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Affordable Housing

Legislation Would Give Nonprofits First Crack at Developing NYC-Owned Land 

“Public land is a treasure that we need to maximize for truly affordable housing,” said Councilmember Lincoln Restler, whose new bill would preventing the city from selling off land to private, for-profit developers unless no qualified nonprofit group makes an offer.

By David Brand
Housing and Homelessness

NYC Housing Calendar, Aug. 10-17

By Mariam Hydara
Housing and Homelessness
Three men at tables in NYC Council chambers

NYC Now Leasing 11 Hotels for Families as Homeless Population Rises

By David Brand
Opinion

Opinion: Use NYC’s Vacant Lots and Buildings to Help Solve the Housing Crisis

By John Thompson Jr.

News

  • Una Ciudad sin Límites
    Multas a los vendedores ambulantes aumentaron durante el primer año del DCWP

    DCWP y NYPD emitieron 2.427 multas a vendedores ambulantes durante el periodo que comprende junio 2021 y mayo 2022, lo que significa un aumento del 33 por ciento en comparación con 2019, cuando la policía emitió 1.609 multas.

    By Daniel Parra
  • A view of the Manhattan skyline and the East River.
    NYC journalism
    City Limits Expands Focus on NYC Housing; David Brand Promoted to Deputy Editor

    The move reflects the organization’s expansion of housing and homelessness coverage at this pivotal moment for New York, as the city emerges from the pandemic amidst a housing affordability crisis and a rising shelter population.

    By City Limits
  • 2022 election
    Debate Watch: Bronx State Senate Candidates Square Off

    BronxNet will air debates between Democratic candidates in the newly redrawn District 33, where incumbent Gustavo Rivera is facing party-backed attorney Miguelina Camilo, and in District 34, where Christian Amato and John Perez are up against Assemblywoman Nathalia Fernandez for the East Bronx seat left open by Alessandra Biaggi.

    By Jeanmarie Evelly
  • A hand holding a cell phone
    Podcast: El Diario Sin Límites
    ¿Cómo los inmigrantes navegan la desinformación al viajar a los Estados Unidos?

    Para el informe titulado “Inside the World of Misinformation Targeting Migrants on Social Media” (Dentro del mundo de la desinformación dirigida a los migrantes en las redes sociales) se entrevistaron a 200 inmigrantes que hablaban español y maya: 100 en Guatemala, al comienzo de su viaje hacia el norte, y otros 100 en refugios en la frontera entre Estados Unidos y México.

    By Daniel Parra
  • A bus pulling into Port Authority in Manhattan
    Housing and Homelessness
    NYC Shelter System Awaits Some Immigrants Bused From Texas

    After a two-month journey from South America to the U.S. Border and a two-day bus ride from Texas to New York City, immigrants who spoke with City Limits just wanted a bite to eat and a place to rest. "I just want to work and get ahead," one recently-arrived man said.

    By David Brand and Daniel Parra

Mapping the Future

  • An open fire hydrant spraying water on a Brooklyn street
    City’s Heat-Vulnerable Neighborhoods Need More Cooling Centers, Comptroller Says

    Queens had the fewest number of cooling centers based on population density with only five for every 100,000 people, while Manhattan had seven, an analysis by City Comptroller Brad Lander's office found. East Flatbush was the neighborhood with the worst access to cooling centers based on vulnerability.

  • New York City Housing Calendar, Aug 3-10

    City Limits rounds up the latest housing and land use-related events, public hearings and upcoming affordable housing lotteries that are ending soon.

  • NYC Mayor Eric Adams talking into a microphone at a press conference podium
    Mayor’s Emergency Declaration Will Speed Shelter Openings as Homeless Population Rises 

    The declaration will allow the city to open a new intake facility specifically for asylum-seekers and immigrants who have made their way to city shelters. It will also allow the Department of Homeless Services to issue contracts to nonprofits to open additional shelters, most likely in hotels, while bypassing public review and the usual competitive bidding process.

  • Thousands of Formerly Flooded Homes Sold Last Year in New York: Report

    In 2021 alone, New Yorkers purchased 7,645 homes with prior flood damages that totaled more than $23.5 million. The state's current flood disclosure law contains a loophole that "stacks the deck against buyers," a new report from the Natural Resources Defense Council found.

  • East New York Families in Limbo as Developer Plans High Rise to Replace Crumbling Housing Complex

    Just six units remain occupied at the Arlington Village complex. Now, those who remain worry about what the owners' plan to develop the site will mean for them. "What exists now won’t exist."

Podcasts

  • ► Decorative play icon links to post: ¿Cómo los votantes recién naturalizados podrían cambiar el curso de las elecciones este año?

    ¿Cómo los votantes recién naturalizados podrían cambiar el curso de las elecciones este año?

    Se calcula que unos 5.19 millones de personas se han naturalizado desde el 2016 en los Estados Unidos, y la gran mayoría de ellos, 4.4 millones, lo hicieron tras la elección de Donald Trump. California fue el estado con más nuevos ciudadanos, con 733.756, seguido por la Florida, con 429.017, y Nueva York, con 402.904 personas.

    By Daniel Parra
  • ► Decorative play icon links to post: City Watch: Ritchie Torres Wants to Make Federal Rent Relief Permanent

    City Watch: Ritchie Torres Wants to Make Federal Rent Relief Permanent

    The Stable Families Act builds off the massive pot of money that Congress sent to states and local governments to cover rent arrears for tenants who could not make payments as a result of the pandemic

    By David Brand
  • ► Decorative play icon links to post: ¿Cómo California piensa ofrecer beneficios alimentarios y de salud a indocumentados?

    ¿Cómo California piensa ofrecer beneficios alimentarios y de salud a indocumentados?

    California se convertirá en el primer estado en permitir a personas indocumentadas de bajos ingreso acceder la atención médica y beneficios alimentarios como cupones de alimentos a todas las personas mayores de 55 años sin importar el estatus migratorio.

    By Daniel Parra

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Special Projects

City on the Edge: Climate Change and New York
  • City’s Heat-Vulnerable Neighborhoods Need More Cooling Centers, Comptroller Says

    Queens had the fewest number of cooling centers based on population density with only five for every 100,000 people, while Manhattan had seven, an analysis by City Comptroller Brad Lander's office found. East Flatbush was the neighborhood with the worst access to cooling centers based on vulnerability.

  • Thousands of Formerly Flooded Homes Sold Last Year in New York: Report

    In 2021 alone, New Yorkers purchased 7,645 homes with prior flood damages that totaled more than $23.5 million. The state's current flood disclosure law contains a loophole that "stacks the deck against buyers," a new report from the Natural Resources Defense Council found.

  • Some Rikers Detainees Had No Air Conditioning During Heat Wave, Lawmakers Say

    In the week before the recent heatwave, Department of Correction officials testified at a hearing that nearly 200 individuals incarcerated at the jail with conditions that are exacerbated by heat were still without air conditioning.

Age Justice
  • Seniors’ Housing Needs are a Special Challenge

    Rents are rising for seniors as they are for everyone else. But a fixed income, vulnerability to harassment and age-related physical impairments raise the housing stakes for elder New Yorkers.

  • Aging in New York: City Wrestles with Poverty Among Seniors

    Amid the debates about how the minimum wage or better schools might reduce poverty are a million New Yorkers who are largely beyond the reach of those policies. And one in five of them are poor.

  • Opinion: What Older New Yorkers Deserve In the Next Phase of the COVID-19 Pandemic

    "We must ensure that New York City’s growing population of 1.25 million adults ages 65 and older can access high-quality services, resources, and opportunities that accommodate their needs and preferences, celebrate their strengths and resilience, and empower them to live in the communities they helped build and continue to make meaningful contributions to."

The Ride
  • Opinion: We Need a Real Penn Station Plan, Not a Neighborhood Replacement Scheme

    "Our leaders seem blithely unaware that we have within our grasp a once-in-a-century opportunity to create a transit hub worthy of New York, which many of us still think of as 'the greatest city on Earth.'"

  • Opinion: The Penn Station Plan is a Job Well Done. It’s Time We Acknowledge That

    "The one thing that unites all New Yorkers is our collective disdain for the derelict old Penn Station. That’s why it makes no sense why some would come out against a plan to actually make it and the surrounding district better."

  • Opinion: How E-bikes Can Help NYC Reach its Climate Goals

    "To get the most out of its vital investments in protected bike lanes, the city should pull every lever at its disposal to increase access to personal and shared e-bikes."

Investigations

  • Bronx tenant and her two children in her apartment kitchen
    housing
    ‘It’s Like a Slum’: Supportive Housing Tenants Cope with Violation-Filled Homes. Provider Blames Underfunding

    Postgraduate Center for Mental Health has $130 million in two cash reserves and steady funding from the state, but conditions inside the apartments it rents for low-income tenants continue to deteriorate. The organization says it is forced to rent substandard units because state contracts are too low to cover better housing.

    By David Brand
  • Housing and Homelessness
    What Will it Take To Remove the Mold From This Washington Heights Apartment?

    Tenant attorneys, advocates and policymakers say the delays that Nichols has encountered demonstrate the flaws of the city’s code enforcement program, and the limits of a housing court system that can move at a glacial pace when it comes to holding owners accountable for unsafe conditions.

    By David Brand
  • Government
    Inside NYC’s Street Homeless Sweeps, Rapid Responses and Signs of Futility 

    While the policy is handed down by the mayor, an array of New Yorkers—from everyday residents to top city officials to nonprofit service providers—play a role in recommending locations for sweeps, according to hundreds of internal emails reviewed by City Limits.

    By David Brand
  • Economy
    Some NYC Vendors Are Using Excluded Workers Fund Aid to Cover City Fines

    Vendors and advocates say increased city enforcement is hampering the industry’s recovery, as workers continue to see fewer sales since the pandemic began.

    By Daniel Parra
  • Health and Environment
    For NYC Tenants with Inadequate Heat, Enforcement Can Be Elusive

    City Limits examined 311 data related to heat and hot water complaints over the past three years, and found the highest number were in areas populated by communities of color and lower-income individuals. They include Washington Heights, followed by several neighborhoods in The Bronx, including the community district where the deadly Twin Parks fire occurred.

    By Liz Donovan

City Limits Newsletters

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City Limits Newsletters

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City Limits uses investigative journalism
through the prism of New York City
to identify urban problems,
examine their causes, explore solutions,
and equip communities to take action.

Founded in 1976 in the midst of New York’s fiscal crisis, City Limits exists to inform democracy and equip citizens to create a more just city. The organization is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit funded by foundation support, ad sponsorship and donations from readers.

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