A New York City Council member is trying to give the city a heads-up on vacant building sales.
Councilman Ben Kallos plans to introduce legislation on Thursday that would require real estate brokers, realtors and listing agents to notify the city 30 days before a vacant property — including empty lots and unoccupied buildings — of 20,000 square feet or more goes up for sale, Commercial Observer has learned.
Kallos said the bill will bring the city in the loop on transactions, giving it the first right of refusal on vacant properties to allow it to build more schools, firehouses and other municipal buildings.
“In my district, which is the Upper East Side, we have three gigantic vacant spaces,” Kallos told CO. “I’m trying to build more pre-K sites, and more schools [and] firehouses … It’s clear to me that it is a bad thing that real estate isn’t getting into the hands of the government [and] public-private partnerships aren’t happening frequently.”
The city would be required, under the
new legislation, to express interest in acquiring the property or say
why it’s not interested within a 30-day timetable. If an owner rejects
the city’s offer, the city would also be required to disclose why it
didn’t use eminent domain — when a government takes private property for
public use and compensates the owner — or the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure to acquire the property, according to the a copy of the bill shared with CO.
1 comment:
Wouldn’t want the government coveting anything I possess. Government is the heavy hand of thuggery.
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