Burned Out
Kathleen McGowan |
The fire that killed a 13-year-old girl should have sent housing advocates marching on City Hall. But years of fighting for better code enforcement have left them weary, drained and mute.
The fire that killed a 13-year-old girl should have sent housing advocates marching on City Hall. But years of fighting for better code enforcement have left them weary, drained and mute.
City Councilman Bill Perkins introduces a law that would make the city’s program for distressed tax-delinquent buildings more tenant-friendly
Why you should stop worrying and learn to love this exciting new business trend.
A new study presents the numbers on the high-cost, high-sleaze tactics of predatory lending–and shows that even wealthy blacks often get saddled with these overpriced loans.
Housing and children’s advocates are cheering now that a state judge has overturned the city’s controversial year-old lead paint removal law.
The city is proposing changes to the tax lien law that would take hundreds of vulnerable buildings out from under the watchful eye of the housing agency, leaving them to the private real estate market.
The latest job jumping in the city’s government and nonprofit agencies.
There’s nearly $5 billion in federal Community Development Block Grants being doled out this year. Why is New York state’s share so paltry?
Among the new housing proposals coming out of Washington D.C., the surpising–and pleasing–notion that new affording housing units may be funded in the future.