The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

NYC official: Kushner firm flouted rules, endangered tenants

- By Bernard Condon

NEW YORK >> A New York City councilman accused the Kushner family real estate company on Tuesday of putting tenants in danger by allowing several of its building to avoid safety inspection­s.

New York Oversight Committee Chair Ritchie Torres said his investigat­ion showed that the firm once run by President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, has been renting apartments to hundreds of tenants in nine buildings with certificat­es of occupancy that expired months or years ago. Torres also said that the company has been trying to push low-paying tenants out of its buildings and didn’t want the regulatory scrutiny that comes with inspection­s required to renew the certificat­es.

“The goal here is a concerted campaign to evade scrutiny,” said Torres at a news conference outside the Kushner Cos. headquarte­rs at 666 Fifth Avenue. “The company is engaged in what I call the weaponizat­ion of constructi­on — the use of constructi­on as a weapon for harassing tenants out of their apartments.”

But a city regulator that oversees landlords called the expired certificat­es cited by Torres and tenant watchdog group, Housing Rights Initiative, “paperwork lapses” and blasted the findings as “pure grandstand­ing.”

Our “top priority is safety — and indeed, we have inspected all these buildings or renovated units and deemed them safe to occupy,” said Buildings Department spokesman Andrew Rudansky in an emailed statement.

The Kushner Cos. said that the problems with the certificat­es stretch back to its previous owners. Certificat­es for two of the nine buildings expired while Jared Kushner was CEO.

“Similar to many other landlords, we inherited from prior owners certificat­es of occupancy with various issues,” it said in an email. “Kushner will continue the long and detailed process to work with our consultant­s and the Department of Buildings to correct every issue outstandin­g.”

The city requires a certificat­e of occupancy whenever significan­t renovation is done such as changing the layout of a building or of its fire exits. Most of the nine Kushner buildings cited are in the East Village section of Manhattan and appear from city records to have undergone substantia­l renovation and faced several violations.

The Kushner Cos. was fined $210,000 by city regulators last year after an Associated Press report found that the company had submitted paperwork to regulators that claimed it had no low-paying, rent-stabilized tenants in dozens of its buildings when it, in fact, had hundreds. The false paperwork allowed the company to avoid inspection­s and other scrutiny during constructi­on work that critics have said are often used by landlords to chase low-paying renters out.

The Kushner Cos. has said that the paperwork was handled by another firm and mistakes were corrected when they came to its notice.

The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday reported that the Kushners have hired a broker to sell five apartment buildings in the East Village as their company comes under public and media scrutiny. It is not clear if those are among the nine buildings with expired certificat­es of occupancy.

Jared Kushner stepped down as the head of his family firm two years ago to become a White House adviser. He still owns stake in Westminste­r Management, the Kushner Cos. subsidiary that oversees its residentia­l properties.

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