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
    Townhouses in Bedfort-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn
    Sell
    The 10 NYC neighborhoods with the most properties selling over asking price
    Manhattan waterfront condo buildings
    Sell
    Manhattan deals hit new two-year high as inventory wanes
    Apartment buildings on Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn.
    Sell
    Brooklyn median sales price passes $1 million for the first time
  • Rent
    • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
    Manhattan apartment buildings seen from Central Park
    Rent
    Inflation vs. signing a new lease in Manhattan: Which is more painful?
    young woman using space heater to supplement apartment heat
    Rent
    Ask Altagracia: My electric fan heaters cost a fortune to run. How do I get the landlord to replace them?
    Sponsored By Outerbridge Law P.C.
    NYC apartment buildings
    Rent
    New law aims to give NYC renters who served time a fair chance at housing
  • Sell
    • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
    Townhouses in Bedfort-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn
    Sell
    The 10 NYC neighborhoods with the most properties selling over asking price
    Manhattan waterfront condo buildings
    Sell
    Manhattan deals hit new two-year high as inventory wanes
    Apartment buildings on Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn.
    Sell
    Brooklyn median sales price passes $1 million for the first time
  • 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
    Residential buildings along 76th Street and Riverside Park in the late 19th century.
    Live
    Join Brick’s new book club for readers fascinated by NYC’s real estate history
    Fire escape on brick apartment building in NYC
    Troubleshooting
    A fire safety checklist for your NYC apartment building
  • Improve
    • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide
    insurance adjuster inspecting mold
    Products + Services
    How to tell if your apartment has mold—and how to get rid of it
    Woman on the phone to a plumber about a leaking sink
    Small Projects + DIY
    Here's what I learned to get our absentee landlord to fix things fast
    Apartment buildings in Lower Manhattan
    Renovation
    What repairs are co-op and condo owners responsible for, and what do buildings take care of?
  • 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
    Apartment buildings in Lower Manhattan
    Rent
    Ask Altagracia: If I pay a broker’s fee that a landlord should cover under the FARE Act, can I get a refund?
    Sponsored By Outerbridge Law P.C.
    young woman using space heater to supplement apartment heat
    Rent
    Ask Altagracia: My electric fan heaters cost a fortune to run. How do I get the landlord to replace them?
    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: How do I get help when New York passes the Emergency Rent Relief Act?

By Himmelstein McConnell Gribben & Joseph LLP  | June 10, 2020 - 9:30AM
image

The new bill, which awaits Governor Cuomo's signature, would provide rent vouchers to landlords of qualified tenants impacted by the pandemic. 

Austin Havens-Bowen for Brick Underground/Flickr

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

I’ve lost income because of Covid-19 and need help paying my rent. I heard that New York State is on the verge of passing a law for tenants like me. How do I take advantage of it?

The New York State Assembly and Senate have passed the Emergency Rent Relief Act of 2020, which will create a $100 million fund to subsidize rents for New Yorkers who have lost income because of the coronavirus pandemic.

“It’s a compromise on what tenant advocates have been pushing for, which is a rent suspension bill,” says Sam Himmelstein, an attorney with the law firm Himmelstein, McConnell, Gribben, Donoghue & Joseph, who represents residential and commercial tenants and tenant associations. 

The legislation, which now awaits Governor Andrew Cuomo’s approval, was written as a replacement for a more sweeping mortgage and rent cancellation bill. Under this new law, tenants who are rent-burdened, which means they’re spending more than 30 percent of their income on rent, and were earning less than 80 percent of the AMI (area median income) both before and after the pandemic are eligible for rent vouchers. 

These vouchers will be paid directly to tenants’ landlords, and will cover “the gap between [tenants’] pre-Covid rent burden and their new rent burden, up to 125 percent fair market rent.” The subsidy will only cover rent for April 1st through July 31st.

In order to get these subsidies, tenants will have to submit applications to the Division of Housing and Community Renewal, and prove their eligibility with paperwork showing that they spend more than 30 percent of their monthly income on rent, that they have lost income since March 7th, and that they were already low-income (that is, earning less than 80 pecent of the AMI) before the crisis. 

Ronald Languedoc, a partner with HMGDJ Law, provides the following example of how the subsidy would work for a family of two with an annual income of $60,000 and a rent of $1,800 a month (a rent burden of 36 percent). If one person lost their job and their household income was reduced from $60,000 to $36,000, their "rent burden" would be increased from 36 percent to 50 percent. The household would then be eligible for a rent subsidy equal to the 14 percent increase of their monthly rent burden—$252 per month, or $1,004 for the four-month period covered by the bill. 

Critics of the new legislation say that proving their eligibility will be a major challenge for many tenants.

“The problem with this is that it’s creating a whole new bureaucracy for tenants who have to submit applications and proof,” Himmelstein says. “And it’s going to be administered by the DHCR, which is already an overburdened agency.”

Another issue with the legislation is that it doesn’t cover tenants who may be withholding their rent for reasons other than lost income.

“What if the tenant has a defense for nonpayment of rent, like poor conditions in their apartment?” Himmelstein points out.

Tenant advocates say the legislation falls far short of what’s needed, given that one quarter of NYC’s renters did not pay any rent last month.

Himmelstein agrees. “It’s better than nothing, but it’s not what we in the tenant community want to see,” he says.

Related: 

Ask Sam: I had to stop paying rent. What will happen next? (sponsored)

Ask Sam: My wife and I have been laid off. What happens if we can't pay our rent? (sponsored)

Ask Sam: What happens if you have a case pending in NYC housing court during the coronavirus crisis? (sponsored) 

Ask Sam: Could I lose my rent-stabilized apartment if I'm staying with family because of the coronavirus? (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 Coronavirus landlords Rent renting tenants tenants' rights
SHARE
TWEET
BRICK’S PICKS
880 Fifth Ave., PHF, a two-bedroom co-op listed for $6.975 million
The pros and cons of owning a NYC penthouse apartment
empty nesters in modern kitchen
Empty nester checklist: What to consider if you are buying or renting in NYC
NYC apartment building with AC units
My neighbor's dripping AC is driving me crazy. What can I do?
Historic brick facades of NYC apartment buildings
Getting overcharged by a landlord? Here’s how the Tenant Protection Unit helps rent-stabilized tenants
Apartment buildings in Soho
New Rent Guidelines Board report justifies a rent freeze, tenant advocates claim
Brooklyn apartment buildings
Understanding net effective rent: Here's how to calculate your real monthly rent
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