The fight between New York City Mayor Eric Adams and the City Council over a suite of legislation to reform the rental voucher system may be headed to court. The Council is poised to override Adams’ veto of four bills Thursday — setting the stage for a potential lawsuit to block the package, which the mayor has argued is not on sound legal footing. The bills were approved with a veto-proof majority in May. They would expand eligibility for CityFHEPS vouchers — a rental assistance program — and eliminate a longstanding requirement that people be in shelters for 90 days before they can qualify. Adams scrapped the 90-day rule last month but held that the larger package would pose too great a financial burden on the city. He wrote in an op-ed last week the legislation “clearly exceeds the Council’s legal authority.” The argument that might underpin a prospective legal challenge is essentially that the Council has no role in legislating on how the voucher program should be administered, because the issue is regulated by the state. “[The Department of Social Services] implements rent subsidy programs under the auspices of the state Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance,” Social Services Commissioner Molly Park said at a migrant crisis briefing Wednesday. “There's a long history for that level of oversight and that division of responsibilities that does not traditionally include the Council.” But the Council notes it has approved several pieces of legislation on CityFHEPS recently, including a 2021 law that raised the value of the vouchers and a measure earlier this year to make rental assistance payments available through an electronic funds transfer. The body released an annotated response to the mayor’s op-ed Wednesday that alleged he was citing “alternative facts” and that his arguments amounted to “gaslighting.” “The Council has passed several bills on CityFHEPS that have been enacted into law and implemented, including by this Administration as recently as this year, fundamentally undermining their claim,” Council spokesperson Mandela Jones said in a statement. Jones continued: “If the Administration wants to fight to deny New Yorkers in need with help staying in their homes and leaving shelters, that is their prerogative, but it is a disservice to the City.” IT’S THURSDAY. WHERE’S KATHY? In New Jersey for the National Governors Association Summer meeting. WHERE’S ERIC? Visiting a new NYC health & hospitals/correctional health services center, delivering remarks to mayor’s office summer interns, hosting a roundtable with deaf and disability advocates, meeting with members of the Korean National Assembly, hosting an annual reception celebrating Puerto Rico heritage at Gracie Mansion, and delivering remarks at Drs. Roy and Eda Hastick Family Foundation’s celebration of life. QUOTE OF THE DAY: “What should we have done? Put out the fires?” Adams said on Fox 5 Wednesday morning in response to the criticism he received on New York's air quality alerts, resulting from Canada's wildfires. |
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