Thursday, June 6, 2013

Judge slaps down self-certification


From the Daily News:

A state judge has ordered the city to re-examine the flawed process that allowed a developer to build an allegedly illegal — and notorious — building in Homecrest.

Judge Yvonne Lewis sided with neighbors who have argued for seven years that building owner Joseph Druzieh and his architect lied to the city when they said his 53-foot house — built over an existing bungalow — was merely an “alteration” rather than a new structure.

The Department of Buildings and the Board of Standards and Appeals had rubberstamped the permits for 1882 E. 12th St. because the architect, Shlomo Wygoda, had “self-certification” rights — a professional courtesy given to, and sometimes abused by, prolific builders.

Lewis did not have the power to order Druzieh to tear down his unfinished tower at 1882 E. 12th St., but she told him to prepare to do so, according to a lawyer who was there when the ruling was handed down.

3 comments:

Jerry Rotondi said...

BRAVO!

I was told, by an Albany lawmaker, that about 80% of bad building practices are a direct result of this self certification process.

DUMP IT ALREADY!

What idiot farmer puts the fox in charge of the chicken coop?

Anonymous said...

Best news EVER!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

It will be difficult for the city to reverse self certification without adding additional headcount to perform internally. They should at least penalize violators heavily, such as loosing their license if caught. Currently all they loose is the right to self certify for six months on a first time violation and then timeframes increase with more occurances.

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