New York Daily News

Albany Democrats must pass Good Cause Eviction

- BY NYDIA VELÁZQUEZ

In the 2022 midterm elections, New York Democrats suffered what can generously be described as a disappoint­ing night, as the Empire State delivered four seats in the House of Representa­tives to Republican­s. In 2024, the control of the House is on the line with the Republican Party holding a threadbare majority.

With the stakes so high, we absolutely cannot afford a repeat of 2022 in New York. However, if Democrats fail to take meaningful action to address the housing affordabil­ity crisis and protect tenants, we will be doing ourselves absolutely no favors.

A recent poll from Marist found that the vast majority of New Yorkers are concerned about housing affordabil­ity. Across the state and across the country, housing costs and rents are higher than ever. Americans are expressing their legitimate concerns about the housing crisis to elected officials from city council members up to the president.

President Biden recently told his aides that “the challenge of affording a home is the main complaint he hears” out on the campaign trail. The president has expressed concern that the high cost of housing could be a top issue on the campaign trail this November.

Biden is correct, and policymake­rs in New York should heed his message. As rents continue to climb, we risk appearing out of touch with the daily experience­s of New Yorkers if we fail to embrace tenant protection­s and other measures that actually address affordabil­ity.

The housing affordabil­ity crisis has reached epic proportion­s in every part of New York State. From Buffalo to Long Island to Ithaca, the rent has simply gotten too high and too many New Yorkers have already lost or are at risk of losing their homes.

Some tend to think of this crisis as a problem that only impacts New York City and the major urban centers of our state, but unaffordab­le housing costs are sadly hitting suburban and rural areas in New York just as hard. New Yorkers are rightfully demanding that the people they voted into office address the skyrocketi­ng cost of living and help working people stay in their homes.

One key solution to this crisis already exists: Good Cause Eviction, which protects tenants from unreasonab­le rent hikes and retaliator­y or discrimina­tory evictions. Good Cause Eviction already has the backing of many senators and Assembly members in Albany.

Senate Democrats have made clear they will not make a deal on the budget without “protection­s similar to those in the Good Cause Eviction legislatio­n,” and the Assembly majority has committed to “enacting statewide policies that protect tenants from arbitrary and capricious rent increases and unreasonab­le evictions of paying tenants.” This is welcome news for all New Yorkers to hear as budget negotiatio­ns get underway.

As with all things, the devil will be in the details. There are some calling for a “swiss cheese” version of a Good Cause Eviction bill that would require localities outside of the five boroughs to opt-in as well as provisions that would deny tenants’ protection­s based on the size of their buildings or the size of their landlords’ real estate portfolios.

This watered-down Good Cause would devastate thousands of tenants across the Empire State and severely weaken the impact of any bill in the housing package. These carve-outs could leave at least 67% of non-New York City renters (872,000 households) vulnerable to predatory rent hikes and retaliator­y evictions. This is unacceptab­le and fails to truly address the crisis we face.

By protecting only some but not all tenants, a patchwork network of protection­s would be impossible to enforce, weakening even municipali­ties who have chosen to opt-in ability to hold bad landlords accountabl­e.

If Good Cause Eviction fails to move forward this legislativ­e cycle, it will represent a major win for the real estate lobby. Over the past five years, top real estate organizati­ons have spent nearly $14 million lobbying against Good Cause Eviction. We absolutely cannot let special interests get in the way of enacting policies that can offer crucial protection­s to New Yorkers who are fighting to keep their homes.

We have just a few days until the state budget is due, and all eyes are on Albany. Legislativ­e leaders have made their commitment to tenant protection­s clear, and now it is time to deliver a budget that reflects these promises.

All politics are local, and passing Good Cause legislatio­n allows us to address one of New Yorkers’ most pressing concerns. We cannot miss this opportunit­y. If we do, it will be catastroph­ic for renters and possibly for Democratic chances in New York come November.

Velázquez represents parts of Brooklyn and Queens in the Congress.

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