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Hundreds of New York City tenants converged to air their housing grievances during Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s inaugural “rental ripoff” hearing on Thursday. However, many remain skeptical about whether their landlord issues will be effectively addressed.
Approximately 500 tenants registered for the opportunity to discuss their problems face-to-face with Mamdani’s contentious tenant advocate, Cea Weaver, and volunteers from various city agencies at the Downtown Brooklyn event. The hearing aimed to provide a platform for tenants to express ongoing disputes related to housing and landlords.
Cea Weaver initiated the session, which faced criticism from New York City Housing Authority residents for largely sidelining them, by highlighting key issues for discussion. These included additional fees for amenities like pet ownership and problems with code enforcement. “What are the things you have to pay every month that are not your rent and that are making housing more unaffordable in the city?” Weaver asked those gathered.
Tenants from privately owned buildings voiced their frustrations over longstanding housing quality issues and conflicts with landlords. Despite the Mamdani administration’s assurances, many attendees remained doubtful about any forthcoming improvements.
Brooklyn tenant Alex Reddihough commented on the initiative, “Mamdani’s made a pretty big statement about how he wants to get tenants’ rights recognized, and I think it’s great they’re having these kinds of meetings in the first place.”
âMamdani’s made a pretty big statement about how he wants to get tenants’ rights recognized, and I think itâs great theyâre having these kinds of meetings in the first place,â said Brooklyn renter Alex Reddihough.
âIâm not sure anything will come from this, but at least the city is giving an opportunity.”
The 41-year-old structural engineer who lives with his wife in Prospect Heights was first to line up for the hearing around 4 p.m. outside of K605 George Westinghouse High School.
âIâve got some hope that the new mayor is going to enforce the regulations and understand what people are having to deal with,â he said.
Reddihough has been in the same rent-stabilized one-bedroom unit on Eastern Parkway for years, paying $2,950 rent a month â but has dealt with mouse infestations, heat and hot water issues, and repeated “patch jobs” of other maintenance issues.
Residents have filed multiple 311 complaints, but they get closed out within âhours,â he recalled, alleging no one from the city ever actually comes to check complaints.
Though he belongs to a tenant association, Reddihough said many older rent-stabilized tenants are afraid to report problems over fears of eviction.
âIt makes me sad that theyâre kind of scared and they donât feel like thereâs an avenue to make the state of living better,â he said.
Joshua Rodriguez, a Red Hook resident on Coffey Street for over 40 years, spoke one-on-one with Weaver during the hearing for advice on how to move forward with his housing court case and enforce repairs in his building.
“It’s cool that it exists in general because in my lifetime I haven’t really seen anything like this,” Rodriguez said of the hearing. “Most of the time, we get ignored, especially people of color and people who are lifelong New Yorkers.”
“I guess I don’t have too much faith in the government, but this new administration, maybe, maybe we’ll see a little bit of a change,” he said.
The start of the meeting was disrupted by a notorious online agitator who calls herself “Crackhead Barney.”
The profane performance artist stormed the stage and took to the podium, where she shouted, “NYCHA [tenants] should be allowed to speak today. NYCHA should be allowed in the motherf–cking building. NYCHA should be allowed to speak. This is bulls–t.”
“There’s no tenants association without NYCHA. Poor people have a f–king voice.”
NYCHA tenants — nor any tenant — was given time to provide their public testimony during the hearing and were instead offered one-on-one meetings.
Public housing residents can still attend the forums and speak individually with NYCHA officials in attendance about repairs, heat or hot water issues and other worries, according to the mayor’s office.
The city is planning to host separate, additional tenant engagement for NYCHA tenants, a City Hall spokesperson said.