Mayor Zohran Mamdani's administration failed in its bid to slow the sale of 5,100 rent-stabilized apartments owned by Pinnacle Group, a real estate firm that declared bankruptcy last year. The city's efforts came just hours after Mamdani took office, with the Mayor instructing his law department to intervene in the looming bankruptcy sale.
The Union of Pinnacle Tenants had organized to challenge the sale and find an alternative buyer, fearing that Summit Properties USA would perpetuate the same practices as Pinnacle, including neglecting maintenance and failing to pay electrical bills. The city's housing agency is owed around $12.7 million by Pinnacle in unpaid fines.
In a court ruling on Thursday, federal bankruptcy judge David Jones refused to grant Mamdani's administration a reprieve, dealing a blow to the Mayor's efforts to steer thousands of apartments towards what he sees as a more responsible owner. The judge's decision complicates the tenants' mission and delivers an early setback for Mamdani.
The sale of the 5,100 rent-stabilized apartments has become a flashpoint in a larger debate over housing policy in New York City. Pinnacle purchased many of the properties decades ago and employed a business model that raised rents and deregulated apartments to pay lenders and increase revenue. The company's tactics to evict tenants and increase rents on vacant apartments received scrutiny from state and city prosecutors, including the Manhattan district attorney's office.
Mamdani campaigned on aggressively penalizing property owners who fail to maintain their apartment buildings, and on freezing rents for tenants in rent-stabilized apartments. However, his administration faces intense scrutiny over its handling of housing issues, with one close adviser facing criticism over years-old social media posts.
The Union of Pinnacle Tenants had organized to challenge the sale and find an alternative buyer, fearing that Summit Properties USA would perpetuate the same practices as Pinnacle, including neglecting maintenance and failing to pay electrical bills. The city's housing agency is owed around $12.7 million by Pinnacle in unpaid fines.
In a court ruling on Thursday, federal bankruptcy judge David Jones refused to grant Mamdani's administration a reprieve, dealing a blow to the Mayor's efforts to steer thousands of apartments towards what he sees as a more responsible owner. The judge's decision complicates the tenants' mission and delivers an early setback for Mamdani.
The sale of the 5,100 rent-stabilized apartments has become a flashpoint in a larger debate over housing policy in New York City. Pinnacle purchased many of the properties decades ago and employed a business model that raised rents and deregulated apartments to pay lenders and increase revenue. The company's tactics to evict tenants and increase rents on vacant apartments received scrutiny from state and city prosecutors, including the Manhattan district attorney's office.
Mamdani campaigned on aggressively penalizing property owners who fail to maintain their apartment buildings, and on freezing rents for tenants in rent-stabilized apartments. However, his administration faces intense scrutiny over its handling of housing issues, with one close adviser facing criticism over years-old social media posts.