BY KEVIN DUGGAN 
 Demonstrators at a recent  
 Williamsburg  rally  called  on  
 landlords to stop keeping apartments  
 vacant for years in order  
 to bypass rent regulations. 
 One advocate decried the  
 practice — known as “warehousing” 
  — as especially cruel  
 at  a  time  of  record  vacancy  
 rates during which more and  
 more New Yorkers are becoming  
 homeless. 
 “I fi nd it inhumane that we  
 are denying housing to these  
 people,” said Yadira Dúmet, an  
 organizer with the local community  
 development non-profi t  
 St. Nicks Alliance, at a protest  
 on Hooper Street on Nov. 18. 
 The End Warehousing Coalition, 
  which includes St. Nicks  
 Alliance and several other advocacy  
 organizations, hung  
 banners and demonstrated outside  
 of two apartment blocks  
 at 293 and 301 Hooper St., near  
 Broadway, where residents say  
 the landlord has kept 11 units  
 vacant for years. 
 “The landlord really just refuses  
 to  rent  them,”  said  longtime  
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 293 Hooper St. resident  
 Francisca Serrano in Spanish  
 through a translator. “We have  
 family who need apartments,  
 we have friends who need  
 apartments  —  many  of  us  in  
 this building know people who  
 need apartments and there are  
 many, many people in this city  
 who need a home.” 
 Public  records  list  the  
 owner of the two buildings as  
 the NYC Housing Partnership,  
 a Manhattan-based non-profi t  
 that  acts  as  an  intermediary  
 between city and state agencies  
 and private developers to build  
 affordable housing, according  
 to its website. 
 A spokesman for the company  
 said they were only “nominally” 
  the owners on behalf of  
 a landlord, but he couldn’t immediately  
 say who the owners  
 were. The rep did not return  
 multiple follow-up requests to  
 clarify who is responsible for  
 keeping units empty. 
 Vacancy rates in Manhattan  
 have been record-breaking for  
 six consecutive months, with  
 more than 6 percent of housing  
 lying empty on the distant  
 isle, according to an October  
 report by real estate fi rm Douglas  
 Elliman. The report did not  
 provide vacancy numbers for  
 Brooklyn. 
 Meanwhile, 53,925 New  
 Yorkers slept in shelters on Nov.  
 23, according to the Department  
 of Homeless Services. 
 Ever since the state legislature  
 passed a package of tenant 
 friendly bills in Albany last  
 year, real estate bigwigs have  
 been keeping more units empty  
 in the hopes that politicians  
 will  undo  some  of  those  laws,  
 and the consequences could  
 be lethal for the unhoused facing  
 down the pandemic without  
 shelter, according to Manhattan  
 Assemblywoman Linda  
 Rosenthal. 
 “People who are homeless  
 will get sick and they have nowhere  
 to go, this spells death for  
 them and their families,” the  
 Big Apple lawmaker said at the  
 protest last week. “What landlords 
  hope — although this  
 won’t happen — is that we will  
 roll  back  some  of  these  tenant  
 Activists rallied against the warehousing of vacant apartments.   
   Photos by Kevin Duggan 
 protections and they will once  
 again  be  able  to  increase  the  
 rent and be able  to  take apartments  
 out of rent regulation.” 
 Another method of landlords  
 is  to  keep  apartments  
 empty until tenants next-door  
 leave, enabling them to combine  
 both units into a larger  
 dwelling which they can then  
 let at a higher price. 
 Vacant units can become  
 a hazard for neighboring tenants  
 because the deserted digs  
 can be an unsecured entryway  
 for burglars, and a breeding  
 ground for vermin or other deteriorating  
 conditions, which  
 the city fails to check on, according  
 to a housing lawyer. 
 “If these units go vacant  
 for a longer and longer period  
 of time and make everybody’s  
 life more miserable, make  the  
 building less inhabitable, and  
 terrify the tenants,” said Samuel  
 Chiera, an attorney with  
 Communities Resist, which  
 provides legal services for lowincome  
 tenants. “Frankly you  
 don’t know what’s going on inside  
 empty apartments.” 
 IT’S ‘INHUMANE’ 
 Activists demand end to ‘warehousing’ empty apartments 
  
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 718-278-3900 
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