As legislature faces April 1 budget deadline, approval of a successor to 421-a tax break could nudge the future of Atlantic Yards/Pacific Park
The Senate puts forward a new program entitled the New York Housing Opportunity Corporation, using the $250 million allocated as a part of the NY RUSH program, to expedite and build more long-term affordable housing on available state-owned land throughout NY, as a successor to the Mitchell-Lama program.Note that the reference to 421-a remains vague. State Sen. Brian Kavanagh, the Senate’s chair of the Committee on Housing, Construction and Community Development, told Capital Tonight:
Protecting Tenants and HomeownersTenant protections that align with the core principles of Good Cause Eviction.
Protecting New Yorkers against Deed Theft.
Providing the City of New York the authority to override the FAR [Floor Area Ratio] cap.
Commercial conversions with more emphasis on affordability.
Openness for further discussion on extending the 421-a construction completion deadline for vested projects, as well as the creation of a tax exemption for the construction of multi-family rental housing to replace the expired 421-a program.
“In the case of the 421a program, the governor put forth a new proposal but acknowledged it was something of a placeholder,” Kavanagh said. “We are more or less saying the same thing about the details, but the goal is to get a comprehensive deal in the context of a budget.”
The contour of the 421-a successor is crucial, as well. Would it allow the obligation to deliver "affordable" units be satisfied by building below-market apartments for the middle-class, with higher rents, or would it require more deeply affordable ones, at lower rents and thus in smaller quantities?
The trade-offAs the New York Times noted, landlords and developers surely appreciate the proposals to replace 421-a and allow larger buildings by lifting the 12 FAR cap, but there's a bargain implied:
But the package comes with one major condition: Senate Democrats say they will not make any deal that does not include protections similar to those in the Good Cause Eviction legislation — a controversial bill that would limit landlords’ ability to evict tenants or raise their rent above 3 percent in times of low inflation.City Limits reported, in Second Time’s the Charm? NY Legislature Angles For Broad Housing Deal:
The Assembly’s proposal also includes incentives for office conversions and for building new housing on state-owned land. And while it makes reference to protecting tenants from “capricious rent increases and unreasonable evictions,” it makes no mention of the tenant protection legislation...
With the state’s annual spending plan due in less than three weeks, the Senate and Assembly called this week for a housing deal that both incentivizes development and protects tenants. But Hochul, who has substantial leverage in budget negotiations, has insisted that these topics should be addressed separately.
The Senate and Assembly also put forward ideas for building housing on state-owned land. The former proposed $250 million for a New York Housing Opportunity Corporation, billed as Mitchell-Lama 2.0, while the Assembly pitched $500 million for Foundations for Futures, a limited-equity co-op plan it tried for last year.
Hochul’s plan includes $500 million for housing development on state-owned land, which she estimates could produce 15,000 housing units.Technically, Atlantic Yards/Pacific Park is a state-owned site, but... the cost of construction, including the platform over the railyard, ensures that any state funding for new construction would go to more shovel-ready sites.
Taken purely as a technical exercise, of identifying the appropriate locations for the right amount of housing, the downstate housing supply crisis is solvable. NYC’s “City of Yes for Housing Opportunity” proposal would, if enacted and supported with the needed state legislation, give the city a meaningful increase in housing production.[1] An analysis for the New York Times found locations for Mayor Eric Adams’s full “moonshot” goal of 500,000 new housing units over 10 years “without radically changing the character of the city’s neighborhoods or altering its historic districts.”[2] In the suburbs, finding low-impact building sites is even easier. For example, in a 2021 report, I focused on the housing potential of commercial areas near commuter rail stations and along arterial roads.[3] A 2017 Regional Plan Association study found the potential for as many as 250,000 new housing units on commuter rail parking lots in the NYC region.[4]
The problem, of course, is politics.
Indeed, Kober's report noted:In a recent report, I suggested that Hochul should propose legislation simply authorizing the city to create a property tax exemption program for new mixed-income rental housing, by local law. My argument was that state control of 421a had led repeatedly to costly and ineffective program designs and that the mayor and the city council were better positioned to determine how much city tax revenue should be given away, to whom, and under what conditions. The mayor and the city council would then be accountable to voters for the consequences, in a way that the state legislature is not.
Hochul’s actual proposal is an unwieldy contraption that combines state mandates, outsourcing of public policy to private interests, and local flexibility in a manner that seems unlikely to produce a good outcome. First, the legislation specifies that eligible rental projects shall receive a 35-year tax benefit and eligible homeownership projects, a 40-year tax benefit. It also specifies the amount of property tax exempted for each year of the term. However, the legislation doesn’t specify what an eligible project is. Thus it creates, in effect, a piñata stuffed with NYC property tax revenues for interested parties to fight over.
Moreover, reauthorizations of the program are done through secretive negotiations, which often come at the city’s fiscal expense. In the last go-round in 2016, for example, the negotiations created the widely used Option C,[30] which provides a 35-year, 100% post-construction tax exemption, applicable in most of the city, in exchange for “affordability” conditions requiring units to be rented at, or close to, market rates in many neighborhoods.[31] It is an ineffective system and a colossal backdoor cash drain on the city.
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