We built new affordable housing in the Bronx. It took nine months to fill vacant units.
Melrose North in South Bronx.
June 7, 2024
Crains New York Business
Op-ed by Perry Perlmutter, S:US President & CEO
While our building opened in July, it has only recently reached close to full capacity — meaning that dozens of supportive housing and lottery-awarded affordable units remained vacant for six months or more. This reality underscores a collection of deeper problems in the city’s housing systems that hamper the efficient allocation of subsidized housing.
Simply put, we shouldn’t let laborious bureaucracy stand in the way of solving our housing crisis.
Too often, the result of that paperwork is a series of delays and frustrations, where families who finally have an opportunity to move into stable, long-term housing are stuck in the limbo of the shelter system as they gather paperwork. In some cases, we are prevented from moving families from shelters that our own organization operates — families that are known to us and already receiving care from our team — into housing that we operate.
The remaining 65 units of this development are subsidized affordable units, open to moderate- and low-income New Yorkers through the City’s housing lottery. The lottery process is run by a platform called Housing Connect, which went through a major overhaul in 2020. Unfortunately, the underlying processes of the lottery still leads to long delays: Selected applicants are typically notified by email and/or mail and must then undergo a verification process to confirm their eligibility by providing additional documentation such as tax returns, pay stubs, and identification. Once eligibility is confirmed, applicants may be offered a lease for an affordable housing unit.
If an applicant is deemed ineligible at this stage, they also have the right to appeal — a process that can take additional months. In the meantime, the unit in question is required to remain empty and cannot be offered to anyone else.
The delays in bringing people to new housing are frustrating right now, but without meaningful correction, they could become debilitating. S:US has committed to bringing more than 2,000 new affordable units online in the next five years. Some experts believe New York is short of more than 300,000 homes due to underproduction over the past few decades.
If we are going to build real, affordable housing at scale to fill that gap, then a process should be developed that will allow us to fill that housing at speed. While we acknowledge that city agencies have met, on an ongoing basis, with various stakeholders and advocates to try and improve these processes, a more sustained effort is needed. We think it would help if city officials work collaboratively with service providers and property managers like S:US to identify paperwork redundancies and streamline the approval process for supportive housing. It would also help if the lottery process to move more people into our buildings faster was streamlined. We invite city officials to join us as partners in these efforts.
In this time in New York City’s history, with historic demand for housing and overflowing shelters, we cannot allow affordable apartments to be left vacant for months. As a city and housing community, we know we can do better.
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