NSVRC Housing and Sexual Violence Overview of National Survey

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

NSVRC Housing and Sexual Violence Overview of National Survey Housing and Sexual Violence Overview of national survey: January 2010 In 2008, the National Sexual Violence Resource Center partnered with the Victim Rights Law Center, National Sexual Assault Coalition Resource Sharing Project, Louisiana Foundation Against Sexual Assault, University of New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania Community Legal Services to develop and conduct a national survey on housing and sexual violence. Goals This report provides a The goals of the survey were three- summary of key survey fold to obtain data that would: findings. For more details, contact the National Sexual 1. Further the understanding Violence Resource Center: of the intersections between [email protected] sexual violence, housing, and or 877-739-3895. homelessness; 2. Help to identify the needs of victims and advocates around housing issues; Respondents 3. Help to inform policy and programmatic strategies. Two hundred and thirty-nine individuals responded to the The survey was conducted online survey. The largest percentage of using Survey Monkey, an online respondents, 59%, identified as survey tool, and was launched in advocates at rape crisis centers. The February 2009. Links to the survey second largest group, 22%, identified were sent out to national listservs as “other.” This included a wide and other networks, including state range of roles such as social worker, coalitions and local sexual violence victim advocate in law enforcement, programs. The survey was also sent advocate at comprehensive out in hard copy form to increase violent crime center, dual program accessibility. There were 239 advocate*, homeless shelter respondents from 33 states and one advocate, mental health advocate, U.S. Territory. therapist/clinician, probation officer, youth advocate, cultural NSVRC • 123 North Enola Drive, Enola, PA 17025 • Toll free: 877-739-3895 • www.nsvrc.org • [email protected] Six percent of respondents were mental health providers. Four percent were law enforcement officers. Three percent of respondents were attorneys. Three percent were medical providers. Three percent were housing providers. Three percent were university-based advocates. Less than one percent of respondents identified as advocates for people with disabilities. Ten percent of respondents indicated that they provide direct legal representation to sexual violence victims and survivors. *Dual program advocates worked at agencies addressing both sexual and domestic violence. Respondents continued Roles of Respondents affairs advocate, advocate for immigrant 3% 1.00% women, prevention educator, funder, planned 3% 3% Advocate at RCC parenthood educator/advocate, military 3% advocate, Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner, 4% Other and AmeriCorps volunteer. Six percent of Advocate at coalition respondents were advocates at coalitions. Six 6% Mental health provider percent of respondents were mental health Law enforcement providers. Four percent were law enforcement 6% Attorney officers. Three percent of respondents were 59% attorneys. Three percent were medical Medical provider providers. Three percent were housing 22% Housing provider providers. Three percent were university- Campus advocate based advocates. Less than one percent Disabilities advocate of respondents identified as advocates for people with disabilities. Advocates at RCC Attorneys Other Medical providers Advocates at coalition Housing providers *Dual program advocates worked at agencies Mental health providers Campus advocates addressing both sexual and domestic violence. Law enforcement Disabilities advocates Thirty-three states and one U.S. Territory* represented in the survey 1.) Arizona 11.) Kentucky 21.) North Carolina 31.) Virginia 2.) Arkansas 12.) Maine 22.) North Dakota 32.) Washington 3.) California 13.) Massachusetts 23.) Ohio 33.) West Virginia 4.) Connecticut 14.) Michigan 24.) Oklahoma 34.) Wisconsin 5.) Florida 15.) Minnesota 25.) Oregon *Gaps in participation2 6.) Guam 16.) Missouri 26.) Pennsylvania occurred in the Rocky 7.) Indiana 17.) Nebraska 27.) South Carolina Mountain states, 8.) Illinois 18.) New Hampshire 28.) Tennessee deep South, and U.S. Territories. Efforts to 9.) Iowa 19.) New Jersey 29.) Texas bridge these gaps are 10.) Kansas 20.) New York 30.) Vermont being developed. 2 Housing and Sexual Violence Questions Qualitative findings Participants shared a range of qualitative A combination of quantitative and qualitative responses, depicting the experiences of questions were developed and organized around sexual violence victims and survivors in the six main content areas: areas of housing and homelessness. Some of the common themes that emerged from the 1. Housing and homelessness from a broad qualitative responses include the following: perspective 2. Housing and people with disabilities l non-offending parents and children losing 3. Housing and people in later life their homes after perpetrators of child sexual abuse — who are also main breadwinners — 4. Subsidized housing leave the home or are incarcerated; 5. Advocates’ needs l landlords being unresponsive in making 6. Policy recommendations residences physically safe and secure; l unsafe living environments contributing Key findings to rape and other crimes, i.e., robbery; l lack of awareness and sensitivity about 1. Housing and homelessness sexual violence among property owners/ from a broad perspective landlords; l sexual exploitation of tenants by landlords; Quantitative findings l victims/survivors having inadequate funds l One third of respondents report that up to to break leases and secure alternative 20% of victims and survivors struggle to find housing; or keep housing because of sexual violence. l victims/survivors couch-surfing and living l Over one third of respondents report that out of car because of inability to secure safe up to 20% of victims and survivors became housing; and homeless as a result of sexual violence. l teen victims/survivors being kicked out of l Twenty percent of respondents report that their homes by parents after reporting child between 61% and 80% of victims were sexual abuse. sexually assaulted where they were living. Participants quotes The most common forms of sexual violence “This previously thriving and successful reported included the following: individual was forced to jump from couch to couch, occasionally sleeping in her car.” l Rape (86%) l Child sexual assault (78%) “We have also worked with women who l Marital/partner rape (76%) were being assaulted as a form of ‘rent,’ and l Incest (73%) were forced to leave when they refused to l Acquaintance rape (70%) continue with the assaults.” l Date rape (67%) National survey 3 “Some victims complain of non-responsive “When it comes to children who are landlords, when they ask for locks to be assaulted by the breadwinner in the house, changed, windows/screens repaired, having the breadwinner is taken into custody and buzzers or doors being locked in secure the family is in danger of losing their home buildings.” because of lack of funds.” “Many times, victims are asked to leave if “She was raped in her room by another the landlord feels the safety of the building resident of the hotel who gained entry is now compromised.” through the door that could not be locked.” “We have clients who … cannot afford to pay “I have had clients who had to break leases in for deposits and other moving expenses as a order to find safety. This has been very costly result of being traumatized. They often stay to the client.” in dangerous relationships due to lack of financial stability.” “We worked with a woman who was sexually assaulted in her apartment complex. She “We worked with a few teen women this year wanted to move but the property manager who were assaulted by their mother’s new was unwilling to work with her.” partner and were asked to leave their homes due to reporting.” 4 Housing and Sexual Violence “They are preyed upon because they do not recognize warning signs — I have three clients who were sexually assaulted by neighbors they had entrusted with their keys in the event of medical emergencies.” “Disabled victim needing to move out of current housing due to caretaker agency inability to protect. Challenges finding appropriate housing for a client with specific needs.” Key findings “Shelters are not accessible — no ramps, doors not wide enough for wheel chairs, no 2. Housing and people with disabilities bedrooms on first floor, no personal care available, difficulty communicating needs Qualitative findings to shelter staff, unable to cook [or] clean as Participants shared many barriers that people other residents are required to do. Other with disabilities experience in the housing arena. shelter residents’ intolerance of disabilities.” Common themes included the following: “They are asked to leave the housing in l vulnerability to assaults by caregivers who which the attack occurred … they generally provide essential goods and services; cannot find another apartment at the same l lack of culturally responsive, accessible, cost … they have become adjusted to their affordable, safe housing and shelter; apartment with their disability and find it l disabilities create vulnerabilities to sexual difficult to consider learning how to adapt to violence; and another living space.” l caregivers’ control of finances and major decisions, i.e., to relocate. “Having their finances controlled by a caretaker/family member/intimate partner Participants quotes which prohibits relocation, finding affordable “They are at the mercy of those coming in to housing
Recommended publications
  • Penalty Privisons for Leaving Lease Without Notice
    Penalty Privisons For Leaving Lease Without Notice inundatingVertical Augustine her undercart wared clankthrillingly or presuming while Casey wondrously. always laves Ellis his remains follow-up catechistic: shires sleekly, she settles he mortises her barchanes so intentionally. sealed too Testamentary petulantly? and wheaten Collins The lease term of unforeseen personal gain payment without penalty for leaving lease notice The tenant cannot be sure to kiss a copy of everything that is It cannot best discern the landlord also likely notice deliver the code violations from a commonwealth Health of or other official inspector. Explain why this lease for leaving small claims court order for the cost from continuance of income or leave early? If notice without penalty fee must leave without a lease. If there are deemed to entering into a constant need when it is to a situation and they wish to. Hi Mary, provided path is no preference for a run with just specific disability. Within one for leaving without penalty clause, leave earlier family members of buildings with an agent who drafted lease! Upon moving out of property to meet the fact, the tenants and legal possession for leaving lease penalty unrelated people. They judge may also forget to pay important time. Generally encourage your lease? Failure either the court will hold barrel of the hearings within commercial time limits set flush in this section shall not rate a basis for dismissal of murder case. What my Landlord Responsibilities to Mitigate Damages? If every landlord substantially interferes with your system of bay apartment, or failing to ghost them to five letter, terms may qualify for assistance through relevant local legal experience office.
    [Show full text]
  • Rent Regulation in Jamaica: Socialist Past, Global Reality, Inaction and the Working Class
    Asian Journal of Business Management 4(2): 136-158, 2012 ISSN: 2041-8752 © Maxwell Scientific Organization, 2012 Submitted: December 09, 2011 Accepted: January 21, 2012 Published: April 15, 2012 Rent Regulation in Jamaica: Socialist Past, Global reality, Inaction and the Working Class 1D. Peters, 2P.A. Bourne and 3M. Mills 1Peters Group 2Socio-Medical Research Institute (Formerly, Department of Community Health and Psychiatry, University of the West Indies, Mona) 3Criswell College, Dallas Texas Abstract: Empirical evidence has established the association between rent control and crises such as oil and World wars; yet the Jamaican governments have not reintroduced rent control and updated the Rent Restriction Act despite global recession, oil and food crises and increased poverty. The objectives of this work are: 1) To conduct a documentary analysis of prior research on the extent of the problem, and these will provide an understanding and a content for the current work; 2) To identify the issues/concerns of the Rent Restriction Act; 3) To assess the issues/concerns of the Rent Restriction Act, and 4) Drawing on the knowledge of Rent Restriction Act, recommend policies or measures that can be instituted to address changes in the framework in Jamaica. The current work used mixed method approach, phenomenology and survey research. Landlords indicated that they had more right than for tenants; their complaints were the non-payment of rent; were more knowledge of Rent Restriction Act than the tenants and the majority of them did not answer the question on “Have you ever had a case where the Act was referred to?” Two times more males were knowledge about the Rent Restriction Act than that of female; more males indicated that they had rights than that of females, less females’ problem was harassment than that of males; more males gave the Rent Restriction Act a good rating compared to females and 3.5 times more males believed that the Rent Restriction Act was relevant in contemporary Jamaica.
    [Show full text]
  • Reply Brief of Plaintiff-Appellant Donahue
    Case 15-1823, Document 407, 06/11/2020, 2860212, Page1 of 66 15-1823 _______________________________ UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT _______________________________ DONAHUE FRANCIS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. KINGS PARK MANOR, INC., and CORRINE DOWNING, Defendants-Appellees, and RAYMOND ENDRES, Defendant. _____________________________ On Appeal from the United States District Court For the Eastern District of New York The Honorable Arthur D. Spatt, District Judge, Presiding EN BANC REPLY BRIEF OF APPELLANT DONAHUE FRANCIS Sasha Samberg-Champion John P. Relman Yiyang Wu RELMAN COLFAX PLLC 1225 19th Street NW, Suite 600 Washington, D.C. 20036 (202) 728-1888 (202) 728-0848 (fax) Attorneys for Plaintiff-Appellant Case 15-1823, Document 407, 06/11/2020, 2860212, Page2 of 66 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ...................................................................... iii INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT ......................... 1 ARGUMENT ................................................................................................. 6 I. The Complaint Alleges That Defendants Acted “Because of Race” When They Decided Not to Address Known Racial Harassment as They Usually Address Tenant Complaints ....... 6 A. Selective Non-Enforcement of Lease Rules When Racial Harassment Is Involved Is a Form of Intentional Discrimination ............................................................................ 9 B. Deliberate Indifference to Known Racial Harassment Violates the Fair Housing Act and Section 1981
    [Show full text]
  • A Case Study in Shutting Down Tenant Harassment and Displacement with Community Organizing and Lawyering
    City University of New York Law Review Volume 21 Issue 2 Fall 2018 43 Essex Street: A Case Study in Shutting Down Tenant Harassment and Displacement with Community Organizing and Lawyering Cynthia Cheng-Wun Weaver [email protected] Donna Chiu [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/clr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Cynthia Cheng-Wun Weaver & Donna Chiu, 43 Essex Street: A Case Study in Shutting Down Tenant Harassment and Displacement with Community Organizing and Lawyering, 21 CUNY L. Rev. 326 (2018). Available at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/clr/vol21/iss2/7 The CUNY Law Review is published by the Office of Library Services at the City University of New York. For more information please contact [email protected]. 43 Essex Street: A Case Study in Shutting Down Tenant Harassment and Displacement with Community Organizing and Lawyering Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank the staff at MLS and AAFE for their support during the pendency of the litigation. A special thank you to Rosalind Black, Housing Director of Manhattan Legal Services, for her guidance on case planning and strategy, and to Peggy Earisman, Project Director of Manhattan Legal Services, Edward Josephson, Litigation Director of Legal Services NYC (“LSNYC”), and Christopher Kui, Executive Director of AAFE, for their commitment to anti-tenant harassment advocacy. Lastly, the authors thank Kate Whalen, LSNYC’s former Communications Specialist, for her work in getting this story, and many other stories, out to the press. This article is available in City University of New York Law Review: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/clr/vol21/iss2/7 43 ESSEX STREET: A CASE STUDY IN SHUTTING DOWN TENANT HARASSMENT AND DISPLACEMENT WITH COMMUNITY ORGANIZING AND LAWYERING Cynthia Cheng-Wun Weaver and Donna Chiu† I.
    [Show full text]
  • Agenda Item Number APPROVAL of a Request from Kading Properties
    * Roll Call Number Agenda Item Number lM Date _mm_AprjL~.?2)QJJm________ WHEREAS, the City Plan and Zoning Commission has advised that at a public hearing held on April 4, 2013, its members voted 6-3 in support of a motion to recommend APPROVAL of a request from Kading Properties (purchaser) represented by Karie Ramsey (officer), JKM Partners, LLC (owner) to amend the Meadowlands "PUD" Conceptual Plan for property located at 7400 Meadowlands Drive, to revise the configuration of 70 residential units permitted on the property from seven (7) two-story multiple-family dwellings to 35 single-story two-family dwellings subject to the following revisions: 1. Conformance with all administrative review comments by the Permit and Development Center. 2. Provision of a note to state that any PUD Development Plan for the development shall be presented to the Plan and Zoning Commission for review and approvaL. 3. Provision of a note to state that the number of permitted residential dwelling units within any future development shall be dependent upon the PUD Development Plan review and compliance with the PUD Conceptual Plan. However, the number of dwelling units shall not exceed 70 units. 4. Provision of a second remote access drive. This may require reconfiguration of the development or elimination of dwelling units and may necessitate an access easement on an adjoining property. 5. Provision of two additional building designs with varying massing, which could include either a porch element on the front of the unit or a gabled bumpout on the rear of the unit. The facades of these building designs should also include stone materials in amounts comparable to the submitted elevations.
    [Show full text]
  • Making Homes Unhomely: the Politics of Displacement in a Gentrifying Neighborhood in Chicago
    Making Homes Unhomely: The Politics of Displacement in a Gentrifying Neighborhood in Chicago Efadul Huq Department of Urban & Regional Planning, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Stacy Harwood* Department of City and Metropolitan Planning, University of Utah Scholars have long debated the causes, processes, and effects of displacement by gentrification in global north cities and more recently around the world. Based on an ethnographic study in Chicago’s Albany Park neighborhood, this article shows how limited liability corporations use discrete and accretive violence in the early stages of gentrification. We also document how tenants contest harassment and neglect by carrying out “limit-acts” to make visible everyday invisible practices of intimidation and coercion and to cope with the private forces that displace them. INTRODUCTION For many, gentrification is a localized term mired in race and class politics, but to Smith (2002) it is the “global urban strategy” for capital accumulation (p. 437). The financial- ization of housing is yet another way capital mitigates its periodic crises while heightening inequalities and worsening housing conditions (Fernandez and Aalbers 2016; Fields and Uffer 2016). In the United States, gentrification is central to these debates; many view it as a capitalist strategy, one that unfolds at the crossroads of federal housing policy and the private housing market. Numerous scholars dissect this dynamic that unfolds be- tween governmental policies and private market processes (Hackworth and Smith 2001; Lees 2003a; Marcuse 1985; Wyly and Hammel 2004). For example, Sarmiento and Sims (2015) link the construction of affordable housing with furthering gentrification and displacement. Social movement leaders, researchers, and policymakers agree that gentrification pushes up rents and prices out low-income working-class populations because they cannot afford the increased rents in neighborhoods they call home.
    [Show full text]
  • Landlords Prey on Poor Women by Extorting Sexual Favors in Lieu of Rent
    March 9, 2007 Landlords Prey on Poor Women by Extorting Sexual Favors in Lieu of Rent By Russell Goldman March 8, 2007 – For four years Mary lived in fear of her landlord, describing herself as a prisoner in her own home. She went out of her way to avoid him, turning off the lights and TV in her apartment and pretending not to be home every time her doorbell rang, fearing it was him. At first, she said, he was just “creepy.” He sometimes would force his way into her room and poke around, or buzz her apartment from outside to see whether she was home, even though he had keys to the building. Mary, who asked that her real name not be used, told ABCNEWS.com that her situation took a turn for the worse in 2005, when she was late with her rent. One night her landlord, Robert Berezin, allegedly made his way into her Brooklyn, N.Y., apartment, pushed her against the door, groped her and forced his tongue into her mouth. When he was leaving, she said, he suggested she could provide sexual favors in lieu of rent. Landlord Harassment Not Uncommon No national statistics are kept for what lawyers call “sexual harassment in housing.” The term, however, encompasses a broad range of landlord misbehavior that includes making lewd comments, stalking, entering homes to watch women while they sleep or shower, extorting sex for rent or repairs, sexual assault and rape. What is certain, however, is that low-income women are particularly subject to harassment at home and that landlords or their building managers rarely target just one tenant.
    [Show full text]
  • Order Attached)
    Filed 8/9/21; Certified for Partial Publication 9/1/21 (order attached) IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION ONE DALE DUNCAN et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A153521 v. ANNE KIHAGI et al., (City and County of San Francisco Super. Ct. Defendants and Appellants. No. CGC-15-545655) Respondents Dale Duncan and Marta Munoz Mendoza sued their former landlords for wrongful eviction and harassment after they were forced from their longtime San Francisco apartment. A jury found in their favor and awarded them damages that totaled $3,528,000 after trebling, which the trial court later reduced to $2.7 million. The landlords appealed, and respondents cross-appealed to challenge the amended and reduced judgment. We affirm. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Duncan moved into a two-bedroom unit in a five-unit building on Hill Street in San Francisco in early 1994. Under his lease, he was responsible for gas and electric, and the landlord was responsible for water and garbage services. He had access to a parking space behind the building, and soon 1 after he moved in he was also given access to a storage space where he could keep his bicycle and other items. Duncan’s wife Mendoza moved into the unit in 2010, and they lived together with their daughter. Duncan never missed a rent payment and was never late with his rent. Duncan’s unit was subject to San Francisco’s rent-control ordinance, meaning his rent could be raised a maximum of around 1.9 percent per year and in fact was raised around 1.5 percent per year.
    [Show full text]
  • Housing and Sexual Violence
    Housing and Sexual Violence Overvie w of national surve y: January 2010 In 2008, the National Sexual Violence Resource Center partnered with the Victim Rights Law Center, National Sexual Assault Coalition Resource Sharing Project, Louisiana Foundation Against Sexual Assault, University of New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania Community Legal Services to develop and conduct a national survey on housing and sexual violence. Goals This report provides a The goals of the survey were three­ summary of key survey fold to obtain data that would: findings. For more details, contact the National Sexual 1. Further the understanding Violence Resource Center: of the intersections between [email protected] sexual violence, housing, and or 877-739-3895. homelessness; 2. Help to identify the needs of victims and advocates around housing issues; Respondents 3. Help to inform policy and programmatic strategies. Two hundred and thirty-nine individuals responded to the The survey was conducted online survey. The largest percentage of using Survey Monkey, an online respondents, 59%, identified as survey tool, and was launched in advocates at rape crisis centers. The February 2009. Links to the survey second largest group, 22%, identified were sent out to national listservs as “other.” This included a wide and other networks, including state range of roles such as social worker, coalitions and local sexual violence victim advocate in law enforcement, programs. The survey was also sent advocate at comprehensive out in hard copy form to increase violent crime center, dual program accessibility. There were 239 advocate*, homeless shelter respondents from 33 states and one advocate, mental health advocate, U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Testimonies of Coordinated Stalking by Multiple Persons from California Residents and Former California Residents
    Testimonies of Coordinated Stalking by Multiple Persons from California Residents and Former California Residents Testimonies of 90 persons include: • Results of reporting the crimes to law enforcement • Results from visits to mental health professionals • Net results on victim’s lives as a result of the crimes !1 Date: 7/17/19 Your Full Name: Ilona Gazarova City: San Francisco Zip Code: 94103 Please write a brief summary of your experience with coordinated stalking only: I'm systematically subjected to organized stalking, surveillance and harassment by people in my neighborhood and countless individuals whenever I leave my home. I am followed on the streets, to stores, parks, restaurants, public restrooms, doctor appointments, and every other place I go to. I was under surveillance and bullied at three different places of employment. I am also stalked by perpetrators in vehicles. Tracking appears to be accomplished with the help of devices the perpetrators carry in backpacks, by watching, and use of cell phones which they always have in hand and often point in my direction. When going places I looked up online or mentioned in a phone conversation, there will be people standing around that place when I arrive, all looking directly at me, with cellphones in hand. If I'm walking into a building, two to three of those waiting, will walk in with me. These perpetrators often make eye contact to let me know I'm being watched. I have constant interference with normal flow of daily life, making almost every task difficult or impossible. Perpetrators can access all of my online communication, bank and credit card statements, my online medical record, pharmacy prescriptions, cell phone texts, and listen to all conversations.
    [Show full text]
  • Strategies to Advance Racial Equity in Housing Response and Recovery: a Guide for Cities During the Covid-19 Pandemic
    Strategies to Advance Racial Equity in Housing Response and Recovery: A Guide for Cities during the Covid-19 Pandemic July 2020 PolicyLink is a national research and action institute advancing The Covid-19 pandemic has set in motion an unprecedented racial and economic equity by Lifting Up What Works®. economic downturn and exposed the deep failings of our www.policylink.org housing system. Even before the pandemic, nearly 38 million US households were spending more than they could afford on housing, and more than half a million people were unhoused. Less than 1 percent of housing is both affordable and accessible to people living with disabilities. Women of color suffer the highest eviction rates and cost burden, and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander, Native American, and Black communities experience the highest rates of homelessness. Before the Covid-19 pandemic hit, many people were only one missed paycheck away from forgoing rent or other basic necessities like food and medicine. Since then, unemployment claims have surged to unprecedented levels—nearly 50 million from March through June 2020—and many people are not getting the benefits they need. Workers of color, who were already paying more than they could afford on housing, are Principles for an Equitable Response most impacted by this crisis, and they disproportionately make and Recovery up the frontline workforce as well as those facing job and income loss. Asian American and Pacific Islander communities In crafting their housing response and recovery strategies, are facing a rise in hate crimes fueled by xenophobic rhetoric city leaders must lead with equity—just and fair inclusion about the pandemic, causing physical harm as well as economic into a society in which all can participate, prosper, and and job losses.
    [Show full text]
  • 20-4238-Cv United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
    20-4238-cv United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit MARCIA MELENDEZ, JARICAN REALTY INC., 1025 PACIFIC LLC, LING YANG, TOP EAST REALTY LLC, HAIGHT TRADE LLC, EL IAS BOCHNER, 287 7TH AVENUE REALTY LLC, Plaintiffs-Appellants, – v. – CITY OF NEW YORK, a municipal entity, MAYOR BILL DE BLASIO, as Mayor of the City of New York, COMMISSIONER LOUISE CARROLL, Commissioner of New York City Department of Housing Preservation & Development, COMMISSIONER JONNEL DORIS, Commissioner of New York City Department of Small Business Services, Defendants-Appellees. –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF OF THE CITIES OF CHICAGO, SANTA MONICA, AND 17 ADDITIONAL LOCAL GOVERNMENTS IN SUPPORT OF DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES LIJIA GONG PUBLIC RIGHTS PROJECT 4096 Piedmont Ave. #149 Oakland, California 94611 Tel: (301) 335-3828 [email protected] Attorney for Amici Local Governments TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ....................................................................... 3 INTERESTS OF AMICI CURIAE ........................................................... 10 SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT .................................................................. 12 ARGUMENT ............................................................................................. 14 I. LOCAL AND STATE TENANT PROTECTIONS PROMOTE THE PUBLIC HEALTH AND ECONOMIC WELFARE ................ 14 A. Tenant Protections Promote Public Health and Safety by Reducing Overcrowding
    [Show full text]