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PEP Archives | May 2002
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By DIANE S. WILLIAMS
The DC 37 Rent 2002 Campaign to extend rent regulation laws and end
vacancy decontrol has gained more ground through four recent developments.
If the senators also pass the bill, it will go before Gov. George
E. Pataki as he runs for re-election.
"All-out campaign"
"This is an all-out campaign in which our members are fighting
for the right to live in this city," said DC 37 Housing Committee
Chair Barry Jamison.
"Anyone can play a role in this campaign. If you have a pen you
have the power to make it happen," he said.
The rent regulation laws are set to expire June 15, 2003, and the
DC 37 Housing Committee is pushing the affordable housing issue to
the forefront of the 2002 political debate.
Tens of thousands of DC 37 members and their families could face eviction
if rent control laws are allowed to sunset and vacancy decontrol is
not repealed. Also at risk are the jobs of 450 state workers. The
members of Rent Regulations Services Employees Local 1359 administer
the rent laws for the Division of Housing and Community Renewal.
"It's clear why politicians had put off the renewal date of these
laws until 2003, after the statewide elections," said Mr. Jamison.
"But we are making this an issue that will decide who gets elected
to office in November 2002."
"How can we expect to be Everyday Heroes for a city we cannot
afford to live in?" asked Ralph Carbone, a housing lawyer and
president of Local 1359. "For too long landlords have had their
cake and ate it too. They got fat off property tax breaks, and now
they're opting out of these programs to rake in even more money through
astronomical market rents."
"Keep rents affordable"
Several of DC 37's larger locals also have made the Rent 2002 Campaign
part of their political agenda. Clerical-Administrative Local 1549
has joined the advocacy group Tenants and Neighbors.
"The majority of our members earn low to moderate incomes,"
said Local President Eddie Rodriguez. "We cannot afford outrageous
rents that eat up almost three weeks' pay every month. We have to
fight to keep rents affordable."
For the next phase of the Rent 2002 Campaign, the Housing Committee
is asking DC 37 members to post signs in their apartment windows May
13, and not remove them until rent regulations are extended and vacancy
decontrol is repealed. "Landlords won't like it," Mr. Jamison
said, "but we don't like their attempt to squeeze us out of our
homes, either."
If you would like a poster to support the campaign, please call (212)
608-4320, ext. 310, or 815-7554.