14 The Courier sun • may 21, 2015 for breaking news visit www.couriersun.com BP KATZ APPROVES ZONING AMENDMENT TO SPEED UP POST-SANDY RECOVERY BY LIAM LA GUERE [email protected] @LiamLaGuerre More help is on the way for Queens residents affected by Hurricane Sandy trying to rebuild their homes. Borough President Melinda Katz recently approved amendments to citywide zoning codes, which will allow more Sandy-affected homeowners to rebuild their homes faster and to return them to how they were before the storm instead of having to alter them to fit current regulations. The zoning change is a result of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s overhaul of the city’s Build it Back program, which has started construction T:8.75” T:5.5” on 412 homes in Queens to date, and completed construction THE WORST THING YOU CAN DO IF YOU THINK YOU SMELL A GAS LEAK IS NOTHING. Smell gas. Act fast. Don’t assume someone else will call 911, 1-800-75-CONED (26633) or your local utility. Leave the area immediately and make the call yourself. You can report a gas-related emergency anonymously, and not even be there when help arrives. For more gas safety information, visit conEd.com and take safety into your own hands. on 222. “This is a vital text amendment that will finally relieve the red tape that had burdened entire neighborhoods and prevented thousands of homes from fully rebuilding since Hurricane Sandy,” Katz said. “Thanks to joint inter-agency collaboration, home and property owners will soon be able to rebuild their homes to their original form prior to the storm, with improved flood resiliency elements.” The amendment was also approved by Sandy-impacted community boards 10, 13 and 14. It would allow, among other things, more residents to rebuilt their homes faster by waiving document requirements. Under current laws, before reconstruction can begin on residences, homeowners are supposed to provide documents to show changes made to homes since 1961, which is difficult for most people since their homes probably traded hands since then or documents were destroyed in the storm. Also, some homes could be required to be constructed much taller than others in the neighborhood because of current zoning. The amendment will create zoning pockets, which will allow homeowners to build shorter and wider homes, which are prevalent in surrounding neighborhoods. Now with support from Katz, the amendment must be approved next by the Department of City Planning and then the City Council before it can go into effect. THE COURIER/File photo Homeowners affected by Sandy will be able to rebuild their homes more easily after zoning amendments.
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