Showing posts with label Harvey Epstein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harvey Epstein. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Primary Election Night 2025

Photos by Daniel Efram 

Last evening, d.b.a. on First Avenue hosted a watch party for Zohran Mamdani.

And it turned out to be a night to remember for his supporters as the 33-year-old Democratic socialist from Queens appeared set to win the Democratic nomination for NYC mayor over former Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
Although a winner won't be officially declared until July 1 due to the city's ranked-choice voting system, Cuomo conceded less than two hours after the polls closed at 9 p.m. 

Mamdani carried about 43.5% of the vote, in what Democratic political strategist Trip Yang described to Gothamist as "the biggest upset in modern New York City history." (Read more: 5 takeaways from the NYC mayoral primary at The Hill.) 

He will now face off against Mayor Adams, who's running as an independent, and Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa in November. He may also see Cuomo again, per Axios and other published reports. 

In the race for term-limited Carlina Rivera's City Council seat in District 2, Assembly Member Harvey Epstein appears to be headed for victory with nearly 40% of the vote, per The New York Times. He is followed by Sarah Batchu (21.2%), Andrea Gordillo (21.1%), Anthony Weiner (10.3%), and Allie Ryan (7.3%).

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Opinion: Against Upzoning

Local Assemblymember Harvey Epstein wrote the following op-ed.

With the Soho/Noho Neighborhood Plan pushed by Mayor de Blasio stuck in legal limbo and mired by community opposition, it's time we reevaluate upzoning as a tool for creating affordable housing. 

In 2019, the Democratically controlled legislature partnered with advocates to pass the statewide Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act (HSTPA), the strongest tenant protection in decades. The bill closed many of the loopholes that led to a loss of affordable housing over the years preceding, especially in "high opportunity" neighborhoods in Manhattan. 

But now, the de Blasio approach of upzoning –– changing the existing zoning to allow for more height and density –– undermines the work we did to protect renters in the HSTPA by incentivizing the demolition of existing rent-regulated affordable housing, one of the few ways rent-regulated units can still be lost. 

Upzonings imperil small older apartment buildings, which suddenly become vulnerable to demolition when an upzoning incentivizes their replacement with new buildings two or three times the size or more. Older, smaller, affordable buildings could be replaced with new buildings required by mandatory inclusionary housing to offer rents as high as 75 percent market rate. It's unlikely many current tenants could afford a unit in the buildings that would be allowed due to an upzoning. 

Today, every day New Yorkers foot the bill for three units of luxury housing for every one unit of not very deeply affordable housing, often in wildly out-of-scale new buildings that may be replacing existing affordable housing and residents. It’s a bad deal for New Yorkers.

The need for a more affordable and equitable city is especially great right now, and every neighborhood needs to take part in that effort. We should eliminate as-of-right development and require all new residential developments to designate a greater than 25 percent share of units as affordable. Linking affordability and upzonings forces a false choice. Affordability shouldn't be dependent upon upzonings, which inherently endanger existing housing in neighborhoods, including affordable housing with longtime and often lower-income residents.

We should also be directly subsidizing and funding the construction of truly affordable housing in NYC that doesn't depend on the whims of the market and private for-profit developers all across the city, not just in less well-off neighborhoods.

With these policy changes, we can protect existing affordable housing, create new affordable housing, and do it in a way that’s compatible with neighborhood character and doesn't create a flood of new luxury housing that does more harm than good in terms of making our neighborhoods equitable, affordable, and diverse.

Assemblymember Harvey Epstein represents the 74th District, which includes parts of Manhattan's east side.