Slideshow-1 Slideshow-2 Slideshow-3 Slideshow-4

Other Info


Bronx Gallery Random Image

Bronx Gallery Random Images

Talk Network
Delaware Chat
Pennsylvania Forum
Ohio Forum
New York Chat



Community Action for Safe Apartments watching for corporate landlords

Community Action for Safe Apartments watching for corporate landlords

Correction
An article in the July 8 edition of Bronx Boro News about tactics by some private equity-backed developers who acquire rent-regulated buildings to force tenants out inaccurately identified Pinnacle Group as the owner of a building at 1005 Walton Ave. in the Bronx. While the article correctly stated that the property is managed by Chestnut Holdings, Chestnut owns the building, not Pinnacle. The News regrets the error.

*****

The Bronx’s real estate market is hot, but instead of worrying about gentrification, tenant advocates fear that private equity firms snapping up apartment buildings may become a new breed of slumlord.

Community Action for Safe Apartments is working with tenants in 19 of the estimated 277 buildings in the borough bought in recent years by private-equity-backed developers like Pinnacle, SG2, Ocelot, Normandy, Urban American Management and others.

The concern is that the only way to squeeze the high returns demanded by private equity firms from rent-regulated units is to force existing tenants out and rent the units at market rates.

Developers counter that the long-term profit prospects are also attractive.

Mayor Bloomberg recently signed Local Law 7, a new anti-harassment law giving tenants added protection from landlord pressure, so advocates are watching for tactics owners sometimes use to convince rent-regulated tenants to give up their leases, like eviction threats, contrived arrears charges, neglected repairs and high-pressure buyout offers.

Carla Brooks, a mother of five who has lived in a rent-controlled building at 1005 Walton Ave. for 12 years, and has a Section 8 rent subsidy, said she is being threatened with eviction over supposed arrears.

Chestnut Holdings, which owns the building, contends that her portion of the monthly rent nearly doubled starting in January.

But Brooks said she didn’t receive her new lease until March, and even that only listed the total amount - part of which is paid by Section 8. It was only in April that she received a letter from the city telling her that her rent obligation had increased.

“Now, [Chestnut] says I owe them $1,500, and they’re starting eviction proceedings,” Brooks said.

Chestnut’s lawyer, James Mantea, blamed the Section 8 bureaucracy for the delays and confusion, and said the court case was meant to pressure the city Housing Authority, which administers the Section 8 program.

“Sometimes, you have to have an active case pending to get Section 8 [administrators] to take action and make adjustments,” Mantea said. “Ms. Brooks was never in danger of losing her apartment.”

Brooks also complains that plumbing work has left her family of six without toilets or sinks for more than a month.

“The only running water we’ve had has been the bathtub,” Brooks said.

Other tenants have complained gaping holes left by stalled plumbing work have led to rat infestations.

Mantea said the building-wide plumbing renovation is being held up by a few tenants refusing workers access to their apartments.

SOURCE

 

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...
Email This Post Email This Post





“If You Don’t Ask You Don’t Get” .. To Teen Program Activists RE Funds

 ”If You Don’t Ask You Don’t Get” .. To Teen Program Activists RE Funds

 A Bronx neighborhood has done an end run around a city agency to get an after-school program for its teens, after years without one.

John Fratta, district manager for Community Board 11, has been complaining for months about the lack of after-school programs for local teens.

But the Department of Youth and Community Development responded that since no one in the district had applied for funding when they should have years ago, local kids were out of luck.

So Fratta, politicians and community leaders got creative.

The Mosholu Montefiore Community Center went grant hunting and secured $100,000 from the Boys and Girls Club, hopefully to be matched by the city Housing Authority for a program in the Eastchester Gardens Community Room this year.

“I know deep in my heart you are not going to get the bad kids off the street no matter how you try,” Fratta said.

“But we’re going to get those marginal kids that might become bad kids if they don’t have something to do.”

He said several other teen programs outside of the city youth agency are in the works, including one at an unused gym at Jacobi Medical Center that might become a community center.

Leaders are looking for funding for a Police Athletic League program.

Read more..

 

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...
Email This Post Email This Post





NYPD Retiree Getting The Boot From Morrisania Apartment

reti600.jpg 

“I know the lease says I have to go,” Harold Gregory says. “I can read.”

NYPD Retiree Getting The Boot From Morrisania Apartment

HAROLD GREGORY, 52, was sitting at a desk in his peeling, leaky three-bedroom apartment, in a squat city-owned building on a dreary block of Morrisania in the Bronx. “This building sometimes lacks heat and hot water,” he said, “but it’s better than dealing with a personal landlord.”

Mr. Gregory’s desire to stay put has made him a thorn in the city’s side. He is the first retired alumnus of an 11-year-old city program that waives income ceilings and waiting lists to allow New York City police officers to live in low-rent public housing, as long as they perform some community service and leave when they retire.

Therein lies the problem: Although Mr. Gregory retired as a sergeant in 2005, he still refuses to move out of his apartment, which he shares with his grown daughter and rents for $689 a month.

“I know the lease says I have to go,” said Mr. Gregory, a bulky man with a patience born of 22 years walking a beat. “I can read. But I’ve been respectable, and I’ve been a good citizen. Why should I have to go? All I did was retire honorably from my job. If I had a regular lease, I’d be allowed to stay.”

That argument has not persuaded city officials, who have been trying to evict Mr. Gregory for about a year, taking him to court and eventually sending marshals to his apartment. These officials point out that the program, which seeks to improve safety at public housing and help community relations, is explicitly limited by federal law to working police officers. Currently, 41 police officers live in public housing through the program.

Read more..

 

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...
Email This Post Email This Post





Your Slip and Fall Case Happened In Manhattan, Not The Bronx!

Your Slip and Fall Case Happened In Manhattan, Not The Bronx!

The Bronx is up and Marble Hill is down - an appeals court has ruled.

Although Marble Hill is attached to the Bronx, Appellate Judge Joseph Sullivan says a woman who sued the Housing Authority in the Bronx for a slip-and-fall accident in her building at 5480 Broadway will have to refile in Manhattan.

Sullivan, who was born and raised in the Bronx, reversed a lower court decision and gave Vitaline Montesano, 56, a bit of a geography lesson.

Read more..

 

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...
Email This Post Email This Post