"Bills included will end the vacancy bonus, which allows landlords to increase rents by 20% whenever a regulated unit is empty and jack up rents until the apartment is no longer covered by regulations."
It's a good day for New Yorkers.
More like it's a good day for the New Yorkers these laws will cover, bad for the ones it won't, and bad insofar as increasing the housing crisis.
"Bills included will end the vacancy bonus, which allows landlords to increase rents by 20% whenever a regulated unit is empty and jack up rents until the apartment is no longer covered by regulations."
It's a good day for New Yorkers.
But this bill doesn't tackle NIMBYs.Good. Fuck you, you neo-feudalist enablers of the Rentier Economy. I say FUCK YOU.
Yup.More like it's a good day for the New Yorkers these laws will cover, bad for the ones it won't, and bad insofar as increasing the housing crisis.
this bill is simply replacing an expiring bill and closing some loopholes that one left open for decades.
the new laws will certainly keep the bar low and work as leverage against landlords trying to raise our rent as well. The victory is for ALL tenants, not just for those under rent-stabilization.More like it's a good day for the New Yorkers these laws will cover, bad for the ones it won't, and bad insofar as increasing the housing crisis.
I was making a joke about the "neo-feudalist enablers" actually being NIMBYs.this bill is simply replacing an expiring bill and closing some loopholes that one left open for decades.
"Bills included will end the vacancy bonus, which allows landlords to increase rents by 20% whenever a regulated unit is empty and jack up rents until the apartment is no longer covered by regulations."
It's a good day for New Yorkers.
Individual apartment improvements will be capped at $15,000 per 15 years.
Preventing landlords from paying for improvements to properties via rent increases seems like a great way to encourage slums.the new laws will certainly keep the bar low and work as leverage against landlords trying to raise our rent as well. The victory is for ALL tenants, not just for those under rent-stabilization.
Not perfect but it's a start.
I can't see this improving the housing crisis. Take the power away from the NIMBYs completely.
got youI was making a joke about the "neo-feudalist enablers" actually being NIMBYs.
landlords get tax breaks in the city for apartment improvements thoPreventing landlords from paying for improvements to properties via rent increases seems like a great way to encourage slums.
Rent stabilization is a band-aid over the problem of supply, which these laws at best do not tackle at all. Which means they're not actually helping long-term with stopping rents from rising.
I'm not too sure how to take that one either but the wording in the article leaves a lot to be desired. Not sure I even understand what that means.Not a fan of the capping improvements to 15,000 for 15 years, though. Sounds really bad.
Not a fan of the capping improvements to 15,000 for 15 years, though. Sounds really bad.This bill, like i said prior, is closing loopholes left open by expiring rent laws. It was never going to end NIMBYism but it will improve tenants rights
got you
WTF $15,000 max per 15 years?
Thats like 1 bathroom or half a kitchen.
Does none of them know how much it cost to renovate?
Well, it will provide more fodder for the economics community to have things to unanimously agree are counter-productive.If there's one thing that always solves a housing crisis, it's rent control.
You note a interesting paradigm with "luxury" housing being built in 'the hood'. Even with 30% affordable units in the building, you're still having a dramatically negative impact on the housing market of that particular area. To put it plainly you're reducing the total number of affordable units in that neighborhood as opposed to increasing it. If you did the same thing in a neighborhood like forest hills the opposite would be true. You're increasing housing stock and affordability in that particular area. Because of NIMBYism which is ultimately motivated by greed we choose to work backwards in solving this problemWhy is everyone anti-rent control?
NY isn't SF. There's plenty of new housing stock being built, particularly in the outer boroughs, the problem is that it's on the luxury side of things. The argument is that developers say the powers that be (property taxes, union workers, etc) only make It feasible to build luxury housing, but seeing luxury housing being built in neighborhoods that are the very definition of 'the hood' makes me think that's just smoke and mirrors.
Why is everyone anti-rent control?
NY isn't SF. There's plenty of new housing stock being built, particularly in the outer boroughs, the problem is that it's on the luxury side of things. The argument is that developers say the powers that be (property taxes, union workers, etc) only make It feasible to build luxury housing, but seeing luxury housing being built in neighborhoods that are the very definition of 'the hood' makes me think that's just smoke and mirrors and a cash grab for higher end tenants who are running out (which you see on the retail side, some monied parts of manhattan look like the 80's as far as empty storefronts are concerned, lol)
You note a interesting paradigm with "luxury" housing being built in 'the hood'. Even with 30% affordable units in the building, you're still having a dramatically negative impact on the housing market of that particular area. To put it plainly you're reducing the total number of affordable units in that neighborhood as opposed to increasing it. If you did the same thing in a neighborhood like forest hills the opposite would be true. You're increasing housing stock and affordability in that particular area. Because of NIMBYism which is ultimately motivated by greed we choose to work backwards in solving this problem
Not really the reason. They are building there because building in not 'the hood' doesn't have the problem of NIMBYism and policy as a result of NIMBYism stopping them from doing so.They're building in those areas because it's cheaper to buy the land there.
Speculative housing has always been built in underdeveloped neighborhoods.Not really the reason. They are building there because building in not 'the hood' doesn't have the problem of NIMBYism and policy as a result of NIMBYism stopping them from doing so.
You're right but that doesn't really take from my pointSpeculative housing has always been built in underdeveloped neighborhoods.
Get rid of Charlie Baker.
couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of bastards
i would say make it happen all over the country, but other places don't charge 2200 for a 1 bed hole in the wall
Except this is NYC and not San Francisco. The problem is not stagnation of new supply. The city is insanely densely built, moreso than just about any other city in the world.I was making a joke about the "neo-feudalist enablers" actually being NIMBYs.
$2200? I'd be fucking over the moon if I could get a 1/1 for that in SF, or even anywhere in the immediate Bay Area. Seems NYC is doing comparatively way better.couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of bastards
i would say make it happen all over the country, but other places don't charge 2200 for a 1 bed hole in the wall
Yes, it's NYC. When building height/density restrictions mean that you're not able to replace an existing building with a new building that is able to contain the same number of housing units, it's the same damn fundamental problem. I do not disagree that the geography means that NY will always be expensive relative to other cities, but land development restrictions from existing residents and/or property owners to limit the amount of people who can move into a neighborhood is a problem even there.Except this is NYC and not San Francisco. The problem is not stagnation of new supply. The city is insanely densely built, moreso than just about any other city in the world.
The cost of land, and thus real estate, in NYC will always be absurdly high due to physical limitation in expansion. Opportunistic rich people parking their money by gobbling up real estate to make a low-effort buck are the problem in a place like this. There is just no way to get around it in a place like this.
Yes, it's NYC. When building height/density restrictions mean that you're not able to replace an existing building with a new building that is able to contain the same number of housing units, it's the same damn fundamental problem. I do not disagree that the geography means that NY will always be expensive relative to other cities, but land development restrictions from existing residents and/or property owners to limit the amount of people who can move into a neighborhood is a problem even there.
My point is that at that level of density, adding more people is not necessarily a good thing, in addition to the space limitations. Quality of life relative to density operates on a bell curve just like everything else. You jam too many people in that small of a space and it begins to detrimentally affect quality of life. NYC has different problems than west coast cities exactly for this reason.Yes, it's NYC. When building height/density restrictions mean that you're not able to replace an existing building with a new building that is able to contain the same number of housing units, it's the same damn fundamental problem. I do not disagree that the geography means that NY will always be expensive relative to other cities, but land development restrictions from existing residents and/or property owners to limit the amount of people who can move into a neighborhood is a problem even there.
"Bills included will end the vacancy bonus, which allows landlords to increase rents by 20% whenever a regulated unit is empty and jack up rents until the apartment is no longer covered by regulations."
It's a good day for New Yorkers.
Yes it is. Tokyo does just fine. This attitude is a huge part of the problem.My point is that at that level of density, adding more people is not necessarily a good thing, in addition to the space limitations. Quality of life relative to density operates on a bell curve just like everything else. You jam too many people in that small of a space and it begins to detrimentally affect quality of life. NYC has different problems than west coast cities exactly for this reason.