Skip to main content
Fulltext search
FILTER RESULTS BY:
RECOMMENDED IN RENT
Moving to NYC after college? Here's how to find a rental apartment
RECOMMENDED IN BUY
How buying real estate in NYC is unlike anywhere else
RECOMMENDED IN SELL
A guide to using a no-fee renovation loan from a NYC real estate firm
RECOMMENDED IN IMPROVE
How to make your NYC renovation more pet-friendly
BEST REAL ESTATE WEBSITE!
National Association of Real Estate Editors
BEST REAL ESTATE WEBSITE! National Association of Real Estate Editors
Brick Underground
Social Links
follow:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Flipboard
  • search
Brick Underground
☰ Brick Underground
Brick Underground
Brick Underground
☰
Brick Underground
  • Buy
    • Buy
    • The Market
    • Investing
    • New Construction + Condos
    • Affordable Housing
    • Co-ops
    • Negotiating + Financing
    • How to Buy in NYC Guide
    Apartment buildings in New York City
    Sell
    What is a pied-à-terre? What makes it different from a typical NYC apartment?
    houses in Queens, NY
    Live
    Ossé calls on Hochul to halt evictions for deed theft victims
    NYC buildings along the East River
    Co-ops
    Submitting a co-op board package? Starting this summer, you’ll be approved (or rejected) much faster
  • Rent
    • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
    Stephanie moves from Chicago to UES
    Rent
    Why I moved to NYC from Chicago: My Midwest life felt stable but I was craving ‘energy and urgency’
    Rent Guidelines Board vote 2025
    Affordable Housing
    Mamdani appointments to RGB board pave the way for a rent freeze
    cast iron radiator next to a window
    Live
    Is your rent-stabilized apartment too hot in winter? This tenant group wants to know
  • Sell
    • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
    Apartment buildings in New York City
    Sell
    What is a pied-à-terre? What makes it different from a typical NYC apartment?
    renovating before selling
    Renovation
    How much should you renovate your NYC apartment or house before selling?
    Residential towers in Downtown Brooklyn
    Sell
    Brooklyn’s median price rose to $990,000 in the fourth quarter, third-highest on record
  • Live
    • Live
    • Neighbors
    • Kids + Pets
    • Neighborhood Intel
    • Products + Test-drives
    • Troubleshooting
    FlatRate moving brick underground
    Live
    How to troubleshoot your move in advance
    Sponsored By flatrate
    The Conant House at 25 Stuyvesant St
    Live
    The 1861 Conant House at 25 Stuyvesant St: A narrow Anglo-Italianate home on a triangular plot
    The Radiker House at 159 West 87th St.
    Live
    The Radiker House at 159 West 87th St: Taming the west side of Central Park
  • Improve
    • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide
    Shimon Olesker and Mark Seidenfeld, founders of Just SO Constructionwith a company van
    Renovation
    5 Manhattan renovation pitfalls and how to avoid them
    Sponsored By Just SO Construction
    Park Avenue kitchen update by Prime Renovations with IKEA cabinets
    Renovation
    IKEA vs. Home Depot: Which should you choose for a NYC kitchen renovation?
    one-bedroom floor-through loft at 419 Wythe Ave. in Williamsburg
    Renovation
    The 7 best ways to find a short-term rental while you renovate your NYC apartment
  • Boards & Buildings
    • Boards & Buildings
    • Boards
    • Finance
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Property Management
    • Structure & Systems
    • Sustainability
    Burned and Boarded Up Windows
    When should your board hire a public adjuster?
    Manhattan GM
    What should we consider when renewing insurance for our building?
    Facade of NYC buildings
    How much is insurance on a NYC co-op or condo building?
  • Advertise
    • Advertise with us
    • Sponsored Content
    • Experts
    FlatRate moving brick underground
    Live
    How to troubleshoot your move in advance
    Sponsored By flatrate
    Shimon Olesker and Mark Seidenfeld, founders of Just SO Constructionwith a company van
    Renovation
    5 Manhattan renovation pitfalls and how to avoid them
    Sponsored By Just SO Construction
    Manhattan downtown skyline at sunrise
    Rent
    Ask Altagracia: My landlord threatened to raise my rent after I reported unsafe wiring. What are my rights?
    Sponsored By Outerbridge Law P.C.
  • Brick Report
  • About Us
  • About Us
Email Address
Fulltext search
FILTER RESULTS BY:
New Main menu
  • Buy
    • Buy
    • The Market
    • Investing
    • New Construction + Condos
    • Affordable Housing
    • Co-ops
    • Negotiating + Financing
    • How to Buy in NYC Guide
  • Rent
    • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
  • Sell
    • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
  • Live
    • Live
    • Neighbors
    • Kids + Pets
    • Neighborhood Intel
    • Products + Test-drives
    • Troubleshooting
  • Improve
    • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide
  • Boards & Buildings
    • Boards & Buildings
    • Boards
    • Finance
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Property Management
    • Structure & Systems
    • Sustainability
  • Advertise
    • Advertise with us
    • Sponsored Content
    • Experts
  • Brick Report
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
  • About Us
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER →
Social Links Footer
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Search
Ask Altagracia [ SPONSORED ]

Ask Sam: Am I rent-stabilized if I live in a 421-g building in the Financial District?

By Himmelstein McConnell Gribben & Joseph LLP  | June 6, 2018 - 10:00AM
image

A pending court decision could impact thousands of renters.

Jeff Gunn / Flickr

SHARE:
Share to Facebook
Share to Twitter
Print
More...

My building in the Financial District was converted to residential several years ago under the 421-g tax abatement program. Should I be rent-stabilized? If so, what would that mean for my rent?

As of now, 421-g buildings are not stabilized, but this could change due to a case that will be heard in the Court of Appeals, says Sam Himmelstein, a lawyer at the firm Himmelstein, McConnell, Gribben, Donoghue & Joseph LLP, who represents residential and commercial tenants and tenant associations.

From 1995 to 2006, commercial buildings in the Financial District were converted to residential use under the 421-g program, a tax abatement program designed to help revitalize the neighborhood.

“Landlords got tax breaks for doing so, but the issue is that for years, tenants were not treated as rent-stabilized,” Himmelstein says.

In buildings with similar tax abatement programs, like 421-a, tenants are rent-stabilized as a condition of the tax break. Serge Joseph, a partner at HMGDJ Law, has represented tenants from 421-g buildings in court, arguing that they should be stabilized. Decisions from the lower courts have been mixed; a mid-level appellate court previously ruled in the landlords’ favor, but now the case is going to the Court of Appeals, the highest court in the state; a decision is expected early next year.

“The legislation was enacted in 1995 and the language is pretty clear,” says Joseph. “But when the bill was making its way through the state Senate, months after it had passed the Democrat-controlled Assembly, then-Mayor Giuliani and Senate Leader Joseph Bruno, both Republicans, sent letters to each other interpreting the law in a way permitting for deregulation of most of the apartments in buildings participating in the program. They then had their letters read into the Senate record. And this has been what the landlords and some of the courts have accepted as the basis for interpreting the legislation to permit deregulation.”

If the Court of Appeals rules that the apartments should be stabilized, between 5,000 and 10,000 tenants will be affected.

“Almost all of these apartments had initial rents above the threshold for deregulation, which used to be $2,000, and then went up to $2,500 and then $2,700,” Himmelstein says. “The landlords’ argument is that the legislation never intended to make the apartments rent-stabilized because there was recognition they would already be above the vacancy deregulation threshold.”  

But if the Court of Appeals rules in favor of the tenants, they will then be under the protection of rent stabilization, which would mean new leases, stronger protections against eviction, and limitations on how much landlords can raise their rent, as set by the Rent Guidelines Board.

“There should be discussion and determination of what their legal rent should be, since they were not treated as rent stabilized in the past, and they may be entitled to recover from past overcharges,” Joseph says.

This would apply, too, to tenants in buildings where the tax abatement already expired, as long as they were residing there while it was still in effect.

The appellate division, which previously ruled against the tenants, granted the firm’s appeal to take the case to the Court of Appeals, which could bode well for residents of 421-g buildings.

“It could mean they’re not so sure about the decision, or think that the issue needs to be resolved by the highest court in state,” Himmelstein says.

Related: 

Ask Sam: How do I find out if my apartment should be rent-stabilized—and if the landlord owes me money? (sponsored)

Ask Sam: My landlord claims I'm not rent-stabilized because a J-51 subsidy expired before I moved in. Is this true? (sponsored)

Ask Sam: I found out my apartment used to be rent-stabilized. Now what? (sponsored)

Read all our Ask a Renters Rights Lawyer columns here.


 

Sam Himmelstein, Esq. represents NYC tenants and tenant associations in disputes over evictions, rent increases, rental conversions, rent stabilization law, lease buyouts, and many other issues. He is a partner at Himmelstein, McConnell, Gribben, Donoghue & Joseph in Manhattan. To submit a question for this column, click here. To ask about a legal consultation, email Sam or call (212) 349-3000.

Alanna Schubach

Alanna Schubach

Contributing writer

Contributing editor Alanna Schubach has over a decade of experience as a New York City-based freelance journalist.

SEE MORE BY Alanna Schubach »
Brick Underground articles occasionally include the expertise of, or information about, advertising partners when relevant to the story. We will never promote an advertiser's product without making the relationship clear to our readers.

topics:

Ask Altagracia landlords rent regulation taxes tenants' rights
SHARE
TWEET
BRICK’S PICKS
Manhattan apartment building
Cool homes for all: A guide to NYC’s new AC mandate for rentals
renovating before selling
How much should you renovate your NYC apartment or house before selling?
staged outdoor space NYC at 212 East 70st St. #4b
Selling in winter? Here's how to stage your outdoor space
Man looking at his phone in NYC street
Why you should check reviews from current tenants before you sign a new lease
brownstone NYC
You bought a NYC brownstone. How are you going to manage it?
three-bedroom duplex condo in Williamsburg is listed for $1.8 million
How much does moving to the suburbs cost vs. staying in NYC?
Follow Brick on Instagram
@brickunderground | #brickunderground
Brick UndergroundBRICK UNDERGROUNDREAL LIFE. REAL ESTATE. REAL NEW YORK.
Social Links Footer
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Search
Main menu footer
  • Buy
    • The Market
    • Investing
    • New Construction + Condos
    • Affordable Housing
    • Co-ops
    • Negotiating + Financing
    • How to Buy in NYC Guide
  • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
  • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
  • Live
    • Neighbors
    • Kids + Pets
    • Neighborhood Intel
    • Products + Test-drives
    • Troubleshooting
  • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide

Get more news you can actually use...

Email Address

Delivered to your inbox weekly - for free.

*By signing up you agree to receive occasional emails on behalf of our sponsors

Footer Menu
  • About Us
  • Advertise

Copyright 2009-2024 by BND Ventures Inc | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Ad Choices | Login | Powered by Mortar CMS, the AI CMS