NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: EPA Cancels Union Contract, Questions Over Plan to Move NYPD Duties to New Agency, the New Harlem Renaissance Cultural District and Cuomo Attacks Mamdani for Living in Rent Stabilized Unit

Episode Date: August 11, 2025

The EPA is terminating contracts with its union. Also, a plan to shift some NYPD responsibilities to a new agency is drawing both praise and skepticism. Plus, New York state is marking Harlem Week wit...h new laws honoring the neighborhood’s legacy. And finally, former Gov. and mayoral candidate Andrew Cuomo is going viral for a series of social media posts attacking his rival Zohran Mamdani over housing policy.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 The EPA cancels its union contract. Questions over a plan to move NYPD duties to a new agency, the Harlem Renaissance Cultural District, and Cuomo attacks Mumdani for living in a rent-stabilized unit. From WNYC, this is NYC now. I'm Jene Pierre. The EPA is terminating contracts with its union. In a memo to staff,
Starting point is 00:00:26 the agency says that it was following an executive order issued back in March that bans collective bargaining. President Trump cites national security concerns as a reason for the move. Union officials say it stands to affect over 600 employees in the New York City area. In April, the American Federation of Government employees filed a lawsuit to block the ban, but a federal court upheld the president's actions. Last month, the agency also placed more than 100 employees on leave for protesting EPA policies, some of which were in our area.
Starting point is 00:00:58 The union says it will fight this decision. In our previous episode, we mentioned a plan from New York City mayoral candidate Zeramamam Dani to shift some NYPD responsibilities to a new agency. WMYC's Charles Lane reports the plan is drawing both praise and skepticism. Momdani says his new Department of Community Safety should handle homelessness, mental health, and violence prevention. The idea is to reduce the NYPD's role in social services without reducing its headcount. Some experts say that makes sense if they can hire the staff and if the new head of the department has as much political power as the police commissioner.
Starting point is 00:01:42 But former NYPD watchdog Mac Mirror says the plans association with the movement to defund the police causes friction. Defund the police is not popular. It's a negative term. I think what Mom Donnie's doing five years later is saying what are the positive outcomes and how can I focus on those? Murr says it doesn't help that a policy advisor to Mom Dhani is Josie Duffy Rice, an outspoken critic of the police associated with the abolished police movement. Duffy Rice says the politics of showing support to the police actually hurts public safety. There's kind of this entire rhetoric around police support, and often that rhetoric leads to policy that's bad for police, and it's bad for the people who are being policed.
Starting point is 00:02:25 Mayor Eric Adams and former Governor Andrew Cuomo, who are running for re-election as. independence have criticized Mom Dani for his association with the defund movement. Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa dismissed the proposal as rebranding. Harlem Week is still underway, and New York State is marking it with new laws honoring the neighborhood's legacy. Governor Kathy Hoke will sign legislation officially creating the Harlem Renaissance Cultural District. The area goes from 110th to 155th streets between Fifth Avenue and the Hudson River.
Starting point is 00:03:02 Another bill renames the 110th Central Park North subway station as 110th Malcolm X Plaza. Hockel says the change is a tribute to the civil rights leader's impact and an invitation for more people to learn about his life and work. The area will be recognized as sacred ground for black art, music, and thought, echoing the creativity of the 1920s. Andrew Cuomo and Zeramam Dani are in a tussle, this time over housing policy. More on that after the break. Rent-stabilized units when they're vacant should only be rented to people who need affordable housing, not people like Zoran Mondami. Former governor and mayoral candidate, Andrew Cuomo, is going viral for a series of social media posts attacking his rival, Zora Mamdani, over housing policy. Cuomo slammed Mamdani for living in a $2,300 a month rent-stabilized apartment that could otherwise go to a homeless family.
Starting point is 00:04:06 He then proposed a new law that would prevent landlords from leasing empty rent-stabilized units to, quote, wealthy tenants. He's calling it Zoran's law. The post have sparked some intense debate about housing and rent laws. WMYC's housing reporter David Brandt has been following the story. Now, David, we know New York City has about a million rent-stabilized apartments, but what is Cuomo actually proposing here? Well, that's a great question because he doesn't have many details here, but his plan, what he's calling Zoron's law would be to prevent landlords from renting empty rent-stabilized apartments to wealthy New Yorkers. Now, he hasn't answered any of my questions about what would constitute
Starting point is 00:04:49 a wealthy New Yorker or how this would be implemented. He hasn't added any additional details in other news outlets. You know, the New York Post did a story after he tweeted and, you know, he got a, it seems like maybe did a short interview. There was a quote from him in that piece, but they also say there's no details here. So it's hard to say exactly what he wants. But you know, you mentioned it in the question. There are a million rent-stabilized apartments in New York City. These are apartments where the annual rent is set by a board appointed by the mayor, the rent guidelines board. You remember a few months ago, they approved a 3% increase. Tenants living in those apartments have the automatic right to a lease renewal. So there's some pretty strong protections for renters here. But these apartments
Starting point is 00:05:34 really run the gamut from low-priced apartments in Bronx buildings that were built a century ago to really expensive new units in places like Hudson Yards or other midtown Manhattan high rises where in exchange for property tax breaks, the landlords will have to keep the rents, rent stabilized. So it's all different types of housing. It was never set up as like an affordability program designed specifically for low. or middle-income tenants, you know, that would be kind of a new way of thinking about it. But I will say that there was for about 25 years some state laws that did allow landlords to take apartments out of rent stabilization if they found that their tenants were making.
Starting point is 00:06:23 I think it started at $200,000 a year. I think it ended at $250,000 a year. And if they could prove that, they could deregulate that apartment and begin charging whatever they wanted. That came to an end in 2019 when, who was governor, Andrew Cuomo, he signed a law getting rid of that loophole. Okay, so what does Mamdani have to say in response to Cuomo's proposal? Mamdani had a press conference where he addressed Cuomo's comments, and he said this shows he's living, quote, rent-free in Cuomo's head. He also said that why didn't Cuomo institute this during his decade-plus tenure as governor? Because it's the state.
Starting point is 00:07:03 that sets the rent laws and oversees the rent stabilization system for New York City. So we could have done it then. Mom Donnie also said that he thinks the protections that are part of the rent stabilization system, those minimal annual rent increases, that right to a lease renewal, that those should apply to all tenants. What do housing experts have to say about all of this? Well, people have really strong opinions on rent stabilization. So there are many housing experts who say it's great and that it protects tenants and protects people from exorbitant rent increases and allows them to stay in their apartments. A lot say actually it's bad for the market, bad for housing overall, discourages new development.
Starting point is 00:07:49 But what they agree on here is that this proposal would be really hard to enact. First off, we don't have many details, but a means testing proposal where you have to do income verification to determine whether someone earns too much or earns below a certain threshold to qualify for one of these apartments, that would be really hard for the state's housing agency to actually enforce. And you're talking about tenants living in around a million apartments that then the state would have to verify their income or go through all of this paperwork before someone moves into an empty apartment. It would just prolong the moving process and wouldn't actually do much to help New York City solve its housing crisis.
Starting point is 00:08:31 What they say is that we should be focused on building more housing and building more housing, especially for the lowest income New Yorkers, that would then receive subsidies from the government to make it work for landlords and for the tenants. That's WMYC's David Brand. Thanks for listening to NYC now from WMYC. I'm Jene Pierre. We'll be back tomorrow.

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