Mayor de Blasio Signs Legislation to Launch Basement Apartment Conversion Pilot Program

March 4, 2019City to partner  with community organizations to finance creation of safe, quality basement  apartments in  East New YorkNEW  YORK— Today, Mayor Bill de Blasio signed landmark legislation to create a pathway for  transforming certain basement and cellar apartments into safe, legal,  affordable homes. The new law establishes a three-year demonstration program to  facilitate the creation and renovation of apartments in the basements and  cellars of qualifying one- and two-family homes in Brooklyn Community District  5.“There  are thousands of basement apartments in our City, but too many are illegal and  unsafe. This program will help New Yorkers secure safe, affordable homes and  give homeowners a new legal source of income,” said Mayor de Blasio.Residents  in illegal basement and cellar apartments typically have no lease, limited  rights, and live in substandard conditions. This new law will add to New York  City’s existing housing stock by allowing property owners to create safe,  legal, and affordable apartments in their buildings. The City will also use the  pilot to learn about how to overcome barriers that owners face when seeking to  convert basement units.Last  summer, the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development  released a Request for Expressions of Interest to identify a Community Based  Organization to administer the program.  HPD will partner with Cypress  Hills Local Development Corporation (CHLDC), a local non-profit that will  subcontract with four community non-profits.  The program will provide  eligible low- to middle-income homeowners living in one- to three-family homes  in East New York and Cypress Hills, Brooklyn with low or no-interest loans to  convert their basements into safe, legal, and rentable apartments, based on the  altered Building Code. The homeowner will also be provided with the technical  assistance needed to close on a loan and complete the construction project.  Homeowners can learn more by calling 311 or visiting  nyc.gov/basementconversion.“Finding  a path to create safe, legal basement apartments that will add to our city’s  affordable housing stock while stabilizing homeowners is an idea whose time has  come,” said Department of Housing Preservation and Development Commissioner  Maria Torres-Springer. “We are grateful to Councilmembers Lander, Espinal,  and Barron for their leadership on this issue and our partner City agencies for  helping us to advance this innovative pilot program that promises to unlock  more safe, quality housing opportunities.”“The  Buildings Department is pleased to join our colleagues in city government to  promote the Mayor’s vision for affordable housing. This legislation varies  several existing city code standards and provides additional protections to  help homeowners build safe and legal cellar and basement dwelling units in  certain properties in Brooklyn. We thank the  City Council and our partner agencies for their work to enact legislation  creating this important new program,” said Acting Buildings  Commissioner Thomas Fariello, RA. Modifications  of code standards include minimum ceiling heights and window sizes in basement  and cellar spaces and strengthened requirements for emergency egress and fire  safety. Each proposed modification to the code standards for this program took  into account the health and safety of residents. The changes will modify  requirements in order to reduce costs and facilitate conversion of new  residential units.Brooklyn’s  Community District 5, including East New York, has an existing building stock  of one- and two-family homes that makes it ideal for the launch of this  program. 

The basement conversion pilot program was a commitment made under the  East New York Neighborhood Plan, and is the result of a study conducted by a  working group convened in October, 2016. This working group was comprised of  Administration officials, elected officials including Council Member Espinal;  Community groups, residents and housing advocates including CHLDC, Community  Development Project at Urban Justice Center, CHHAYA CDC, Pratt Center for  Community Development, Coalition for Community Advancement - Progress for East  New York/Cypress Hills.“Across this city, there are  New Yorkers living in unsafe, illegally converted basement apartments,” said Council  Member Robert E. Cornegy, Jr., Chair of the Council’s Committee on Housing and  Buildings. “Thanks to this pilot, residents of illegally converted basement  units in East New York will be afforded the opportunity to live in apartments  that meet the various building and fire codes that make other dwelling units  throughout our city safe and livable. I look forward to seeing the results of  this pilot and am hopeful it will reveal the great potential of basements for  expanding the stock of safe, affordable housing throughout New York City.”“Converting basement units into safe and legal housing is an  important way to address New York City""s affordability crisis," said Council  Member Brad Lander. “This pilot program will create affordable housing for  tenants, financial stability for homeowners, and investment in East New York.  It will also enable us to learn useful lessons to smartly expand the program to  neighborhoods around the city in the future. I’m proud to co-sponsor the  legislation along with Council Members Rafael Espinal and Inez Barron, and  grateful to the de Blasio Administration for working to develop this thoughtful  pilot program. Thanks especially to the community advocates of the BASE  (Basement Apartments Safe for Everyone) Campaign, including Chhaya CDC, Cypress  Hills LDC, and the Pratt Center for Community Development, we have been pushing  for years to bring underground units into the light.”Council  Member Inez Barron said,  “This bill will increase the stock of safe and quality housing in a city where  housing is imminently needed. The number of people who are homeless,  rent-burdened, ‘couch-surfing’ and living ‘doubled-up’ are representative of  the need for safe, pleasant, affordable housing. Currently, thousands of people  across the city are living in basement apartments that are not registered with  the city and that have not been certified as meeting the standards, codes and  requirements of the city. Agencies responsible for ensuring that the  established fire, health, construction and building requirements have been  satisfied have no opportunity to confirm the safety of all who live in such  premises and indeed the entire neighborhood. This bill will enable landlords to  make necessary structural adjustments to their basements so that these  potential living spaces can be legalized. As such, landlords can provide living  accommodations that conform to codes and in which residents can live with  confidence.”  "I  am grateful to the coalition of partners that came together to combat our  City""s affordability crisis with innovative ideas rooted in community needs,”  said Council Member Rafael Espinal. “With foreclosures on the rise, programs  like this give New Yorkers the additional income they require to keep their  homes. The basement pilot program is going to stabilize the livelihood of many  of my neighbors in East New York, while expanding and securing the number of  legal and affordable units available to rent."

日期:2021/12/30点击:15