NYCHA’s New Federal Monitor Issues Mixed Reviews for Performance Over the Past 5 Years


Although the new monitor credits NYCHA for being a “very different organization” since the start of the oversight arrangement in 2019, there are still setbacks, particularly with addressing mold, leaks and lead.

NYCHA’s New Federal Monitor Issues Mixed Reviews for Performance Over the Past 5 Years

Adi Talwar

Water damage in a bathroom at NYCHA’s Red Hook West Houses in 2022.

Though the start of the school year is still a day away for the city’s scholars, the New York City Housing Authority received a progress report showing mixed reviews of its maintenance and operations efforts over the past five years.

The monitor review, which comes out quarterly, is part of a legal agreement struck in 2019 with NYCHA, federal and state agencies in an effort to hold the housing authority accountable for how it manages its properties.

The arrangement put an independent entity in place to track NYCHA’s efforts to improve living conditions for tenants. On Aug. 21, Jenner and Block LLP, a law firm, published its inaugural report as the new federal monitor—filling the shoes of the former monitor, Bart Schwartz, who departed in February.

Although the new monitor credits NYCHA for being a “very different organization” since the start of the monitorship five years ago, there are still setbacks, particularly with addressing mold, leaks and lead. The housing authority is either not compliant with federal regulations or behind schedule for full remediation of these issues.

For example, NYCHA must abate 100 percent of reported floods or any other water-related damage within 24 hours, according to the report. But during the fifth year of the monitorship—defined as Feb. 1, 2023 to Jan. 31, 2024— NYCHA abated these issues within the required one-day period 69 percent of the time.

Mold cases had an even lower performance rate. The report says that NYCHA must remove or remediate visible mold within five business days, 95 percent of the time. It could also remediate the mold and the “root cause” of it within one week, and take 15 days for complex repairs, according to the rules. However, the housing authority only met those timelines 12 percent of the time.

These findings come as no surprise to Aixa Torres, a tenant association president at the Alfred E. Smith Houses in lower Manhattan and a member of NYCHA’s Citywide Council of Presidents. “I had expectations that I did not see,” said Torres. “I think some of the work got done but not as much as it could’ve.”

Anna Luft, the public housing justice project director at the New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG), had a similar takeaway. “I’ve heard of people reporting mold and moisture issues and being told no one can come see them for over a month to do an inspection, let alone begin the removal,” said Luft in an email to City Limits.

Slow repair times were among the reasons NYCHA was placed under federal monitorship in the first place.





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