FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM  JULY 25, 2019 • THE QUEENS COURIER 23 
 Queens lawmakers get extension for Breezy Point work permits  
 BY BILL PARRY 
 bparry@schnepsmedia.com 
 @QNS 
 Some Breezy Point homeowners are  
 breathing a sigh of relief aft er Governor  
 Andrew Cuomo signed legislation that  
 authorizes an additional two-year extension  
 to Chapter 100 of the Laws of 2013. 
 The  measures,  introduced  by  
 state  Senator  Joseph  Addabbo  and  
 Assemblywoman Stacey Pheff er-Amato,  
 provide exemptions directed at Breezy  
 Point work permits for resiliency and  
 recovery in the aft ermath of Superstorm  
 Sandy. 
 “Th  ousands of residents have been subjected  
 to delays under Rapid Repair, Build  
 it Back and other programs at the city  
 level, creating an urgency for us to provide  
 residents with at least two more  
 years to rebuild with relief from red tape,”  
 Addabbo said. “I am confi dent that Breezy  
 Point neighborhoods will now be able to  
 complete the rebuild process and return  
 to living in structurally sound homes as  
 a result of this new law. Th  e fact that we  
 needed to introduce and pass an extender  
 bill yet again shows the magnitude of the  
 devastation Sandy brought to our constituents  
 in Breezy Point.” 
 Th  e devastation of the seaside bungalow  
 community was seen around the world  
 when Sandy crashed into the Rockaway  
 Peninsula in October 2012. What wasn’t  
 destroyed by the storm surge was lost to  
 a massive fi re which destroyed more than  
 150 homes and businesses. 
 “Nearly seven years aft er Sandy made  
 landfall, many Breezy Point constituents  
 are still trying tirelessly to rebuild their  
 lives and their homes in the community  
 they love,” Addabbo said. “While  
 the storm wreaked havoc throughout my  
 Senate district and elsewhere, this neighborhood  
 was devastated beyond imagination.” 
 Pheff er-Amato said the law would make  
 a huge diff erence for Breezy Point families, 
  seniors, laborers and the overall community. 
 “With the passage of this bill extension,  
 we are helping the people of Breezy Point  
 to continue to go forward and succeed in  
 the aft ermath of Hurricane Sandy, and to  
 spare them the frustration and expense of  
 reinventing the wheel when it comes to  
 dealing with city bureaucracy,” Pheff er- 
 Amato said. “I appreciate my colleagues  
 in both houses for understanding that my  
 neighbors deserve to live in structurally  
 sound homes and that they deserve every  
 chance to rebuild.” 
 Courtesy of Sullivan & Galleshaw, LLP 
 Th  e law takes eff ect immediately and  
 extends to July 3, 2021. 
 “With the approval of Chapter 83, we  
 are ensuring the people of Breezy Point  
 can continue to move forward and succeed  
 in the aft ermath of Hurricane Sandy  
 while sparing them additional frustration  
 and expense in dealing with city bureaucracy,” 
  Addabbo said. 
 Queens lawmakers celebrate expansion of co-op and condo tax program 
 BY JACOB KAYE 
 More co-op and condo owners will now  
 have the opportunity to join a previously  
 expired tax abatement program, thanks to  
 a bill signed into law earlier this month by  
 a Flushing lawmaker in the Senate and a  
 Bayside lawmaker in the Assembly.  
 Th  e J-51 tax abatement, which helps  
 co-ops and condos make capital improvements, 
  now allows for co-ops and condos  
 with an assessed value of up to $40,000 to  
 join the program.  
 Previously, the tax abatement, which  
 expired on June 30, 2019, was only available  
 to units with an assessed value of  
 up to $35,000, a number lawmakers said  
 didn’t match the increasing cost of living.  
 Senator Toby Ann Stavisky of Flushing  
 introduced  the  bill  in  the  New  York  
 State Senate, and Assemblyman Edward  
 Braunstien of Bayside introduced the bill  
 in the New York State Assembly. Aft er  
 passing in both houses, it was signed into  
 law by Governor Andrew Cuomo earlier  
 this month, on July 3, 2019.  
 “Th  is will enable middle-class co-ops  
 and condos to try to keep maintenance  
 costs down when repairs and renovations  
 are necessary,” Stavisky said.     
 Th  e program, enacted 65 years ago, was  
 created to encourage older rental property  
 owners to install hot water plumbing.  
 Over time, co-ops and condos have used  
 the tax program for roof repairs, electrical  
 improvements, window replacements,  
 installing new elevators and other structural  
 enhancements.  
 “Th  e J-51 program makes it possible for  
 housing co-ops to maintain and improve  
 their properties,” said Warren Schreiber,  
 co-president of the Co-op and Condo  
 Council. “If not for this program, the  
 entire fi nancial burden of capital improvements  
 would fall on the shoulders of middle 
 income shareholders. Extending the  
 J-51 program will help aff ordable  co-op  
 housing to remain aff ordable.”  
 “Over time, as assessments continue to  
 rise, more and more co-op units have fallen  
 out of the J-51 program,” Braunstein  
 said. “Our legislation, signed into law by  
 Governor Cuomo, extends the J-51 program  
 and increases the assessed value cap  
 from $35,000 to $40,000, helping middle 
 class families aff ord the cost of capital  
 improvements.  
 Bob Friedrich, president of Glen Oaks  
 Village,  the  largest  garden  apartment  
 co-op in New York, celebrated the passing  
 of the law.  
 “Th  e J-51 tax exemption program is  
 an important component in helping to  
 keep our aff ordable housing stock in good  
 condition for its working-class residents,”  
 Friedrich said. 
 Photo via Getty Images 
 
				
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