percent of Viennese live in 

 2           some form of social housing.  Rents are low, 

 3           even market rents.  The private landlords 

 4           have to compete with the social housing, so 

 5           market rents tend to be fairly low.

 6                  I mean, 600 euros is a normal rent in 

 7           Vienna.  That's like, what, $650?  Something 

 8           like that.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  And this bill 

10           is modeled after that, what we --

11                  MR. McKEE:  Yeah.  I mean, and it's 

12           mixed-income.  Only the most affluent 

13           Viennese are not eligible for social housing.  

14           This is one of the reasons it's so popular.  

15           It's like Social Security:  Everybody gets 

16           it.  This is why the Republicans have not 

17           been able to do in Social Security.

18                  So I strongly believe in mixed-income 

19           housing as long as the balance is correct and 

20           you have enough housing for really low-income 

21           people who need it the most.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

23                  To the Senate.  Brian, you have 

24           anybody else?


                                                                   255

 1                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Next we have 

 2           Senator -- Senator Brisport's up next.

 3                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you, 

 4           Mr. Chair.  

 5                  And thank you to our panelists for 

 6           being here today.  

 7                  I have a couple of questions for 

 8           Mr. Inwald and also Mr. McKee from Tenants 

 9           PAC.

10                  Mr. Inwald, first up, do you come 

11           across any tenants in 421-a apartments who 

12           are being overcharged on their rent, despite 

13           the state subsidizing the real estate sector?

14                  MR. INWALD:  So I'm not the right 

15           person to answer questions about tenants 

16           because the practice that I oversee is really 

17           all about representing and preserving 

18           homeownership.  So --

19                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Okay.  Okay.  I 

20           only have questions for Mr. McKee, then.  

21                  (Laughter.)

22                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you.

23                  Mr. McKee, on brokers' fees, could you 

24           tell us a bit more about the impact of 


                                                                   256

 1           brokers' fees on tenants?  In New York City 

 2           we hear horror stories from our constituents 

 3           all the time.

 4                  MR. McKEE:  I assume you're talking 

 5           about your bill that would prohibit landlords 

 6           from passing brokers' fees on to tenants?

 7                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Yes.

 8                  MR. McKEE:  I mean, this is a 

 9           peculiarity of the New York City rental 

10           market.  It is absurd that tenants who are 

11           looking for an apartment have to pay a broker 

12           who's hired by the landlord.  

13                  And there was an article in the New 

14           York Times, what, three days ago, four days 

15           ago?  Something like that.  The average cost 

16           of moving into an apartment now, including 

17           the broker's fee and one month's rent and 

18           security deposit, is like $10,000.  I mean, 

19           that's just a huge impediment to people who 

20           are looking for a place to live.  And it's 

21           unfair.  It's just absurd that tenants should 

22           have to pay a broker unless the tenant hires 

23           the broker.  Period.

24                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Yeah.  Period.


                                                                   257

 1                  And on the good-cause eviction bill, 

 2           could you please describe what happened in 

 3           the City of Kingston after they opted into 

 4           ETPA and what the problems were with the lack 

 5           of enforcement --

 6                  MR. McKEE:  Oh, thank you for asking 

 7           that, Senator.  I could go on forever.  I 

 8           urge you all to read my chronicle, "Lessons 

 9           from Kingston."

10                  Once Kingston opted in -- we were not 

11           prepared for this.  We should have been, but 

12           it was a good lesson.  We should have started 

13           tenant education months before.  Because once 

14           the City of Kingston opted in, there was mass 

15           confusion for three or four months.  

16           Landlords went wild with, you know, 

17           misconduct.  Even though rents were legally 

18           frozen until the new Kingston Rent Guidelines 

19           Board was constituted and could vote on rent 

20           adjustments, landlords were demanding that 

21           tenants sign illegal leases and pay illegal 

22           rent increases.

23                  Tenants at a seven-unit building who 

24           should have been protected by ETPA were 


                                                                   258

 1           evicted, and the building was emptied by a 

 2           speculator who bought it and told the tenants 

 3           he was going to flip it for a million 

 4           dollars.  And they were evicted even though 

 5           they were technically protected by ETPA as 

 6           well as the Kingston good-cause eviction law, 

 7           which at that point was in full force and 

 8           effect.  And they were evicted because they 

 9           couldn't get a lawyer.  They couldn't get a 

10           lawyer.  And all seven families -- six of 

11           them Black -- are gone.  One of them is now 

12           in a shelter, one's in a Section 8 building, 

13           and one moved to Albany.  I don't know what 

14           happened to the others.

15                  We're seeing the same kind of illegal 

16           behavior in Newburgh, where we're seeing 

17           tenants reporting that landlords -- even 

18           though Newburgh rents are frozen, landlords 

19           are hitting them with demands for signing 

20           leases with a big rent increase.

21                  And the agency, DHCR, does nothing.  

22           There's no enforcement at all.  Which is why 

23           I'm suggesting that the two Housing 

24           Committees have an oversight hearing about 


                                                                   259

 1           this.  

 2                  It's going to be the same problem in 

 3           every other future municipality that opts in.

 4                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 6                  We go to Assemblyman Brown.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Thank you, 

 8           Chair.

 9                  Just one quick comment.  I just 

10           appreciate all your help with the Homeowner 

11           Protection Program.  I'm from Suffolk County.  

12           Our county is one of the hardest-hit when it 

13           comes to foreclosures.  And in particular, 

14           Touro Law School has a clinic to help support 

15           your efforts.  So I just wanted to say thank 

16           you.

17                  MR. INWALD:  Thank you.  And Touro is 

18           actually part of the HOPP network.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN KEITH BROWN:  Yes.  Thank 

20           you.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Back to the 

22           Senate.

23                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator Salazar.

24                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  Thank you.


                                                                   260

 1                  Michael, could you speak more about 

 2           specifically -- you know, you talked about a 

 3           loophole, right, so large that you could 

 4           drive a truck through it.  What is the risk?  

 5           Like what is actually lost?  If you don't 

 6           mind elaborating.

 7                  MR. McKEE:  No.

 8                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  Failing to protect 

 9           the integrity of the bill.

10                  MR. McKEE:  Right.

11                  Well, your bill defines it the way it 

12           should be.  Your bill would subject every 

13           unit, every rental unit in the state that is 

14           not rent-regulated in some way -- public 

15           housing, Mitchell-Lama, whatever -- to the 

16           good-cause eviction law.  And you would 

17           exempt two- and three-unit owner-occupied 

18           buildings, which is appropriate.

19                  But some staff member last year cooked 

20           up a formula that a landlord who owns fewer 

21           than X number of apartments would be exempt 

22           from the law.  I mean, this is the kind of 

23           things landlords -- some landlords are really 

24           good at manipulating.  And with the Governor 


                                                                   261

 1           now making the LLC registry not available to 

 2           the public, it's going to make it harder for 

 3           tenants to even know who their landlord is.

 4                  So the correct way to do this is the 

 5           way it's done in your bill, to specify 

 6           specifically that it's going to apply to 

 7           these units.

 8                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  Thank you.

 9                  And then I have a very different 

10           question for Christie.  You mentioned the 

11           End Toxic House Flipping Act, S1569A -- thank 

12           you, I appreciate that -- in the context of 

13           potentially generating revenue.  

14                  How else could that bill help 

15           alleviate and address problems that are 

16           impacting the housing market in communities 

17           in New York City?

18                  MS. PEALE:  Well, certainly first from 

19           a preservation perspective, if we can deter 

20           purchasers who are just looking to, you know, 

21           slap a coat of paint on a property and flip 

22           it for, you know, 100, 200 percent profit, 

23           thereby evicting families from affordable 

24           rental units, you know, we certainly save a 


                                                                   262

 1           lot in preserving owner-occupant and their 

 2           tenants that are most likely receiving 

 3           below-market rents through an owner-occupant 

 4           landlord.  So that's one piece.

 5                  And then I think that what we'd like 

 6           to see is if there are short-term flips, that 

 7           a percentage of that upside be returned to 

 8           the community, either in the form of, you 

 9           know, what we're all dreaming about, new 

10           affordable homeownership, whether that's 

11           through Mitchell-Lama or other multifamily 

12           affordable home ownership, such as subsidized 

13           co-ops, community land trusts.  I imagine 

14           those would be a piece of a social housing 

15           approach.  

16                  But we're really interested in 

17           creating new affordable homeownership supply, 

18           as a part of the fact that we know we've lost 

19           tens of thousands of BIPOC homeowners across 

20           the city through the foreclosure crisis, 

21           through gentrification, through a lot of 

22           speculative pressure and all the deed theft 

23           schemes that Jay mentioned.

24                  So there's a lot that we're fighting 


                                                                   263

 1           against and we're really optimistic about the 

 2           way revenue could help us address it.

 3                  SENATOR SALAZAR:  Thank you.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 5                  Assemblywoman Levenberg.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  Thank you so 

 7           much to all of you for your testimony and for 

 8           all of the good work you do.

 9                  And Mr. Dillard, thank you for all 

10           your struggles and your testimony as well.  I 

11           appreciate hearing that.

12                  I just wanted to agree with the idea 

13           of going to Vienna, number one.  I think that 

14           sounds great.  And I appreciate your 

15           clarifying some of the social housing pieces 

16           from the Gallagher legislation.

17                  I did want to just follow up with some 

18           of the questions about good-cause to some of 

19           the legal services teams because, you know, 

20           out of curiosity.  You know, we hear a lot of 

21           pushback obviously about what would happen in 

22           the legal processes because of good-cause.  I 

23           do support this legislation, but I'm 

24           wondering, again, what the other, you know, 


                                                                   264

 1           perspective is in terms of just taking a lot 

 2           of time to get through the process.  

 3                  And if you could clarify some of that 

 4           for us, I think it would be helpful, because 

 5           I'm hopeful that it's not the lengthy process 

 6           that we're hearing about from the other side, 

 7           I guess you could say.

 8                  MS. PEALE:  Again, you have a lot of 

 9           folks here that spend a lot of time defending 

10           against the state process of foreclosure in 

11           the State Supreme Court.  So I would love Jay 

12           to recommend some resources.

13                  MR. INWALD:  What I can say is my 

14           colleagues who work with rental housing, I'd 

15           be happy to connect you offline and I don't 

16           want to sort of overstep my bounds and sort 

17           of, you know, go beyond my lanes, which is 

18           sort of outside of my expertise. 

19                  So -- but I'd be happy to connect you.  

20           We have a huge amount of resources on that 

21           subject.  It's just that I'm not that 

22           resource, so --

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  I gotcha.  I 

24           gotcha.  Okay.


                                                                   265

 1                  I guess -- I guess that's -- I mean, I 

 2           don't know, Mr. McKee, if you wanted to 

 3           comment on it then, you know, from -- from 

 4           what you know.  Mr. McKee?

 5                  MR. McKEE:  Well, I don't think it 

 6           would have a huge impact on the court system.  

 7           What it would do is give unregulated tenants, 

 8           which is roughly 1.6 million tenants 

 9           statewide -- including tenants in rural 

10           areas, who are never going to have access to 

11           a lawyer, and where landlord/tenant cases are 

12           often heard by justices of the peace who know 

13           nothing about landlord/tenant law.

14                  It gives people a defense.  And if 

15           you're brave enough to stay and fight and 

16           say, No, I'm not going to pay that rent 

17           increase, or No, you can't evict me for no 

18           reason, that tenant will have a defense that 

19           they don't now have.  

20                  I mean, it's essential to give people 

21           the right to counsel.  That's huge.  And it's 

22           very important.  But if you don't give people 

23           an affirmative defense, all a lawyer's going 

24           to be able to do is buy some time.


                                                                   266

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  Yeah.  And 

 2           shout out to --

 3                  MR. McKEE:  You know, Kathy Hochul 

 4           says we've got more tenant protections in 

 5           New York State and therefore we don't need 

 6           any more.  Well, I'm sorry, half the tenants 

 7           in this state live in unregulated apartments, 

 8           and they are not protected in any way.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  Thank you 

10           very much.  Appreciate it.

11                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator May.

12                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

13                  And thank you, all of you, for the 

14           great work you do and your advocacy.  And 

15           Randy, for your work on right to counsel.  

16           I'm proud to carry that bill.  

17                  I wanted to say first to Mike, if 

18           going to Vienna is too far, we should go to 

19           Montgomery County, Maryland, and see the 

20           public developer model at work there, because 

21           they've done some really great work with 

22           mixed-income housing that people love living 

23           in.  And so I would love to have a trip down 

24           there with you.


                                                                   267

 1                  But on right to counsel, what I keep 

 2           hearing is that we don't have enough lawyers 

 3           to actually do the work that would need to be 

 4           done statewide.  So I want to pick your 

 5           brains about how do we ramp up that pipeline 

 6           of attorneys who can be -- who can make a 

 7           program like that actually work statewide.

 8                  MS. ZIMNY:  I think specifically from 

 9           the legal services point -- oh, sorry.

10                  Thank you for the question.  

11                  And specifically from the point of the 

12           Access Alliance, we are actively working with 

13           all of our law school partners across the 

14           state to create internships and fellowships 

15           with law clerks, to get them interested in 

16           the work that these organizations are doing 

17           so that when they come out of law school 

18           they're excited and ready to work within 

19           these organizations.

20                  Additionally, across the state we've 

21           had to look at raising salaries to attract 

22           qualified candidates.  And so I think the 

23           issue comes back to funding and to exercise 

24           those relationships early within the law 


                                                                   268

 1           schools.

 2                  MR. INWALD:  And if I could just jump 

 3           in on that, sweeping funding from IOLA is not 

 4           going to help.  I know that's beyond the 

 5           scope of this committee.  But, you know, 

 6           there is a huge problem with pay parity for 

 7           legal services, so resolving that would be 

 8           really helpful.

 9                  MR. DILLARD:  And that's why we're 

10           asking for $260 million, because it would 

11           help pay lawyers and to bring lawyers in.  

12           And it would help pay organizers.  And it 

13           would help pay the office that we're getting 

14           ready to open up to get started.

15                  SENATOR MAY:  Yeah, I was wondering 

16           about that too, if there is an administrative 

17           level that needs to be funded --

18                  MR. DILLARD:  Yes.

19                  SENATOR MAY:  -- and supported in 

20           addition to just having enough attorneys to 

21           do this.  Everyone's nodding.  Make the 

22           record.  Record, everybody is nodding.  Okay, 

23           great.

24                  Thank you so much.  And again, thanks 


                                                                   269

 1           for your leadership on all of these issues.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman 

 3           Burdick.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  Thank you, 

 5           Chair Weinstein.

 6                  And I want to thank each of the 

 7           panelists for the terrific work that you're 

 8           doing.

 9                  I should mention to Erica Zimny that 

10           we really appreciate the coalition that 

11           you've put together of legal services 

12           statewide, and the Westchester County 

13           delegation is certainly extremely supportive 

14           of Legal Services of the Hudson Valley, which 

15           I know is part of that alliance.  So thank 

16           you for that work.

17                  I'm just going to ask the same 

18           question I asked of the previous panel.  I 

19           don't know whether any of you had heard the 

20           exchange with Commissioner Visnauskas about 

21           the work that my Hudson Valley colleague Dana 

22           Levenberg and I are doing about trying to do 

23           something more on a statewide basis, and if 

24           any of you might have any comments about it.


                                                                   270

 1                  (No response.)

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  Maybe you didn't 

 3           hear it.

 4                  MS. PEALE:  I'm sorry, doing more --

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK:  So, you know, 

 6           it's really to try to -- it does not have 

 7           construction mandates.  Instead, it provides 

 8           that municipalities need to come up with 

 9           something.  They have to come up with a 

10           housing plan.  They have to assess need.  

11           They have to take a look at mixed-use housing 

12           along the income range and require something.

13                  In a housing hearing back in December, 

14           New York City said they're fine in putting 

15           together a plan.  They do that anyway.  So it 

16           seems that this can be done statewide, it 

17           doesn't have to be centered in just New York 

18           City or just upstate.

19                  And so we would welcome your thoughts 

20           and would be happy to provide that to you and 

21           would appreciate your feedback and whether 

22           you might support it.

23                  Thank you.

24                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator Cleare.


                                                                   271

 1                  SENATOR CLEARE:  I want to thank all 

 2           of you for being here today and the work that 

 3           you're doing ongoing.  

 4                  Mike McKee, I am a huge fan of all the 

 5           work that we've done together over the years.

 6                  This is a comment question.  I don't 

 7           know if you were here when you heard about my 

 8           testimony.  My district which I represent, 

 9           which includes Harlem and East Harlem and 

10           El Barrio, aggressively gentrified.  You 

11           know, I feel like I'm fighting for the very 

12           soul of my community, the exodus of Blacks 

13           out of New York State, not just the city -- 

14           that have left the state not because they 

15           wanted to, but because they could not afford 

16           to live here.  And it's continuing across the 

17           city.

18                  I would like to know if there's more 

19           that we can do.  And losing HPD, losing the 

20           community preference battle a couple of weeks 

21           ago, I just want to know what we can do to 

22           preserve and protect and allow us to maintain 

23           a diverse population in New York City.  And 

24           also for the work that you do.


                                                                   272

 1                  I chair the Aging Committee.  Very 

 2           concerned about our seniors who are getting 

 3           defrauded.  And I think it's a despicable 

 4           crime.  I think it's horrible.  I sadly think 

 5           more people get away with it than don't.  And 

 6           I'd like to know what we can do legislatively 

 7           to help those cases that are so long and so 

 8           arduous and take so much time and so many 

 9           resources -- as well as allow us to even look 

10           back longer, and what can we do where there 

11           are cases where this has happened?  

12                  Seniors, they don't have the strength 

13           to fight.  You don't even have to be a 

14           senior.  These cases wear people out.  Even 

15           in landlord/tenant court, they will wear you 

16           out.  When Mike McKee talks about folks in 

17           Kingston, you know, not having a lawyer, that 

18           makes a difference.  Because even just to 

19           take off from work to show up -- they know 

20           that they can show up more than you.

21                  What can we do?

22                  MR. INWALD:  Well, with one minute and 

23           6 seconds --

24                  SENATOR CLEARE:  You can call me.


                                                                   273

 1                  MR. INWALD:  I would say, first of 

 2           all, preserving existing homeownership, which 

 3           is one of the reasons why I'm here, is 

 4           really, really key.  Right?  

 5                  There's no reason to lose the -- all 

 6           the talk about, you know, increasing the 

 7           housing stock and everything, when our 

 8           clients, if they're not represented by us and 

 9           they lose their homes to foreclosure, that is 

10           the loss of affordable housing on several -- 

11           in several respects.  And it actually feeds 

12           gentrification, right?  Because the people 

13           buying these properties at auction are 

14           private equity and speculative investors who 

15           are not maintaining these as, you know, 

16           community --

17                  SENATOR CLEARE:  I'm looking forward 

18           to a conversation later, with recommendations 

19           legislatively that we can --

20                  MR. INWALD:  Yeah, I'd be happy to 

21           have a -- yeah.

22                  SENATOR CLEARE:  Yes, please.

23                  MR. McKEE:  I would recommend that you 

24           put the 300,000 or so apartments that were 


                                                                   274

 1           lost to vacancy decontrol back under 

 2           regulation.  And which, for some reason, were 

 3           not included in the Housing Stability and 

 4           Tenant Protection Act.  That's a substantial 

 5           chunk of the New York City and three county 

 6           housing stock, and it was not reregulated for 

 7           some reason.

 8                  SENATOR CLEARE:  Thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

10                  Senate?

11                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  I think we have no 

12           further questions.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Oh, we still 

14           have -- that's just the Senate.  We have a 

15           couple of Assemblymembers. 

16                  Assemblywoman Lee.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  Thank everyone for 

18           being here.

19                  Just a question for Mike.  You know, 

20           there have been conversations around 

21           including good-cause in the budget, but more 

22           including it in intention but maybe not 

23           naming it as good-cause.  Does it make a 

24           difference as long as protections are there?  


                                                                   275

 1           Do you care that the name is there or not?

 2                  MR. McKEE:  It depends on the kind of 

 3           protection.  

 4                  I mean, the formulation that we've 

 5           been told that is being pursued by -- at a 

 6           leadership level, whether it's true or not, 

 7           that's what we are being told -- is 

 8           unacceptable.  It's unenforceable.  It would 

 9           not -- it would leave out 85 percent of 

10           tenants in upstate New York.  It would leave 

11           out a substantial number of tenants living in 

12           smaller buildings in New York City and in the 

13           suburban counties.  They would be without any 

14           protections.  

15                  And we're simply not going to accept a 

16           watered-down good-cause eviction.  If you 

17           can't give us a real good-cause-eviction 

18           bill, no bill is better.  We don't want a 

19           screwed-up, watered-down bill that is not 

20           going to work just so some legislators can 

21           say "We passed good-cause."  

22                  I'm sorry, that may sound very blunt, 

23           but I tend to be a very blunt person.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  But if it is in 


                                                                   276

 1           its totality but not named that, that's okay, 

 2           is what -- you're okay with that?

 3                  MR. McKEE:  (Sighing; chuckling.)

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  Okay.  And then 

 5           this is just more of a comment, because I 

 6           represent a district that has a lot of -- a 

 7           large Asian community.  And there's certainly 

 8           a lot of misinformation about what good-cause 

 9           is, and it gets propagated through, you know, 

10           the Asian property owners and things like 

11           that, when there are a lot of vulnerable 

12           Asian tenants who would benefit greatly from 

13           good-cause.

14                  So just something that I'd like to 

15           say, I'd like to just reemphasize for anyone 

16           providing legal services, we need -- and 

17           language services that are culturally 

18           competent, please come to our communities.  

19           We need that.  And we need strong organizing 

20           as well so that we can build that groundswell 

21           of support for the tenant protections that 

22           really do help so many vulnerable members of 

23           the community -- but they get drowned out or 

24           lost because of, you know, the language and 


                                                                   277

 1           other issues.  

 2                  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 4                  And to close out this panel, 

 5           Assemblyman Manktelow.

 6                  (Audio echo.)

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Thank you, 

 8           Chair. 

 9                  Jacob, I want to say thank you for 

10           everything HOPP does.  I'm from the 

11           130th District, Wayne County, up near 

12           Ontario County, and you've done a lot of good 

13           work there through your organization, so 

14           thank you.

15                  My second question, to Michael, if you 

16           have a few minutes.  I appreciate you being 

17           blunt.  I think you'd make a great 

18           Assemblymember being blunt.

19                  (Laughter.)

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  So you talked 

21           a little bit about social housing.  So a few 

22           years ago I was in New York City; I've seen 

23           housing in NYCHA, the city housing authority.  

24           I've been overseas, I've seen housing, social 


                                                                   278

 1           housing in different countries.  I want to go 

 2           see Vienna.

 3                  When you talk about social housing, 

 4           how is that going to be different than some 

 5           of the housings that I've seen around the 

 6           world, and including New York City?  What are 

 7           you going to do to make sure that doesn't 

 8           happen with this type of housing?

 9                  MR. McKEE:  This is a very long 

10           conversation, and we would have to go back to 

11           the 1930s and what the federal government did 

12           in establishing public housing and some of 

13           the restrictions they put on it, including 

14           how much you could spend to construct it.  

15           Which is why so much of it is badly 

16           constructed and has maintenance problems.

17                  Social housing in other countries, 

18           including France and Germany, is much 

19           different:  It's beautiful, it's 

20           well-constructed, it's constructed at the 

21           highest standards of construction.  They hire 

22           top architects to design it.  It doesn't all 

23           look like projects.  It's a very different 

24           approach.  


                                                                   279

 1                  And that's what we're talking about.  

 2           We're not talking about, you know, 

 3           monolithic, you know, buildings that are all 

 4           red brick and badly built and where the 

 5           government does not meet its obligations in 

 6           terms of funding for maintenance.  I mean, 

 7           these are low-income people.  You can't -- 

 8           you can't run a building on the rent rolls in 

 9           public housing.  You've got to have 

10           subsidies.  

11                  And, you know, government at every 

12           level, especially the federal government, you 

13           know, just doesn't do what they should be 

14           doing.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  So I'm glad 

16           you brought up Germany.  I spent three years 

17           of my life there, and I've been in a lot of 

18           that housing.  And I agree with some of the 

19           things you say, maybe not all of them.  

20                  But I'd love to spend a little time 

21           with you on the side where we can spend a few 

22           hours and really talk about this in depth, 

23           because I want to see where you think we can 

24           go, how we're going to fund it -- but more 


                                                                   280

 1           so, how are we going to help the tenants that 

 2           are in those homes, in those rental units, 

 3           make that last long-term for them?  Because 

 4           we can't constantly throw state or federal 

 5           dollars at that.  We have to give them the 

 6           ability to work and to help self-fund the 

 7           rent.

 8                  So I'm in full support of talking with 

 9           you.  I want to go to Vienna.  Let's go see 

10           these places and let's talk.

11                  So thank you for your testimony, and 

12           thank you all for being here this afternoon.

13                  PANELISTS:  Thank you.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

15           While we plan our field trip, I want to thank 

16           you all for being here.

17                  And I'm going to call on Panel C:  

18           New York Building Congress; New York Housing 

19           Conference; American Institute of Architects 

20           New York; 32BJ SEIU; and Open New York.

21                  (Pause.)

22                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  So whenever you're 

23           ready.

24                  MS. WYLIE:  Good afternoon, 


                                                                   281

 1           Chairs Weinstein, Kavanaugh, Rosenthal and 

 2           members of the Senate and Assembly.  

 3                  My name is Megan Wylie, and I am the 

 4           director of government relations at the 

 5           New york Building Congress.  And I want to 

 6           thank you for allowing us to speak today 

 7           regarding the Legislature's efforts to create 

 8           a comprehensive plan in the FY 2025 budget to 

 9           address our state's current housing 

10           affordability crisis.  

11                  The New York Building Congress 

12           represents over 500 constituent organizations 

13           comprising over 250,000 skilled tradespeople 

14           and professionals dedicated to the growth and 

15           prosperity of New York City and State.  

16                  With the lack of adequate affordable 

17           housing stock, one of the biggest obstacles 

18           to these goals, we applaud the Legislature's 

19           eagerness to shape a housing package that 

20           incorporates the diverse priorities of labor, 

21           property owners and developers, third-party 

22           stakeholders, the 46 percent of New Yorkers 

23           who rent their homes, and those currently 

24           struggling to find a place to call home.  


                                                                   282

 1                  The Building Congress has already 

 2           committed to working with a broad coalition 

 3           to take much-needed action once and for all.  

 4                  We echo Governor Kathy Hochul's 

 5           proposal in the Executive Budget to extend 

 6           eligibility for the recently expired tax 

 7           incentive program and enact a newer and more 

 8           robust one to reinvigorate the development of 

 9           affordable housing.  

10                  We also support the Governor's 

11           proposals to remove antiquated restrictions 

12           on the FAR cap that hinder development, 

13           streamline environmental reviews on 

14           affordable housing projects, boost the 

15           conversion of unused commercial space into 

16           residential units, and incentivize new 

17           opportunities for homeowners and tenants like 

18           accessory dwelling units.  

19                  We respectfully request that you 

20           consider these items to be included in any 

21           plan put forth by the Legislature.  We 

22           believe the dire current statistics outlined 

23           in our recent Construction Outlook Report 

24           underscore this request.  


                                                                   283

 1                  New York's housing crisis went from 

 2           bad to worse when we lost the number-one 

 3           driver for residential housing development in 

 4           decades.  While the program had its critics, 

 5           when 421-a expired in 2022 we saw a dramatic 

 6           drop in the construction of new residential 

 7           affordable housing.  In New York City alone, 

 8           our annual projections for new units dropped 

 9           from 30,000 to just over 11,000.  This 

10           situation is unsustainable, and we are 

11           counting on the Legislature to ensure a home 

12           for every New Yorker.  

13                  In the Governor's Executive Budget she 

14           introduced 485-x, a replacement program for 

15           421-a.  We believe this proposal has the 

16           potential to provide a much-needed shot in 

17           the arm for our statewide housing stock and 

18           will address criticisms of previous incentive 

19           programs.  

20                  485-x would allow the Department of 

21           Housing Preservation and Development to 

22           determine updated affordability indexes, and 

23           includes extending the completion deadline 

24           for vested projects that qualified for 421-a 


                                                                   284

 1           benefits but failed to start construction 

 2           prior to the June 2022 deadline.  This would 

 3           save over 33,000 rental units currently in 

 4           the pipeline.  Extending the deadline is 

 5           appropriate to account for delays and 

 6           construction challenges due to the pandemic.  

 7                  Furthermore, the Building Congress is 

 8           most importantly committed to supporting the 

 9           stipulation that makes the program dependent 

10           on the Building and Construction Trades 

11           Council and the Real Estate Board of New York 

12           agreeing to a memorandum of understanding.  

13                  With member organizations across both 

14           labor and development we are ready, willing, 

15           and able to use our unique position to help 

16           guide this program towards success.  We have 

17           the opportunity in the FY 2025 budget to 

18           improve the lives of all New Yorkers, and we 

19           owe it to our great state to meet this 

20           crucial moment.  

21                  Thank you again for the opportunity to 

22           testify.  Sorry.

23                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Thank you.  

24                  I just don't want Assemblymember 


                                                                   285

 1           Weinstein to hear that, you know, once she 

 2           left the room bedlam broke out, so.  

 3                  (Laughter.) 

 4                  MR. PASTREICH:  All right.  Thank you, 

 5           Committee Chairs Rosenthal, Kavanaugh and 

 6           Weinstein.  

 7                  I'm here today because what I am is -- 

 8           and very proud to be -- is the representative 

 9           of nearly 100,000 working New Yorkers, 

10           members of SEIU Local 32BJ who call New York 

11           home.  They're not just the heart and soul of 

12           the largest property service union, they're 

13           also the working people, the essential 

14           workers who are struggling to find affordable 

15           housing within a reasonable commute to their 

16           jobs.  

17                  That's the common thread you've heard 

18           many times today, you will hear in coming 

19           weeks from other labor leaders -- like DC37 

20           and the hotel trades -- and you'll continue 

21           to hear until a new housing paradigm is 

22           established.  Right now we have too few units 

23           of affordable housing too far away from where 

24           people work.  


                                                                   286

 1                  In years past, addressing the crisis 

 2           may have been too big a mountain to climb, 

 3           but I'm optimistic that if we take a 

 4           different route, a middle ground, that we can 

 5           collectively reach our common goal of 

 6           reaching a set of policies that works for 

 7           both tenants and workers.  

 8                  First, we must recognize the problem.  

 9           New York City's housing crisis didn't appear 

10           overnight.  It's a result of years of new 

11           housing construction failing to keep pace 

12           with population and job growth.  And it's a 

13           problem that unfortunately has grown more 

14           acute since the expiration in 2022 of 421-a, 

15           the program which spurred a majority of the 

16           new housing production in recent years.  

17                  From 2010 to 2020, New York City's 

18           population increased by approximately 

19           630,000 residents.  The city gained a million 

20           new jobs while its housing stock increased by 

21           only 200,000 units.  That discrepancy between 

22           job growth and housing production meant that 

23           for every job added, less than one in five 

24           units of housing was created.  That's 


                                                                   287

 1           literally the definition of demand 

 2           overwhelming supply.  

 3                  And as the New York Times said, the 

 4           housing availability is at a 50-year low.  

 5           And the result is exactly what you'd think:  

 6           Not enough housing to go around, and workers 

 7           being forced to travel long distances, 

 8           sometimes two hours, to live in the only 

 9           neighborhoods they can afford.  

10                  We need to produce hundreds of 

11           thousands of housing units to meet the 

12           projected half-million shortfall, and to do 

13           that we need to create and reinvigorate 

14           policies so we have tools to meet and 

15           maintain the housing needs of working people 

16           and all the residents.  

17                  Specifically, we believe there's a few 

18           key actions that should be taken.  The first 

19           is to extend the project completion deadline 

20           for 421-a and create new tax abatements for 

21           rental housing construction.  It's been 

22           proven to increase supply, increase 

23           affordability, and have labor standards to 

24           ensure jobs and pay a living wage for 


                                                                   288

 1           workers.  

 2                  Second, we need to authorize tax 

 3           incentives benefits for converting unused 

 4           commercial property to affordable housing.  

 5                  Third, we should lift the 12-FAR cap 

 6           to allow for greater housing density.  

 7                  Fourth, we should enact strong tenant 

 8           protections to prevent arbitrary evictions, 

 9           including the ability to renew leases at 

10           reasonable rent.  

11                  Fifth, we should establish a Housing 

12           Access Voucher Program to provide immediate 

13           rental assistance to avoid homelessness.  

14                  And sixth, provide a right to counsel.  

15                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Thank you.  

16                  MS. DONOHUE:  Good afternoon.  I am 

17           Bria Donohue, senior manager of government 

18           affairs at AIA New York.  We represent more 

19           than 5,000 architects and design 

20           professionals committed to positively 

21           impacting the physical and social qualities 

22           of our state.  

23                  Thank you, members of the joint 

24           legislative budget committee, for the 


                                                                   289

 1           opportunity to participate in today's 

 2           hearing.  

 3                  To avoid being repetitive, I'm going 

 4           to focus my testimony today on office-to- 

 5           residential conversions.  In order to 

 6           maximize the opportunity in front of us, 

 7           there are three key barriers that need to be 

 8           addressed to create a feasible pathway for 

 9           office to residential conversion.  

10                  First, AIA New York supports ELFA 

11           Part Q to authorize New York City and the 

12           New York State Urban Development Corporation 

13           to allow for denser residential development.  

14           Since 1961 there has been a cap on floor area 

15           ratio in New York City which limits the size 

16           of residential buildings to 12 times the size 

17           of the lot on which they are built.  

18                  This presents a challenge for 

19           conversion projects, because the FAR cap only 

20           applies to residential buildings.  Many 

21           commercial buildings, however, are greater 

22           than 12 FAR, so this cap serves as one of the 

23           first impediments to office-to-residential 

24           conversion projects.  


                                                                   290

 1                  Second, AIA New York supports ELFA 

 2           Part R to authorize tax incentive benefits 

 3           for converting commercial properties to 

 4           affordable housing.  

 5                  Without government incentives, 

 6           conversion projects with affordable units are 

 7           effectively impossible.  Conversion projects 

 8           are expensive to start with, and adding on 

 9           affordable units without government 

10           assistance to offset costs is not feasible.  

11                  In this current economic climate where 

12           interest rates and construction costs are 

13           high, a new tax incentive program is 

14           essential to producing housing in New York 

15           City and creating an opportunity for the 

16           inclusion of affordable units to be a 

17           realistic option.  

18                  Third, AIA New York recommends 

19           amending the date conversions are permitted 

20           in the Multiple Dwelling Law from 1961 to 

21           1990.  By extending the date, approximately 

22           120 million square feet of office space will 

23           be eligible for conversion.  This proposal is 

24           needed to open the full-scale opportunities 


                                                                   291

 1           for conversion projects.  

 2                  Additionally, one of the many 

 3           challenges with conversion projects is that 

 4           buildings are often not entirely empty and 

 5           it's often too costly to buy or wait out 

 6           tenants' leases.  For buildings built before 

 7           1961 this is not an issue, and conversions 

 8           can begin with tenants in units.  However, 

 9           for buildings built after 1961, the Multiple 

10           Dwelling Law prohibits conversions beginning 

11           with a single tenant in place.  Therefore, 

12           the date extension is essential to remedying 

13           this roadblock.  

14                  Additionally, AIA New York is 

15           supportive of the policies to create a 

16           replacement for 421-a, extend the completion 

17           date for 421-a projects, and create a pathway 

18           to legalize basement apartments included in 

19           Governor Hochul's Executive Budget, as well 

20           as legislation to encourage transit-oriented 

21           development and legalize accessory dwelling 

22           units.  

23                  Thank you again for the opportunity to 

24           testify today and for your consideration of 


                                                                   292

 1           AIA New York's budget requests.  Our full 

 2           testimony has been submitted for your review, 

 3           and I welcome any questions you may have.  

 4                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Thank you.  

 5                  MS. FEE:  Good afternoon.  I'm 

 6           Rachel Fee, executive director of the 

 7           New York Housing Conference.  Thank you for 

 8           this opportunity to testify.  

 9                  Last year I spoke in support of 

10           statewide zoning action to boost supply and 

11           improve affordability.  We still believe 

12           New York needs to adopt a housing supply 

13           framework including transit-oriented 

14           development, tax incentives to spur 

15           development, and rental assistance to prevent 

16           homelessness.  

17                  New York's housing vacancy rate has 

18           dropped to the lowest in decades.  Finding an 

19           affordable home in New York City and in much 

20           of New York State is nearly impossible.  The 

21           Legislature should pass a budget with 

22           policies to encourage housing supply and with 

23           support for the lowest-income renters.  All 

24           policies requested by the City of New York to 


                                                                   293

 1           help them address the city's housing crisis 

 2           should be granted.  

 3                  Without a 421-a replacement, the 

 4           city's local zoning authority is undermined 

 5           and affordable housing development is only 

 6           viable in the lowest-income neighborhoods, 

 7           letting wealthy, resource-rich communities 

 8           off the hook.  

 9                  Projects that went through public 

10           review and were negotiated by New York City's 

11           City Council are also undermined.  And Mayor 

12           Adams' City of Yes citywide zoning text 

13           amendment to add housing in every 

14           neighborhood is also undermined without a new 

15           rental tax abatement.  And the City of Yes 

16           won't add much rental housing at all.  

17                  We support replacing 421-a with a 

18           tax abatement that requires affordable 

19           housing with rents affordable to low-income 

20           New Yorkers.  We support a state Housing 

21           Access Voucher Program to prevent 

22           homelessness and help New Yorkers afford 

23           rent.  We support linking aid to renters to 

24           adding supply, to ensure housing access.  For 


                                                                   294

 1           example, 485-x could require low-income 

 2           housing in the highest-rent neighborhoods, 

 3           where it could be cross-subsidized.  And it 

 4           could allow setting rents affordable to 

 5           voucher-holders to give them access 

 6           elsewhere.  

 7                  Outside of New York City, the 

 8           Governor's Pro-Housing Community designation 

 9           can be used to reward communities that add 

10           housing with a formula that increases HAVP.  

11                  While we need to build more housing, 

12           we must also ensure continued investment in 

13           our housing stock and support for renters 

14           falling behind in rent, including in public 

15           housing.  Arrears in affordable housing 

16           continue to be significant.  A third of 

17           renters in affordable housing owing more than 

18           two months in rent were identified in a 

19           sample of 52,000 units of affordable housing 

20           we analyzed.  

21                  Limitations for improvements in 

22           rent-stabilized buildings should be 

23           revisited.  With high interest rates and 

24           rising operating costs, it's important that 


                                                                   295

 1           this housing stock remains financially sound 

 2           and in good repair.  

 3                  We're pleased Governor Hochul has 

 4           taken the first steps towards regulating 

 5           discriminatory practices in insurance, but 

 6           more must be done.  

 7                  While addressing housing policy is 

 8           challenging, the divided Congress just passed 

 9           an expansion for the Low-Income Housing Tax 

10           Credit in the house, so we think here in 

11           New York the Legislature and the Executive 

12           can find compromises to our housing crisis.  

13                  Thank you.  

14                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Thank you.  

15                  MS. GRAY:  Thank you, Chairs Kavanagh 

16           and Rosenthal.  My name is Annemarie Gray.  

17           I'm the executive director of Open New York, 

18           an independent grassroots pro-housing 

19           nonprofit with hundreds of volunteer members 

20           across the state.  

21                  New York's housing affordability 

22           crisis is rooted in the fact that we simply 

23           do not build enough homes.  Displacement, 

24           exclusion, tenant harassment and homelessness 


                                                                   296

 1           are all exacerbated by our dire housing 

 2           shortage.  Homeownership is out of reach for 

 3           everyone but the wealthiest.  Landlords know 

 4           that renters have far too few options.  

 5                  Frankly, your landlord should always 

 6           be aware that you can find another apartment.  

 7           We have the opposite.  Nearly 1.4 percent of 

 8           apartments, as many people have said, in 

 9           New York City are vacant and available for 

10           rent.  That is the lowest in over 50 years.  

11                  Not only are workers from doormen to 

12           janitors to architects to carpenters seeing 

13           their industries impacted by the lack of 

14           construction, but working people across the 

15           state don't have enough options to live near 

16           jobs and spend hours commuting to work -- or 

17           just leave New York entirely.  

18                  The proposals in the Governor's 

19           Executive Budget are positive steps to 

20           introduce new incentives for pro-housing 

21           communities, advance housing projects on 

22           state-owned land, and revive tax incentive 

23           tools in New York City to build mixed-income 

24           housing in well-resourced communities.  


                                                                   297

 1           However, these proposals do not go nearly far 

 2           enough.  

 3                  We need an "all of the above" approach 

 4           to housing.  We need incentives, we need 

 5           subsidies, we need vouchers, we need tax 

 6           tools, we need tenant protection measures to 

 7           help people facing pressures right now.  And 

 8           critically, we need state-level zoning and 

 9           land use reforms that ensure that all corners 

10           of the state are building more homes.  

11                  Unlike many other states, New York 

12           allows local governments absolute power to 

13           ban housing growth, which perpetuates 

14           patterns of segregation and exclusion and 

15           worsens our housing crisis each year.  The 

16           Legislature must come to the table with 

17           strong solutions.  This will require a 

18           multiyear commitment from all levels of 

19           government, but we can take meaningful steps 

20           this year to build the foundation and clear 

21           away major hurdles to building housing in a 

22           more affordable way.  

23                  The Faith-Based Affordable Housing 

24           Act, which empowers religious organizations 


                                                                   298

 1           to develop affordable housing on their 

 2           properties and includes proposals to reform 

 3           environmental review practices and 

 4           single-stair building design, is an important 

 5           start that we can do this year.  

 6                  We need our state leaders at every 

 7           level of government to pass reforms that 

 8           build more homes of all types this year, next 

 9           year, and every single year for the 

10           foreseeable future.  

11                  Thank you.  

12                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Thank you.  

13                  So we're going to begin with 

14           Senator Myrie.  

15                  SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Mr. Chair.  

16                  And thank you to the panel for your 

17           patience in waiting today.  

18                  My first question is directed at 

19           Manny.  Firstly, congratulations on the new 

20           commercial cleaning contract.  

21                  My question is, you know, because we 

22           have this discussion about the needs and 

23           we're all clear about what the facts are, and 

24           at times we divide forces that could be 


                                                                   299

 1           easily coalesced.  And they do this with 

 2           labor as well.  So I'm asking from a labor 

 3           perspective:  Are you aware of how much of 

 4           your members' wages they spend on rent?  

 5                  MR. PASTREICH:  Yeah, thank you for 

 6           the question, Senator.  

 7                  So our members in New York City 

 8           range -- our commercial members and 

 9           residential members are on the higher range 

10           of our members.  And I would say, you know, 

11           our members are very much like working-class 

12           New Yorkers.  And I think the stat roughly 

13           for working-class New Yorkers is that 

14           50 percent of New Yorkers spend a third of 

15           their salary on rent, and a third of 

16           New Yorkers spend 50 percent of their salary 

17           on rent.  

18                  And I think our members are not that 

19           different from that reality, from our 

20           better-paid members to the workers who've 

21           been most recently organized at airports and 

22           other places.  

23                  So the rent burden and the increases 

24           in rent have been a real stress for our 


                                                                   300

 1           members and a major concern for us.  

 2                  SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you for that 

 3           response.  

 4                  And in line with that, I would ask the 

 5           entire panel -- and you don't have to give an 

 6           extensive answer, but it was alluded to in 

 7           several of your testimonies.  We have been 

 8           told that we can either do a lot on the 

 9           supply side, we can do a lot on the zoning, 

10           or we can do a lot to protect tenants.  

11                  And I want to know from each person on 

12           the panel whether or not you think it is 

13           feasible for us to do all of those things and 

14           tackle them at the same time -- not perhaps 

15           to completion in every single area, but to 

16           not be paralyzed by not being able to 

17           accomplish every one of those things.  

18                  MS. FEE:  Thank you.  I'll start.  

19                  So I would just say that we know we 

20           have a housing supply shortage, especially 

21           for affordable units.  So as we're building, 

22           we have to keep creating incentives and other 

23           tools to create affordable housing.  

24                  But building takes a long time, and 


                                                                   301

 1           people can't pay their rent today.  So we 

 2           strongly support the Housing Access Voucher 

 3           Program to make sure that we have more 

 4           resources to help people stay in their homes 

 5           and afford a home.  

 6                  MR. PASTREICH:  I'll just add that I 

 7           think the answer is a simple yes.  I think 

 8           that when you look back over the past couple 

 9           of years, I think there's been a lot of good 

10           ideas.  And I think now is the moment.  And 

11           we're very optimistic that we can put 

12           together key elements of capping rent so that 

13           tenants are not gouged -- but, as many people 

14           have said on this panel, ensuring that we 

15           have the supply that we need as well.  

16                  MS. GRAY:  I'll also jump in and say a 

17           hearty yes.  You're speaking my language, 

18           Senator.  

19                  But we -- you know, tenant protections 

20           and supply really go hand in hand, and we 

21           need all of the above.  And it's very 

22           possible.  

23                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

24                  We go to Assemblywoman Kelles.


                                                                   302

 1                  (Pause.)

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  All right, I 

 3           found all my notes.  

 4                  So thank you all.  Like the balance 

 5           of, as you heard me say earlier, being able 

 6           to walk and chew gum at the same time and be 

 7           able to address the crisis today, which is 

 8           that we have housing that's not affordable, 

 9           and build at the same time -- so thank you 

10           for confirming -- for confirming that.  

11                  I would love -- Annemarie, we've 

12           spoken about this before, but I want to hear 

13           you talk a little bit more about the research 

14           between incentivizing the development of 

15           housing versus having a mandatory program 

16           across the state that requires that everyone 

17           participate.  Create diversity, but it's 

18           mandatory participation.  

19                  MS. GRAY:  Yes, thank you.  

20                  So this was a big topic of 

21           conversation last year.  But all of the 

22           academic research is quite clear that an 

23           incentives-only approach doesn't work.  

24           Right?  There are a lot of -- New York has 


                                                                   303

 1           some of the most exclusionary zoning in -- 

 2           across parts of the state.  And frankly just 

 3           incentives and sort of asking some places to 

 4           build more housing, it's just proven to not 

 5           be the only way we can do things.  

 6                  So -- which is why our organization, 

 7           we're really, we're really advocating for -- 

 8           of course you need incentives.  There are a 

 9           lot of things we can do.  We also have to 

10           just be honest that we absolutely need the 

11           state to use all of the tools that it has to 

12           keep all parts of the state just accountable 

13           to fair housing and to really being part of 

14           the solution, that we just need more homes.  

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  Great, thank 

16           you.  It does seem that having a program that 

17           is flexible enough so that communities can 

18           still decide how they want to participate, 

19           but that they simply have to participate, 

20           would be a great balance.  So I think that 

21           housing compact kind of got there a little 

22           bit.  I mean, I think it did a good job on a 

23           lot of it.  So thank you on that.  

24                  Another question:  You've been 


                                                                   304

 1           advocating for the Faith-Based Housing Act.  

 2           Can you talk about the components of it, how 

 3           this will help with our supply?  

 4                  MS. GRAY:  Yeah, absolutely.  

 5                  So the Faith-Based Affordable Housing 

 6           Act empowers religious organizations who have 

 7           deep connections to their local communities 

 8           to develop mixed-income and 100 percent 

 9           affordable housing on their land across the 

10           state.  

11                  So this is actually something that has 

12           passed in other states.  It's really making 

13           sure that we're both kind of using all of the 

14           powers of the state to, again, keep everyone 

15           accountable and just get rid of sort of 

16           outdated zoning restrictions that slow 

17           down -- something that a lot of religious 

18           organizations already want to do by serving 

19           their communities and their constituents with 

20           more affordable housing on land that they 

21           already have.  

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  So has a lot of 

23           support been from the faith-based community?  

24                  MS. GRAY:  It is.  We're working with 


                                                                   305

 1           a whole coalition of faith leaders. 

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KELLES:  All right.  It 

 3           seems like wonderful low-hanging fruit.  So 

 4           if they -- we so rarely have people say, 

 5           Please let us help, let us be part of the 

 6           solution.  We've got a group that's saying, 

 7           Please, please, let us do it.  It just seems 

 8           very strange to not prioritize it.  

 9                  So thank you so much, appreciate it.  

10           Thank you, everyone, I really appreciate it.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senate?  

12                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator May?  

13                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  

14                  And thank you all for your advocacy.  

15           I -- and Annemarie especially for keeping the 

16           term "zoning" on the table.  Because I think 

17           just because local officials went nuts about 

18           it last year isn't a reason we need to table 

19           that.  

20                  In my city of Syracuse we know that as 

21           soon as you get outside the boundary of the 

22           city, there's almost no land that is zoned 

23           for multifamily housing.  

24                  And the very term "affordable housing" 


                                                                   306

 1           seems to trigger so much opposition in local 

 2           communities that it's just almost impossible 

 3           to build -- to overcome the zoning 

 4           restrictions.  

 5                  So I guess I -- this is partly for 

 6           Bria.  I feel like part of that is people 

 7           don't have a vision of what can be beautiful, 

 8           attractive, affordable housing that works, 

 9           that, you know -- and especially mixed-income 

10           housing that creates communities and helps 

11           contribute to walkable, desirable 

12           neighborhoods and that kind of thing.  

13                  So I'm just wondering, is there -- 

14           have you all worked on like literature or a 

15           tour or something that helps us raise the 

16           profile of that kind of housing to something 

17           that communities might be able to imagine?  

18                  MS. DONOHUE:  Yeah, absolutely.  Our 

19           members are a hundred percent committed to 

20           the whole built environment.  It's not just 

21           about creating strong design, it's about 

22           incorporating it into the larger community 

23           and the public realm element of it.  

24                  Which is why office-to-residential 


                                                                   307

 1           conversions is something that we are really 

 2           passionate about and supportive of, because 

 3           it does not interrupt the character and the 

 4           integrity and the connection to the 

 5           neighborhood.  

 6                  We're adaptively reusing existing 

 7           buildings.  And there's also a lot of 

 8           sustainability benefits to it that I wasn't 

 9           able to touch on in my testimony, but it's in 

10           my written comments.  So it's about the 

11           larger connection to the city and to the 

12           state as a whole.  And so we're trying to 

13           figure out and advocate for different ways to 

14           do that.  

15                  SENATOR MAY:  Great.  Thank you.  

16                  And then, Annemarie, I'm wondering -- 

17           how much do you think about not just changing 

18           the zoning itself, but changing who is doing 

19           that?  I feel like really trying to promote 

20           having young people on zoning boards who have 

21           a desire for walkable communities, for 

22           example.  Or people who have a vision for the 

23           future rather than people who are just 

24           protecting their vision of the past.  


                                                                   308

 1                  Is that something you're thinking 

 2           about?  Is that something we can help with?  

 3                  MS. GRAY:  Yeah.  So Open New York, 

 4           we're a grassroots membership-based 

 5           organization, so we have hundreds of members.  

 6           A lot of them are on their own community 

 7           boards.  They kind of go together to meetings 

 8           to really like be proponents of new housing 

 9           directly in their backyards.  So we think 

10           it's a model, and we've expanded across the 

11           entire state.  

12                  So it's really, really, really 

13           important.  This is a -- you know, we got 

14           into this mess over decades, and it's going 

15           to take us kind of everything to get out of 

16           it and everyone really organized.  

17                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you. 

18                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  

19                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We go to 

20           Assemblymember Grace Lee.  

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  Good afternoon.  

22           Thanks for waiting patiently to testify.  

23                  And I want to thank especially our 

24           labor unions here for being a good reminder 


                                                                   309

 1           of all the great men and women who keep our 

 2           city running and who also are struggling with 

 3           housing.  

 4                  So this is for Manny.  I see many 32BJ 

 5           members who work in big buildings in my 

 6           district in Manhattan.  What are their 

 7           commutes like?  And how does their access to 

 8           affordable housing impact their commute?  

 9                  And can you tell me how many of -- you 

10           know, more specifically, how many of your 

11           members are traveling more than an hour to 

12           get to their jobs?  

13                  MR. PASTREICH:  Yeah.  No, thank you, 

14           Assemblymember.  The -- so approximately 

15           80,000 of our members work in New York City.  

16           And of those, 13,000 live outside the city 

17           and 6,000 live outside the state.  So I think 

18           it's a fair assumption for those 13,000 that 

19           their commutes are over an hour.  

20                  We know that a few hundred of our 

21           members live in Pennsylvania because that's 

22           where they can afford to live, so they have 

23           at least a two-hour commute each direction.  

24           So it is a real stress in the realities of 


                                                                   310

 1           it.  

 2                  You know, it varies.  We could have a 

 3           discussion about the MTA.  But the reality is 

 4           13,000 are clearly over an hour commute in 

 5           each direction.  

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEE:  Great.  Thank you.

 7                  MR. PASTREICH:  Thank you.  

 8                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator Martins.  

 9                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Good afternoon, 

10           everyone.  Thank you for your patience.  

11                  I happen to represent one of those 

12           urban districts that everyone is concerned 

13           about, with zoning and the like.  I have 

14           about 45 villages in my district in 

15           Nassau County outside of New York City.  

16                  And, you know, I love the term 

17           "exclusionary zoning," especially when it's 

18           used by someone who doesn't live in a suburb 

19           or in a village, because it means villages 

20           make decisions for themselves and those 

21           communities get to decide what's permissible 

22           or, alternatively, what's excluded.  We like 

23           to consider the possibilities.  

24                  So as a Mineola guy myself -- and we 


                                                                   311

 1           built probably 1500 units or so in the last 

 2           10 years in the village, based on downtown 

 3           revitalization efforts.  I guess I'm 

 4           concerned because I know other communities 

 5           that are socioeconomically challenged who are 

 6           telling us:  "Don't build any more low-income 

 7           housing or affordable housing here, we have 

 8           enough.  We want to see market-rate housing, 

 9           because we want people to build market rates 

10           in our downtown."  

11                  So there seems to be a disconnect -- 

12           socioeconomically challenged communities that 

13           feel that they have too many affordable units 

14           in their downtowns, and they want market-rate 

15           because they want the activity that comes 

16           from that market-rate housing.  

17                  Do we support that?  Should we support 

18           that?  Because I think all kinds of housing 

19           should be an imperative here, and not a 

20           one-size-fits-all approach.  Because there 

21           are communities out there that are asking us 

22           precisely for that.  

23                  So, Annemarie, what do you say?  

24                  MS. GRAY:  Yeah, our organization -- 


                                                                   312

 1           we support all types of housing, very 

 2           explicitly.  We support market-rate housing, 

 3           we support affordable.  Frankly, I think you 

 4           need a diversity of sizes of housing that 

 5           serves different family structures.  You need 

 6           people to be able to upsize, downsize.  

 7                  And frankly, we are -- we need all of 

 8           it so badly, we just need to make sure that 

 9           everyone is kind of taking that approach and 

10           being part of the solution.  

11                  But we're very much for that.  

12                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Yeah, look, I happen 

13           to agree.  I love housing diversity.  I love 

14           the fact that people can buy a house when 

15           they're young, move into the suburbs if they 

16           choose to, and as they're older they can stay 

17           in the community where they live.  

18                  I'd just love to see us use an 

19           all-tools approach -- I think we heard that 

20           before from some of my colleagues -- about 

21           how we should put everything on the table and 

22           not emphasize one as opposed to others as a 

23           tool.  

24                  So I thank you all for your testimony 


                                                                   313

 1           today.  Looking forward to working with my 

 2           colleagues in trying to figure out how we 

 3           incentivize not only landlords to maintain 

 4           apartments and make them livable and spend 

 5           money in revamping them and not just looking 

 6           at them as -- in a negative light, but also 

 7           incentivizing our local communities to use 

 8           their zoning laws.  Because I do think the 

 9           carrot works -- more likely to get a better 

10           result than that stick.  

11                  So thanks again.  

12                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

13                  We go to Assemblywoman 

14           Chandler-Waterman.  

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

16           Thank you so much for all the hard work you 

17           do around housing.  

18                  And this is going to go to Manny, of 

19           32BJ.  Yeah, we're asking you a lot of 

20           questions today.  

21                  So we talked about your union members, 

22           how hardworking they are, essential to 

23           buildings, essential workers.  And they're 

24           working in housing facilities that they could 


                                                                   314

 1           probably never afford to live in.  

 2                  And then we have a community 

 3           preference percentage change that was made 

 4           with the mayor, the settlement, right, that 

 5           changes that for affordable housing from 50 

 6           percent to I think like 15 percent.  How does 

 7           that impact your members?  

 8                  MR. PASTREICH:  The thing that we're 

 9           pushing for is to ensure that we get 

10           increased supply and that we use all the 

11           levers we can to ensure that with that 

12           increased supply there's a level of 

13           affordability.  

14                  And I think when we go through the 

15           affordability levels, I think as a number of 

16           people just said, we need different levels of 

17           affordability.  Obviously for union members 

18           in New York City that affordability is a 

19           little higher than in other areas.  And 

20           addressing the affordability levels that meet 

21           the needs of 32BJ members, hotel trades, 

22           public-sector groups is incredibly important.  

23                  But obviously, as others have said, we 

24           have to meet the needs of all New Yorkers up 


                                                                   315

 1           and down the income ladder.  

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  And 

 3           there needs to be more local community too, 

 4           what their median income is for that 

 5           particular community so they go for it to 

 6           live there.  

 7                  And for interfaith housing, what does 

 8           it -- what can it look like to really include 

 9           our faith leaders in part of development?  Is 

10           there a plan that you may have?  That would 

11           be great.  Or is there one that we can work 

12           towards that's going to really have the faith 

13           leaders at the head of development in their 

14           communities, the Black and brown communities 

15           especially.  

16                  MS. GRAY:  Yeah, I would love to sit 

17           down and talk more directly.  

18                  So this is a bill that just basically 

19           puts -- it gets rid of some red tape that 

20           stops faith-based organizations who want to 

21           use their land to build housing.  It just 

22           makes it easier for them and makes it faster 

23           for them.  They're in the driver's seat.  

24                  There's also some components to the 


                                                                   316

 1           bill that allow some technical assistance 

 2           programs and support, just to make sure that 

 3           you know how to navigate some of the process 

 4           with all of -- with different partnerships.  

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  And 

 6           especially the financing part of it.  

 7                  MS. GRAY:  Exactly.  

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  To 

 9           make sure they get the loans -- 

10                  MS. GRAY:  Exactly.  

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  -- 

12           and remove the red tape as well, and get 

13           assistance throughout the whole process.  

14                  MS. GRAY:  Exactly.  

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  So I 

16           appreciate definitely talking with y'all.  I 

17           appreciate -- anybody want to add anything 

18           else -- we're talking about true 

19           affordability -- that we have not mentioned 

20           here?  I have 30 seconds.  Anybody want to 

21           say anything?  

22                  MS. FEE:  We're supportive of funding 

23           for LISC NY that is looking to provide that 

24           technical assistance to faith-based 


                                                                   317

 1           organizations and build affordable housing.  

 2           And that's part of our budget request as 

 3           well.  

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

 5           Thank you so much.  

 6                  Twenty seconds.  Anybody else?  

 7                  MS. WYLIE:  Oh, thank you.  I included 

 8           this in our written testimony as well, but 

 9           the Building Congress is also in support of 

10           faith-based housing.  But additionally, 

11           increasing as-of-right opportunities for 

12           areas where less than 10 percent of the 

13           housing in the area, in the units, are below 

14           market rate.  And we think these will create 

15           affordability.   

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

17           Thank you all for your support.  Thank you.  

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

19                  Assemblywoman Rosenthal.  

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Hi.  Thank 

21           you all for your testimony.  

22                  So everybody here is basically 

23           supporting what the Governor put in her 

24           budget, and then you've mentioned some other 


                                                                   318

 1           things you support.  

 2                  Last year there were 213,000-plus 

 3           filings for evictions across the state, 

 4           135,000 of them were in the city.  So they 

 5           weren't all evicted, but they were all 

 6           brought to court.  So how do you think we 

 7           deal with that situation in the contexts of 

 8           building, converting commercial to 

 9           residential -- and hopefully not a 

10           Fifth Avenue type, but a mixed-income 

11           commercial conversion -- and yet tenants 

12           don't have access to attorneys in the city 

13           because there's not enough of them and they 

14           don't have the right across the state?  

15                  So heavy on supply solutions, but less 

16           on keeping people housed and at decent rents.  

17                  MS. GRAY:  Yeah, I'm happy to start.  

18                  That we -- you know, our policy 

19           platform very much believes that the root 

20           issue here is that we have -- we've had 

21           decades of underbuilding and lack of supply 

22           of all types, but frankly in the near term 

23           you need to make sure that you're keeping 

24           tenants in their homes and that these really 


                                                                   319

 1           go hand in hand.  And this is how it's also 

 2           played out in other states.  

 3                  So we're supportive of the good-cause 

 4           eviction bill and of generally just making 

 5           sure that you're really thinking about this 

 6           holistically, both in the near term and who's 

 7           suffering right now, but then also just 

 8           taking a hard look at the root cause and 

 9           making sure you're really addressing the fact 

10           that frankly right now landlords -- it's 

11           really easy to take advantage of tenants 

12           because they don't have other options.  And 

13           we should switch that.  

14                  MS. FEE:  I would just add that the 

15           eviction filings, we're really concerned 

16           because that number is growing.  And the 

17           number of households that are actually being 

18           evicted has I think more than doubled in the 

19           last year.  

20                  So, you know, I think right to counsel 

21           has been proven to be really effective.  

22           We're certainly supportive of an expansion.  

23                  We're also supportive of rent arrears 

24           across the state.  An emergency one-shot 


                                                                   320

 1           program has been effective in keeping people 

 2           in their homes in New York City, and that 

 3           could go beyond New York City as well.  

 4                  And then, you know, the Housing 

 5           Voucher Program also is really critical.  And 

 6           I had mentioned our analysis of arrears and 

 7           affordable housing where a third of tenants 

 8           are still struggling.  We have this left over 

 9           from the pandemic, where renters --  

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  I want to 

11           get other people, thank you.  

12                  MS. FEE:  Yeah, sure.  

13                  MR. PASTREICH:  I'll go quickly.  

14                  I mean, I think that in -- we strongly 

15           believe we need to set -- have some kind of 

16           rent cap so people don't get evicted for 

17           unreasonable rent increases.  I think we need 

18           a right to counsel.  And vouchers also are -- 

19           I think need to be a key component as well to 

20           ensure that people can stay in their housing.  

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Anyone else?  

22                  MS. DONOHUE:  Again, I'll just say 

23           quickly, AIA New York strongly supports just 

24           adding as many tools to the toolbox as 


                                                                   321

 1           possible, to giving as many people an 

 2           opportunity.  But again, supply is really 

 3           what we think is the core problem here.  

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Thank you. 

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you. 

 6                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  I think we're good. 

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Okay.  So thank 

 8           you to this panel for being here.  

 9                  And we're going to go to Panel D:  

10           Association for Neighborhood and Housing 

11           Development; Interfaith Affordable Housing 

12           Collaborative; Enterprise Community Partners; 

13           Thurgood Marshall Institute, NAACP; Community 

14           Voices Heard; and Make the Road New York.  

15                  And if you're part of Panel E, which 

16           is our last panel, I might suggest that you 

17           make your way to the front of the room so 

18           people could get home for Valentine's night.  

19                  (Laughter.) 

20                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  It's musical 

21           chairs today.  

22                  MS. GOLDSTEIN:  Yeah, right. 

23                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So we'll go in 

24           the order that I said, so Emily Goldstein 


                                                                   322

 1           first.  

 2                  MS. GOLDSTEIN:  Good afternoon.  And 

 3           thank you for the opportunity to testify and 

 4           for sticking around through this long 

 5           hearing.  

 6                  My name's Emily Goldstein.  I'm the 

 7           director of organizing and advocacy at ANHD, 

 8           which stands for the Association for 

 9           Neighborhood and Housing Development.  

10                  There are a number -- there's a lot in 

11           my written testimony, so I'm just going to do 

12           highlights and try to keep it short.  

13                  First of all, we want to thank you for 

14           your support of the Displacement Alert 

15           Project and ask you to continue that support.  

16           We want to maintain the important data work 

17           that we're doing that provides our elected 

18           officials as well as community members with 

19           resources that they need to understand the 

20           housing situation and displacement risks in 

21           their communities.  

22                  Second, an initiative that's been 

23           highlighted a number of times by others who 

24           have testified but is really crucial for our 


                                                                   323

 1           nonprofit developer members in particular, is 

 2           we really need emergency preservation funding 

 3           to address the unmet needs of rental arrears 

 4           in nonprofit and in general affordable 

 5           housing.  

 6                  A lot of affordable housing never got 

 7           ERAP, was not served by the money that was 

 8           provided last year.  We supported, you know, 

 9           both those programs.  We certainly don't ever 

10           want to be pitting different forms of 

11           affordable housing against each other.  A lot 

12           of last year's money went to public housing, 

13           which was absolutely a necessity, but it 

14           means there are a lot of affordable buildings 

15           that are still carrying arrears from during 

16           the height of the pandemic when, you know, 

17           through nobody's fault, no one could pay.  

18                  This is particularly unsustainable for 

19           nonprofit mission-driven developers that 

20           operate on incredibly slim margins, because 

21           they underwrite their buildings to maximize 

22           affordability and they're always putting 

23           resources back into community programs.  So 

24           this is becoming -- you know, this has been 


                                                                   324

 1           an issue.  It's hitting a crisis point where 

 2           we're either going to see buildings start to 

 3           fail or tenants start to get evicted, and we 

 4           desperately don't want either of those things 

 5           to happen.  

 6                  Third, we support -- along with 

 7           others -- both the legislation and the 

 8           Governor's recommendations around addressing 

 9           discrimination on insurance premiums in 

10           affordable housing.  This has likewise become 

11           a huge challenge for our members.  

12                  Fourth, we absolutely need to pass and 

13           fund right to counsel statewide.  We support 

14           good-cause.  We agree with the BASE campaign 

15           and supportive of that campaign on passing 

16           legalization for basement and cellar 

17           apartments and allowing the city to address 

18           those housing needs.  

19                  And finally, I'll just say, unlike 

20           many of the others who have spoken here, we 

21           are not supportive of the -- what we've seen 

22           so far of proposals to replace 421-a.  The 

23           numbers and letters keep changing.  At its 

24           core, this still seems to be primarily use of 


                                                                   325

 1           public resources for primarily market-rate 

 2           housing, and we don't think that's the right 

 3           priority for public resources.  

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 5                  Rashida Tyler.  

 6                  MS. TYLER:  Hi, thank you.  My name is 

 7           Rashida Tyler.  I'm the project manager for 

 8           the Interfaith Affordable Housing 

 9           Collaborative and the Partnership of 

10           Faith-Based Affordable Housing and Community 

11           Development, a/ka/a "the Partnership."  I am 

12           also the deputy executive director of the 

13           New York State Council of Churches.  

14                  The Partnership is comprised of the 

15           New York State Council of Churches, 

16           Interfaith Affordable Housing Collaborative, 

17           and the Interfaith Assembly on Homelessness 

18           and Housing and Bricks and Mortals.  

19                  And so these organizations were begun 

20           to help faith-based organizations respond to 

21           housing and homelessness crises in their 

22           communities by providing them access to 

23           technical assistance and predevelopment funds 

24           to utilize their properties to help develop 


                                                                   326

 1           housing that stabilizes and strengthens their 

 2           communities.  

 3                  Although it is well-known that 

 4           New York State has been in a housing crisis 

 5           for many years, post-pandemic this crisis has 

 6           been deepening at an alarming rate.  

 7           According to the Fiscal Policy Institute -- 

 8           and again, we all know these numbers, so I'm 

 9           not going to go too in-depth -- but 

10           40 percent -- housing prices have increased 

11           40 percent in the three years since the 

12           pandemic.  

13                  According to the Point-In-Time housing 

14           survey, our homelessness count, New York 

15           State is second in the nation for the number 

16           of homeless individuals.  And last year there 

17           were 212,000 eviction filings in New York 

18           State, according to the Eviction Dashboard.  

19                  So these numbers are worsening.  And 

20           it should come as no surprise that our 

21           faith-based institutions are being impacted 

22           in unprecedented ways, particularly with the 

23           loss of population of over 100,000 people 

24           since last year.  


                                                                   327

 1                  And so post-COVID, faith-based 

 2           organizations are facing economic pressures, 

 3           with over 50 percent of some pastors citing 

 4           negative impact on their congregations.  

 5           Attendance at religious services is 

 6           decreasing.  And although giving remains 

 7           stable, operating costs are rising and many 

 8           houses of worship are in economic distress.  

 9                  So we favor the Faith-Based Affordable 

10           Housing Act, which allows faith-based 

11           organizations to utilize their properties to 

12           develop affordable housing.  Outside of 

13           New York City, you can build up to three 

14           stories; inside of New York City, up to five 

15           stories.  It's based on population.  

16                  The reason we favor the Faith-Based 

17           Affordable Housing Act is that it allows 

18           communities to determine and work with their 

19           institutions of faith to find the type of 

20           development that works best for them.  

21                  The housing crisis really can be seen 

22           as three crises in one -- a lack of vacancy, 

23           a lack of affordability, and a lack of will.  

24           Many faith-based institutions have the will 


                                                                   328

 1           to develop, but there are many things such as 

 2           zoning restrictions that actually hamper 

 3           their ability to develop.  So we urge a 

 4           comprehensive housing plan that is 

 5           pro-development, such as the Governor's 

 6           Pro-Housing Communities plan, and also 

 7           policies that help prevent homelessness, such 

 8           as the Housing Access Voucher program and the 

 9           right to counsel, which helps keep people 

10           housed.  

11                  Thank you.  

12                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

13                  Next, Enterprise Community Partners.  

14                  MR. BOYLE:  Hi.  I'm Patrick Boyle, 

15           senior director with Enterprise Community 

16           Partners.  Thank you for the opportunity to 

17           testify here today.  

18                  A number of issues, some of which were 

19           reflected in the Governor's budget and a few 

20           other additional ones we just wanted to 

21           highlight quickly today.  

22                  First is the Housing Access Voucher 

23           Program.  We are co-conveners of that 

24           coalition, which has been growing.  It's 


                                                                   329

 1           really been growing in membership around the 

 2           state.  I think coming out of the pandemic, 

 3           in terms of what we've seen around rental 

 4           arrears and housing insecurity and 

 5           homelessness, you know, more important than 

 6           ever.  And we certainly thank the Senate and 

 7           the Assembly for their historical support of 

 8           that proposal.  

 9                  On insurance, you know, Enterprise is 

10           spending a lot of time thinking about 

11           insurance and convening about insurance 

12           lately.  It really is a significant crisis in 

13           the affordable housing world.  So we support 

14           the Governor's language in her 

15           Executive Budget around closing some of the 

16           discrimination loopholes -- and, you know, 

17           thank our Housing chairs for kind of beating 

18           the drum about this issue for a while now.  

19                  So that's an important first step.  

20           But we want do want to stress that that is a 

21           first step of what we think are a number of 

22           necessary steps.  You know, it's going to be 

23           important to close the discrimination 

24           loophole, but it doesn't address root causes.  


                                                                   330

 1           There's going to be funding relief that's 

 2           needed here, and there's going to be sort of 

 3           a number of, you know, regulatory and 

 4           legislative solutions that we hope to partner 

 5           with the Legislature on moving forward over 

 6           this session.  

 7                  The Fair Housing Testing Network and 

 8           Opportunity Program out of HCR, this launched 

 9           last year, $2 million to fund six 

10           full-service fair housing testing 

11           organizations around the state.  That's gone 

12           a long way.  That has grown out of an 

13           Enterprise pilot program called EBNY {ph}, is 

14           where that -- where this program was sort of 

15           seeded from.  It needs more funding support.  

16                  So it's $2 million, and that's allowed 

17           these organizations to do a lot, but there's 

18           a lot of unreached areas around the state in 

19           terms of fair housing deserts.  There's a lot 

20           more these organizations could be doing.  

21           There's a lot that they do that's not covered 

22           under the parameters of the program.  

23                  So we would like to request an 

24           increase to $8 million annually for that 


                                                                   331

 1           program.  There's still a tremendous amount 

 2           of source of income discrimination that goes 

 3           on around the state, and we'd really like to 

 4           see a funding increase there to match the 

 5           need.  

 6                  We support the Supportive Housing 

 7           Network and their ask for $32 million to 

 8           bolster the State Supportive Housing Program 

 9           initiative and bring those up to ESSHI levels 

10           of funding.  

11                  And we support the Rural Housing 

12           Coalition and their ask for $25 million 

13           around USDA 515 housing preservation.  So, 

14           you know, this is a lot of housing units 

15           around the state that's coming up to the end 

16           of their sort of affordability regulatory 

17           periods, over 20,000 units around the state.  

18           And so, you know, that's a great preservation 

19           need that's going to become more apparent in 

20           the years and decade ahead.  

21                  So thank you for your consideration.  

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Perfect timing.  

23                  Thurgood Marshall Institute.  

24                  DR. KAJEEPETA:  Thank you.  


                                                                   332

 1                  Good afternoon.  My name is 

 2           Dr. Sandhya Kajeepeta, speaking on behalf of 

 3           the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.  Thank you for 

 4           the opportunity to testify in support of 

 5           good-cause eviction legislation, which has 

 6           been discussed already today.  

 7                  My testimony will focus on my original 

 8           research on racial disparities and evictions 

 9           in New York State and the ways in which 

10           good-cause can help promote racial equality 

11           in the state.  

12                  In 2022, New York landlords filed 

13           nearly 200,000 eviction filings.  That's 

14           almost triple the number in 2021.  About 

15           20 percent of these filings are for holdover 

16           evictions, those initiated for a reason other 

17           than nonpayment of rent.  The concerning 

18           reality is that many New York renters live in 

19           their homes at the whim of their landlords, 

20           and they can be evicted for reasons that are 

21           no fault of their own.  

22                  New research from LDF's 

23           Thurgood Marshall Institute, where I am 

24           senior researcher, documents that New York's 


                                                                   333

 1           eviction crisis has a disportionate impact on 

 2           Black renters.  We analyzed housing and 

 3           demographic data from the census and the 

 4           Statewide Eviction Dashboard.  

 5                  We found that, first, Black New York 

 6           residents are significantly more likely to be 

 7           renters than homeowners.  Two of every three 

 8           Black households in the state are renters, 

 9           while two of every three white households are 

10           homeowners.  As a result, tenant protections 

11           are particularly important for the hundreds 

12           of thousands of Black renter households in 

13           New York.  

14                  Second, Black New Yorkers are 

15           4.6 times as likely as white New Yorkers to 

16           report being threatened with eviction.  

17                  And finally, we found that New York 

18           counties and neighborhoods with higher 

19           Black renter populations face higher rates of 

20           total and holdover eviction filings.  A 

21           10 percentage-point increase in the percent 

22           of Black renters in a county was associated 

23           with a 55 percent increase in the rate of 

24           total eviction filings and a 33 percent 


                                                                   334

 1           increase in the rate of holdover eviction 

 2           filings.  We observed the same pattern at the 

 3           zip code level.  

 4                  The findings from our analysis provide 

 5           evidence that Black communities in New York 

 6           face a disproportionate risk of eviction, 

 7           including holdover evictions where the renter 

 8           is keeping up with rent payments.  

 9                  Enacting good-cause-eviction 

10           protection in New York has the potential to 

11           reduce the rate of holdover evictions, help 

12           renters stay in their homes, and limit the 

13           negative impacts of housing instability.  We 

14           anticipate that good-cause will significantly 

15           benefit renters in predominantly Black 

16           neighborhoods that currently face a 

17           disproportionate risk of total evictions and 

18           holdover evictions.  

19                  Thank you.  

20                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

21                  And Community Voices Heard.  

22                  MS. WILLIAMS:  Good afternoon, and 

23           thank you for having me this evening.  

24                  My name is Barbara Williams.  I am a 


                                                                   335

 1           member of Community Voices Heard, and I live 

 2           in public housing in Washington Heights.  

 3                  I've lived in public housing for 

 4           33 years.  I've also been the president of my 

 5           resident association for two terms.  I'm here 

 6           today because of the living conditions that 

 7           I'm seeing in public housing.  

 8                  I've been in apartments with no 

 9           kitchen.  I've been in apartments with no 

10           walls.  I've looked into closets where you 

11           couldn't see the ceiling because of black 

12           mold.  I've smelled mold and mildew so strong 

13           that I almost passed out.  I've opened 

14           kitchen cabinets infested with roaches.  I've 

15           seen bathroom ceilings fall on my neighbors.  

16           And we've been going through these same 

17           issues for three decades.  Three decades.  No 

18           one should have to live like that.  

19                  The development where I live, the 

20           Polo Grounds, was constructed in 1968.  In 

21           56 years, the piping has never been updated.  

22           Just Band-Aid fixes.  And while all of this 

23           is going on, 800 people in Polo Grounds are 

24           likely to be evicted for rent arrears because 


                                                                   336

 1           public housing residents were not covered in 

 2           the pandemic aid.  That's not right.  

 3                  But this isn't just an issue in 

 4           Polo Grounds or in NYCHA.  Lack of repairs 

 5           and evictions is a problem statewide.  CVH 

 6           members living in Newburgh public housing 

 7           face the same issues.  Their buildings are 

 8           falling apart.  

 9                  Nearly 600,000 people live in public 

10           housing across the state.  Public housing is 

11           one of the largest sources of affordable 

12           housing.  In the middle of a statewide 

13           housing crisis, the state can't afford to 

14           lose more public housing because of 

15           disinvestment.  We depend on the state to 

16           protect us and provide us with healthy homes.  

17                  We voted you into office because we 

18           felt you would do the right things for people 

19           in public housing.  I'm here on behalf of 

20           Community Voices Heard members from across 

21           the state to ask you to commit $4.5 billion 

22           for public housing capital repairs to 

23           preserve 40,000 public housing units.  

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you for 


                                                                   337

 1           your -- thank you for your oral testimony.  

 2                  As I said earlier, all the written 

 3           testimony is posted on the Assembly and 

 4           Senate websites.  

 5                  And to end this panel, Make the Road 

 6           New York.  

 7                  MS. HERNANDEZ:  Yes.  Thank you for 

 8           allowing me to testify.  My name is Jennifer 

 9           Hernandez, and I'm a staff member at Make the 

10           Road New York, a 25-year-old organization 

11           building the power of immigrant and 

12           working-class communities.  

13                  New York faces an out-of-control 

14           housing and affordability crisis.  Rents and 

15           basic costs have risen dramatically.  Wages 

16           and government support have stagnated.  

17           Meanwhile, millions of people remain unjustly 

18           excluded from tenant protections and key 

19           safety-net programs like health insurance and 

20           unemployment.  

21                  Families are being pushed out of their 

22           homes and neighborhoods.  We now have the 

23           highest homelessness level since the Great 

24           Depression, the consequence of decades of 


                                                                   338

 1           inaction to ensure safe, affordable housing 

 2           for all.  

 3                  Governor Hochul continues to cater to 

 4           real estate tycoons who see our homes as 

 5           ATMs, raising rents, refusing to make basic 

 6           repairs, and displacing us.  She has no plan 

 7           to address this crisis.  We do.  All 

 8           New Yorkers deserve the freedom to stay in 

 9           our homes -- affordable, comfortable and safe 

10           homes where we can watch our kids take their 

11           first steps, gather around the kitchen table 

12           to share meals, and unwind after a long day 

13           of work.  

14                  The Legislature must stand up to the 

15           Governor and prioritize the needs of Black, 

16           brown and immigrant families.  We must give 

17           unregulated renters protections against 

18           unreasonable rent hikes and retaliatory or 

19           discriminatory evictions by passing a 

20           statewide good-cause eviction program, as 

21           introduced by Senator Salazar and 

22           Assemblymember Hunter.  

23                  We must create a statewide program 

24           that provides low-income New Yorkers who are 


                                                                   339

 1           homeless or at risk of homelessness with 

 2           money to pay their rent.  Let's pass the 

 3           Housing Access Voucher Program, as introduced 

 4           by Senator Kavanagh and Assemblymember 

 5           Rosenthal.  And we must invest in the future 

 6           of all New Yorkers by enacting the Invest In 

 7           Our New York tax proposal to raise tens of 

 8           billions of new public dollars for vital 

 9           services by ensuring the wealthiest 

10           New Yorkers and big corporations pay what 

11           they owe in taxes.  

12                  These concrete policy steps can ensure 

13           that every tenant in New York gains the same 

14           basic protections.  But you must stand up to 

15           the Governor and her real estate friends who 

16           will continue to try to take away our homes 

17           and even chip away at the rent-stabilization 

18           laws we have already fought so hard to 

19           strengthen.  

20                  Without action now, more and more 

21           families will find themselves on the streets 

22           or unable to live in our state.  Our written 

23           testimony will lay out our additional policy 

24           priorities to ensure all New Yorkers have the 


                                                                   340

 1           freedom to thrive.  

 2                  Thank you.  

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 4                  For our first questioner, we go to 

 5           Assemblymember Chandler-Waterman. 

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

 7           Thank you, Chair.  

 8                  I appreciate the advocacy.  I 

 9           appreciate all that you all have been doing, 

10           not only for yourselves, but advocating for 

11           others and our most vulnerable population, 

12           Black and brown communities.  So I agree that 

13           we need to ensure community voices -- no pun 

14           intended, I'm saying just involvement with 

15           community members -- is at the table in a 

16           true way.  

17                  And we know this is a multilayer issue 

18           that requires a multifaceted approach.  So 

19           creating a pathway for faith leaders to 

20           develop is one.  As we know, they create 

21           more.  We talk -- I talk so much about that.  

22           But tenants are not really being part of the 

23           discussion.  

24                  So unfortunately, individuals going 


                                                                   341

 1           through heartbreaking experiences -- like 

 2           what you said, Barbara; like what you're 

 3           saying, Jennifer -- don't always know where 

 4           to go, right?  Or what to do or how to 

 5           access, right?  We know we need so much more, 

 6           but what we have -- sometimes we don't even 

 7           know what exists.  

 8                  So educational awareness, in what ways 

 9           can residents be more informed about the 

10           complex dynamics of housing -- you know, what 

11           they're going through and how to get support.  

12           The initiatives, the workshops.  What do you 

13           think we could do more of, even as 

14           legislators or just in agencies, just to make 

15           sure that people are more aware of what 

16           access is out there and what support?  

17                  And I could -- Make the Road.  I don't 

18           know if Community Voices Heard wants to start 

19           with that, especially the experiences you 

20           just talked about.  

21                  MS. WILLIAMS:  Well, I feel that 

22           public housing has been being disinvested in 

23           ever since 1998.  And each year, it's less 

24           funds with the expectation to do more.  


                                                                   342

 1                  We need funding.  The funding is what 

 2           allows the necessary work to be done.  

 3           Capital projects are major.  Where I live -- 

 4           as I mentioned, this development came up in 

 5           1968.  The piping has never been changed.  

 6           According to law, it should be changed every 

 7           20 years.  So we're way past that year.  

 8                  It's time that those things be done, 

 9           those types of repairs.  

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

11           Gotcha.  Thank you.  

12                  MS. WILLIAMS:  Mold, mildew. 

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

14           Thank you so much for that.  And -- 

15                  MS. HERNANDEZ:  Yeah, I mean, your 

16           question was around education.  I mean, you 

17           know, as a community organizer, we do a lot 

18           of that education in the community, right?  

19           Obviously, one of the things that you could 

20           do is, you know, continue funding organizing, 

21           fund organizers organizing even more, right?  

22                  But also give us the tangible 

23           solutions that we can teach people about.  

24           Right?  A lot of the times folks come to us 


                                                                   343

 1           with a rent hike, with an eviction for no 

 2           cause, right, and they come to us with -- in 

 3           need of solutions.  Right?  Sometimes they 

 4           don't even know that they don't have 

 5           protections against rent hikes.  Right?  

 6                  And we like have to sit there and say 

 7           to them:  The most we can do, if you can find 

 8           a lawyer and right to counsel, right, 

 9           because -- you know, because of the -- so 

10           many cases, right, it's -- right?  Like you 

11           might be able to delay your process of 

12           eviction, but we probably won't be able to 

13           stop your eviction.  Right?   

14                  And so they ask questions, right? 

15           Where am I -- where else am I going to go?  

16           What apartments can I rent.  Right?  We don't 

17           have those tools.  

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN CHANDLER-WATERMAN:  

20           Thank you.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We go to the 

22           Senate.  

23                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Just I guess the 

24           first question for ANHD.  


                                                                   344

 1                  We had NYSAFAH here earlier talking 

 2           about the -- what did they call it?  I'm 

 3           sorry, there's a -- NYSAFAH was also pushing 

 4           for a $250 million fund to stabilize existing 

 5           housing, which sounded a little bit -- quite 

 6           a bit like your emergency preservation fund.  

 7                  I'm just trying to figure out, are 

 8           these sort of distinct asks for distinct sets 

 9           of housing?  Or is there a consensus among 

10           ANHD and NYSAFAH and perhaps others that a 

11           new $250 million fund would be what we'd be 

12           looking for this year?  

13                  MS. GOLDSTEIN:  I think there's 

14           consensus that we're looking for funding for 

15           affordable housing.  I think probably there's 

16           still some working out of the details of 

17           exactly how would the program work, who 

18           qualifies.  You know, what types of -- yeah, 

19           the details.  

20                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Okay.  But just so 

21           there's not -- 

22                  MS. GOLDSTEIN:  It's the same 

23           $250 million.  

24                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  That's what I was 


                                                                   345

 1           getting at.  

 2                  MS. GOLDSTEIN:  I think there's still 

 3           some sorting out of exactly how should it be 

 4           distributed, what are the qualifications and 

 5           criteria for prioritization.  

 6                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Right.  And in 

 7           response to questions earlier NYSAFAH said, 

 8           you know, there would be, you know, an 

 9           application process and some details to be 

10           worked out with HCR.  I would, just for 

11           practical purposes in the next five weeks or 

12           so -- 

13                  MS. GOLDSTEIN:  It's the same -- it's 

14           the same pot.  

15                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  I think you should 

16           also come up with the same name for it, just 

17           so -- because it's going to be hard -- I 

18           think it's going to be hard for -- like 

19           people have trouble processing all the things 

20           that are being asked for.  So it would be 

21           helpful if it's -- if there's a single kind 

22           of ask.  

23                  The -- there's -- you know, we've -- a 

24           lot of us have been advocating for a long 


                                                                   346

 1           time for money for public housing, for 

 2           capital.  I really appreciate CVH's role in 

 3           bringing, you know, the voices of people most 

 4           affected by this to Albany over the course of 

 5           many years now.  

 6                  I just want to -- since there's only a 

 7           few of us here now, one of the arguments we 

 8           often get when we talk about putting more 

 9           money into public housing capital is that 

10           public housing authorities, particularly the 

11           New York City Public Housing Authority, don't 

12           manage their capital particularly well.  That 

13           they don't -- they haven't -- you know, they 

14           have management operational challenges.  They 

15           don't spend the money they have.  

16                  Can you just, as someone who's 

17           advocating for $4.5 billion over the next 

18           five years, which is something I support, can 

19           you just talk a little bit about, you know, 

20           how your advocacy for additional money fits 

21           within that argument?  

22                  MS. WILLIAMS:  Well, I can't offer how 

23           the money is spent.  I'm not on that level.  

24           I am not -- I'm not an employee of public 


                                                                   347

 1           housing.  I live in public housing, and I 

 2           feel that my home should be as good as 

 3           anybody else's home.  And everybody who lives 

 4           in public housing has the right to a safe and 

 5           healthy home.  

 6                  And that's the responsibility of those 

 7           that we put in place, to protect that.  Poor 

 8           management, on city and state -- if the money 

 9           is not being used correctly, those people 

10           answer to those agencies, not to residents.  

11                  So I feel that -- put people in place 

12           that check.  I live in public housing.  When 

13           I first came in, there were superintendents 

14           that came behind the workers to make sure 

15           that the work was done that they were 

16           allotted to do.  That's not happening 

17           anymore.  

18                  There were two apartment inspections 

19           yearly to make sure that what was needed in 

20           those apartments was done and the residents 

21           who lived there were doing their part to 

22           upkeep that apartment.  That's no longer 

23           done.  

24                  There's a lot of things that -- 


                                                                   348

 1           that -- I cannot go through the list here, it 

 2           would just get too much time. 

 3                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  I'm going to get in 

 4           trouble if I let you go any further.  

 5                  But thank you.  That was very 

 6           eloquent, though.  We appreciate it. 

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 8                  And, you know, again, there's 

 9           opportunity later today to be able to submit 

10           in writing -- if these conversations have 

11           brought other issues to your thoughts, that 

12           you can submit additional information to the 

13           committees that will be posted as part of the 

14           official record.  

15                  We go to Assemblyman Manktelow.  

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Thank you, 

17           Madam Chair.  

18                  Barbara, if I could ask you a 

19           question, please?  

20                  MS. WILLIAMS:  Yes.  

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  And thank you 

22           all for your testimony, and thank you for all 

23           your comments.  

24                  I believe you gave us the number of 


                                                                   349

 1           $4.3 billion to fix up the housing, is that 

 2           correct?  

 3                  MS. WILLIAMS:  4.5 billion. 

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  4.5 billion?  

 5                  MS. WILLIAMS:  Yes.  

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  So if you 

 7           don't mind me asking, where did that number 

 8           come from?  

 9                  MS. WILLIAMS:  That came from a lot of 

10           research into public housing.  Getting to the 

11           necessary people to give us what the costs 

12           would be.  And that is well published in 

13           NYCHA works.  This is where we got it from.  

14           That's their numbers, saying what it would 

15           cost.  

16                  There are other areas that I didn't 

17           even mention.  But -- 

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Well, Barbara, 

19           before you go on to that, just -- I want to 

20           finish.  I don't mean to interrupt you, but 

21           I'm running out of --

22                  MS. WILLIAMS:  No, no, go right ahead.  

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  So is it safe 

24           to assume that you live in NYCHA housing, 


                                                                   350

 1           then, is that correct?  

 2                  MS. WILLIAMS:  I live in NYCHA 

 3           housing.  Yes, I do.  

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  When is the 

 5           last time, where you live -- when is the last 

 6           time that has been updated?  

 7                  MS. WILLIAMS:  Updated?  

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Mm-hmm.  Like 

 9           a change of paint.  You know, we talk about 

10           lead poisoning in our water -- has all those 

11           lines been checked in your unit?  Those are 

12           some of the questions we have.  

13                  You talked about every 20 years it 

14           should be updated.  I just want to know where 

15           that number came from as well.  

16                  MS. WILLIAMS:  Well, that's also part 

17           of NYCHA's literature.  And what is needed, 

18           we have something called the Tenants Handbook 

19           to give you information.  

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Mm-hmm.  

21                  MS. WILLIAMS:  We get that 

22           information.  We didn't all throw it away.  

23           It is something that was given out, like, 

24           when these developments first came up.  Rules 


                                                                   351

 1           and regulations and what needs to be done and 

 2           when it should be done.  

 3                  Painting used to be done every three 

 4           years.  If you don't request it now, you 

 5           don't get it.  And then when you do, you 

 6           might get one room.  The entire apartment is 

 7           not done at the same time.  

 8                  There's a lot of things that's not 

 9           being done that should be done.  So this is 

10           why we need this.  But we need people who are 

11           taking the time to manage this.  

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Mm-hmm.  

13                  MS. WILLIAMS:  That money can go 

14           wherever it needs to go if it's managed 

15           properly.  

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Okay.  Because 

17           I know just in our Governor's proposed 

18           budget, we're going from 229 billion to 

19           233 billion.  Well, there's your $4 billion, 

20           or almost where you need to be.  

21                  And you're absolutely right, we throw 

22           dollars at a lot of different things at the 

23           state level and a lot of it doesn't get 

24           followed up on, to make sure those dollars 


                                                                   352

 1           are spent wisely.  

 2                  So I want to thank you for your 

 3           testimony.  And I totally agree with what 

 4           you're saying.  Your property should be 

 5           updated.  It should be taken care of.  And 

 6           you should have some pride in that home.  

 7                  So thank you for your testimony.  

 8                  MS. WILLIAMS:  And thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  To the Senate.  

10                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator May.  

11                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  And thank 

12           you all.  Ms. Williams, for telling us really 

13           specifics about what some of the issues are 

14           that tenants confront.  

15                  Mr. Boyle, I wanted to ask you a 

16           couple of questions about source-of-income 

17           funding and what the Governor put in her 

18           budget, what you think about what's in her 

19           budget, and how we can further eliminate 

20           source-of-income discrimination.  

21                  MR. BOYLE:  Sure.  

22                  So the HCR testing program as it 

23           exists is really successful for the amount of 

24           money that's put into it.  It's $2 million.  


                                                                   353

 1           It funds six full-service fair housing 

 2           testing organizations that operate around the 

 3           state.  That money has allowed them to hire 

 4           new staff, it allows them to do testing, it 

 5           allows them to do enforcement work and 

 6           negotiate settlements with landlords, which 

 7           is really a good outcome.  

 8                  I think what we're looking for is not 

 9           just punitive damages against landlords that 

10           get -- you know, that a tenant is turned away 

11           and then down the line there's sort of a 

12           punitive damage, but the tenant hasn't been 

13           housed.  

14                  A model that's been sort of 

15           increasingly popular and which we're very 

16           supportive of is sort of negotiated -- you 

17           know, when there's a tenant that's 

18           discriminated against, there is a quick 

19           action that's negotiated between the landlord 

20           and when there's a settlement, that landlord 

21           will have to put aside several units for 

22           voucher-holders for the future, and there's 

23           oversight of that.  

24                  And the Governor in her budget has a 


                                                                   354

 1           new unit between Human Rights and HCR that 

 2           would staff some additional people to kind of 

 3           help facilitate some of that up-front 

 4           quick-action enforcement work.  And so we are 

 5           supportive of that new unit that the Governor 

 6           has announced in her State of the State.  

 7                  The Attorney General also has a pot of 

 8           money, and that's intended to fund nonprofits 

 9           in some fair housing deserts around the state 

10           that don't currently do fair housing work but 

11           that might have the capacity if they got some 

12           extra funding.  

13                  So what we're asking for is extra 

14           money specifically into that HCR Fair Housing 

15           Testing program, which is really kind of the 

16           best current state-supported vehicle for 

17           rooting out SOI.  But which is just kind of, 

18           you know, based on what we've seen around the 

19           state, is really kind of in need of some 

20           extra support.  

21                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  

22                  And just quickly, Ms. Tyler, the 

23           faith-based affordable housing bill, I was 

24           part of writing that but then we realized 


                                                                   355

 1           this really mostly affects New York City, and 

 2           so we wanted a New York City sponsor for 

 3           that.  

 4                  But I'm wondering if you're seeing 

 5           pushback.  Are there -- what do you expect to 

 6           be the barriers to making that work?  

 7                  MS. TYLER:  Well, I think that most 

 8           communities want to make sure that the 

 9           development that is proposed is specific and 

10           unique to their community.  

11                  So I think the Faith-Based Housing Act 

12           is flexible in that way.  So far we've had 

13           conversations with faith leaders across the 

14           state, and we've been working with the 

15           coalition to hold forums, and so we haven't 

16           had a lot of pushback.  

17                  One of the things that has come up is 

18           around labor and prevailing wage, which we 

19           know that we want to make sure that there is 

20           space and room to have those conversations 

21           and make amendments to the bill, because we 

22           ultimately want to make sure that labor and 

23           prevailing wage are -- are included.  

24                  SENATOR MAY:  Great.  Thank you.


                                                                   356

 1                  MS. TYLER:  Thank you.  

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 3                  So thank you to this panel for being 

 4           here with us today and being able to answer 

 5           some of our questions.  Thank you.  

 6                  So we move on to our final panel of 

 7           this hearing:  Rural Housing Coalition of 

 8           New York, Adirondack Foundation, and New York 

 9           State Rural Advocates.  

10                  MR. BORGES:  Can you hear me?  There 

11           it goes.  Okay.  

12                  Oh, good evening.  Thank you for 

13           having me.  I'm Mike Borges.  I'm the 

14           executive director of the Rural Housing 

15           Coalition of New York.  We represent rural 

16           housing nonprofit organizations and community 

17           development organizations that serve rural 

18           communities throughout the state.  

19                  I first want to thank the Legislature 

20           for really stepping up last year and 

21           supporting increases for a number of housing 

22           programs that serve rural communities.  Kudos 

23           to you guys for really helping us and doing 

24           the things that unfortunately the Governor 


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 1           didn't.  

 2                  This past November the Rural Housing 

 3           Coalition commissioned a Marist poll that 

 4           showed 73 percent of New Yorkers believe 

 5           housing affordability is a major concern in 

 6           their communities and 71 percent believe the 

 7           state is not providing enough resources to 

 8           address this problem.  

 9                  Given this overwhelming concern about 

10           housing availability and affordability, we 

11           had really high hopes that the Governor's 

12           Executive Budget would convene housing 

13           stakeholders from around the state to develop 

14           consensus proposals to address this housing 

15           crisis.  The Executive Budget did not include 

16           that.  Instead, the Executive Budget actually 

17           cut funding for a variety of housing 

18           programs, many of which serve rural 

19           communities.  

20                  As you know, funding was cut to 

21           RESTORE, which assists seniors with emergency 

22           housing repairs so they can remain in their 

23           homes.  Funding was cut for Access to Home, 

24           which assists the disabled with accessibility 


                                                                   358

 1           modifications like wheelchair ramps, 

 2           handrails, so they can remain in their homes.  

 3           Funding was cut to the Rural Preservation 

 4           Program, which funds a network of nonprofit 

 5           housing community development organizations 

 6           that serve rural New Yorkers by repairing, 

 7           rehabbing, and building housing for 

 8           low-to-moderate-income New Yorkers.  Funding 

 9           was eliminated for the Small Rental 

10           Development Initiative, which funds 

11           affordable rental projects of 20 units or 

12           less that are more suitable for less densely 

13           populated areas with little to no 

14           infrastructure.  

15                  Lastly, we just released a report 

16           yesterday about the state of our USDA 515 

17           programs.  This was all emailed to all the 

18           legislators, and we released it to the media.  

19           Again, it documents a great need in rural 

20           communities.  If you're not familiar with it, 

21           the USDA 515 program was created by 

22           Harry Truman back in 1949 or so.  And in 

23           New York State we built thousands of these 

24           affordable rental projects in the 1980s and 


                                                                   359

 1           1990s.  

 2                  Their mortgages are expiring now.  And 

 3           as those mortgages expire, they lose their 

 4           affordability protections as well as their 

 5           rental assistance.  So thousands of 

 6           New Yorkers in rural communities -- about 

 7           15,000 households -- potentially could lose 

 8           their homes because they can no longer afford 

 9           to stay where they are.  These properties are 

10           in great disrepair.  

11                  We're looking for an investment of 

12           about $25 million, as Enterprise's Patrick 

13           Boyle mentioned ealier, to similar -- like 

14           with the Mitchell-Lama program.  You know, 

15           there was about $50 million in the 

16           State Budget last year to preserve and rehab 

17           the Mitchell-Lama housing.  And so we're 

18           looking for something similar that serves 

19           rural New York.  

20                  Again, thank you for your support, and 

21           we appreciate it.  

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

23                  Adirondack Foundation.  

24                  MS. BELLINGHAM:  Sure.  Hi.  Thank you 


                                                                   360

 1           for the opportunity to testify.  

 2                  My name's Lori Bellingham, and I'm 

 3           vice president for community impact with 

 4           Adirondack Foundation.  The foundation seeks 

 5           to improve lives and expand opportunities for 

 6           the people in our region by working with 

 7           partners to identify and address challenges 

 8           such as housing.  

 9                  I'll share a brief description of our 

10           year-round residents.  Approximately 

11           44 percent of the population are ALICE 

12           individuals and families.  Nearly 60 percent 

13           struggle to earn enough income to access 

14           stable housing, reliable transportation, 

15           childcare and the like.  

16                  To compound our challenges, seasonal 

17           housing constitutes 24 percent of housing 

18           units, and in some communities it's as high 

19           as 70 percent.  

20                  Perhaps more critical, though, is that 

21           the housing affordability gap is growing.  In 

22           Clinton and Franklin counties, 50 percent of 

23           families live in rent-burdened households.  

24           And income has not kept up with housing 


                                                                   361

 1           prices.  Median household income increased 

 2           15 percent between 2015 and 2020; however, 

 3           median home prices increased by 28 percent -- 

 4           and now we've heard 40 percent from 

 5           elsewhere.  

 6                  Until the gap between wages and 

 7           affordability of housing comes into balance, 

 8           our economy will be constrained.  The gap and 

 9           our region's unique scale are two of the most 

10           important points I'd like to make. 

11                  We noted in written testimony that our 

12           communities are, quote, truly rural -- 

13           meaning there's rural and then there's the 

14           Adirondack region.  While we are 

15           book-ended by population bases in Plattsburgh 

16           and Lake George, the majority of the more 

17           than 100 communities in between are home to 

18           fewer and often far fewer than 3,000 people.  

19           In these communities, housing projects of 

20           12 units or less for people making at least 

21           120 percent AMI make a significant impact on 

22           the schools and the economy.  

23                  Unfortunately, as we've heard, the 

24           Executive Budget fails to invest in proven 


                                                                   362

 1           programs such as the Small Rental Development 

 2           Initiative, Rural Preservation Program, and 

 3           the Adirondack Community Housing Trust.  We 

 4           encourage the Legislature to fully support 

 5           these programs, as they are some of the few 

 6           that meet the unique needs and scale of our 

 7           region.  

 8                  In addition to these programs, our 

 9           community has developed new ideas that can 

10           pilot public-private partnerships targeted at 

11           addressing the housing shortage in the 

12           North Country at first.  With the state 

13           investment of 3.3 million and the partnership 

14           of foundations and municipalities, we can 

15           establish targeted resources to address the 

16           need for technical assistance and 

17           predevelopment support.  Using state dollars 

18           to leverage private philanthropy can maximize 

19           and target our investments.  

20                  The housing crisis -- you know this -- 

21           is a workforce crisis.  It inhibits our 

22           region's economic development.  Our residents 

23           seek to improve their rural communities by 

24           ensuring that teachers, first responders, and 


                                                                   363

 1           municipal workers can live, work, and welcome 

 2           visitors to the North Country.  

 3                  Thank you for the opportunity.  

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 5                  New York State Rural Advocates.  

 6                  MR. SEBASTIAN:  Thank you so much for 

 7           the opportunity to testify this afternoon.  

 8           Thank you for persevering through yet another 

 9           marathon day.  And happy Valentine's Day.  

10                  My name's Blair Sebastian.  I'm with 

11           New York State Rural Advocates.  Rural 

12           Advocates submitted written testimony that 

13           focused on some of the economic and 

14           demographic challenges that impact housing in 

15           New York's rural communities.  We also offer 

16           our thoughts about some of the ways our 

17           not-for-profit community can contribute to 

18           addressing these challenges.  

19                  At the top of our list is the 

20           Rural Preservation Program.  It's at the top 

21           because RPP provides the platform from which 

22           we deliver a whole array of state and federal 

23           housing and community development programs.  

24           RPP funds pay for the research and the 


                                                                   364

 1           planning.  It pays for the community building 

 2           work that precedes every grant.  It pays for 

 3           the writing of the grants and for the 

 4           reporting that comes at the end of a program.  

 5                  When New York invests in rural 

 6           preservation, it's buying powerful and 

 7           flexible organizational capacity.  We've 

 8           often spoken of the ways these locally 

 9           governed organizations are able to tailor 

10           their work programs to the specific needs of 

11           communities.  That same flexibility and 

12           resourcefulness positions RPCs to respond to 

13           unforeseen events.  

14                  I can't tell you how many RPCs we have 

15           worked with who have responded to floods -- 

16           big floods, little floods, tornadoes, 

17           ice storms, hurricanes, and fires.  They are 

18           able to bring their general housing and 

19           community development skills to bear to focus 

20           resources and mitigate these crises because 

21           you have invested in their basic capacity, 

22           and for that we and the communities we serve 

23           thank you.  

24                  In the FY 2024 State Budget you were 


                                                                   365

 1           able to return RPP borrowing power to the 

 2           level that it had back at the turn of the 

 3           century, back in 2000.  The revised funding 

 4           levels allowed Rural Preservation Companies 

 5           to begin catching up and rebuilding old 

 6           capacity.  

 7                  Unfortunately, and quite predictably, 

 8           the Governor is proposing to return the 

 9           program to historic funding levels.  We're 

10           here to ask you to find a way to sustain 

11           those levels of funding.  

12                  We understand the difficult budget 

13           decisions you face.  We also understand that 

14           our funding comes through some kind of funky 

15           streams.  But we are grateful for your past 

16           support, and we ask for your continued 

17           support and to fund RPC at $7.86 million this 

18           year.  

19                  Thank you.

20                  (Overtalk.)

21                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

22                  MR. SEBASTIAN:  It's the end of the 

23           day.  We're the last slot.

24                  (Overtalk.)


                                                                   366

 1                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  Senator May.  

 2                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  

 3                  And thanks for your testimony.  And I 

 4           want you to know, as chair of the Legislative 

 5           Commission on Rural Resources, we are 

 6           fighting to put these programs back in the 

 7           budget.  I'm very concerned about many of the 

 8           cuts that you highlighted.  

 9                  I also want to say last year I think 

10           was the first time I ever heard the term 

11           "rural homelessness," and at first I thought 

12           it was an oxymoron.  But it is a real thing.  

13           And you didn't mention that, but is -- would 

14           you -- how large a problem would you call 

15           that?  

16                  MR. SEBASTIAN:  It's a large problem, 

17           and it's invisible.  You know, I ran Rural 

18           Preservation Companies in Western New York.  

19           We encountered folks living in barns, living 

20           in -- there was a sawmill up the road from 

21           our office that knowingly left boards 

22           flapping on the back because there were a 

23           handful of local fellows who were living in 

24           the mill at night and wandering the streets 


                                                                   367

 1           during the day.  

 2                  And they're a particular challenge 

 3           because they're -- often you find folks who 

 4           are not particularly comfortable living in 

 5           traditional sort of living environments.  

 6                  SENATOR MAY:  Sure.  

 7                  MR. SEBASTIAN:  So we offer housing, 

 8           and it isn't particularly attractive to 

 9           folks.  So some of this is imagining ways to 

10           allow particularly rural homeless people who 

11           have kind of this independent streak that 

12           comes with characters like that to be 

13           comfortable.  

14                  It is a big problem.  Families -- we 

15           did a -- years ago in the Adirondacks we were 

16           looking at census data with the folks from 

17           one of the RPCs up there, and there were 

18           these anomalies that nobody could figure out, 

19           why we had more families than housing units.  

20           We found mobile homes with partitions through 

21           the middle of them -- 

22                  SENATOR MAY:  Wow.  

23                  MR. SEBASTIAN:  -- with a front door 

24           and a back door.  


                                                                   368

 1                  SENATOR MAY:  So let me interrupt for 

 2           the last minute and ask about mobile homes, 

 3           because we had a conversation earlier about 

 4           the idea that maybe instead of replacing 

 5           mobile homes, if people owned the land -- 

 6           building actual brick-and-mortar homes would 

 7           be a better way to proceed because it would 

 8           help people build equity.  

 9                  Do you want to, in 30 seconds, comment 

10           on that?  

11                  MR. BORGES:  Well, I think, you know, 

12           there are like 1800 mobile home parks in the 

13           state.  And I think there's like over 100,000 

14           manufactured housing, making up 10 percent of 

15           the housing stock in rural communities.  So 

16           mobile homes and mobile home parks are an 

17           essential affordable housing option for 

18           owner-occupied residents.  

19                  So, yes, the cost of replacing a 

20           mobile home now has risen to the point where 

21           it's $150,000, $180,000.  Which is why we 

22           have a bill with Senator Mannion in the 

23           Senate, and I think it's Assemblywoman 

24           Barrett, Didi Barrett in the Assembly, to 


                                                                   369

 1           replace that program and raise the amount 

 2           that could be used to replace the mobile 

 3           homes from $100,000 to $200,000.  

 4                  So yeah, modular homes or mobile homes 

 5           or stick-built homes -- we need all kinds of 

 6           housing in rural communities, and we need you 

 7           to do more.  The state needs to do more to 

 8           preserve the housing stock that we do have, 

 9           because we have very old housing stock and 

10           dilapidated housing stock.  

11                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  

12                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

13                  We go to Assemblywoman Rosenthal.  

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ROSENTHAL:  Thank you.  

15                  And thanks for sticking around.  

16                  I know a lot of what we talked about 

17           sounded like it centered on the city, 

18           New York City.  But, you know, as a city 

19           person I have been educated by all of you 

20           over the past year and really believe that 

21           you need many more resources.  

22                  We can't forget about you, you're all 

23           struggling there to maintain your home in New 

24           York State and contribute to society.  And we 


                                                                   370

 1           can't leave you in the lurch, so we're going 

 2           to fight for more funding for all of you.  

 3                  And thank you.  

 4                  PANELISTS:  Thank you.  

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 6                  So thank you to this panel for being 

 7           here.  

 8                  So just before we conclude the Housing 

 9           hearing, I just want to thank my cochair, 

10           Senator Liz Krueger, for all of the budget 

11           hearings; my cochair today for the 

12           Housing hearing, Senator Kavanagh; and our 

13           ranker on Ways and Means, Assemblyman Ra, and 

14           Senator O'Mara.  

15                  So this concludes the -- not only the 

16           Housing budget hearing, but all of the budget 

17           hearings for the '24-'25 Executive Budget, 

18           until Senator --   

19                  SENATOR KAVANAGH:  And I would be 

20           remiss if I did not also thank our Ways and 

21           Means Chair Helene Weinstein, who I had the 

22           pleasure of serving with for many years in 

23           the Assembly, for all of her work over many 

24           of these hearings -- and everybody who 


                                                                   371

 1           testified today.  We really appreciate your 

 2           input.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 4                  (Whereupon, the budget hearing 

 5           concluded at 5:26 p.m.)

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