The Boston Globe

N.Y. seeks to boost rentals of one-room units

Plans to pay landlords to fix, rent spaces

- By Mihir Zaveri

New York state is planning to pay landlords who rent out single-room occupancy units, commonly known as SROs, in an attempt to fight homelessne­ss by slowing the decadeslon­g decline in the number of small, cheap rental homes.

Through the program, announced Tuesday, the state will spend about $50 million to help landlords repair and renovate about 500 such units and keep them livable and on the market. It is the first time the state has funded such an effort and is something of a reversal in attitudes toward SROs, which for many years were targeted for eliminatio­n by government policies.

These units are typically small apartments with a private room but shared kitchen, bathrooms, and other amenities. They are more affordable than convention­al apartments, making them attractive to people struggling with homelessne­ss or those who have limited incomes.

While there once were as many as 100,000 SROs in New York City, according to the New York University Furman Center, the number began to decline in the mid-20th century, when they became associated with poverty, overcrowdi­ng, and unsanitary conditions.

The city passed laws preventing the constructi­on of new units and encouraged the conversion­s to other types of apartments. In many cases, SROs were combined with other units to form bigger homes for wealthier people.

State officials say they do not know how many still exist. A 2018 paper from the Furman Center estimated that between 30,000 and 40,000 remained.

Housing experts and politician­s increasing­ly seem to be eyeing SROs as a solution to a nationwide housing crisis.

In New York state — and most visibly in New York City — housing costs have risen because there have not been enough homes built in recent decades, creating an enormous shortage.

The affordabil­ity problems have contribute­d to record levels of homelessne­ss, a crisis that has been underscore­d by the arrival of tens of thousands of migrants in the past couple of years.

SROs could help better match the city’s housing stock with the needs of the population. The Furman Center paper pointed out that there were about 210,000 “small” units in the city — including SROs and studio apartments — yet there were almost 1.2 million single adult renters living alone or with roommates.

The SRO program would be small. Many of the units are in very bad condition and need extensive renovation­s; state officials think the $50 million might help preserve only about 500 units, illustrati­ng how costly these types of efforts can be. The state housing shortage is estimated to be in the hundreds of thousands of units.

In the city, leaders are attempting to change zoning rules to encourage the constructi­on

These units are typically small apartments with a private room but shared kitchen, bathrooms, and other amenities. They are more affordable than convention­al apartments.

of smaller apartments, as part of a broader effort to make way for 100,000 additional homes over the next 15 years. That would require the approval of the City Council, which is still months away.

State legislator­s and Governor Kathy Hochul failed last year to agree on other big initiative­s many housing experts believe are necessary to address the crisis, including a new tax incentive program for affordable housing developmen­ts, stronger tenant protection­s, and mandates that suburbs allow more homes to be built.

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