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 COURIER L 14     IFE, AUG. 14–20, 2020 PS 
 Dozens of demonstrators protested inside of a real estate law fi rm on August 5 to demand  
 help for struggling renters.    Photo by Paul Frangipane 
 Brooklynites push  
 for rent relief 
 BY KEVIN DUGGAN 
 Dozens  of  Brooklynites  took  to  the  
 streets  of  Downtown  Brooklyn  this  
 week for a multi-day demonstration calling  
 on the state to provide more relief to  
 renters struggling amid the COVID-19  
 pandemic. 
 The rally came just one day before  
 Gov.  Andrew  Cuomo  issued  an  executive  
 order Aug. 5 giving New York’s Offi  
 ce of Court Administration leeway to  
 extend the state’s eviction moratorium  
 — which Chief Administrative Judge  
 Lawrence K. Marks did the following  
 week, halting all post-pandemic evictions  
 until at least Oct. 1 in a guidance  
 passed down on Aug. 12.  
 Activists at the week’s various rallies, 
  however, lamented those actions as  
 half-measures, and urged the state to institute  
 longer-term fi xes — pointing out  
 that, while residents may not yet be removed  
 from their homes, they may still  
 be on the hook for past-due rents when  
 the moratorium does end.  
 “If I don’t have the means to pay for  
 rent, what happens next,” said Starr  
 Sanford, a Bushwick renter at an Aug. 6  
 demonstration. “Will I be evicted? Will I  
 be forcibly removed if I’m unable to pay?  
 It’s a lot of fear.” 
 Cuomo did sign the “Tenant Safe  
 Harbor Act” in June, which gives tenants  
 who have “suffered a fi nancial  
 hardship during the COVID-19 covered  
 period” a legal excuse to potentially  
 avoid evictions because of pandemicrelated  
 rents — although critics have  
 charged that the law is too vague about  
 how tenants can prove that those guidelines  
 apply to them, and too much onus  
 is placed on renters who often lack adequate  
 legal representation.  
 Cuomo, along with real estate groups  
 and some politicians, have pointed out  
 that  many  landlords  rely  on  rent  to  
 pay mortgages and other necessary expenses, 
  making it diffi cult to forgive  
 owed-rent across the board without also  
 implementing some relief for homeowners  
 as well.  
 On Aug. 6, the protestors took their  
 march to the lobby of real estate attorneys  
 Balsamo, Rosenblatt, and Hall,  
 where they engaged in chants like “No  
 landlords. No cops. All evictions gotta  
 stop.”  
 During the morning’s demonstration  
 at the law fi rm’s  Schermerhorn  
 Street headquarters, attorneys and  
 staff mostly milled about in their overcrowded  
 offi ce — although one legal eagle  
 later reached out by phone to say the  
 protesters’ anger was misdirected, and  
 argued that half of their work is on behalf  
 of tenants facing evictions.  
 “Besides the Legal Aid offi ces, there’s  
 not a bigger law fi rm  in Brooklyn that  
 serves tenants,” said Robert Rosenblatt,  
 a partner with the company. “Half of my  
 calendar is tenant work that we’re working  
 with clients to prevent evictions.” 
 The attorney conceded that the other  
 50 percent of their workload is for landlords, 
  including eviction cases, before  
 denouncing the protesters’ tactics —  
 saying the crowd intimidated his staff,  
 vandalized desks and walls with sharpies, 
  poured water on documents, and  
 stole postage and notary stamps. 
 “I’m in support of the movement  
 but this is not the way to protest, to  
 be violent and to do misdemeanors. If  
 they came in and asked for a dialogue,  
 I would have shown them the thousands  
 of thousands of tenants I’ve represented,” 
  he said. “As the great civil  
 rights leader John Lewis once said,  
 ‘protest, but do it peacefully.’” 
 The previous day, protesters gathered  
 inside two Court Street law fi rms,  
 before blowing past security guards and  
 into Borough Hall across the street.  
 “We refuse to accept a month, we refuse  
 to accept half measures,” said Ali,  
 an organizer with the Bushwick Bed- 
 Stuy Tenants Coalition who declined to  
 give his last name. 
 
				
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