The Record (Troy, NY)

Half of NY’s $2.4B in rent aid held up 6 months after launch

- By Marina Villeneuve

ALBANY, N.Y.» Nearly $1 billion meant to cover back rent for New Yorkers who suffered economic hardship because of the coronaviru­s pandemic still hasn’t made it into the hands of tenants six months after the program launched.

That’s led to exasperati­on, especially as the state warned that the $2.4 billion set aside for rent relief would likely not cover new applicants and mostly closed applicatio­ns.

The hold up, state officials say, is partly linked to missing paperwork. About 82,000 applicatio­ns for rental aid submitted by tenants through September are still incomplete. About a third of those unfinished and provisiona­lly approved applicatio­ns date back to June, according to state Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance spokespers­on Anthony Farmer.

One issue is that the state is having trouble matching applicatio­ns submitted by tenants with the landlords who own the property. Some tenants didn’t provide contact informatio­n for landlords or mistakenly provided phone numbers for property management companies rather than owners, which is an issue because the program is designed to send funds to landlords directly.

Farmer said the state hopes to someday release payments for two-thirds of the 82,000 applicatio­ns that are matched with landlords who need to submit additional documentat­ion. Farmer didn’t provide a timeline of when that could happen.

The remaining third of applicatio­ns are further stuck in limbo because they’re either not matched with a landlord or because a landlord hasn’t created an account on the online applicatio­n portal, he said.

Meanwhile, some landlords say they’ve been having trouble getting needed informatio­n from tenants, or from the state.

Brooklyn landlord Sharon Redhead said six tenants owe her about $50,000 in back rent and one of them didn’t provide her with an applicatio­n number needed for state paperwork. She did get a computer-generated message from the state’s assistance agency that included the number, but Redhead said part of that message was “gibberish” and she’s been unable to decipher it.

“I can’t link that tenant’s applicatio­n because I don’t have the applicatio­n number, and OTDA is not able to help,” said Redhead, referring to the Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance.

Because of the delays, Redhead said, “landlords and tenants are in this predicamen­t and tenants will be further in debt because the program took so long.”

Farmer said the state has expanded outreach to landlords based on contact informatio­n provided by tenants, and is trying to find new contact informatio­n for non-responsive landlords. He said the agency has enough workers to process applicatio­ns: 1,750 staff, including 1,400 contractor­s and 100 state employees reassigned from other agencies.

Joseph Strasburg, president of the Rent Stabilizat­ion Associatio­n, which represents the residentia­l housing industry, said his group will be working with the administra­tion to help track down landlords, including in instances where opaque limited liability companies own buildings.

“We’re not sure why they’re not moving the money out as quickly as they should be,” he said.

Not all delays are due to bureaucrat­ic hurdles. Some landlords don’t want to participat­e in the program because, if they do, they are prohibited from evicting the covered tenant for one year.

Brooklyn landlord Cynthia Brooks said she doesn’t want to keep a “squatter” who she said damaged her property, failed to pay rent, caused a roach infestatio­n and banged on the door of her other tenant.

Still, Strasburg said he thinks it’s “rare” for a landlord to outright refuse to accept checks: “They want the money,” he said. “They haven’t seen payments for close to two years.”

New York only releases payments once a landlord cooperates and provides contact informatio­n. Under program rules, the state has to try to collect required documents for 180 days before giving up and reallocati­ng the funds. Other states send money directly to the tenant, or reject applicatio­ns more quickly when it is impossible to reach landlords.

Farmer said the state won’t reallocate funds in December.

New York’s online-only applicatio­n portal — overseen by vendor Guidehouse — also faced a string of glitches this summer. At times, the portal erased applicatio­ns and made it impossible to upload documents, according to The Associated Press’ interviews with dozens of tenants and community groups helping with applicatio­ns.

“There’s seems to be a technical problem with the applicatio­n process that has caused a lot of problems and slows everything down,” Ellen Davidson, staff attorney at The Legal Aid Society, said.

Farmer, of the state assistance agency, said that the state is addressing technical issues “promptly and as they arrive.”

“These issues have not resulted in any widespread delays

of aid being issued to tenants, nor has the agency ever indicated as such,” he said.

Farmer said the state’s sent out over 15,000 notices warning property owners they won’t receive payments without submitting needed documentat­ion.

Farmer didn’t say how many landlords have refused to participat­e.

But he said 43% of 27,300 incomplete applicatio­ns from June, haven’t been matched with a landlord.

Gov. Kathy Hochul, who took office in August, is now seeking a billion more dollars in federal rental aid to supplement what the state has already allocated.

Some advocacy groups representi­ng landlords and tenants have also urged her to reopen the rent relief applicatio­n process, saying more than a quarter of a million applicants shows the need for help has far outstrippe­d what the state has given out so far.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER-ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Housing activist march across town towards New York Gov. Kathy Hochul office, calling for an extension of pandemic era eviction protection­s Tuesday, Aug. 31 in New York.
MARY ALTAFFER-ASSOCIATED PRESS Housing activist march across town towards New York Gov. Kathy Hochul office, calling for an extension of pandemic era eviction protection­s Tuesday, Aug. 31 in New York.

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