New York Daily News

B’klyn pol pushes bill to end evicts from Nov. to April

- BY DENIS SLATTERY

ALBANY — A Brooklyn lawmaker wants to put an end to winter evictions in New York.

State Sen. Zellnor Myrie (D-Brooklyn) and backers rallied Thursday in support of a bill that would prohibit sheriffs and marshals from executing eviction warrants statewide during the coldest part of the year.

Tenant advocates joined Myrie outside of Brooklyn Housing Court to bring attention to the measure, which they say would prevent inhumane evictions during the winter and help reduce the ongoing homelessne­ss crisis in the city.

“If it’s too cold to cut the heat, it’s too cold to be out on the street,” Myrie (photo) said. “We’ve seen over the past few years how preventing evictions is not simply a matter of tenants’ rights, it’s integral to public health and safety.”

The bill, known as the Winter Moratorium on Evictions Act, is also sponsored by Assemblywo­man Anna Kelles (D-Ithaca) and would block evictions between Nov. 1 and April 15 of each year.

Myrie said the measure is modeled on eviction moratorium­s instituted during the height of the COVID-19 crisis that prevented thousands of families from facing homelessne­ss.

Evictions continue to rise across the five boroughs after the pandemic ban expired early last year.

According to city data, marshals removed nearly 4,400 families or individual­s from apartments between January 2022, when the COVID restrictio­ns lapsed, and last month.

That number is still a fraction of the annual evictions recorded prepandemi­c. In 2019, nearly 17,000 evictions were carried out by marshals in the city, per the Department of Investigat­ion.

“In the midst of a homelessne­ss and housing affordabil­ity crisis in this city and state, stopping eviction proceeding­s during the winter months is an important step towards housing justice for all,” Myrie said.

Tenant advocates agreed, saying that the bill would provide some peace of mind for New Yorkers falling behind on rent or worried about winding up on the streets during a cold spell.

“Respect low-income people and stop all court cases from moving forward and evicting people and their families, who are losing their homes,” said Fidele Albert, a tenant leader with Flatbush Tenant Coalition, Crown Heights Tenant Union and Brooklyn Eviction Defense.

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