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STATE LEGISLATURE UPDATE
February 9th, 2009
The following is our initial summary of the laws relating to rent regulation that passed the Assembly and were referred to the Senate on February 2, 2009. (Visit the State Assembly’s website for a complete list.)
Bill No. A-860
Concerns luxury deregulation and raises the threshold income to $240,000 through January 1, 2010. After January 1, 2010, the income threshold will be raised by the CPI in effect for NY, NJ, CT and PA. The threshold rent is raised to $2,700 per month through January 1, 2010 with the same CPI increase as for income. If passed, the bill would be effective immediately.
Bill No. A-1688
This essentially repeals the Urstadt Law for cities of 1 million or greater population. The basic theory is that if a municipality can weaken rent regulation laws it should be able to strengthen rent regulation also. The presently existing Urstadt Law prohibits any municipality from enacting more restrictive rent regulation. This is only applied to financial aspects such as rent increases, and not items such as window guard legislation or the three-month city pet law.
Bill No. A-2005
Any apartment that was deregulated upon a vacancy because the rent after the vacancy was, or became, more than $2,000 per month goes back into rent regulation with the legal rent as of December 31, 2006 if the deregulation occurred on or after January 1, 2007. Any apartments deregulated before January 1, 2007 with a monthly rent of less than $5,000 per month in New York City (or less than $3,500 per month elsewhere) go back into regulation with the “actual rent applicable” on January 1, 2007 or the “first rent applicable” after January 1, 2007. This legislation could lead to landlords only renting housing eligible for luxury deregulation to households with income greater than the $240,000 threshold. The supporting memo notes that some 300,000 apartments have been lost to luxury deregulation in New York City, Westchester, Nassau and Rockland.