Politics

No Explanation for Delays on 'Housing Court Counsel' Bill

The Right to Counsel bill that would guarantee attorneys to low-income tenants facing eviction in housing court now has 35 sponsors. There is an "unprecedented citywide coalition," supporting his bill, Councilman Mark Levine says. It includes Comptroller Scott Stringer and Public Advocate Letitia James. Both Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito and Mayor de Blasio took time in their annual State of the City speeches to help make the case that tenants need lawyers in housing court.

Introduced by Levine and Councilwoman Vanessa Gibson last year, the legislation has been met with a groundswell of support in a city where affordable housing is being made a major priority. The only question is, will the bill move toward law anytime soon?

Mark-Viverito's office could offer no timeline for the measure reaching the Council floor. As of this writing, more than a year after its introduction, not even a committee hearing has been scheduled for it. And despite the mayor's support for more funding for tenants in legal trouble (as well as multiplying funds for helping low-income people get representation in court), de Blasio's office would not say if he'll get behind the measure. 

"We are reviewing the legislation, and clearly tenant representation is a significant priority for this administration," a spokesperson from the mayor's office said.

The bill would guarantee attorneys for tenants in housing court if they are facing eviction and their income is less than 125 percent of the poverty level. Statistics show that more than 90 percent of landlords are represented by attorneys in housing court, while over 90 percent of tenants are not. More than one in three cases of family homelessness in New York City is the result of eviction. A recent City Limits investigation found that the lack of tenant attorneys in housing court lends daily operations in those facilities little resemblance to the pursuit of justice.

The City Hall spokesperson would not elaborate on which elements of the bill were under consideration. But the sticker price is a possible sticking point. The city's Independent Budget Office has estimated that the bill would cost somewhere between over $150 million and more than $250 million annually, but that it would also save the city some $53 million in shelter expenses.

"When you go to housing court and the lawyer meets you at the door to tell you what's in their interest, that's the lawyer representing the landlord. There's nobody representing you. And that's got to change in this town," Stringer told a group of housing advocates recently in the Bronx.

Another piece of legislation touted by Mark-Viverito in her State of the City speech would create Office of the Civil Justice Coordinator, charged with creating a plan to ensure New Yorkers have access to legal help. That measure could make it to the floor first, and the office it creates used to build momentum for Right to Counsel. And there has already been a huge increase in funding from the City Council and the mayor's office for legal services in the past year, meaning many more tenants have access to an attorney now than when de Blasio took office. But they continue to get nudged.

"Both the mayor and the City Council speaker in both of their speeches put this as a priority to get representation for tenants in housing court," Stringer said. "That doesn't happen often. That has never happened before. This is a civil right."