
NEW YORK, NY – The New York City Council will introduce a COVID-19 relief package that aims to protect tenants, help small businesses survive, and find creative ways to address the public health crisis brought on by the virus. Highlights include a bill that extends time for COVID-impacted tenants to repay rent and pay back debts, as well as new protections from harassment for all renters, including the City’s small businesses.
This package will also include a NYC Essential Workers Bill of Rights. The bills would require premiums for non-salaried essential employees at large companies, prohibitions on the firing of essential workers without just cause, and paid sick leave for gig workers.
All of the bills will be introduced on Wednesday at the Council’s first ever remote Stated Hearing. The Council will hold hearings on each of the bills over the next week and a half.
“We are in the midst of an unprecedented crisis for our City, and mourning the loss of so many neighbors, friends and fellow New Yorkers. But even in this dark time, we must be laser-focused on helping New York City emerge from this crisis while prioritizing our public health. These bills provide relief where it is needed most right now, including protecting tenants from eviction. It’s essential that New Yorkers get the rent cancellation they need, but in the meantime, we need to give renters peace of mind that we won’t let them suffer irreparable harms. We’re also protecting small businesses and essential workers, who have been so hard hit. We must take these steps to help make sure that New York City remains the vibrant, diverse and exciting place it was before COVID ravaged our neighborhoods,” said Speaker Corey Johnson.
“Essential workers are putting their lives on the line every day to keep this City running and to keep New Yorkers safe. We must treat these workers with the respect and dignity they deserve. The bill that I am sponsoring with Speaker Johnson would ensure these critical workers are compensated in a way that reflects their critical contributions towards our City’s health and economy in the short and long-term,” said Majority Leader Laurie Cumbo.
“COVID-19 exposed many weaknesses and inequities in our society and at this critical time the New York City Council must think about those on whom this pandemic will fall most heavily. Our small businesses, including those impacted by COVID-19, are the backbone of New York City’s economy and the embodiment of the American dream. These small businesses are struggling right now and we must strengthen protections against commercial tenant harassment so that they will have the opportunity to thrive in the future. I applaud Speaker Johnson for his leadership on the COVID-19 relief package and look forward to its passage,” said Council Member Adrienne Adams.
“Every night, New Yorkers are cheering wildly to thank the people who are stocking shelves in our grocery stores, delivering food and supplies, driving people to work and appointments, and caring for sick New Yorkers in our hospitals and nursing homes. With this legislation, we’ll go beyond cheering to make sure they have the pay, sick leave, dignity, and workplace protections they so deeply deserve. I’m thrilled to join Speaker Johnson, Majority Leader Cumbo, and Council Member Kallos to introduce NYC’s Essential Workers Bill of Rights, to ensure that these frontline workers are able to take paid sick leave, are protected against unfair firings, especially when they speak out about safety conditions, and are compensated for the risk and sacrifice they are undertaking for our collective benefit,” said Council Member Brad Lander.
“Harassment and retaliation against COVID-19 impacted tenants pose an urgent risk, and tenants must be protected against unscrupulous landlords during these extremely difficult and uncertain times. This bill would make harassing a tenant based on their status as a COVID-19 impacted person, illegal. We need strong tenant protections in place to ensure everyone who has a home is able to keep it,” said Council Member Ritchie Torres.
“The COVID-19 crisis has shaken every sector of New York to its core, and we must respond in an unprecedented manner to protect our most vulnerable, rebuild our economy, and ensure our City emerges a more equitable and safer one. While I’ve been focusing day in and day out on providing oversight of our City’s hospitals, we also must start to look to the future. My bills to open city streets and suspending personal liability on commercial leases will be critical to re-opening our economy and I look forward to the Council passing them along with all of the bills in this legislative package,” said Council Member Carlina Rivera.
“During these unprecedented times, our City needs to take bold steps to protect all New Yorkers. Our city’s hospital and frontline workers are the hands-on heroes of this crisis. They must be allowed to speak up to protect their safety and the wellbeing of patients and customers without risking their jobs. They are the whistleblowers who can tell us the full story so we know where our healthcare and system essential services are succeeding and where we need to do more to fight this pandemic and save as many lives as we can. We must protect our frontline workers now more than ever with strong protections, as many of them may be forced to sound the alarm about safety conditions at their facilities. Thank you to Speaker Corey Johnson for this substantive package of legislation that will help bring New York City through this tough time,” said Council Member Ben Kallos.
“The devastation of the coronavirus pandemic is everywhere and has left virtually no one and no part of the economy untouched. These bills will bring desperately-needed relief and critical protections for the workers, small businesses, and tenants who are bearing the brunt of this crisis. I’m proud to work alongside Speaker Johnson and my colleagues in City Council to ensure our relief measures are truly inclusive of our most vulnerable communities and we do not allow anyone to slip through the cracks during this time of need,” said Council Member Andrew Cohen.
“I am proud to sponsor a bill with Speaker Johnson that addresses the systemic issues in our shelter system that make it impossible for residents to observe social distancing. Those issues put all New Yorkers at risk, which is why we are addressing them is so important in this public health crisis. This crisis has shown in stark terms that we are all interconnected. It is inhumane and dangerous to allow New Yorkers to remain in unsafe shelter conditions,” said Council Member Stephen Levin.
NYC Essential Workers’ Bill of Rights
Protecting New York City’s Renters
Prioritizing Public Health
Protecting New York City’s Small Businesses
WHAT ADVOCATES ARE SAYING:
“This legislative package offers urgently-needed support for the hardest hit communities in New York City. New York City must take action to protect essential workers and ensure their rights are respected. Today, again, Amazon workers are holding a day of action to call out that corporation’s unwillingness to put its workers’ safety and that of all of us ahead of its ability to profit off of this public health crisis. Amazon’s response? To try to intimidate and fire the whistleblowers working to keep all of us safe. Today Speaker Johnson, with Councilmembers Kallos and Lander, say that this city will not tolerate profiteering off of the well being of the most vulnerable workers and tenants in our city. This action stands in sharp contrast to the hateful exclusion of immigrants from Congressional relief and Unemployment Insurance, and Albany’s failure to step into the breach,” said Deborah Axt, Co-Executive Director of Make the Road New York.
“It’s clear the City Council and its leadership have listened to small business owners and are taking quick action to support local restaurants, bars and clubs during the COVID-19 crisis. This package of small business relief bills is a critical step in our effort to save our beloved eating and drinking spots. We thank Speaker Johnson and the Council for their support and urge the swift passage and enactment of this legislation,” said Andrew Rigie, Executive Director, and Robert Bookman, Counsel of the New York City Hospitality Alliance.
“With tens of thousands of empty hotel rooms, there is no reason for any vulnerable New Yorker to be left on the streets or in dangerous congregate shelters where social distancing is impossible and COVID-19 can spread easily. New York City must immediately move to provide safe shelter for single homeless adults and homeless families during this deadly pandemic. Every day that the City fails to take action is a day lost in preventing the spread of COVID-19 to, and among, our most vulnerable neighbors,” said Giselle Routhier, Policy Director at Coalition for the Homeless.
“As New York fights and emerges from this crisis, we need to ensure that New Yorkers who must be out have the safe space they require for physical distancing. We are grateful to Speaker Johnson and Council Member Rivera for stepping up for New Yorkers by advancing this ambitious open streets plan. We look forward to working together to bring much needed space to every neighborhood,” said Transportation Alternatives Executive Director Danny Harris.
“Workers are putting their own lives on the line to keep us safe and fed. They deserve more than just our thanks and gratitude in these challenging times – they are essential workers and deserve essential pay. They are shouldering extra burdens, taking extra risks and experiencing incredible stress – none of which were supposed to be part of their jobs. They more than deserve additional compensation,” said Stuart Appelbaum, President of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU).
“We commend the City Council for introducing legislation to protect vulnerable New Yorkers who have been hit hardest by the COVID-19 pandemic. Our clients, whether they are essential workers on the front lines of the crisis, low-income tenants who can’t afford their rents, or homeless individuals in shelters, deserve meaningful solutions and relief from the unprecedented impact of the coronavirus,” said Judith Goldiner, Attorney-in-Charge of the Civil Law Reform Unit at The Legal Aid Society.
“This legislative package provides a range of important safeguards for New Yorkers during and beyond the pandemic. We applaud Speaker Johnson and the Council for taking a holistic approach to protecting the city’s workers, residents, and small businesses. We look forward to working together to ensure that low-income communities and communities of color do not continue bearing the brunt of this crisis,” said Barika X. Williams, Executive Director, Association for Neighborhood & Housing Development (ANHD).
“Thank you, Corey Johnson, and thanks to the City Council, for showing how to legislate while maintaining safe physical distancing. Tenants PAC applauds these initiatives to protect tenants from eviction, harassment and debt burdens during a public health crisis that makes it impossible for so many to pay rent. Without rent forgiveness, thousands of renters will face eviction once these temporary protections end, but this package offers a helpful step,” said Michael McKee, Treasurer of the Tenants Political Action Committee (PAC).
“Stopping evictions for a year is essential in a moment where the state has yet to act to cancel rent. Hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers can’t pay rent and will become homeless once the Governor lifts his eviction moratorium in June. Thank you, Speaker Johnson for looking out for tenants in this time of great uncertainty,” said Yolande Cadore, Acting Executive Director of Tenants and Neighbors.