
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
18, No. 10 |
May 19 - June 1, 2005 |



Some Progress on Tracey's Elevators
and Security
But Deeper Problems Likely to Remain, Some Say
By HEATHER HADDON
Conditions
at Tracey Towers continue to take small steps forward with elevator work and
security staff changes under way. But many worry that some problems are
endemic at the building and that Tracey will never run as smoothly as other
Mitchell-Lama developments.
Following a large rent increase last year, R-Y Management, the company that
oversees Tracey, has begun over the last several months to address Tracey’s
many problems. The Tenants Council now meets monthly with R-Y’s Bronx
manager, Daniel Durante, to discuss short-term improvements for the
building. Durante joined R-Y 18 months ago and has years of prior housing
experience.
“He has been very responsive,” said Diana Walters, president of Tracey’s
Tenants Council, who estimated that a third of the targeted improvements
have been completed.
Major repairs are a
different story. R-Y finally started replacing Tracey’s notoriously
dangerous elevators last month, with work wrapping up on the first of 12
elevator lines. The city Department of Housing, Preservation and Development
(HPD), which oversees Tracey through the Mitchell-Lama housing program, says
that two elevators serving the lower floors and one for the higher levels
will be completed by the summer.
Estimates have varied about how long the total rehab will take, but Virginia
Gliedman, an HPD spokesperson, firmly said last week that work will conclude
by May 2007.
Tenants had hoped for
quicker results. “They’ve got to split them up two at a time, otherwise it
will be 12 years before it’s finished,” Walters said.
Tracey’s elevators are over 30 years old, and they shake, race past floors,
and stall. This was acutely highlighted last month when Ming Kuang Chen, a
Chinese food delivery man, was stuck in one of Tracey’s elevators for almost
four days. The building’s security cameras proved useless and staff
inattentiveness didn’t help.
The extreme mishap renewed scrutiny of Tracey’s conditions. Durante admitted
last month during a tenants meeting that some of the maintenance and
security staff are not up to snuff. Durante did not return calls for
comment.
The Tenants Council recently told Durante which security agents were
inadequate, and a few were fired. “Some of them were sleeping, eating, or up
in people’s apartments,” Walters said. “They couldn’t wait to get a job at
Tracey Towers.”
Not all Mitchell-Lamas are burdened with such problems.
The conditions at Scott Tower, just around the block on Paul Avenue, offer a
stark contrast. “It’s always been a well-managed building,” said Stuart
Davis, a 35-year Scott resident. When one of the building’s three elevators
gets stuck, Davis says an alarm audibly sounds and management responds
immediately.
Scott’s elevators were modernized several years ago. Tenants paid additional
charges over their monthly rent to fund the improvements.
After Tracey started a multi-phase rent increase last year, R-Y was able to
get a $1.6 million loan to repair the elevators, along with the roof and
façade. The building had not raised its rents since 1991, when tenants
successfully sued R-Y to stop collecting more money until numerous repairs
were made.
HPD and R-Y contend that the long delay in a rent increase is both unusual
and detrimental. “The rents really were not covering the expenses,” Gliedman
said. Companies that own buildings created through the Mitchell-Lama
program, started by New York State to provide housing for middle-income
residents, are mandated to put aside some money. It’s not enough, however,
to cover capital expenses, according to Gliedman.
Tracey’s owners have only paid interest on the mortgage, and not the actual
principal, on the building, according to an annual state report on the
Mitchell-Lama program. The mortgage’s interest rate is at a substantial 8
percent. Many other Mitchell-Lamas refinanced their mortgages during the
1990s when rates plunged, according to the report.
The rent increase is not
enough to fund an overhaul of Tracey’s boilers, which provided inadequate
heat and hot water last winter. R-Y is now looking for assistance from a
state energy program.
Tenants, however, have been unhappy with R-Y’s service for years. “It
doesn’t feel like you make it an obligation to do what you need to do, said
D’Ann St. Paul, a tenant, to Durante during the meeting. “Someone in
management has to care.”
But others blame Tracey’s issues on its size. The complex is the second
largest Mitchell-Lama in the Bronx, and reportedly the tallest one in the
entire city at 41 stories. At that size, providing proper heat and elevator
services becomes difficult.
“It’s not that other Mitchell-Lamas are better maintained than Tracey,”
Gliedman said. “A complex of this configuration is just costlier and harder
to maintain.”
Council Member Oliver Koppell, whose district includes the towers, thought
Tracey was burdened by its size, but also believes that its initial
construction was shoddy.
Tracey is owned, and was built by, the DeMatteis Construction Corporation, a
large and powerful developer. Some think the company hasn’t done its share.
“Clearly, Mr. DeMatteis is not doing his job,” said Sheila Reinhardt, a
resident, during the tenants’ meeting.
Koppell is meeting with R-Y and HPD this week to discuss Tracey’s issues.
Gliedman said that, despite the hurdles, the agency is committed to making
progress. “We are definitely committed to making this thing work,” she said.
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