Tuesday, July 2, 2024

MAYOR ADAMS CELEBRATES HISTORIC $2 BILLION INVESTMENT IN AFFORDABLE HOUSING, TOTAL 10-YEAR CAPITAL COMMITMENT REACHING RECORD $26 BILLION IN FISCAL YEAR 2025 BUDGET

 

Announcement Follows On-Time, Balanced, and Fiscally-Responsible $112.4 Billion Adopted Budget That Invests in Future of New York City 

 

Historic Investment Comes as Adams Administration’s Addresses Housing Crisis with “City of Yes for Housing Opportunity Proposal to Produce as Many as 108,850 New Homes Over 15 Years 

  

New York City Mayor Eric Adams today celebrated an on-time, balanced, and fiscally-responsible $112.4 billion Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 Adopted Budget that addresses the city’s affordability crisis head-on and invests in the future of the city and the working-class people who make New York the greatest city in the world. The budget specifically invests $2 billion in capital funds across FY25 and FY26 to the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) and New York City Housing Authority’s (NYCHA) capital budgets. In total, the Adams administration has committed a record $26 billion in housing capital in the current 10-year plan as the city faces a general housing crisis. The historic investments support the Adams administration’s “moonshot” goal of building 500,000 new homes by 2032 and its commitment to transforming NYCHA. Finally, the announcement comes as the Adams administration is advocating for passage of the City of Yes for Housing Opportunity, the most pro-housing zoning proposal in New York City’s history that will help build a little more housing in every neighborhood. 

 

On Sunday, the City Council voted to pass the FY25 Budget. After Friday’s announcement, New Yorkers from across the city, including housing advocates, praised the budget for its wide-ranging investments that help protect public safety, rebuild the economy, and make New York City more livable.  

 

“Despite facing unprecedented challenges, our administration and the City Council passed a collaborative budget that addresses the issues that cost New Yorkers the most, including housing,” saidMayor Adams. “Together, we are investing a historic $2 billion in capital funds to HPD and NYCHA, bringing our total investment in affordable housing to more than $26 billion — a new record level. We must throw open the doors to new solutions and housing in our city to keep New York a city for everyone. With these investments, we are going to build to build a city that is more affordable, and that provides opportunity and security for all.” 

 

"Investing in affordable housing is an absolute priority for the future of our city," said First Deputy Mayor Sheena Wright. "This additional $2 billion in funding for preserving and building affordable and public housing is a huge win for our community, and we are grateful for our partners in the City Council for recognizing how important housing is for all New Yorkers. Our administration is committed to our expansive housing agenda. With the ‘City of Yes for Housing Opportunity’ and combined with this significant investment today, we are confident in our trajectory to increase housing opportunities for all New Yorkers.”   

 

"Making good on our promise to increase affordable housing, support cultural institutions, and invest in libraries, we have funded and restored critical services for New Yorkers thanks to responsible fiscal management,” said Deputy Mayor for Housing, Economic Development, and Workforce Maria Torres-Springer. “With an additional $2 billion in funding for affordable and public housing, we are building off our legislative wins in Albany, advancing our pathbreaking‘City of Yes’proposal, and continuing to demonstrate how Mayor Adams is the most pro-housing mayor in our city’s history. We thank the City Council for their partnership and shared commitment to improving the lives of all New Yorkers through this year’s budget process.” 

 

“Homes provide stability and a base to build from, and, in funding housing, New York City is recognizing the critical value quality affordable homes provide,” saidNew York City Executive Director for Housing Leila Bozorg.“The additional housing funds announced via this budget deal mark a record $26 billion investment in housing, cementing this administration’s record as the most pro-housing in history. With this added funding, New York City will be able to build and preserve more affordable housing, develop more supportive housing, and renovate more apartments for NYCHA residents. At a time when finding an affordable home is a real challenge, this historic investment in housing is a crucial investment in New Yorkers’ futures.” 

 

“An additional $2 billion isn’t an abstract number, it is a decisive and deliberate investment in confronting the housing crisis our agency works to tackle every day,” said HPD Commissioner Adolfo Carrion Jr. “The mayor’s commitment marks yet another important step towards giving us the resources for more affordable housing units and the city’s collective efforts to create enough new homes so that every New Yorker will have access to a safe, accessible home. We are grateful to Mayor Adams for his leadership and appreciate all our partners, in and out of government, that work with us to make New York a more equitable city.” 

 

“It will take every tool in the city’s toolbox to address our housing crisis,” saidNew York City Department of City Planning (DCP) Director Dan Garodnick. “This historic investment in the Fiscal Year 2025 Adopted Budget sets us up for success, and will work in tandem with our ‘City of Yes for Housing Opportunity’ proposal to create opportunities across the city, help working families thrive in New York, and create the housing New Yorkers need.” 

 

"The preservation of NYCHA's housing stock is absolutely critical amid the current housing crisis," said NYCHA Chief Executive Officer Lisa Bova-Hiatt. "Equally important is the improvement of the quality of life for the one in 17 New Yorkers who call NYCHA home. With this funding, Mayor Adams and the New York City Council have ensured additional, holistic renovations to NYCHA campuses across the city through the PACT program and Public Housing Preservation Trust. We are incredibly grateful for their prioritization of NYCHA residents, and their ongoing dedication to public housing in the greatest city in the world." 

 

The $2 billion in capital funds across FY25 and FY26 will deliver $700 million towards NYCHA, primarily to support PACT and Public Housing Trust projects. These extensive renovation projects will result in critical upgrades and improved conditions for NYCHA homes and campuses. Recent PACT projects include updates to units, such as redone bathrooms, kitchens, and new flooring; as well as upgrades across properties, including updated heat and hot water systems, refreshed building entryways, free WiFi, and enhanced security systems. The scope of specific updates for properties are developed through engagement processes involving NYCHA residents.  

  

The remaining $1.3 billion will support HPD programs that focus on preserving and building new affordable housing, supportive housing, and homeownership. At a time when low vacancy rates and high housing costs underscore the need for affordable housing, this investment will result in the construction of new affordable homes for lower-income households, create more supportive homes for those who can benefit from on-site supportive housing, offer the opportunity to build generational wealth through access to affordable homeownership, and fund preservation work to improve housing quality, enabling tenants to stay in their homes. 

 

Thanks to the Adams administration’s ongoing strong fiscal management, which was bolstered by better-than-expected revenue growth, the administration overcame unprecedented challenges in this budget cycle to stabilize the city’s financial outlook and close a $7.1 billion budget gap. Now, because of steady, decisive decision making, this Adopted Budget allows the Adams administration and the City Council to reinvest in initiatives and programs that make New York City more affordable and that address the three things that cost New Yorkers the most — housing, child care, and health care — and invest billions of dollars of city resources in critical areas, including early childhood education, cultural organizations, parks, public safety, housing, health care, and more. 

 

Through a set of carefully crafted zoning changesCity of Yes for Housing Opportunity will increase overall housing supply across the five boroughsDCP released the draft environmental impact statement of the proposal, which estimates it could produce as many as 108,850 new homes over the next 15 years. The proposal includes lifting arbitrary and costly parking mandates for new residential construction; the Universal Affordability Preference, a bonus allowing roughly 20 percent more housing in developments, as long as the additional homes are permanently affordable at an average of 60 percent of the area median income; transit-oriented development and Town Center zoning, which would allow three-to-five story apartment buildings to be built near transit and along commercial corridors, respectively; and allowing homeowners to add accessory homes like backyard cottages. 

 

Additional proposal components include facilitating conversion of non-residential buildings like offices to housing; re-legalizing small and shared housing models with common facilities like kitchens; allowing development on large lots known as campuses that are today limited by outdated rules from using existing development rights; and creating new zoning districts that would allow more housing, including mandatory affordable housing, that had previously been restricted by state law. City agencies are also advancing a slate of related, non-zoning efforts to guide implementation of the proposals, such as rules for HPD’s administration of the Universal Affordability Preference, as well as technical assistance and financing tools to assist homeowners who want to add secondary homes onto their properties. 

 

In addition to City of Yes for Housing Opportunity, the Adams administration is using every tool available tool possible to address the city’s housing crisis. Mayor Adams and members of the administration successfully advocated for new tools in this year’s New York state budget that will spur the creation of urgently needed housing. These include a new tax incentive for multifamily rental construction, a tax incentive program to encourage office conversions to create more affordable units, lifting the arbitrary “floor-to-area ratio” cap that held back affordable housing production in certain high-demand areas of the city, and the ability to create a pilot program to legalize and make safe basement apartments. 

 

Under Mayor Adams’ leadership, the city financed a record number of affordable homes in 2023 and is ahead of schedule on a 2024 State of the City commitment to advance two dozen 100-percent affordable housing projects on city-owned land this year through the 24 in ‘24” initiative. Mayor Adams has also taken steps to cut red tape and speed up the delivery of much-needed housing, including through the Green Fast Track for Housing, a streamlined environmental review process for qualifying small- and medium-sized housing projects; the Office Conversion Accelerator, an interagency effort to guide buildings that wish to convert through city bureaucracy; and other initiatives of the Building and Land Use Approval Streamlining Taskforce. 

 

City of Yes for Housing Opportunity is the third of the Adams administration’s three “City of Yes” initiatives to update New York City’s zoning for a more sustainable, prosperous, and affordable city. The first — “City of Yes for Carbon Neutrality”— was adopted by the City Council last December. The second — “City of Yes for Economic Opportunity” was adopted by the City Council in June. 

  

"We thank Mayor Adams and the City Council for adding $2 billion to the housing capital budget including support for additional staff to administer the housing program and distribute the funds,” said Reverend Peter Cook, executive director, New York State Council of Churches. “The city has for years faced an affordable housing crisis. It has not, however, offered enough housing capital to come close to meeting the demand. It has been discouraging to tell faith communities, which want to build affordable housing on their property, about the limited public dollars for housing and the corresponding length of the approval process due to lack of money and staffing. While much more is needed, 2 billion is a big improvement which will result in more city residents being able to find an affordable and permanent home."   

  

“The PACT Program plays a critical role in preserving New York City’s affordable housing portfolio,” said Matthew Rooney, principal, RDC Development and CEO, MDG Design & Construction; Susan Camerata, principal, RDC Development and chief financial officer, Wavecrest Management. “In partnership with NYCHA, it allows companies like RDC Development to provide comprehensive upgrades and enhanced social services to improve the quality of life for countless New Yorkers, while ensuring homes remain affordable. Thank you to Mayor Adams, NYCHA, HPD, and our countless partners across the city for continuing to invest in affordable housing and for giving us the tools to transform the lives of residents,” 

 

DOC DASHBOARD UPDATE: NYC Comptroller Releases New Monthly Data on Department of Correction Operations

 

The New York City Comptroller’s Office released its monthly update to the Department of Correction (DOC) Dashboard, available here. 

Key monthly DOC metrics show: 

  • DOC jails housed 6,351 individuals total as of June 14, 44 more people than in May.  
  • 2,084 individuals entered DOC custody in May, 169 more people than in April.  
    • DOC discharged 2,051 people in May, 98 more people than in April.  
  • The average length of a person detained in DOC custody was 102 days in May, a 3 day decrease from April.  
  • In May, the average percentage of staff who were out sick was 6%, and the average percentage of staff who were on medically restricted leave was 5%; no change from prior month.  
  • Incarcerated individuals missed medical appointments 12,224 times in May. 
  • Incidents of violence increased in every category excluding slashings and stabbings: 
    • 63 recorded assaults, 8 more than in April.  
    • 575 fights broke out, 65 more than in April.  
    • 17 slashings and stabbings occurred, 6 less than in April.  
    • No one reportedly died in custody in May. At least 3 people have died in custody on Rikers in 2024.   

The Comptroller’s dashboard, first published in August 2022, monitors pervasive issues in the City’s jails, including staff absenteeism, missed medical appointments, and incidents of violence among detained people and staff. It also tracks the jail population every month and length of stay. The Comptroller’s office publishes data to this dashboard monthly to provide increased transparency and accountability over the City’s jail system. 

View the DOC Dashboard here. 

Governor Hochul Announces the Next Phase of Subway Service Enhancements and Extended Service to the Beach

MAYOR ADAMS, D.A. BRAGG ANNOUNCE NEW MIDTOWN COMMUNITY IMPROVEMENT COALITION TO ENHANCE QUALITY OF LIFE, PROTECT PUBLIC SAFETY IN MIDTOWN MANHATTAN

 

Coalition Includes More Than 20 City Agencies and Community Partners to Create a Cleaner, Safer, and More Vibrant Midtown Business District 

New York City Mayor Eric Adams and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg, Jr. today announced the launch of the Midtown Community Improvement Coalition, a new interagency quality of life improvement hub that brings together law enforcement, elected officials, and community and business leaders to address public safety and quality of life issues in Midtown Manhattan. Modeled off the successful 125th Street Business Improvement District (BID) Interagency Hub, the Midtown Community Improvement Coalition includes more than 20 city agencies, service providers, and other government and community partners.

The coalition will work to address a range of public safety issues, including retail theft, substance use, the mental health crisis, beautification, illegal scaffolding, unlicensed cannabis shops, and more. The coalition will deploy teams to conduct regular walkthroughs to observe issues in real time and speak with local community members and businesses on the ground. They will also identify specific individuals in the area who may need connections to services, such as housing or medical care, and make referrals to the appropriate city agency or service provider.

“With the launch of the Midtown Community Improvement Coalition we are doubling down on our commitment to improving quality of life, protecting public safety, and beautifying these historic and beloved neighborhoods for working-class New Yorkers,” said Mayor Adams. “Government working hand in hand with the community is crucial to creating a vibrant, cleaner, and more livable city where all New Yorkers can thrive, and that’s why the community’s input is so important to our success. Thank you to all of our partners for working so collaboratively to make our city better.”

“Midtown Manhattan is essential to the economic well-being of our city — and the entire region. It’s among the busiest commercial districts in the entire world, home to thousands of permanent residents, iconic tourist attractions, restaurants, retailers, and critical transportation hubs that are the gateways to our city,” said Manhattan District Attorney Bragg. “This new coalition, which combines the resources and expertise of a variety of agencies and providers, will enhance public safety and quality of life for everyone in the area. We have already proven the success of these inter-agency collaborations through the 125th Street Hub, and I know we will be just as successful in Midtown. I want to thank Mayor Adams and his administration, the NYPD, the Garment District Alliance, and Times Square Alliance for their commitment to realizing this collaborative effort.”

The coalition is the result of an ongoing partnership between the Adams administration and community partners dating back to 2023 focused on addressing community of life and public safety concerns within the geographic areas of 34th Street to 45th Street, between 7th Avenue and 9th Avenue, as well as 34th Street to 37th Street on 8th Avenue. It is co-chaired by Tom Harris, president of the Times Square Alliance; Barbara Blair, president of the Garment District Alliance; and Brian Weber, president of the Midtown South Precinct Community Council. In 2023, Mayor Adams launched the ‘Community Link’ initiative spearheaded by First Deputy Mayor Sheena Wright. Community Link brings together various city departments and agencies to work together with the community and business leaders to address complex and often chronic community complaints that require a multi-agency response. Participating city agencies include:

  • Mayor’s Office of Community Mental Health
  • Fire Department of the City of New York
  • New York City Department of Buildings
  • New York City Department of Consumer and Worker Protection
  • New York City Department of Environmental Protection
  • New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
  • New York City Department of Homeless Services
  • New York City Department of Parks and Recreation
  • New York City Department of Sanitation (DSNY)
  • New York City Department of Small Business Services
  • New York City Department of Transportation
  • New York City Police Department (NYPD)
  • Office of the Special Narcotics Prosecutor for the City of New York

Since its inception, Community Link has already convened five community improvement coalitions throughout the five boroughs. Over the last 18 months, these coalitions have responded to over 800 complaints and conducted over 600 operations to address quality of life concerns raised by the communities they serve.

“We are thrilled that the Midtown West neighborhood has joined forces with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and the Adams administration to develop and implement 2024 solutions for the quality-of-life challenges we see on the corridor in midtown between Penn Station and the Port Authority that balances the needs of those suffering on our streets with those of residents and visitors to our neighborhood,” said Tom Harris, president, Times Square Alliance. “I am confident that if we all work together, our neighborhood will work better for all New Yorkers.”

“The Garment District Alliance is gratified that Mayor Eric Adams and Manhattan District Attorney Bragg are taking up the challenge of combating social disorder on Eighth Avenue between Penn Station and the Port Authority,” said Barbara Blair, president, Garment District Alliance. “The challenges in this area have always been there but grew exponentially during the pandemic. The concentration of social service entities adds an additional layer. The Midtown Community Improvement Coalition will directly address conditions in a coordinated way. The causes of public realm disorder are complex. This Coalition is an opportunity for the Sheriff's office, NYPD, DSNY, and others to respond as a team. In the first weeks that we have been working together we have collaborated to close loopholes and worked in a results-driven process. With 57 hotels in the district welcoming millions of stays a year, commuters using the two of the largest transportation hubs in the country, office workers, and residents will all be beneficiaries of the Midtown Community Improvement Coalition."

“The Midtown South Precinct Community Council welcomes Mayor Adams and District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s ongoing commitment to address chronic public safety and quality-of-life issues along the 8th Avenue corridor,” said Brian Weber, president, Midtown South Community Council. “We are thankful for our partnership with the Garment District Alliance and Time Square Alliance, and the support of the Midtown South Precinct, the NYPD, the District Attorney Office, and the Mayor’s Office for collaborating on the formation of this coalition tasked with facilitating solutions beyond the scope of singular city or state agencies. Coordinating and utilizing existing tools and resources across a range of social services and enforcement agencies, we endeavor to ensure the safety, health, and well-being of all residing, working, commuting, or visiting this area daily.”

“Our Community Improvement Coalitions have had a lot of success cleaning up various areas around the city, and their work has been second to none,” said NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell. “The partnerships they have formed continue to provide tangible results in improving the quality of life for the people of this great city.”

“Undertakings such as this one are exactly why the Community Improvement Coalitions were formed,” said NYPD Deputy Inspector Maurice Williams. “We have the resources and knowledge to make an immediate and long-lasting impact on this community and are eager to bring about a positive change that residents and visitors will be able to feel.”

“We look forward to continued collaboration with all our partners as we develop innovative strategies to address public safety and quality of life issues impacting midtown Manhattan. This critically important area, which includes Times Square and the 8th Avenue corridor, serves as a major transportation hub for millions of people and as a preeminent center of entertainment and cultural attractions for visitors and city residents alike,” said Bridget G. Brennan, Special Narcotics Prosecutor, City of New York. “I applaud Mayor Eric Adams, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, and all of our other partners for their leadership in listening to communities, and for drawing on an array of perspectives and expertise to secure the safety and vibrancy of midtown.”