Friday, December 20, 2019

Tenants call out Madison Realty Capital: Stop warehousing rent-regulated apartments



More than 50 residents, community activists and local elected officials gathered on Tuesday afternoon in the rain outside 325 E. 12th St., a building owned by Madison Realty Capital (MRC) that serves as a de-facto office for MRC’s property management arm, Silverstone Properties.

The group, led by Tenants Taking Control (formerly known as the Toledano Tenants Coalition), called on MRC to sell their 15 buildings to a nonprofit preservation buyer.

They also wanted to bring attention to the practice of property owners letting rent-regulated apartments sit vacant in the aftermath of the Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019.

According to the tenants, there are 136 vacant apartments across the 15-building portfolio, which has a total of 279 units. (MRC took control of the portfolio from disgraced landlord Raphael Toledano in the spring of 2017.)



"It is unconscionable to keep these apartments empty, when affordable housing is so rare," said TTC member Beth Carey.

"We have persevered for four long years — enduring an onslaught of insincere buyout badgering, construction as harassment, elevated lead dust, vermin infestations, and unfair lawsuits," said Sandra Mayer, a TTC tenant. "We have watched our friends and neighbors be picked off one by one until these once vibrant buildings stood dark and quiet. This community of working-class families and artists should not lose its spirit. It is our goal to bring back a solid base of rent-stabilized housing in the East Village."

Joining the tenants were several community groups and elected officials, including members of the INK Tenants Coalition, Cooper Square Committee, Lead Dust Free NYC coalition, St. Nicks Alliance, Good Old Lower East Side, United Neighborhood Organization (UNO), Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, Assemblymember Harvey Epstein, Assemblymember Deborah Glick, Sen. Brad Hoylman and City Councilmember Carlina Rivera.


[Sen. Hoylman]


[Assemblymember Glick]



Photos courtesy of the Cooper Square Committee.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Health Department to inspect Raphael Toledano's East Village properties for toxic levels of lead dust

Ongoing concerns about demolition work and elevated lead levels in Toledano-owned buildings

Tenant activists praise lead reform, urge for more protections from city against predatory landlords

Petition asks Madison Realty Capital to waive legal fees for evicted East Village family

Report: Raphael Toledano files for Chapter 11; $145 million deal for EV portfolio is off the table

Raphael Toledano tenants take to Midtown streets to speak out against their landlord and his lenders

Santa delivers sacks of coal to Madison Realty Capital, Rafael Toledano's lenders

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

I sympathize with missing neighbors, old and prospective, but this may be a rational reaction to the new rent laws passed by the state earlier this year. They really change the economics of owning rental properties and landlords may be trying to figure out how to move forward, or waiting for possible changes in law or from litigation. I’m not a landlord BTW! and believe that tenant protections are important to maintaining our community. I just think there has to be some balance between owner and renter interests for the market to function, and the legislature over-corrected.

noble neolani said...

IF there wasn't tons of money to be made by buying tenement apartment buildings then there wouldn't be be so many big landlords in the game. Albany Republicans royally screwed the working class in NYC when they changed the laws in our city to favor real-estate interest over its residents.
What has happened in NY and our neighborhood in particular has to be seen as a concerted effort by developers and the real estate lobbyists to change laws by backing the election of The Mayor and any other pol who is willing to put their career ambitions ahead of the people they were elected to represent.

Anonymous said...

Scumbag landlords

Tenants Taking Control said...

Here's a six minute video of what went on:
https://youtu.be/vTuzrcVvFgA

Anonymous said...

Madison also lent millions to another local character- the notoruious Gregg Singer

TommyR said...

A mad upside world when buildings are more profitably kept empty than full

Anonymous said...

7:15
I agree that there needs to be "balance between owner and renter interests for the market to function". But your rational for the potential owners rational is complete bullshit.

Anonymous said...

TommyR
+1

Anonymous said...

Some say there needs to be a balance between owner's interest and renters. The fact is the real estate market in New York City has reached a point were its continued existence as is is antithetical to housing being a human right. There is no stability to the housing market in place today and it'll keep growing until no one can afford the city or until the bubble bursts. People need to choose at some point and its brain disease for working class ppl to side with wealthy landlords