Here's what Stuy Town and Peter Cooper Village's official website stated back in 2003. (Try not to laugh too hard at the sentence that follows, which I have not edited out due to comedic value.)
Today over 25,000
people call Peter Cooper Village/ Stuyvesant Town home,
as countless others have done throughout the past 50 years. The values
that built this complex - family, friends, cooperation and community pride
- continue to make PCV/ST a unique and wonderful place to live. (Source: https://web.archive.org/web/20030207122650/http://pcvst.com/History.html)
And now?
PCVST encompasses 110 buildings, 11,250 no-fee rental apartments, and is home to approximately 30,000 people. (Source: http://www.pcvstliving.com/about-nyc-apartments .... Note: no mention of "the values that built this complex....")
Is this a story of partitions and the ever-growing student body in these apartments?
Here is a photo that has been judged to picture 5,000 people:
Now, ask yourselves, if the landlord increases a property's population by 5,000, doesn't that take a toll on the infrastructure and the resources available? If it does, how is it possible that the landlord can request and get an MCI for replacing something that has outlived its "useful life" if the landlord, by his own policy of increasing the tenant base, has degraded such "useful life" more expeditiously than it would have been degraded otherwise?
Excellent point STR
ReplyDeleteIs this why the water pressure is so low at times? Why the recycling room is totally overflowing and looks and smells rather like the former Staten Island Landfill? These greedy, money-grubbing assholes are letting the place deteriorate and then will add MCIs when they are forced to make necessary repairs to keep the buildings from crumbling.
ReplyDeleteI think we are owed a detailed breakdown of the MCI charges, who is being charged and how much - we know RS is paying more than MR - is NYU paying any of the mci charges and is it by apartment room count with the increased rooms taken into account or by number of unrelated people in an apartment.
ReplyDeleteYes I think the mci charges need to be challenged. The wear and tear is greater with the increase population crammed into the same number of apartments and infrastructure.
I think they inflated the number of apartments too--only 11,230 or 11,232, as I recall. I suspect the 30,000 number is a guesstimate. Do we think CW is actually capable of counting how many people are living here?
ReplyDeleteInteresting point about useful life (although I'm not sure we've yet seen second-stage MCIs for things we've already paid for). It's not clear to me how DHCR determines useful life, and some things here (not saying which!) have lasted far longer than their official useful life. Still, I don't think the security system we're all paying for is much affected by how many people live here. Water tanks and valves--sure. Walkway--probably, although weather is a factor. Really poor workmanship? Jackpot!
That increase is 5000 adults. That is a lot of wear and tear. A lot of plumbing stress, electrical stress. Was that given due consideration at all in the MCI closed door talks that were done without tenant representation?
ReplyDeleteSo right, so true STR. Yet our problem lies with DOB and DHCR. Who is responsible for 'approving'.
ReplyDelete5000 more people yet no change in Use, Occupancy or Egress?! Corrupt to the core.
ReplyDeleteNYU leasing Stuyvesant Town apartments, destroying community open spaces, rewiring property for student commercial spaces.....
ReplyDeleteBreaking laws, violating housing regulations, violating building codes, causing safety hazards.....
Which politicians pushed this corrupt deal through the city system and are they still in office orchestrating the cover up?
For all his campaigning and support he got from Stuyvesant Town, Mayor de Blasio owes the residents an explanation of his involvement in the NYU deal when he was Public Advocate and his commitment to residents to get us out of the NYU mess. A direct communication from the Mayor to residents and not a crafted worded statement sent via untrusted messenger sources that help the Politicians push their agenda through this community.
ReplyDelete"The values that built this complex - family, friends, cooperation and community pride - continue to make PCV/ST a unique and wonderful place to live." that no longer exist due to the transient leasing deals to up the Rent Roll for the CW / Brookfield vultures circling, all those who destroyed the place where our grandparents and parents raised us and we are trying to raise our children.
Mayor de Blasio you need to directly speak to the middle class residents here with a plan to remove the transient housing and restore this community. The only way to restore the stable family values that once existed here is to restore 100% RS regulated community that worked well for generations. Generations of families.
NYU or PCVST? Which is it Mr Mayor?
Advocates for NYU expansion plans
http://www.nyu.edu/community/nyu-in-nyc/core-plan-commitments/documents-and-downloads/advocates-for-nyu-2031.html
http://www.nyu.edu/community/nyu-in-nyc/core-plan-commitments/documents-and-downloads/advocates-for-nyu-2031/bill-de-blasio-public-advocate-advocates-for-nyu-2031.html
NYU Housing construction in PCVST started in 2008 and not 2010 as an earlier poster stated. Tom Feeney oversaw it for Robbie Speyer, Tishman then changed employer name and continued under CW Compass Rock.
ReplyDeleteI think the only thing DOB made them do is adjust a plumbing feature in the cellar of every building to accommodate the increased number of people living in the buildings but they allowed them to make false statements of no change in use, occupancy,.
Interview with Brad Hoylman. What he said in 2012 on NYU greedy expansion and saving the homes of rent stabilized communities
ReplyDeleteQ. Any specifics on efforts you would make that affect the East Village?
A.
Well I know that there are a number of bad landlords that I think the next state senator, working with the other representatives, need to keep tabs on and I’m going to pursue that. And, you know, trying to continue the efforts to expand historic preservation and sensible zoning is all part of the same project, I think. Of course the East Village historic district is coming up for a vote, so that’s a big thing. I’ll continue to make certain that that is protected and strengthened.
I’m also continually concerned about N.Y.U.’s encroachment into the East Village. I’ve been a leader, battling them back in Greenwich Village. Generally speaking and particularly, your sponsor – this calls for a sponsor announcement, but putting that aside – N.Y.U. I think has a responsibility to the local community to pare back their current project and to work more closely with elected officials, community boards and local neighbors, on their plans. So, I want to be at the forefront of that effort.
hoylmanJefferson Siegel Mr. Hoylman helps lead a rally against the end
of M8 service in the East Village in 2010
Q.
So you’re for them scaling back their plan?
A.
Yeah, absolutely. I led the community board in its unanimous resolution opposing it. And Senator Duane and Assemblymember Glick were extremely helpful in coalescing community opposition to the plan. We’ve achieved some cuts to the project but it hasn’t gone far enough. So the next stage is the City Council hearing where they’re going to consider, hopefully, more proposals to scale the plan back, but as it stands now it’s not remotely palatable to the local community.
There are also a significant number of rent-stabilized tenants in the area and I’m very concerned about the impact about what the commercial up-zoning in the Washington Square area will do to those tenants as well as the two decades of construction that are predicted for the area should the plan succeed in its current form. Most of those tenants are in their golden years so to think of your retirement being a construction zone is a pretty depressing thought. So there’s a lot of work to be done in making certain that N.Y.U.’s plan is one that the community can live with.
https://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=1837176580996082182&postID=2927469204748824685
What he has done, actions taken in PCVST to match those words:
"I think we are owed a detailed breakdown of the MCI charges"
ReplyDeleteDHCR sent you the information. If you don't have it or can't find it, contact DHCR.
"who is being charged and how much"
The DHCR form details the breakdown of the cost per room. Total cost of an MCI is divided by an 84-month amortization period, then by the number of rooms in the individual building.
"we know RS is paying more than MR"
Not so. The cost is broken down by room. Doesn't matter if you're renovated or unrenovated. Since most people in renovated apartments are paying less than the absurd legal rent, their inflated preferential rent easily covers the cost of MCIs, should management choose not to collect them separately. The Roberts settlement contained language about MCIs.
"is NYU paying any of the mci charges and is it by apartment room count with the increased rooms taken into account or by number of unrelated people in an apartment."
I don't know what NYU is paying, but the room count is determined by what the landlord has filed with DHCR. We all get a form every year about the registration of our apartment. If the landlord files for three rooms (e.g., a 1BR apartment) and a wall is put up to create another "room" but the landlord doesn't file for a change, then it's still three rooms. Number of occupants doesn't enter into it. Keep in mind that these created rooms probably don't qualify as true bedrooms because they don't have closets. The reduced living/dining areas probably don't have windows, and there are regulations for what constitutes a room.
"Yes I think the mci charges need to be challenged. The wear and tear is greater with the increase population crammed into the same number of apartments and infrastructure."
The MCI charges were indeed challenged, initially in 2009 for this latest round--that's why there was a settlement and we all got our retroactive amounts waived (about $1,000 I won't have to pay to our corrupt management and for some people it was thousands of dollars they got to keep). Individually or collectively, we've always challenged MCIs. The problem is that DHCR is understaffed and sympathetic to landlords, which means they don't investigate the costs closely enough, among other things, although they seem to regularly knock off 20%-25% of what landlords ask for. Result: tenants lose, even when we're clearly in the right.
But even after an MCI has been granted, it's possible to file for a rent reduction if the MCI item isn't functioning. Don't have the details on that, but the DHCR website probably does.
9:05 i'm not RS, i'm MR SO I can tell you you're not paying more than me. our rent went up another $56 every month due to mci
ReplyDeletestop posting lies. we're paying too much here and keep getting hit and you don't.
In a number of buildings, if you look closely, maintenance has put up air freshener vials attached to the walls on the main and terrace levels. I asked the worker why and he responded, " to disguise the smell of weed wafting through the halls...wouldn't want potential tenants to get the right idea...haha"
ReplyDeleteSo funny...so sad...dorm living at its best!
I guess this is why people have to use the stairs as bathrooms. Maybe they should invest in buckets and pee-pots to augment their bathroom facilities? But then, they would probably empty them out the window. Regardez de l'eau!
ReplyDeleteAfter reading all the rants on the mci charges it would seem the missing piece of information is the number of apartments the landlord has registered with dhcr and therefore the number of rooms. Seems not all the apartments are being considered in the calculations. does anyone believe all the apartments are registered?
ReplyDeleteTotally OT but a good friend here tried to post a review on Yelp ---- Would not post. Replies with your review posted, but WE CHECKED 3 times. Did not post.
ReplyDeleteDeBlasio is a total lying asshole. He said he was going to abolish the carriage horse trade, but the horses are still pulling fat tourists through the crowded streets, nose to tailpipe in brutal heat and humidity.
ReplyDeleteHe said he was going to freeze RS rents. Didn't happen, no matter that there is a 1% increase on 1-year leases - better watch out for what comes next year.
DeBlasio is puffing himself up because he got the City Council to pass a law giving illegal immigrants an ID card. Whoopdee-doo. I guess they're his next batch of voters. I am not against illegals per se, but these are the people he's pandering to while he doesn't give a flying fuck about the people who are born and raised here and are being driven out by the sky-high condos with sky-high prices being used by money-laundering oligarchs and international criminals.
Big Bill, you certainly don't have my vote for a second term. You don't give a shit about New Yorkers and you are no better than Bloomberg.
July 11, 2014 at 8:41 AM "NYU Housing construction in PCVST started in 2008 and not 2010 as an earlier poster stated.
ReplyDeleteI think the only thing DOB made them do is adjust a plumbing feature in the cellar of every building to accommodate the increased number of people living in the buildings but they allowed them to make false statements of no change in use, occupancy."
The blue light mini security kiosks may have been installed to satisfy NYU security requirements. A college-age relative told me that on his campus similar kiosks were required to be spaced a certain distance apart. Management never mentions them in any of their communications, and no one seems to know if they work.
The numbers are actually even worse when you factor in the number of visitors coming to visit these hyper-social transients. to hang out, party, drink, smoke, and flush. The wear and tear they put on the system with all the extra flushes, elevator rides and foot traffic takes years off the useful life of any infrastructure or improvements, so enjoy those MCIs while you can. You can add several thousand more to the total population based on the large number of visitors alone.
ReplyDeleteThank you 3:06 that raises more questions we need answered.
ReplyDeleteWere the costs to install kiosks included in any of our MCI increases?
Is this an NYU security requirement? Is this part of the contract with NYU?
Was it a requirement by NYU and 100% paid for by NYU?
Was this a requirement by NYC to have PCVST install security kiosks for NYU and should the city then pay for it?
How much money was exchanged in this NYU deal, between whom, approved by whom, and did PCVST residents bear any of the costs associated with the NYU requirements?
Is CW double dipping getting money from NYU and PCVST residents?
Is CW getting any money from PCVST Residents for any of the NYU requirements? We should bot pay for any of these.
Excellent point 6:00AM and another big reason the Residents needed to be included and represented at the MCI negotiations and not the Buyers Association.
ReplyDeleteAre Residents paying for the water valves for the NYU deal?!
ReplyDeleteWe should not pay for any MCI's that were to accommodate this illegal deal and this business transaction - they are not Major Capital Improvements that benefit nor were necessary for Residents! Maybe they should be eliminated entirely!
Security features installed for NY Colleges include
ReplyDeletecampus electronic bulletin boards, emergency notification systems
Sound familiar?!
More New York State college security measures
ReplyDeleteThe OCC Blue Light Call24 System
Blue Light Call24 Boxes that communicate directly with Campus Safety and Security are located at various points around the campus to assist students with emergencies and information requests.
The call boxes have two buttons:
Red button to be pressed for:
Medical emergencies
Life threatening situations
White button to be pressed for non-emergencies such as:
Information
Lockout assistance
Jump starts
Directions
Why are Residents paying for NYU Campus Security requirements? Why wasn't charging Residents for any of these costs stopped and applied to NYU only.
Are we paying for the additional manpower, security systems, etc to make PCVST compliant with New York State Laws on Safety and Security on College Campuses? Not only should we not pay for that but all the names of the people in the city agencies the politicians and lawyers involved in the deal need to be revealed along with the NYU personnel and CW Compass Rock and Management employees. they are intentionally ripping off residents to pay for NYU costs. We need to know who is involved in ripping us off.
ReplyDeleteSaid this before, but we should never have had an MCI for the security stuff. Doesn't work to stop crime. The TA's legal team should have fought the MCI by asking for proof of how many times a crime was prevented due to all the security gizmos we wound up paying for.
ReplyDeleteClearly the security system is not to keep the residents safe. It was installed to meet New York State Laws on Campus Security and Safety and should be paid for by NYU and or the City. Residents are not being kept safe! And Residents are being charged and paying for NY State requirements for NYU. DOB was clearly involved with requiring water valves installed just prior to the 3500 wall partitions installed for the increase population. DHCR was involved up to their necks too with the deregulation of the RS apartments for NYU. Who and How do we file a court case against these City agencies who colluded on this then "negotiated" for PCVST Residents to pay for NYU's Campus Safety requirements? And I don't mean a class action suit where lawyers make millions, residents get less than the overcharge returned to them, and when we win a ruling they all have behind closed doors negotiations to undo the ruling. I mean criminal charges too. This is outright fraud.
ReplyDeleteNew here but I am not sure why I have a 2 BR signed at $4979.00 here and now have MCI as well on top of.
ReplyDeleteSenator Holyman was out on the corner of 14th and 1st giving out notices about this creep (complete with his photograph). I doubt that management cares about this, except may to the extent it may interfere with their hardsell marketing to students.
ReplyDeleteYou are absolutely right about the secrity cameras, STR, we should never have been charged an MCI for these. They are purely ornamental. Too bad the TA didn't challenge that MCI.
For anyone who didn't save the Oct 2013 MCI order, it says in part:
ReplyDelete1. TV/Security system consists of security cameras, key cards (key fobs), interior access door and access card readers.
2. Security cameras are installed throughout the building.
No mention of blue light kiosks, and I don't recall ever seeing a charge for them.
Here is what Hoylman said in 2012
ReplyDelete"so Hoylman will fight to ensure that CW Capital and Rose Associates fulfill their responsibilities to maintain the property, and that they stop block rentals to students"
Too bad his words were NOT met with actions.
Here is more of what he said and did not do:
August 13, 2012 : PRESS RELEASE
Democratic State Senate Candidate Praises ST/PCV Tenant Association’s Work for Community’s Future
New York, NY – Brad Hoylman, Democratic candidate for the new 27th State Senate District containing Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village, announced today an agenda for a future for the Stuyvesant Town/Peter Cooper Village (ST/PCV) community that respects the rights of the long-time tenants who call it their home.
ST/PCV must remain affordable, middle-class housing for its residents, Hoylman declared. The property must be properly maintained, and adequate funds must be set aside to do so. And the historical configuration of the property, including all of its open spaces, must be preserved.
Says all the right words then turns a blind eye and deaf ear as CW tears apart the property and rents to thousands of NYU students.
Why didn't he match his words with actions?
I forgot to include the link to earlier post on NYU students and Senator Hoylman. Here it is
ReplyDeletehttp://bradhoylman.com/2012/08/13/brad-hoylman-announces-agenda-for-stuyvesant-townpeter-cooper-village/
As I walk around the property and smell the stench of dog urine all around and it's not even hot out, I am starting to think we would be better off coop or condo. I WOULD never buy my place, be stupid to do so, but I know I'm protected and my lovely RS will not expire.
ReplyDeleteBut, I'd rather now have other humans owning me, us. I cannot imagine they'd get anywhere near letting this place fall as it has through the corporate greed we've had since MetLife. At least if my neighbor were an owner, collectively we could stop or curtail the madness. Ive never said this or spoken this, but it's very bad here. Too many other reasons to list. And not safe.
If PCVST goes condo the apartments will be bought by foreign investors and hedge funds as BlackRock - the biggest hedge fund landlord of rental properties in the USA.
ReplyDeleteThey will not be bought by middle class families with family and community values who raise families for generations.
Only with RS was this a middle class community with family values and community values where our grandparents, parents and we raised our children and now our kids are starting families here.
This used to be the largest middle class community in NYC.
How the hell are all these tenants using ONE BATHROOM? Disgusting.
ReplyDelete11:19 they also said "no change in use, occupancy" on official documents yet we know that to be untrue.
ReplyDeleteUnless the paperwork is closely scrutinized and all payments and monies investigated they could easily tuck away costs under the headings you list.
NYU has sent a loud message to the Real Estate Community:
ReplyDeleteAny banker, hedge fund, landlord looking to remove apartments from Rent Stabilization in New York City, NYU will work with you on a Dorm Scheme to churn apartments by populating your buildings with multiple transient tenants at a time, which will boost your profits and destabilize your apartments.
NYU - the higher education organization that prioritizes profit over ethics.
Does NYU have non-profit status?
WOW!! I think the leasing office needs more advertising on it's windows. Looks like they may have missed a spot!
ReplyDelete"As I walk around the property and smell the stench of dog urine all around and it's not even hot out, I am starting to think we would be better off coop or condo."
ReplyDeleteTheoretically you're right. But can you imagine how much more self-entitled the offenders would be if they were owners? And the rules would still need to be enforced. From talking to coop owners I can tell that good management is necessary regardless of who is the owner.
However, you can challenge if the lease amount of $4979 was fraudulent, illegally increased, and should challenge it.
ReplyDeleteAlso, the question on the MCI charge being on top of the $4979 can be challenged as the so-called negotiations included that the MR "were already paying the mci in their base" so they were omitted from being charged as the RS were. So yeah, sounds like you could challenge the MCI on top of your $4979.
Someone needs to tell Citi Habitats it is illegal to post false Yelp reviews.
ReplyDelete8 ; 06 yes and no or maybe. But that ship has sailed. Every day we lose more of RS and tenants die or move away.
ReplyDeleteSo you're still living a fantasy from 1956.
Our neighbors, their apartments were once filled with memories, photos, art, memorabilia from vacations and travels around the world from a richness of storied lives well lived by generations of families. Now it is cheap ikea NYU dorm furniture, overflowing recycling areas with beer and liquor bottles, peed in , plastic crates and discarded crap on the sidewalks at the end of every school year. I can't believe how quickly this management deteriorated Stuy Town.
ReplyDeletePeriodically all the RE interests check in with all the tenant blogs and the following is the most likely scenario. They turn to each other at all their respective places and say to each other...'You think they're going to make any trouble for us?" And then comes the answer: "Nah."
ReplyDeleteI guess a lie, repeated often enough, becomes "true." NYU rents a tiny number of apartments at PCVST. That is just the fact. Complain about other stuff.... but that one item just makes you look stupid because it is so EASILY disproven.
ReplyDeleteGerald Guterman - Agree but wouldn't it be better for the Attorney General to file suit than for the tenants to go through another court case that gets undone by a bad settlement?
ReplyDelete2:36 PM I would rather be stuck in the "1956" that values family and people then be stuck in the 1980 Greed is good culture that was reignited by Bloomberg who famously said all he cared about during the MetLife sale of PCVST was that it was a profitable good deal for the purchaser with no regards for the families and people in the community.
ReplyDeleteIn response to 10:59
ReplyDeleteA. You mean it is EASILY covered up.
B. Every time you start calling the tenant's making comments on this blog names like "stupid" it makes you look like you have no legitimate points to your opinion ... only name calling to try to get tenants to stop revealing what is going on in PCVST.
C. Then put your cover up material er I mean proof on the table. Your so called proof will be EASILY proven to be a lie.
2:36 It is the year 2014 where politicians shake hands on community street corners campaigning with words as "family values" and "protecting homes" to get our votes then when in office shake hands with the Brookfields and CW campaigning with words as "profitable deals" and not homes but "houses as assets" to further their political careers.
ReplyDeleteMaybe it is the Politicians using 1956 family values to get into office then when in office act on contrary values as if 2014 is all about profit over humanity.
Maybe that is what term limits are designed to curb. Why we must look at the actions and inaction of the politicians during their entire tenure and not just what they do in an election year for appearance sake.
"...lie repeated..."
ReplyDeleteI know for sure that over the past 5 years I've had students right and left of me, medical students down the hall, and have seen new students come and go on other floors. You an't miss them. They're often on the elevator in groups and they're not all graduate students.
We've seen this same person comment before. The lie is his/her confidence...this person doesn't know the actual figures anymore than the rest of us.
Ruined forever! Sad..............
ReplyDeleteThat crowd in the photo is 5000 people - wow.
ReplyDelete9:24 pm. SO MAKE TROUBLE. WTF is wrong with you people?
ReplyDeleteWe live in the greatest city in the world, Many of us have been here for generations and you can't challenge your sleazy landlord?
"We live in the greatest city in the world, Many of us have been here for generations and you can't challenge your sleazy landlord?"
ReplyDeleteMaybe it would be helpful if we had a Tenants Association worthy of the name, instead of one that capitulates to our sleazy landlord.
Anonymous said....Gerald Guterman - Agree but wouldn't it be better for the Attorney General to file suit than for the tenants to go through another court case that gets undone by a bad settlement?
ReplyDeleteJuly 14, 2014 at 11:20 PM
No. I believe that a laser focused tenant's group, can achieve more than any government agency.
There are 11,232 apartments in the combined STPCV community. No matter what the occupancy is or how many apartments are now rented as dormitory apartments, the sheer size of STPCV with a "mind blowing" amount of monthly rent being paid or not paid, if properly organized, presents an insurmountable economic and political force, against which no landlord in New York or America, can successfully litigate or pragmatically survive.
believe that the significa
My own experience, leads me to nt changes required to return stability to the STPCV community, will only be accomplished by a Community-wide economic and political "REVOLT", taking the form of a laser focused litigation, with sufficient collateral to draw the 100% absolute and unwavering attention of the Owner/Management.
In my opinion, this aforementioned economic force, together with laser focused litigation, can result in the following;
• the Roberts litigation can be re-settled,
• prior MCI increases can be resettled, with future increases moderated,
• conversion of STPCV apartments to dormitory housing, can be stopped and reversed,
• an agreement to restore the OVAL can be completed,
• an agreement to keep all open spaces permanently "open" can be completed,
• an agreement to combine Stuyvesant Town with Peter Cooper Village can be accomplished,
• an agreement to convert all the rental apartments in the STPCV community to ownership housing, with a cost ( to tenants in occupancy) of 60% of market value and pre-approved financing for 85% to 95% of the purchase price for each separate tenant owned apartment, can be accomplished,
• a pre-arranged contract to sell the unsold apartments to a non-profit organization with a pre-settled agreement to retain said unsold apartments under rent stabilization, for approximately twenty years, can be accomplished.
Gerald Guterman
So there are 30,000 people living in 11,250 apartments, so on average it's 2.67 persons per apartment; the majority of apartments are 1BR and 2BR with some 3BR ones and no studios. The apartments here are good sized for Manhattan - that doesn't sound like it's overcrowded. Sure, it could be 25k 10 years before due to demographics trends - MR units are more likely occupied by young families with kids who moved into units that were previously occupied by older residents. I would be surprised if population of PCVST was less the 30k shortly after it was built.
ReplyDeletehaving been here for many many years, the NEW renovated apartments are full of 3 to 5 people in one/two bedrooms.
ReplyDeleteLiterally every older unit that is one to two br here has one or two elderly tenants in it.
Can anyone on here comment about the rent renewal rate received recently with a VERY LARGE base rent apartment? Was your rent renewal 1 to 5% or more? Thank you.
ReplyDelete4:39 pm: those increases don't go into effect until Ovtober. Anyone renewing before then renews at the current rate (whatever that is) that was set last year.
ReplyDelete11:19. has nothing to do with the question. The poster is asking about said increases for those withe very HIGH BASE RENT. Not subject to normal 1 to 5%.
ReplyDelete11:19 - Our base rent is almost 5k on a one bedroom and yes, a total joke. Renwal now and LL raised us by another $350.00 per month.
ReplyDeleteWe're leaving. You can all have your nyu students living above and next to you. We're on time paying respectful and quiet. Done here.
Some of the RS have been fighting for ways to protect MR and RS for the very reason as you 5:44. NYU is driving out good neighbors, destroying a good community. So to those on this blog trying to get all of us to stop having conversation the NYU scheme, we can't do that or we will lose more good people like 5:44.
ReplyDeleteNYU is almost single-handedly destroying PCVST.
4:43 yes, NYU, but more importantly, CR CWC, DHCR, DOB and elected officials.
ReplyDeleteScummiest.
You are right 8:14.
ReplyDeleteThe DOB is responsible for safety and personal welfare and the enforcement of all City codes, and laws and ordinance relating to building, wiring, plumbing, heating and cooling - and PCVST was brought up to State laws and Codes for University Campuses with the DHCR approved security, plumbing, etc.
DOB et al were part of the planning and developing of the NYU dorms.
I don't know how you fix the student problem.
ReplyDeleteIt's not like we or anyone can state that 1. you can't live here as you're a student or you're under 25. 2. you can't have friends come over and have a keg party.
Even if two student live in a one br here and there are no walls, they'll have parties. that's what girls do, guys do. they invite 10 friends and it becomes 20. the city is perfect for this.
Lost another nice family today. Moved to a place they could buy in Kips bay.
ReplyDeleteGetting the beer kegger ready along with our earplugs. Every time someone moves out of our building, we get 3 or 4 20 somethings.
Lost another senior this week on our floor. She was too ill and alone to stay.
ReplyDeleteGetting our beer coolers ready. College start date soon enough!