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NYCHA, Circling The Drain
Manhattan Contrarian ^ | 24 May, 2023 | Francis Menton

Posted on 05/24/2023 4:19:55 AM PDT by MtnClimber

From time to time I like to check in on the latest from the New York City Housing Authority. NYCHA (along with many other municipal housing authorities) is one of the purest examples in the U.S. today of socialist-model economic organization. The state owns the buildings; the residents pay deeply subsidized rents based on income; and the state takes full responsibility for maintenance and upkeep. Is there any reason why this might not work for the long pull?

When we last looked back in 2018, NYCHA had just been sued by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York for failing to maintain “decent, safe and sanitary” conditions, including failing to remediate lead paint, failing to control mold and vermin, and failing to provide consistent heat, hot water., and elevator service. NYCHA had promptly settled that lawsuit with a Consent Decree in which it promised to spend some $4 billion of New York City taxpayer money to fix the identified problems.

In the intervening close to 5 years, NYCHA has been mostly out of the news. Surely, the large infusion of funds has turned things around, and all is now going smoothly? Sorry — that is not how socialism works.

On May 19 a civic organization called the Citizens Budget Commission has come out with a big Report on NYCHA with the title “Uncertain Future, Urgent Priority.” The Report is chock full of data and statistics on how things are going. The summary is, things have gone from bad to worse, and then still worse. Most importantly, nobody here cares about running a financially sustainable operation, so revenue dwindles while costs explode out of control. One can only conclude that the game plan is to engineer a real crisis to more effectively shake down the taxpayers for the really big bucks in the next round.

In privately-run rental housing, the rents must cover all of the costs — operating costs, taxes, debt service, and also capital improvements as they are needed — as well as profit to the owner, if any. At NYCHA, rents, such as they are, cover an ever smaller and smaller share of the operating costs, with nothing whatsoever for taxes, debt service, or capital improvements. Here is CBC’s chart of NYCHA revenues versus operating expenses:

Rent collections reached a peak in 2019, and then started shrinking in 2020 with the pandemic, and have continued to shrink at an accelerating rate through 2022. Federal subsidies increase, but don’t nearly keep up with rising costs.

At this point, collected rents cover barely a third of operating costs. It seems that the stated rent is now treated as merely a suggestion, with no effective penalty for non-payment:

Collections hit a new low of 63 percent in February 2023, down from 70 percent in February 2022 and 90 percent prior to the pandemic. . . . As of December 2022, 46 percent of NYCHA households were in arrears, having accrued $466 million in unpaid rent. . . .

Although the pandemic has ended, the new policy is to forget about evictions, even as nearly half of tenants have stopped paying rent:

Under the Transformation Plan, NYCHA has de-emphasized non-payment evictions in favor of working with residents to get on payment plans and to secure one-time hardship funding. Since then, NYCHA has followed through on its promise to avoid evictions. Between February 2022, when the eviction moratorium expired, and January 2023, NYCHA filed only 427 non-payment eviction notices, and 0 warrants for non-payment evictions have been executed.

Thus, with some 80,000 tenants in arrears, there have been only 427 non-payment proceedings. That is a sure-fire recipe for continued erosion of rent collections. Why would anybody pay in these circumstances?

Over on the cost side, it seems that NYCHA’s costs of operating a unit are about double those of private landlords on a per-unit basis:

Nearly all of the cost differential is in the category of labor costs, where NYCHA’s expenses per unit are about six times those of its private counterparts:

The CBC concludes that the large majority of NYCHA’s units are rapidly approaching a “moment of reckoning,” where “redevelopment would be more cost effective than repair.”

Once again, a seemingly well-intentioned government program has ended up leaving large numbers of the intended beneficiaries in a completely untenable situation. At this point, it’s only a question of how and when this situation comes to its final collapse.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: greenenergy

1 posted on 05/24/2023 4:19:55 AM PDT by MtnClimber
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To: MtnClimber

Governments have no real incentives to get rid of fraud, waste and abuse because they are paying for it with other peoples money.


2 posted on 05/24/2023 4:20:06 AM PDT by MtnClimber (For photos of Colorado scenery and wildlife, click on my screen name for my FR home page.)
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To: MtnClimber

My brother was a NYCHA cop 25 years ago.....according to stories he told, the failure to maintain “decent, safe and sanitary” conditions was primarily due to the residents....


3 posted on 05/24/2023 4:25:36 AM PDT by wny
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To: wny
My brother was a NYCHA cop 25 years ago.....according to stories he told, the failure to maintain “decent, safe and sanitary” conditions was primarily due to the residents....

Yep. If they rebuild the buildings that are in poor condition, they will be in exactly the same condition in a few years because they have the same destructive tenants.

4 posted on 05/24/2023 4:40:52 AM PDT by MtnClimber (For photos of Colorado scenery and wildlife, click on my screen name for my FR home page.)
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To: MtnClimber
What a shakedown!

Federal taxpayers paying New York City, so New York City can destroy the country.

5 posted on 05/24/2023 4:44:06 AM PDT by marktwain
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To: wny

I’m sure the sence of entitlement of these freeloaders is such that they expect the government to regularly clean the apartments for them.

The more crap you tolerate the more you will get.


6 posted on 05/24/2023 6:07:41 AM PDT by aquila48 (Do not let them make you "care" ! Guilting you is how thery control you. )
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To: aquila48

“sense” not “sence”.


7 posted on 05/24/2023 6:10:09 AM PDT by aquila48 (Do not let them make you "care" ! Guilting you is how thery control you. )
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To: wny
"My brother was a NYCHA cop 25 years ago.....according to stories he told, the failure to maintain “decent, safe and sanitary” conditions was primarily due to the residents...."

Have a tenant who filed a lead complaint. Refused to give us access to fix the problem. Refused to give city contractors access. City fined us $7,000. She lives there now not paying rent (350.00) since 2014. Nothing we can do because it's a rent controlled apartment that she sneaked into (inheritance).

Recycling. Tenants never do it. We have to sift through their garbage or we get fined.

8 posted on 05/24/2023 8:41:46 AM PDT by 1_Rain_Drop ( ~~ TRUMP is right about EVERYTHING ! ~~ )
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