Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso Proposes Immediate Legal Opportunities for Governor Hochul, Mayor Adams, and City Council to Address Migrant and Homelessness Crisis in New York

Through Legal Action, City & State Leaders Could Open Up Tens of Thousands Vacant Apartments to New Yorkers Experiencing Homelessness and Compel Other Municipal Governments Outside of New York City to Contribute Housing and Shelter

80,000 New Yorkers Currently Live in City Shelters, Nearly Two-Thirds of Shelter Populations Are Families With Children

Over 41,000 Asylum Seekers Are in the City’s Care Right Now, With Over 65,000 Asylum Seekers Having Gone Through the City System Since Last Spring

  1. TheNew York City Council to pass legislation directing the Mayor to use government power to solve the homelessness crisis through the private sector. Such legislation should (1) add the arrival of migrants as an emergency under the Administrative Code, (2) direct the Mayor and City to lease market apartments for housing homeless families toward creating space in our shelter for new arrivals, (3) require landlords to prioritize renting to the City at the market-rate to alleviate the burden, and (4) ban the refusal to rent apartments to the City during an emergency crisis.
    • Additional Context: Right now, 80,000 New Yorkers – roughly two thirds of whom are families with children – are living in city shelters. More than 41,400 people seeking asylum – including some counted toward shelter beds – are in city care. Despite the profound need for safe, dignified housing, around 89,000 rent-stabilized apartments and tens of thousands more in market-rate apartments might be sitting vacant, based on the NYC Department of Housing Preservation and Development’s (HPD) 2022 Housing and Vacancy Survey.  Many of these empty apartments are the result of “warehousing,” when a landlord declines to list their apartments for rent to keep housing stock low and rents high. Apart from vacant housing, around 94 million square feet of commercial real estate in Manhattan is also estimated to be sitting available for lease. 
  2. Mayor Adams to issue a new emergency executive order declaring a public emergency over homelessness, and not just the arrival of migrants, as the shelter population exceeds a threshold of 0.5% of the City’s population. Upon declaring homelessness a crisis, Mayor Adams must also seek state assistance from Governor Hochul under Section 24[7] of the Executive Law. Both actions would unlock broader government power to address the root of this crisis. 
  3. Governor Hochul to exercise state power for solutions under her emergency declaration issued on May 10, 2023. Solutions would involve not only offering New York City the help of state personnel and use of state facilities under Section 29 of the Executive Law but also the suspension, under Section 29-a of the Executive Law, of local laws that other municipal governments around New York City have invoked to dodge this humanitarian crisis. These are laws such as those Rockland County invoked to block motels and hotels willing to help as well as laws long preventing the construction of affordable housing around surrounding counties that would alleviate the crisis.