
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
18, No. 15 |
July
28 - Aug. 24, 2005 |



New
Inspection Program Targets Problem Landlords
By ANDREAS SCHNEIDER
Dial 311,
wait, and lodge a complaint about landlord negligence. Thousands of people
perform this civic ritual every month, according to the mayor’s office of
operations, hoping that the condition they’ve called about will be resolved.
However, 311 calls mainly highlight problems in individual apartments,
rather than in entire buildings or the landlords who own them. Now, for
irresponsible landlords across the city, those calls are starting to add up.
Multiple 311 complaints will now be one factor in qualifying buildings for
surprise roof-to-cellar inspections under a new building inspection program
agreed to on July 18 by the city’s Department of Housing Preservation and
Development (HPD) and the City Council.
The program has begun in Council District 15 (as well as two districts in
Brooklyn and Manhattan) in the Bronx, which includes the neighborhood of
North Fordham. Landlords and building owners chosen by the program will be
legally obligated to bring their entire buildings into compliance with the
Housing Maintenance Code.
“This is a mechanism through which City Council members — in conjunction
with local community groups — can work with HPD to identify buildings that
would benefit from roof-to-cellar inspections,” said Ali Davis, legislative
director for Council Member Gail Brewer, who collaborated with HPD and
housing advocacy groups to formulate the program.
Under the new plan, a team of HPD inspectors will inspect up to 30 of the
worst buildings in three Council districts every two months, before rotating
on to three new districts for the next two months. After completing
inspections, HPD will issue a written report detailing the violations and
meet with various city agencies to decide whether to pursue the landlord in
court. Tenants will also be able to obtain copies of the report from the
Internet, their Council member and local community groups.
Before inspections begin in each set of Council districts, HPD will consult
with the local Council member and local community groups to determine which
buildings are most in need.
Legislators and community activists are hopeful that the proactive nature of
the plan will accelerate repairs, help avoid abandonment of distressed
buildings and finally provide a distinct legal procedure to force the city’s
worst landlords into code compliance.
“This is a new way to handle distressed buildings,” said Hilda Chavis, a
member of the Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition, who worked
closely with the Association for Neighborhood and Housing Development to
negotiate the terms of the new plan. Now, Chavis and the Coalition are
helping formulate the list of buildings to be inspected in Council District
15.
“What we’re looking for is to have [a landlord make] the repairs and, if he
doesn’t comply, to make him legally accountable,” Chavis said. “If he
doesn’t take care of his responsibilities, he will be held accountable in
court.”
HPD spokeswoman Carol Abrams said that the new program complements HPD
anti-abandonment programs in effect since the late 1990s. “The difference,”
she said, “is [the new program is] really giving the City Council more of a
role in selecting the buildings that are important to their constituents.”
Whereas those initiatives rely mainly on reported violations and complaints
such as those from 311 callers, the new program involves community groups
and Council members in selecting notorious buildings that might not show up
in complaint logs.
“This program will produce detailed strategies that will be used to address
some of New York’s most problematic housing issues,” said Council Member
Joel Rivera, who represents the 15th District, in an e-mailed statement. “As
a result, this will ensure that people in the Bronx will live in sound and
secure apartments that we all deserve to live in.”
Currently, Rivera and the Coalition are meeting with HPD to formulate the
list of distressed buildings in Rivera’s district. Abrams, from HPD, said
the list should be finalized and inspections should begin soon. Anyone
interested in participating in the building selection process can contact
the Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition at (718) 584-0515 or
Council Member Rivera’s office at (718) 364-3700.
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