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Patrick Trombly's avatar

I have the solution for the city's finances and its housing problem. Are you ready?

END NYCHA. It's really the only way.

Auction off ALL 2,500 acres - in staggered auctions every 40 months. Manhattan and Queens East River waterfront first. Then the rest of Queens. Then Brooklyn, then SI and the Bronx.

Demolish the buildings and replace 80% with mixed use or resi towers. 350-400 feet tall on the waterfront, 240 everywhere else but BKLYN, 180 in BKLYN. Re-zone to allow billboards, cell towers and 100% market units.

Including air rights in the auction.

Buy out the existing tenants for an average of $100K/tenant. No housing assistance or any assistance after that - you make $100K now, or $200K for most households - you don't qualify. It's GTFO money, for everyone but the tenants who are also NYCHA workers (I think it's about 1 in 8). But it's life-changing money for them. Win-win.

Buy out the employees for 2 years' base pay - over a staggered period in line with the auction. They'll get jobs on the rebuilds anyway - 2 years' severance is double dipping for them. Negotiate a PLA with the unions and offer 50% increase to abatements if 75% of the work completed by the GC and subs uses union labor.

For the 20%, build schools, parks, libraries, senior centers, pools, etc...

Allow 10% of the space to be redeveloped as hotel, another 10% as parking garages and 10% as condos. Bring at least one, preferably 2, corporate campuses to BX.

Allow the top floor of each of the 420 foot buildings to be condo. Democratize harbor views!

I'm getting total buyout costs of $40BN of which $3BN comes back in municipal tax withholding.

But you're eliminating a $78BN NYCHA capex backlog and $1.5BN in annual employee costs.

You're also bringing in billions in property tax and individual and corporate municipal income tax revenue, every year.

The auction proceeds would probably be in the range of $70-100BN. Doing Manhattan and Queens waterfront first would raise the highest numbers PSF - especially given the allowed heights of the buildings. That would be huge.

AND think of the follow on development when that is done and it's safer and more profitable for people who own non-NYCHA property nearby to redevelop those lots.

So, there should be enough for the city's portion of site upgrades - probably $20-30BN - to use to pay down debt, shore up the pensions, and restore the city's credit rating.

Doing this on a staggered basis would ensure the capacity (capital and labor) to complete the project and it would avoid creating a rental market that was too skewed toward tenants - it WOULD reduce rents, but not to the point that landlords would go under - just enough to resolve the affordability crisis.

T Ferguson's avatar

The NY City Council, like the NY Legislature, is never to be counted on for fiscal checks on the executive.

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