New York Daily News

PUBLIC HOSING

Tenants riled Blaz wants pricey rentals on their grounds

- BY GREG B. SMITH

ON HIS way out of City Hall, Mayor Michael Bloomberg tried but failed to raise money for cash-strapped NYCHA by building luxury apartments on public land.

Tenants feared they would be displaced. Elected officials filed suit to stop it. The entire proposal collapsed.

Last week, Mayor de Blasio put forth his version of the same idea — build hundreds of apartments at two city Housing Authority developmen­ts — Wyckoff Houses in Brooklyn and Holmes Towers on the Upper East Side — half of them at market rates no NYCHA resident could afford. His proposal cut the number of luxury units from 80% to 50%, but he’s already running into the same blowback Bloomberg experience­d: Tenants and elected officials are blasting the plan as being poorly explained and badly executed.

“How are you going to have people here paying $200, $300 rent, then you’ve got tenants in a brand-new building paying $1,500, $2,000?” said one tenant at Wyckoff Gardens last week.

“I think they’re trying to force us out.”

De Blasio’s plan grants longterm leases to developers to build more than 1,000 apartments on “underutili­zed” NYCHA parking lots, playground­s and green space at the two developmen­ts.

That’s stage one. Ultimately he wants 3,500 “market rate” apartments built on “high value” NYCHA land to raise $600 million over 10 years.

Rent generated by the luxury apartments would help trim NYCHA’s budget gap, which will be $98 million this year. Wyckoff and Holmes were picked first because they’re in high-rent neighborho­ods.

“This is an area where we could realize significan­t revenue to the authority,” NYCHA Chairwoman Shola Olatoye told the Daily News.

At Wyckoff, where a handpainte­d sign reads, “All is Well,” NYCHA plans up to 650 units on two “underutili­zed” parking lots. This would more than double the size of the 550-unit developmen­t.

With 300 market-rate apartments, that’s a gold mine in a neighborho­od where two-bedrooms go for $3,000 a month or more.

At Holmes Towers, where a 400-unit high-rise is planned for a NYCHA playground on E. 92nd St., market-rate two-bedrooms rent for $5,000 down the street.

The mayor promised to fully explain his proposal to tenants, neighbors and elected officials. Bloomberg was attacked for failing to consult the community.

But residents and elected officials are once again feeling shut out.

Last Wednesday, before the plan was publicly released, residents at Wyckoff and Holmes got robo-calls from Olatoye stating that NYCHA “will have the opportunit­y to build new housing that will bring additional revenue for repairs and capital improvemen­ts in your developmen­t.”

There was no reference to the hundreds of apartments going up next door, or that half the apartments would rent at sky-high rates.

Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer said the vague call only confused and frightened tenants who fear NYCHA secretly wants to sell the land out from under them.

“You can't do robo-calls on

a plan nobody understand­s,” Brewer said.

Valerie Bell, 56, who’s lived at Wyckoff for 50 years, got the robo-call about 8:30 p.m. Wednesday. All it did was make her mad.

“She just said there was going to be a meeting, but she didn't give a date,” Bell said. “It wasn’t like what the newspaper said,” holding up a copy of the Daily News that spelled out the numbers of units.

Some tenants also fear all those new market-rate tenants will drive up the price of everything in their already expensive neighborho­ods.

Across from Wyckoff Gardens is a longtime bodega. A block away is Brooklyn Circus, where they sell $110 T-shirts and “varsity" jackets for nearly $300.

“With the market-rate income, what’s going to be happening to a neighborho­od that’s already stressed?” asked Beverly Corbin, 61, a longtime Wyckoff resident. “The people who are high income, they’re not going to be shopping at the local bodega. We already lost a Chinese restaurant and a laundromat.”

On the Upper East Side, Rose Bergin, district chair of the Manhattan South Council of NYCHA Tenant Associatio­n Presidents, questioned how NYCHA will shoehorn all those units into such a tight slot. “They're nuts. They’re absolutely insane,” she said. “We’re on top of each other as it is.”

Councilman Ben Kallos, whose district includes Holmes, said de Blasio promised to meet personally with residents next month, though Kallos still thinks the plan is wrong.

“This is going to demoralize residents, seeing that their light and air and playground­s have no value and the city is just going to wall them in,” he said.

Congresswo­man Carolyn Maloney (D-Manhattan) fired off a letter to NYCHA questionin­g how it could justify “taking light, air and playground space from residents of Holmes Towers in order to balance its budget.”

Public Housing Committee Chairman Ritchie Torres praised the plan for raising money, but suggested NYCHA make sure revenue generated by this plan is steered first to repair the affected developmen­ts.

 ??  ?? Mayor de Blasio has dusted off a Bloomberg-era plan to build market-housing on some NYCHA projects’ vacant space, like parking lot (far r.) of Wyckoff Gardens in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn (r.). The plan upsets tenants like Valerie Bell (bottom).
Mayor de Blasio has dusted off a Bloomberg-era plan to build market-housing on some NYCHA projects’ vacant space, like parking lot (far r.) of Wyckoff Gardens in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn (r.). The plan upsets tenants like Valerie Bell (bottom).
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