De Blasio Administration Financed More Than 34,000 Affordable Homes In 2018 – A New Record

January 16, 2019The City financed  record-high for new construction with more than 10,000 affordable apartments;  since 2014, the City has secured nearly 122,000 affordable homesNEW  YORK—–  Mayor  de Blasio announced today that his administration financed 34,160 affordable homes  last year, setting a new high-water mark for affordable housing production in  New York City. This includes a record for both new construction, with  10,099 new homes financed, as well as for preservation, with 24,061  apartments. In 2017, the administration broke the previous record, set by  former Mayor Ed Koch in 1989. This brings the total number of homes  financed to date under the City’s ambitious Housing New York plan to nearly  122,000 apartments. Nearly 85 percent of all homes financed through the Mayor’s  housing plan are affordable to low-income New Yorkers, of which more than 40  percent will serve families earning less than $46,950.“Family  by family, building by building, we’re giving people the security of knowing  they can stay in the city they love. Last year, we created and preserved  affordable housing that will reach 85,000 New Yorkers – enough to fill an  entire neighborhood the size of Flushing. And we’re just warming up. This year,  we’ll launch a new Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants that will fight for  residents in every community,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.“In  New York City, we’re preserving and building affordable housing at rates that  far outpace any other city and even most states. We’ve created a powerful  machine that will continue to produce results for years to come, so that even  as our city grows, New Yorkers will be able to stay in the neighborhoods they  helped build,” said Deputy Mayor for Housing and Economic Development Alicia  Glen."The 34,160 homes financed last year represent a new  high-water mark for affordable housing, and real relief for hard-working  families struggling to make ends meet," said Department of Housing  Preservation and Development Commissioner Maria Torres-Springer. “Last  year, we broke all the records for affordable housing production, and a  full 60 percent of the homes financed serve extremely- and very low-income  New Yorkers. The 122,000 homes completed or underway reflect significant  progress on large public sites, far-reaching policies to secure more affordable  housing with no City financing, a lifeline to safeguard affordability at more  of our city""s Mitchell-Lamas, and major inroads on new programs laid out in HNY  2.0 from Neighborhood Pillars to Partners in Preservation. All this work  complements our broader efforts to fight displacement and protect tenants, and  we thank our Mayor and Deputy Mayor for their extraordinary vision and  unwavering support, the tireless teams at HPD and HDC for their creativity and  commitment, and all our dedicated partners for their steadfast support in our  fight to keep this city affordable for generations to come.”“HDC is proud to have provided more than $1.8 billion in bond  financing toward another record-breaking year of affordable housing production  for our city. The 122,000 homes created and preserved through Mayor de  Blasio’s Housing New York plan are providing  security and affordability to New Yorkers today, while also anchoring  communities for generations to come,” said Housing Development  Corporation President Eric Enderlin. 

“The 34,000 apartments financed  last year are a testament to the visionary leadership of the  administration, the ongoing support of our elected officials, the outstanding  efforts of our countless partners across the public and private sectors, and of  course our teams at HDC and HPD who are constantly working to meet the diverse  housing needs of our dynamic and evolving city.”To celebrate this historic milestone, the Mayor visited Tres  Puentes, a new senior housing development financed through HPD’s Senior  Affordable Rental Apartments program. These 175 new affordable apartments for  seniors, including 53 formerly homeless seniors, were constructed on what had  been a parking lot and underused space next to Borinquen Court, a 145-apartment  federal Housing and Urban Development 202 senior project that the City  previously preserved. This project is the prototype for the new Housing+  initiative proposed as part of HNY 2.0.Protecting  tenants is a core part of the City’s strategy to confront the affordable  housing crisis. The newly created Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants will  spearhead the City’s anti-harassment and outreach initiatives, aggressively  enhance interagency enforcement and more closely engage with tenants and  advocates. The City is also pursuing legislation to dramatically increase  financial penalties against bad landlords and seize buildings from neglectful  owners.The  34,160 affordable apartments financed last year represent a direct City  investment of $1.73 billion, leveraging more than $1.84 billion in bonds issued  by HDC. This brings the total direct City investment under the Mayor’s  housing plan to date to $5.05 billion, and the total bond financing to $8.12  billion. The City has continued to exceed its goals, not just in terms of  numbers, but in terms of affordability, while staying within the amount of  capital budgeted each year.Affordable  housing numbers are available here.The  plan continues to live up to its initial promises:Rezoning  Areas / Public Sites:  The City advanced new construction on large public sites in rezoning and urban  renewal areas, including major developments at Hunter’s Point South in Long  Island City, Queens, MEC 125th Street in East Harlem, and the first  phase of a multi-phase development in Coney Island, Brooklyn. These  projects represent some of the 3,000 newly constructed apartments financed on  public land last year; bringing the total under HNY to 10,480 homes. 

Mandatory  Inclusionary Housing:  Since MIH was introduced in March 2016, the City has financed 1,300 permanently  affordable homes, and is now tracking 7,800 MIH apartments through rezoning  applications; including 5,600 MIH apartments in 64 projects approved by the  City Council that have not yet closed. 421a: The City also  produced 1,175 affordable apartments across 134 projects through 421a with no  additional City funding. This is almost a four-fold increase from last calendar  year in the number of apartments created, most of which are in high-cost  neighborhoods.Homeless  and Supportive Housing: Through significant changes to our financing  programs, the City secured 2,500 apartments for homeless New Yorkers – a record  number that brought the total to almost 10,000 apartments set aside for  homeless households over the life of the plan. In part, this includes the  4,770 supportive housing apartments the City has financed since the start of  the administration.Housing  Connect:  The City’s housing lottery posted 7,700 affordable homes in 2018, an increase  of nearly 50% from the 5,200 affordable apartments that went through the  lottery in 2017, and nearly triple the 2,900 posted in 2014. Since 2014, HPD  and HDC have marketed 24,443 affordable apartments through Housing Connect,  including 18,800 financed under HNY. The agencies also updated their  guidelines to speed up the delivery of affordable housing and ensure those  homes serve the New Yorkers who need them most. M/WBE  Build Up: New program spurred 63 projects with 18,122 apartments to set and meet  M/WBE participation goals that are expected to generate more than $306 million  in spending. Since the program’s inception, 105 projects have been required to  participate in the program for a combined expected spending amount of $481  million.Advancing  Key Initiatives of HNY 2.0In  November 2017, the administration launched Housing  New York 2.0, a roadmap to achieve the accelerated and expanded  goal of producing 300,000 affordable homes by 2026. Since then, HPD and HDC  have made significant progress towards many of the key initiatives laid out in  HNY 2.0, including:Seniors: As part of Seniors  First, a three-pronged strategy to help serve 30,000 seniors  over the 12 year plan, HPD introduced Aging  in Place to ensure seniors in preservation projects get the  improvements they need to stay in their apartments and age in place. Last year,  the City financed 1,830 apartments for seniors; bringing the total number of  senior homes produced under HNY to 7,390. Anti-displacement: Created the new Neighborhood  Pillars program to help finance the acquisition and  rehabilitation of rent-stabilized and unregulated buildings, and Partners in  Preservation to identify community-based organizations to  develop and coordinate anti-displacement strategies with local stakeholders and  tenants in targeted neighborhoods.Mitchell-Lamas: Secured the  continued affordability of 14,859 coops and apartments in Mitchell-Lama  developments, including Masyrk Towers, Lindsay Park, Franklin Plaza Apartments,  and Starrett City, the largest federally subsidized development in the nation.  This brings the total of Mitchell-Lama homes and apartments preserved under HNY  to 33,937.Homeownership: Rolled out the  new HomeFix program to connect existing homeowners to funding for repairs and counseling,  and launched Open Door to build new affordable condos and coops. Last year, the  City financed 10,295 homeownership opportunities for a total of 22,895 under  the plan. Innovation: Launched ShareNYC,  a new initiative to reshape the model of shared housing into a dynamic new  source of affordable housing for New Yorkers, and Modular  NYC to leverage the use of modular design and construction.To  learn more about how New Yorkers can apply for affordable housing, fight  eviction, and freeze their rent, visit the City’s new housing web portal at nyc.gov/housing. “Tackling  our city’s affordable housing crisis is no easy task and I congratulate the de  Blasio administration on this milestone,” said Manhattan Borough President  Gale A. Brewer. “New Yorkers in every neighborhood need more affordable  units and we should continue pushing the boundaries of what’s possible.”“Affordable  housing is very much tied to workforce availability and the vibrancy of our  communities,” said Assembly Member Steven Cymbrowitz, Chair of the  Assembly’s Housing Committee. “The gains we achieved in preserving and  creating affordable housing in the last year make it possible for thousands of  families, seniors and other New Yorkers to improve their lives and remain a  vital, engaged part of our communities.”“It  is a testament to the laser focus of this administration that we as a city continue  to break new ground in the construction and preservation of affordable housing  here in New York City. Equally important is the commitment to creating  opportunities for more New Yorkers to own homes, which provides people the  chance to build and transfer generational wealth. I look forward to continuing  to support this important work in my role as Chair of the Council’s Committee  on Housing and Buildings,” said Council Member Robert Cornegy.“This  housing milestone is a victory for low-income New Yorkers who are in need of  affordable apartments, as well as for communities across the City that are  being revitalized through the investments brought forth by these developments,”  said Council Member Ritchie Torres.“Creating  and preserving affordable housing is integral to the viability of low-income  and working-class communities, like the ones I represent,” said Council  Member Diana Ayala. “I congratulate Mayor de Blasio and his administration  for exceeding their housing goals and I look forward to working with them to  bring more affordable opportunities to East Harlem and the South Bronx.”“I  commend Mayor Bill de Blasio for leading this Administrations’ efforts in  financing 34,000 affordable homes last year, which includes 10,000 new  construction homes financed and 24,000 apartments that were preserved. The  Mayor’s housing plan continues to break previous records to set new all-time  highs. Through the use of programs like Mandatory Inclusionary Housing, Housing  Connect, rezonings, senior housing, anti-displacement initiatives and much  more, the total number of homes financed to date has reached nearly 122,000  units. I’m thankful for the investments made to date to create affordable  housing and hope we continue to see more housing for formerly homeless New  Yorkers, seniors, veterans and families,” said Council Member Vanessa L.  Gibson."LiveOn  NY commends Mayor Bill de Blasio, Deputy Mayor Alicia Glen, and Commissioner  Maria Torres-Springer for their dedication to the historic production and  preservation of affordable housing," states Allison Nickerson,  Executive Director of LiveOn NY. "LiveOn NY is appreciative of the  monumental effort that goes into every unit of affordable housing and we are  heartened by the impact that these homes will have, particularly on the lives  of New York""s older adults. As the population of seniors continues to increase,  we look forward to continuing to work with the city to build upon the progress  made and to our overall commitment to making New York a better place age."“Habitat  NYC would like to congratulate Mayor de Blasio, Deputy Mayor Glen and  Commissioner Torres-Springer on another successful year building and preserving  affordable housing across the city,” said Habitat for Humanity New York City  CEO Karen Haycox. “We are proud to partner with the City to expand  affordable homeownership to even more hard-working families. 

We are  particularly proud of Sydney House, the first development financed under the  City’s Open Door program, which will provide 56 families the opportunity to  become first-time homeowners. We look forward to a long and fruitful  partnership with the City, working together to build a better New York for  everyone.”“We  congratulate Mayor de Blasio and the City on their remarkable achievement in  building and preserving a record number of affordable housing units in 2018,”  said Christie Peale, CEO and Executive Director of the Center for NYC  Neighborhoods. “We are especially excited to learn that the City financed  more than 10,000 homes this past year, bringing the economic benefits of  homeownership closer to many more New Yorkers. We look forward to continuing to  work with the City as it builds on these successes.”“We  congratulate the City on this achievement and look forward to furthering our  shared commitment to ensure every New Yorker has access to a safe, affordable  home,” said Judi Kende, Vice President and New York market leader of  Enterprise Community Partners. “With millions of New Yorkers burdened by  high rents and 60,000 people homeless, it is more important now than ever to  build and preserve quality affordable housing in our city. We are proud to  partner with HPD and HDC to create homes that meet the diverse needs of New  Yorkers, including seniors, people with disabilities, formerly homeless families,  and many others.”“The  Supportive Housing Network of New York congratulates the City on its progress  with NYC 15/15, the City’s pledge to create 15,000 units of supportive housing  in the next fifteen years, as well as HPD’s work funding supportive housing  more broadly across the City. We thank the City for its longstanding commitment  to creating affordable housing linked to services for the most vulnerable  homeless New Yorkers and look forward to more announcements like today’s in the  very near future,” said Laura Mascuch, Executive Director of the Supportive  Housing Network of New York.“We  applaud the City of New York for the 2018 accomplishments of the Housing New  York 2.0 Plan, including financing over 34,000 affordable homes in 2018 – the largest  level of production in the City’s history,” said Sam Marks, Executive  Director of LISC NYC. “We particularly appreciate the City partnering with  community development financial institutions and the nonprofit community on  initiatives like Neighborhood Pillars, Partners in Preservation, and the New  York Land Opportunity Program (NYLOP). LISC NYC and our locally-based,  mission-driven developer partners stand ready to collaborate with the City to  meet the Plan’s overarching goal of building and preserving 300,000 units by  2026.”“SAGE congratulates Mayor Bill de Blasio, Deputy Mayor Alicia  Glen, and HPD Commissioner Maria Torres-Springer on their extraordinary  achievement of securing a record-breaking number of affordable homes for  New Yorkers under Housing New York 2.0. We are thrilled to increase these  numbers even more, as we celebrate the opening of New York’s first  LGBT-welcoming senior housing facilities in the Bronx and Brooklyn in 2019,”  said SAGE CEO Michael Adams. “We cannot think of a better way to honor  our LGBT pioneers during the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall uprising, than  by fulfilling a decades-long dream of building LGBT-friendly housing. We  look forward to celebrating these milestones with the Mayor, Deputy Mayor,  HPD Commissioner, and all of our supporters and partners in the upcoming  months.”“At a time when we see profound inaction from the  federal government, New Yorkers can take pride in the de Blasio  administration’s commitment to delivering real, progressive results for  communities across the city,” said Jolie Milstein, President and CEO of  the New York State Association for Affordable Housing. “NYSAFAH looks  forward to continuing to work alongside Mayor de Blasio and all stakeholders to  maximize affordable housing production, create good jobs and strengthen our  neighborhoods.”“Creating  accessible affordable housing is critical to supporting our growing city, and  to maintaining the diverse and vibrant neighborhoods that make New York great,”  said Steven Rubenstein, Chairman for the Association for a Better New York.  “We applaud the Mayor’s Administration and the Council for their  commitment to providing affordable homes for New Yorkers and their  families.”“Mayor Bill de Blasio, Deputy Mayor Alicia Glen, and HPD  Commissioner Maria Torres-Springer have made it very clear that they are  dedicated to fighting the affordability crisis in New York City,” says Rebecca  Senn,  Executive Director of the New York Mortgage Coalition.  “Every day, residents are being shut out of the housing market in New York City  due to rising home prices, cash buyers, and investor competition. The Mayor has  made extensive progresses in keeping housing affordable for all New Yorkers  with this incredible milestone. The New York Mortgage Coalition’s nonprofit  housing counseling agencies are grateful to Mayor de Blasio and all of our  partners for keeping housing affordability at the forefront of the agenda and  working to create a more affordable and equitable city.”"As part  of the city""s affordable housing community, MBD Community Housing Corp.  congratulates the Mayor, NYC HPD, HDC and other City agencies for achieving  these impressive accomplishments toward the Mayor""s ambitious goals to preserve  and create much needed affordable housing in the Bronx and throughout the  City," said Derrick Lovett, President and CEO of MBD Community Housing  Corp.“Affordable  housing is the foundation of any livable community, and it remains a top  concern of AARP’s members across New York City,” said AARP New York State  Director Beth Finkel. “Fifty-plus New Yorkers of color are twice as likely  as 50-plus white New Yorkers to pay more than half their income for  housing.  AARP applauds Mayor de Blasio and HPD Commissioner  Torres-Springer for their commitment to preserve New York City’s affordable  housing stock and create additional units of affordable housing toward the goal  of 300,000 overall by 2026. We look forward to working with the administration  to achieve this goal as we strive to disrupt disparities and make the city a  great place to live for New Yorkers of all ages.”

日期:2021/12/30点击:17