A Better Mayor Than Propaganda Wants Us to Believe

"When Bill de Blasio ran for Mayor in 2013, he made three big tangible promises: Universal Pre-K, An end to Stop and Frisk, and 200,000 units of affordable housing created or preserved. He delivered on all three and then some. Few politicians can make such a claim." This is from one of his arch nemeses, the NY Daily News on 12/19/2021.

As my final good-bye to de Blasio, I thought that instead of a long list of massive achievements, I would focus on the one I know the most about---Housing in NYC.

By the numbers, mostly.

1) There are 1 Million rent-stabilized apartments in NYC. That is 1/2 the total number of rental apartments in the City and represent at least 3 million people. Every year the NYC Rent Guidelines Board, RUN by the NYC Mayor and his chosen people, approve the Rent Increases for the next year. (Rent raises are supposed to be granted to protect landlords when fuel costs rise, for example. Like this year. A rent raise should happen when the Board votes in June.)

MIchael Bloomberg was in office for 12 years. Each year the RGB raised the rents on one year and two year leases. These raises were as high as 7.75% for 2 year leases and as high as 4.25% on one year leases. Plus there was a cap on how high a stabilized rent could go. Exceed it, and the stabilized apartment loses its status and goes to Fair Market. Too bad for the family living in it. Afford the new rent or get out. Clearing out places working people could afford to live in and making way for developers to build only luxury housing was the goal and the practice for 12 endless years.

In contrast, during de Blasio's 8 years, for 3 years there were Rent Freezes. NO Raise at all. In the other 5 years, the raise never exceeded 1.5% for one year and 2.75% for 2 years. And de Blasio raised the Cap so that very few, if any residents lost their apartments for 8 years.

2) In the closing months of his term de Blasio broke the NIMBY efforts in wealthy areas to prevent new, affordable housing from being built. Change has come to Soho. The 8,000 privileged folks will be getting newly built middle-income housing and it is about time!

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Comments

The chiefs, elders, and councils make it happen.
Wall Street speculators are not allowed to participate.
Capitalism is ruining this country. Glad de Blasio made
a difference.

Good luck!

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10 users have voted.

@QMS We will need a lot more than luck to keep New Yorkers in their homes. It will take work.

Bloomberg is the puppetmaster behind the incoming Mayor.

Which might explain the fact that the New Guy has not bothered to articulate any solid plans for NYC.

Except to assure us that he will be the NightLife Mayor---out partying at clubs until 2 AM. Wearing custom made suits.

His history tells us that he also claims to be up at 5:00 am after sleeping on a mattress at Brooklyn City Hall, so as to be close to his constituents.

(Legal residence of this Dunce is Ft. Lee, NJ----but what does any of this matter when Bloomberg will be back to cleanse the City of everything but the Wealthy and Profitable Tourists.)

Yes. I am bitter. And somewhat irrational.

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NYCVG

@NYCVG I would say that an irrational response would be to see your fellow citizens getting screwed over and...simply shrug and walk on.

I'm on the other coast and I had a somewhat (ir)rational response when I heard his comments on Rikers and Solitary confinement.

It doesn't have to be this way.

Keep the NYC news coming! Even though I have a minor knee jerk reaction to "NYC being the center of the universe" (BIL lives there, he's an ass, another story). What happens there really does spread out to the rest of the country in a way that is matched only by a few other cities.

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snoopydawg's picture

@peachcreek

I would say that an irrational response would be to see your fellow citizens getting screwed over and...simply shrug and walk on.

I appreciate the updates on what’s happening there. Thanks for the 1st hand view info what’s happening there.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

@snoopydawg This is from the NY Daily News this Morning. While the front pages deny de Blasio's work it does allow an occasional truthful article about his stunning achievements.

How to help NYC’s working class now

An obvious fact that many observers are just coming to realize in analyses of Mayor de Blasio’s legacy should come as no surprise: Raising the minimum wage had a remarkable impact on lifting the incomes of low-paid New York City workers. The gradual increase in the New York City wage floor from 2014-19 boosted the incomes of the bottom half by an historic degree, clearly establishing that state and local actions can move the needle on income inequality.
New York’s pandemic unemployment crisis signals that local action is again needed to preserve those exemplary gains.
In 2013, the minimum wage in New York City was the federal $7.25 an hour. State actions increased the hourly wage floor in stages, reaching $15 for fast-food workers and workers at large employers at the end of 2018. Raising the wage floor to $15 benefited 1.4 million workers locally, 35% of the total. The city instituted an after-expense $15 minimum pay standard for 100,000 independent contractor Uber and Lyft drivers in February 2019, the first such gig worker pay standard anywhere.
The result of these local actions: Wages rose for workers in the bottom half by 28-40% between 2014-19, with wages rising fastest for the lowest paid. Coupled with sustained job growth pushing the city’s unemployment rate below 4% for two years prior to the pandemic, something unprecedented happened. The share of total wages paid in the city going to the bottom half rose while the share paid to the richest 10% fell between 2014-19, according to income tax data, the most definitive measure of income trends.
Granted, the highly paid 10% had a share that was nearly five times that of the lowest-paid half, but the lowest paid city workers had never gained such ground during an economic expansion, when the highest-paid enjoy steady raises and big bonuses.
Moreover, the sustained wage gains for New York City’s bottom half meant that between 2014 and 2019, median family incomes rose faster than at any time since the 1960s, and families of color shared in those historic gains. In fact, the wage gains for the city’s predominantly service- and blue-collar workers were substantial enough to mean that the share of total incomes received by the bottom half in New York City inched up from 6% in 2014 to 8% percent in 2019, while the share going to the richest 10% slipped from 65% to 62%.
Rising low wages together with large job gains pushed down the federal poverty rate in the city by nearly five percentage points to 16% and cut child poverty by a quarter over five years.
A handful of other states and cities also raised their minimum wages to $15 (or higher) in recent years, but not enough workers around the country saw wage gains to significantly increase the bottom half’s share of total wages or all incomes for the U.S. overall. National figures show slight increases 2014-19 for the bottom half while shares going to the richest 10% held steady.
New York’s track record on the minimum wage prepandemic clearly shows that bold actions close to home can lift living standards for hundreds of thousands of workers and that steady wage gains for the majority of workers can make a meaningful dent in income inequality. By the way, it also shows that gradually raising the wage floor is fully compatible with continued job growth.

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NYCVG

snoopydawg's picture

@NYCVG

Seems like it can be done after all.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.