NYC actually did it: Rent is frozen for a million apartments
In a plot twist that feels highly illegal for a city known for charging three grand to live in a glorified hallway, the Rent Guidelines Board just voted to freeze rent prices.
Yes, you read that right. Mayor Zohran Mamdani just pulled off his biggest campaign promise, getting the board to pass a historic 0% increase on both one-year and two-year leases starting this October. That affects nearly a million rent-stabilized units.
Usually, these meetings are just public theater where landlords cry about taxes and tenants scream about mold, followed by the inevitable rent hike. This time? Pure chaos of the best kind. Cheers literally erupted in the room when the 7-1 vote landed. It turns out this is the first time in New York history that two-year leases have been completely frozen.
Naturally, not everyone was popping champagne. The lone "no" vote came from Arpit Gupta, a finance professor at NYU. His vibe was basically: "Sure, your rent is cheap, but your ceiling is going to cave in because landlords won't fix anything now." Classic party pooper logic, though he does have a point that the city desperately needs to just build more housing instead of playing musical chairs with the existing stock.
Still, saving renters an estimated seven billion dollars while landlords lose their minds is a hell of a way to start the summer.
Source: NYC Gov
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