
 
		BY BEN BRACHFELD 
 The  city’s  highly  controversial  
 “tax lien sale” expired  
 on Monday, but the future is  
 uncertain for a program long  
 derided as predatory towards  
 communities  of  color,  particularly  
 those who have built  
 wealth  through  homeownership. 
 Legislation  authorizing  
 the sale, which dates back to  
 the  administration  of  then- 
 Mayor Rudy Giuliani, sunsetted  
 on Monday — meaning  
 the sale will not happen again  
 unless the City Council and  
 Mayor explicitly authorize a  
 new one.  
 City Council Speaker Adrienne  
 Adams  said  on  Monday  
 that she would like to put  
 the sale in the past and enact  
 “new solutions” to replace it.  
 Mayor Eric Adams campaigned  
 on ending the sale,  
 and on Tuesday, a rep for the  
 mayor  said  Hizzoner  is  committed  
 to “exploring alternatives” 
  to the sale. 
 “Mayor  Adams  believes  
 the City should explore alternatives  
 COURIER L 16     IFE, MARCH 4-10, 2022 
 to the current lien  
 sale  that  ensure  the  city  can  
 continue  collecting  its  debts  
 while helping homeowners —  
 particularly Black and Brown  
 homeowners who have been  
 disproportionately  impacted  
 by the pandemic — retain  
 ownership,” a city hall spokesperson  
 told Brooklyn Paper. 
 Longtime  advocates  for  
 ending the sale, like the East  
 New York Community Land  
 Trust, are cautiously optimistic. 
  Debra Ack, the group’s  
 secretary,  told  Brooklyn  Paper  
 that she is glad to see the  
 program sunsetting for now,  
 but that at the end of the day,  
 the city could still quietly reauthorize  
 it if it’s looking for a  
 quick buck. 
 “We still need to work on  
 legislation so that it can not  
 ever  be  reauthorized,”  Ack  
 said. “They could do anything. 
   Just  because  today  
 it’s  sunset  doesn’t  mean  in  a  
 month, three, four, six months  
 down the line, they may go,  
 ‘oh, okay, let’s bring back the  
 tax lien sale.’ No, we don’t  
 want that. We want it to die altogether.” 
 The sale was created to  
 farm out the collection of unpaid  
 property  tax  debt  to  the  
 private sector. Every year,  
 the city would hold the sale  
 where delinquent homeowners’ 
  debt was sold at a discount  
 to a private trust, which could  
 then hire private servicers to  
 collect on the debt, often adding  
 steep interest and fees  
 that  only make  the  debt  even  
 harder to pay back. The trust  
 was also empowered to eventually  
 foreclose  on  people’s  
 homes.  The  most  recent  lien  
 sale, which may prove to be  
 the last, took place in December  
 of last year, after a twoyear  
 COVID-induced delay. 
 The sale allowed the city  
 to easily and quickly generate  
 millions of dollars in revenue  
 on debt  that would  otherwise  
 take signifi cant resources and  
 manpower to collect. But yearafter 
 year, the liens sold to  
 the trust disproportionately  
 belonged to homeowners in  
 lower-income  communities,  
 Members of the East New York Community Land Trust hold a banner at  
 the city’s Racial Justice Commission meeting.  Photo by Ben Brachfeld 
 and communities-of-color in  
 particular, and many homeowners  
 came to see it as an engine  
 of displacement and harassment, 
  and a destroyer of  
 generational  wealth  particularly  
 among Black homeowners. 
   
 For those debtors who don’t  
 get foreclosed on, the pressure  
 of being unable to pay the  
 bills and constant harassment  
 from bill collectors often leads  
 people to sell their homes.  
 “The trust is only interested  
 in making money off  
 of someone’s misfortune,  
 someone’s debt, then acquiring  
 the home and fl ipping it,”  
 Ack said. “The predators will  
 come  out,  ring  people’s  doorbells, 
  knock on their doors,  
 call  them,  follow  them  I’ve  
 been told, and try to pressure  
 them  to  sell  their  homes.”  
 Those who do sell their homes  
 often do so “out of fear of being  
 totally put out on the street.” 
 When  distressed  homeowners  
 are backed into a corner  
 and sell their homes, the  
 owners are not the only ones  
 displaced:  oftentimes,  so  are  
 any tenants who may be leasing  
 units on the property, who  
 may be forced out by a new  
 owner intent on fl ipping  the  
 building  or  bringing  in  new  
 clientele. 
 In the 2021 sale, the  
 Brooklyn City Council district  
 with the most liens sold  
 Controversial tax lien sale  
 comes to a bitter end, for now 
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