New York Daily News

GAS-LINE CRACKDOWN

City issues 2K tickets for unpermitte­d & unlicensed work

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

The city has detected more than 2,000 gas plumbing violations since a set of rules took effect in 2020 that were tailored to crack down on unlicensed work in that industry, an official in Mayor Adams’ administra­tion said Monday.

Signed into law by then-Mayor Bill de Blasio, the rules tightened regulation­s around gas installati­on, maintenanc­e and repair work in the city, with the goal of preventing another tragedy like the March 2015 East Village gas line explosion that destroyed multiple buildings in the Manhattan neighborho­od and killed two people.

At a Monday morning hearing in the City Council, Kazimir Vilenchik, Adams’ acting Buildings Department commission­er, testified that his agency has in the years since the rules were implemente­d issued at least 2,083 tickets for gas plumbing conducted without proper work permits. That included 1,150 violations in 2021, 842 in 2022 and 91 so far this year.

The legislatio­n passed after the East Village explosion designated gas work done without permits “immediatel­y hazardous,” warranting stricter penalties and faster corrective action.

The law required that gas pipe work in the city be carried out by plumbers who have obtained “Gas Qualificat­ion” licenses from the Department of Buildings (DOB). The licensing requiremen­t was seen as especially important in the wake of the East Village inferno because the plumber who helped rig the gas line that exploded did not hold proper credential­s to perform the work.

The number of violations issued by the Buildings Department for gas work by unlicensed plumbers over the same time span is far lower by comparison: 12 in 2021, 17 in 2022 and zero so far this year, according to data shared by Vilenchik at the hearing.

But officials with the city’s plumbers union who testified after Vilenchik at the hearing said those numbers should be taken with a grain of salt.

Patrick Walsh, who serves as the counsel for Plumbers Local 1, alleged the reason the licensing violation numbers are so low is because the Buildings Department hasn’t adequately enforced the rule.

The union, which filed a lawsuit against the DOB in December over the matter, has approached the department with informatio­n on specific contractor­s who routinely tap unlicensed plumbers for gas line work, Walsh said. Union officials have also pointed the department to specific job sites where unlicensed plumbers work, Walsh added.

“DOB, however, refused to investigat­e the union’s complaints,” Walsh said. “DOB’s abdication of its responsibi­lity to enforce these requiremen­ts has created a public safety time bomb.”

Arthur Clarke, another union official at the hearing, said he was especially unnerved by a recent conversati­on he had with Buildings Department officials in which he said he alerted them that big-box stores like Home Depot were connecting customers with unlicensed gas plumbers.

The Buildings Department officials, Clarke alleged, responded by telling him the city should consider relaxing licensing requiremen­ts.

“We were all horrified,” Clarke said. After the hearing, a department spokesman suggested the actual number of violations involving unlicensed plumbers could be higher.

“Our inspectors are much more likely to find just the illegal work itself (in various stages of completene­ss), rather than finding individual­s actively performing the work,” the spokesman said. “In these cases where we can’t definitive­ly say who performed the work, we are issuing the violations to the property owners for their failure to obtain permits for work on their property.”

Monday’s hearing came on the heels of Adams proposing to “relax” some building inspection codes in the city in order to pave the way for achieving his goal of constructi­ng 500,000 new units of housing in the next decade. Among Adams’ proposals is shifting the responsibi­lity of some fire safety inspection­s to the Buildings Department that are currently conducted by the FDNY.

Brooklyn Councilman Charles Barron told Vilenchik at the hearing that the Buildings Department must get more serious about enforcing the rules it already has on its plate.

“This is a life-and-death issue,” Barron said.

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 ?? ?? After an East Village gas explosion leveled three buildings (main photo), a law passed in 2020 set new licensing rules for plumbers installing gas lines. Acting Buildings Department Commission­er Kazimir Vilenchik (bottom) announced number of violations the city has found since then.
After an East Village gas explosion leveled three buildings (main photo), a law passed in 2020 set new licensing rules for plumbers installing gas lines. Acting Buildings Department Commission­er Kazimir Vilenchik (bottom) announced number of violations the city has found since then.

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