Monday, December 2, 2013

Vets getting the shaft from HPD

From the NY Post:

The city is fighting a secret war against veterans — not only ignoring laws that give them preference for affordable housing but also pushing legally to erase the rules.

Air Force vet Aaron Glover, 50, is suing the Department of Housing Preservation and Development for failing to favor retired service members applying for Mitchell-Lama developments.

Glover, who works for Manhattan’s VA medical center, applied for a $600-a-month studio apartment at Manhattan’s Henry Phipps Plaza East last summer after seeing a newspaper ad.

But HPD staff never sifted through the nearly 30,000 applications to pick out veterans, said Glover’s attorney, Pete Kempner.

By law, ex-military are to be put at the top of the waiting list, ahead of other applicants who are placed on the list through a random lottery. Instead, HPD has been applying the veteran’s preference only after a lottery is conducted.

Last month, HPD proposed new rules that would weaken the veteran’s preference — applying it only if vets are lucky enough to be picked out of a lottery of thousands of applicants.

Since 2007, state law has required Mitchell-Lama developments — middle-income rental and cooperative housing built through government incentives — to give preference to disabled vets. Three years later, the law was expanded to include all veterans.

Still, a 2012 state audit found few veterans benefited from the rule. Across 18 HPD-supervised buildings, only 14 of 332 vacancies were filled by former servicemen or women. Two developments illegally skipped over vets on their waiting lists.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

That's disgusting. A lot of people in subsidized housing have hidden assets and really shouldn't qualify.

The vetting process is not thorough! And, of course, there's a lot of favoritism. It's a totally corrupt system

Anonymous said...

When the difference between what's something is worth and what one has to pay is controlled by the government, and the government picks the winners and losers, you can expect petty corruption. There are 10 million stories like this one in New York.

CJ said...

Where the hell is the Public Advocate? Oh, that's right.

Anonymous said...

one tenth of one percent of the American population serve in our military. The rest could care less. They have some one to take care of every dirty war our politicians can dig up.

Anonymous said...

Which of our Queens elected officials are Vets?

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