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A rent freeze may not be off the table in New York City, as Mayor Mamdani appointed six new members to the Rent Guidelines Board.
The board is a nine-member independent that has the power to decide if there will be rent increases and what percentage on rent stabilized apartments, lofts and single-room units across the city.
The new appointments include new Chair, Chantella Mitchell, who will be in charge of managing the board deliberations and has the authority to invite outside groups to testify. Sina Sinai, Lauren Melodia, and Brand Mancilla were appointed as public representatives, while Maksim Wynn will represent owners. Adán Soltren will continue in his role as a tenant representative.
City Hall says the appointees have extensive experience in housing, financing, budgeting and public policy.
Arpit Gupta, Christina Smyth and Sagar Sharma will remain on the board in their respective positions.
“I’m proud to appoint these housing, finance, and budget experts to fill the open seats on the Rent Guidelines Board. I’m confident that, under the leadership of Chantella Mitchell as chair, the board will take a clear-eyed look at the complex housing landscape and the realities facing our city’s two million rent-stabilized tenants, and help us move closer to a fairer, more affordable New York. At a moment when so many families are struggling to stay in their homes, this work could not be more important,” said Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani.
Mitchell currently works at the New York Community Trust and previously held positions at the Department of Housing Preservation and Development and Housing and Economic Development Taskforce in the Office of Management and Budget.
The mayor is looking to fulfill one of his key campaign promises of a rent freeze with these appointments. The board is responsible for collecting data and listening to testimony before they set a preliminary range for rent adjustments.
The appointments come a day after the mayor announced the potential of a 9.5% property tax increase if the Governor does not support a wealth tax in order to fulfill a $5.4 billion budget gap.
“Data show that tens of thousands of rent-stabilized buildings are in severe fiscal distress. This is a generally accepted fact among academics, housing experts, and former Rent Guidelines Board members. Any objective review of the data shows that freezing rents would be destructive to pre-1974 rent-stabilized housing, which is about to face a significant property tax increase," said Kenny Burgos, CEO of the New York Apartment Association.
The controversial topic of a rent hike has split landlords and tenants, as property owners say rent is not keeping up with operating costs, taxes and necessary maintenance.
“We believe the law requires RGB members to evaluate all relevant data and make a decision based on facts — not political ideology. If they choose to ignore the consensus view, then they will be opening up the process to legal scrutiny. Worse, they will be responsible for the deterioration and eventual destruction of thousands of rent-stabilized buildings," said Burgos.
Last year the board voted to increase rent on one-year leases by 3% and 4.5% on two-year leases.
“Anything less than an outright freeze at the final vote in June will have catastrophic consequences for an already vulnerable population of renters, particularly given the cumulative 12% rent hike they endured under the previous administration — an increase that was not justified by the data," the Legal Aid Society wrote in response to the appointments.
Public hearings will be held throughout the five boroughs leading up to the final vote at the end of June.