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    Search results for "Advisory Report"

    Comptroller Report: Property Taxes Are Increasingly Hurting Low-Income New Yorkers

    Comptroller's Office  •  Property Taxes  •  Citywide

    Image credit: City of New York, Office of the Comptroller.

    Comptroller calls for an expansion of property tax relief programs in the City. On September 6, 2018, New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer issued a report detailing property tax increases in the City from 2005 to 2016 and their effect on households at different income levels. The report highlights the dramatic impact that these increases have had, particularly on households with incomes below $50,000 and the inability of existing property tax relief programs to ease the burden of taxpayers at this income level. The report shows how the City tax relief programs fare in comparison to other states that offer tax benefit programs, specifically Maryland and Washington D.C, where benefits are higher and more expansive. The report is a call to policy makers and the recently established NYC Advisory Commission on Property Tax Reform to re-evaluate the impact of property tax increases and the ineffectiveness of existing tax benefit programs in order to turn New York City’s tax system from a regressive one to a progressive one. To read CityLand’s prior coverage on NYC Advisory Commission on Property Tax Reform, click here (more…)

    Tags : Basic STAR, Circuit Breaker, City Comptroller, City Comptroller Scott Stringer, Department of Finance, Enhanced STAR, NYC Advisory Commission on Property Tax Reform, NYC Enhanced Property Tax Benefit, NYC School Tax Credit, property taxes, SCHE, tax credit, tax reform, tax relief, tax relief program
    Date: 09/25/2018
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    Landmarks Rescind Landmarks Designation Status of Former School

    Landmarks Preservation Commission  •  Landmarks Designation Rescission  •  Grand Concourse, Bronx

    Public School 31 in 2014 before its demolition./Image Credit: Google Maps

    The landmarked building featured many late Gothic details. On December 10, 2019, the Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to rescind the individual landmark designation of a vacant lot, located at 425 Grand Concourse, Bronx. The lot was formerly the location of Public School 31, which was demolished in 2015.

    (more…)

    Tags : 425 Grand Concourse, Bronx, Chair Sarah Carroll, Commissioner John Gustafsson, Grand Concourse, Historic Districts Council, Landmarks Preservation Commission, Public School 31
    Date: 12/11/2019
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    Many Turn Out to Both Support and Register Concerns about Landmarks Rules Revisions

    Landmarks Preservation Commission  •  Hearing on Proposed Rules Amendments  •  Citywide

    Revisions would see delegation of some work, including certain rear yard and roof top additions, to staff for review and approval. On March 27, 2018, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on a proposed overhaul of the agency’s rules, found in Title 63 of the Rules of the City of New York. The proposed amendments were published in the City Record on January 30, 2018. Landmarks has made a PowerPoint presentation available online. (more…)

    Tags : amendments, Landmarks, rules
    Date: 04/09/2018
    (1) Comment

    My Rules for Thee, But Not for Me: The City Destroys a City-Owned Landmark

    Commentary  •  Commentary
    Jeffrey A. Kroessler

    Jeffrey A. Kroessler, City Club of New York

    The Castle on the Concourse is doomed. Had any other owner of a designated landmark abandoned his property to the elements like this, the Landmarks Preservation Commission would have sued him for “demolition by neglect.” But here the commission is helpless. The owner is the City of New York, and while the city fully expects owners of designated properties – private homeowners, businesses, landlords, or institutions – to adhere to standards set by the LPC, the city exempts itself from any such regulation. In such cases, the Landmarks Commission is only advisory, its pronouncements mere opinion.

    (more…)

    Tags : Bronx PS 31, Jeffrey A. Kroessler, Landmarks Preservation Commission
    Date: 04/16/2015
    (3) Comments

    Plans for Farm Colony Redevelopment Approved

    Landmarks Preservation Commission  •  Binding Report, Advisory Report  •  Castleton, Staten Island
    Image Credit LPC.

    Revised design for new Clubhouse. Image Credit LPC.

    Applicants presented design plans and greater detail, and revised plans for new clubhouse to better relate to historic buildings. On October 28, 2014, the Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to approve an application for binding and advisory reports for the redevelopment of the New York City Farm Colony-Seaview Hospital Historic District. The developers of the site are NFC associates, who plan to use the 45-acre site to create 350 units of housing for people aged 55 or older, as well as for retail and community facility space. (more…)

    Tags : Adi Shamir-Baron, Commissioner Michael Goldblum, Farm Colony - Seaview Hospital Historic District, Fred Bland, Landmarks Preservation Commission, Meenakshi Srinivasan, Vengoechea and Boyland Architecture
    Date: 11/10/2014
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