Page 4 - NY Cooperator September 2020
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4 THE COOPERATOR —  SEPTEMBER  2020  COOPERATOR.COM  PULSE  Industry Pulse  Events  The Cooperator Introduces FREE   Webinars—a New Resource for Boards and   Managers at cooperator.com/events  The Cooperator,    a  Yale  Robbins  publi-  cation, has been a resource for the boards,   managers, and residents of co-ops, condos,   and HOAs for nearly two decades, both in   print and online—and we are pleased to an-  nounce a new addition to our toolkit. Yale   Robbins Productions has launched Coop-  erator Events, a new series of FREE educa-  tional ‘town-hall’ style webinars, sponsored   by leaders in the multifamily industry and   focusing  on  issues  and  challenges  facing   today’s boards. We have assembled expert   panels on everything from legal questions   around the COVID-19 pandemic to opti-  mizing your insurance coverage to disin-  fecting your community’s pool. Registration   and attendance are FREE to all—just visit   cooperator.com/events, choose the webinar   you’d like to attend, and sign up. It’s that sim-  ple. You’ll get an email link and reminders   for the event, and will have the opportunity   to submit questions for the panelists before   AND during the webinar itself. Past events   are archived and available on-demand on   cooperator.com/events.    Serving on your board is a big job and a   big responsibility, but sound, timely advice   from industry veterans can help lighten the   load and make your building or association   run  more  smoothly.  We’re  committed  to   helping you achieve that, and look forward   to ‘seeing’ you at an upcoming webinar!    Law and Legislation  New York Extends Moratorium on    Mortgage Foreclosures  New York law firm Frankfurt Kurnit   Klein & Selz PC reports that Governor An-  drew Cuomo revised his March 20 blanket   moratorium  on  foreclosure  by  lenders  of   any residential or commercial property to   extend until August 20, 2020, with the ex-  tension limited to residential or commercial   mortgages owned by someone “who is eligi-  ble for unemployment insurance or benefits   under state or federal law or otherwise fac-  ing financial hardship due to the COVID-19   pandemic.”   On June 24, according to the firm’s re-  lease, New York’s Chief Administrative Judge   Lawrence Marks procedurally extended the   moratorium, which was originally set to ex-  pire on June 20, by forbidding foreclosure   proceedings  until  August  20,  2020  (other   than entertaining motions to discontinue a   pending case or issuing judgments of fore-  closure on vacant or abandoned property).   On July 24, 2020, Judge Marks revised   the temporary protocol for residential and   commercial foreclosure cases as follows:   1. A stay of commencement and en-  forcement of commercial foreclosure mat-  ters against certain mortgagors initiated by   Executive  Order  202.28  remains  in  effect   until August 19, 2020. Further proceedings   in  particular matters  may  continue to  be   governed by the suspension of ‘any specific   time limit for the commencement, filing, or   service of any legal action, notice, motion,   or other process or proceeding, as described   by the procedural laws’ of New York State,   set forth in Executive Orders 202.8, 202.14,   202.28, 202.38, and 202.48. The general stay   of foreclosure proceedings directed by Ad-  ministrative Order will no longer be in effect   as of July 27, 2020.  2. Filing and serving documents in fore-  closure cases will continue to be governed   by New York Administrative Order 121/20,   which requires that represented plaintiffs   must file  initiating  documents  through   New York Courts Electronic Filing System   or mail, but unrepresented parties may file   such documents in person.  3.  Commencement  papers  in  commer-  cial and residential foreclosure proceedings   must include a form notice indicating that   defendant-tenants may be eligible for an ex-  tension of time to respond to the complaint.  4. Prior to any further proceedings in a   foreclosure matter, the court must initiate a   status or settlement conference (including a   conference pursuant to CPLR Rule 3408) to   address a range of subjects related to the case   and COVID-19 concerns.  5. After holding such conference, the   court may address and decide any pending   or future motion in a foreclosure matter and   may entertain other applications (including   post-judgment applications). Motions may   be considered in any foreclosure matter, in-  cluding matters in which one or both parties   are self-represented.  6. All foreclosure proceedings should be   conducted remotely to the fullest extent pos-  sible.  7. No auction or sale of property may   be scheduled to occur prior to October 15,   2020.  8. By September 1, 2020, each adminis-  trative judge responsible for civil matters   must develop a plan for the conducting of   auctions  within their  judicial district in a   safe and healthy manner, as well as in a man-  ner that addresses a number of outstanding   procedural and administrative concerns in   the auction process. These plans are subject   to the review and approval of the appropri-  ate deputy Chief Administrative Judge.  Denial Disclosures on the Table for    Westchester Co-ops   Reporting from the   Westchester/Rock-  land Journal New  s and associated website   lohud.com indicates that recently enacted   legislation in  Westchester  requires co-op   boards there to disclose when they reject   an applicant. A new amendment proposal   seeks to include a reason for rejection in the   disclosure.   Intended to prevent rejection on the basis   of discrimination, the county’s 2018 Co-op   Disclosure Law requires co-ops to notify the   county Human Rights Commission   when   it   rejects an applicant, but not   why  , the outlets   report. Legislator Catherine Borgia (D-Os-  sining), who is proposing the amendment to   the legislation, asserts that “\[a\] buyer should   have the right to know why they were denied   so that they can either take further action, or   make corrections when attempting to pur-  chase another unit.”    Meanwhile, advocates on both sides of   the Co-op Disclosure Law and a similar law   recently enacted in neighboring Rockland   County are decrying the measure and its   effects. According to the outlets, the Rock-  land law, enacted in February 2018, requires   boards to decide on an application within 45   days, but omits the disclosure requirements   of Westchester’s law. Westchester’s law pro-  vides 60 days for an application decision.   Co-op and building organizations shot   down a planned provision in the Westches-  ter law that would have mandated disclosure   of reasons for rejection, the   Journal News  /  lohud indicates. With a different ownership   structure than a condominium or single-  family residence, the organizations argue,   co-ops should maintain the statutory ability   to reject applicants for any non-discrimi-  natory reason, citing finances as the typical   reason for their denials.  But housing advocates and real estate   agents representing sellers and buyers ar-  gue that the lack of transparency hinders   their transactional ability and denies them   fees from rejected applications, while doing   nothing to ensure that discrimination isn’t a   factor in the rejections.   For its part, the Westchester Human   Rights Commission has suggested a form   rejection letter for tracking and streamlining   purposes. Members of the Commission also   point out that the laws in both counties lack   an enforcement mechanism if boards exceed   the deadline for deciding on an application.   A legislative committee will hear Borgia’s   amendment proposal on August 3. If ap-  proved by the committee, it will then need   to pass a vote of the 17-member county leg-  islature, notes the   Journal News/lohud.   Safety  Murray Hill Endures Series of Facade    Collapses; One Fatal  NBC 4 New York reported that a scaf-  fold on a residential building in Manhattan’s   Murray Hill neighborhood collapsed onto a   sidewalk shed below on July 16, killing one   worker and seriously injuring three others.   All four men were engaged in facade resto-  ration at the building at the time of the in-  cident.   According to the report, the 12-story   co-op building at 136 East 36th Street had   been undergoing facade maintenance to its   upper floors before the coronavirus-related   shutdown. NBC 4 spoke to a resident of the   building  who  said  that removal  of  equip-  ment from the roof was taking place when   the collapse occurred.    Reports and footage from the scene indi-  cate that a chunk of masonry dislodged from   the top of the building, crashing into the   scaffolding that then destroyed the bridging   and littered the sidewalk below with debris.   (In response to an email request for follow-  up, the DOB informs   The Cooperator   that   the damaged sidewalk shed has since been   fully repaired and is safe for pedestrians.)   The incident happened just hours after   another building collapse in the same neigh-  borhood.    According to the NBC 4 report, the other   building—a vacant property at 211 East 34th   Street, about two blocks from the deadly fa-  cade collapse—had experienced not one,   but two collapses earlier the same day. First,   FDNY responded to a reported collapse   on the top floor of the four-story building.   Then, a few hours later, FDNY confirmed a   secondary collapse. All surrounding build-  ings were evacuated and there were no re-  ported injuries, per NBC 4.    Just a week prior, on July 8, a third Mur-  ray Hill building partially collapsed. CBS2   News reported at the time that a 45-foot by   10-foot chunk of parapet fell from a vacant   five-story parking garage at 205 East 38th   Street, injuring a man  who was inside his   car parked in front of the building. A wit-  ness described the incident as having started   “with just a few bricks, before quickly be-  coming an avalanche,” according CBS.         Trends  COVID Crisis Moves Buyers Both Away   from—and into—Cities  A lot has been said about wealthy New   Yorkers and other metropolitan denizens   fleeing their urban high-rises and town-  homes this spring and summer to live per-  manently in their second homes that offer   more space, greenery, and social distancing.   Sources like   The New York Times   have pro-  filed former city die-hards making tempo-  rary or permanent moves to less-dense lo-  cales where daily life doesn’t involve shared   elevators and crowded sidewalks. One   Times   piece cites FlatRate Moving company, which   found that moves from New York to outly-  ing areas in Connecticut, Long Island, and   New Jersey increased 74%, 48%, and 38%,   respectively, between March 15 and April 28   of this year versus the same period last year.   But, according to a piece in   Mansion   Global,   there is a trend moving in the other   direction as well. Some of the sellers of those   continued on page 14 


































































































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