Page 14 - CooperatorNews July 2021
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Cooperative and Condominium Law 
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cesarano &khan1_8 use this_:cesarano &khan 4  7/22/15  4:59 PM  Page 1 
board may well have to articulate a reason  
in response to the lawsuit.” 
In general, Simpson describes a three- 
step process for analyzing such cases al- 
leging intentional discrimination: “   e  
three-step process requires that,   rst, the  
plainti   establish a prima facie case of dis- 
crimination. If the plainti   sustains this  
burden, the defendant must o  er rebuttal  
evidence articulating a legitimate, inde- 
pendent, nondiscriminatory reason for its  
actions. Once defendant does so, in order  
to prevail plainti   must prove, by a pre- 
ponderance of the evidence, that the de- 
fendant’s stated reasons are only a pretext  
for discrimination.” 
In short, explains Simpson, if a mem- 
ber of a protected class is turned down  
by a co-op board and then sues the so-op  
under existing case law, showing that she/ 
he was objectively quali  ed (had the   nan- 
cials, intended use as a primary residence,  
no reason to believe there would be objec- 
tionable behavior) and was turned down, if  
there’s an inference that there was unlawful  
discrimination (if someone not in the same  
protected class successfully purchased, for  
example), then the co-op board will have  
to come forward with legitimate reasons  
for the denial.    e upshot is that, if sued, a  
co-op board cannot stay silent about their  
reasons for rejecting an applicant. 
Is New Legislation Needed? 
With current New York City anti- 
discrimination regulations for housing  
among the toughest in the nation, Green- 
stein considers whether additional legisla- 
tion is necessary.  “I do not believe so,” he  
says. “We represent a signi  cant number  
of cooperative corporations, and over de- 
cades of counseling them I have not had  
more than a handful of complaints alleg- 
ing discrimination relating to the rejection  
of purchasers.” Out of those, he notes that  
“In each instance, the state and city com- 
missions found no wrongdoing.     e leg- 
islative reasons given for this law rely on a  
belief that admissions committees ‘gener- 
ally’ decide if a purchaser will be rejected  
PROPOSED... 
continued from page 6 
or accepted, and assumes a bias or unfair  
motivation which led to rejection.”   
“While admissions committees do play  
an important role in many buildings, it’s  
a board decision,” continues Greenstein.   
“Another reason for the legislation is the  
belief that by not being required to give  
the  reason,  a  board  can  invent  a  reason  
later on if they are challenged. Supporting  
actions to prevent and punish boards that  
discriminate  should  not  be  based  upon  
such assumptions — and particularly that  
people serving on boards as volunteers will  
potentially fail to tell the truth, whether it  
be at commission hearing or before a judge  
gathering the facts and hearing the testi- 
mony.     ere are plenty of remedies for the  
parties who feel they have been discrimi- 
nated against, and there are a number of  
decisions by the commissions and courts  
which support such action.  I feel that this  
legislation  is  not  necessary,  will  encour- 
age litigation, and discourage people from  
serving on the boards of cooperatives.” 
Will it Stand? 
   e more esoteric question perhaps is  
whether, if passed, such a law would stand  
the scrutiny of the judicial review.  “On  
its  face,”  says  Simpson,  “requiring  that  
people with lesser   nancials be accepted  
would not seem to impair the integrity of  
contracts, because no existing contract is  
being interfered with. But I would expect  
co-op owners to push back hard on such a  
proposal, because it would be asking that  
existing co-op owners take on additional  
  nancial risk,” relative to possible   nancial  
emergencies the co-op might experience  
in the future. 
Greenstein concurs.  “Not without  
legislation, and if enacted, I do not see it  
standing if the cooperative is a private co- 
operative.    ere are cooperatives — such  
as Mitchell Lama co-op buildings — which  
have legal requirements limiting incomes  
of eligible purchasers and the sales prices  
of apartments.    e shareholders of a num- 
ber of these buildings have voted to have  
them go private,” in recent years.  
■ 
Noncompliance Is Not an Option 
If a property does not submit their data,  
they will likely be looking at   nes as there  
are penalties for non-compliances for  
LL97, which then translates to non-com- 
pliance for the letter grade laws, explains  
Cebula.  While it’s not required to report  
this information, gathering and record- 
ing it is strongly recommended to avoid  
non-compliance   nes down the road.  
Every building is given its own allow- 
able emission limit - which are subject to  
change from year to year - and consistent  
noncompliance with those set limits may  
subject a building to high penalties and a  
reduced energy grade. 
 In the   nal analysis, as with any other  
requirement under New York City regula- 
tions and laws, the best path is to provide  
the information sought by the City.  Board  
members should rest easy that their man- 
agement persons are on top of this.  If you  
self-manage and are subject to the regula- 
tions, the best bet may be to hire an energy  
consultant and get your   lings in on time.  
■ 
LOCAL LAW 97... 
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