The Day

HUD official trapped in elevator during public housing visit

- By KAREN MATTHEWS

New York — A federal housing official’s monthlong tour of New York City public housing complexes hit a speed bump when she got stuck in an elevator Tuesday.

Lynne Patton and 10 other people including reporters and photograph­ers were trapped in an elevator at the Frederick Douglass Houses in Manhattan for about 10 minutes when someone accidental­ly hit the alarm switch. The group had to be freed by firefighte­rs.

“Thank you, New York’s Bravest! Sadly, NYCHA residents — elderly & disabled — endure this type of debilitati­ng systematic failure on a regular basis,” Patton later posted on Facebook, using the acronym for the New York City Housing Authority.

Patton, the New York-New Jersey regional administra­tor for the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, is spending four weeks living in four different NYCHA complexes.

She spent last week at the Patterson Houses in the Bronx, where she joined an aerobics class and used an obscenity to describe the dilapidate­d state of some apartments.

She later posted on Twitter, “I don’t mince words & I’m not going to sugarcoat @NYCHA’s failures.”

Tuesday’s stalled elevator turned out to not be a product of systemic failure. NYCHA spokesman Michael Giardina said someone in the crowded elevator accidental­ly hit the alarm switch. “There was no mechanical failure, and staff were on site immediatel­y to help everyone out after a few minutes,” Giardina said.

Patton’s day at the Douglass Houses also included visits to several apartments and a senior center.

The NYCHA stays come after HUD Secretary Ben Carson and Mayor Bill De Blasio announced a deal that averts a federal takeover of the housing authority.

Under the agreement, HUD will appoint a federal monitor to oversee the authority but will stop short of taking over full control through receiversh­ip.

The housing authority’s 400,000 residents have long endured problems including vermin, mold and heat and hot water outages.

Authority chairwoman Shola Olatoye resigned last year after an investigat­ion found that lead paint inspection reports had been falsified for years.

De Blasio, a Democrat, has blamed the authority’s woes on lack of funding from the federal and state government­s as well as previous mayoral administra­tions. But Patton blamed “gross mismanagem­ent” in a Facebook post.

Patton, an event planner best known for her work on the wedding of Trump’s son Eric, was widely criticized as unqualifie­d when the president appointed her to the HUD job.

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