July 22, 2003 -- Government
officials dangled a new $50 million carrot yesterday in an effort to
produce more than 300 "affordable" apartments in lower Manhattan.
Mayor Bloomberg and Gov. Pataki joined HUD Secretary Mel Martinez
downtown to announce the added subsidy to developers who agree to
set aside 20 percent of their units for families earning $50,000 to
$80,000.
Bloomberg said the measure would result in 315 apartments for
middle-income New Yorkers.
Jerilyn Perine, the city's housing commissioner, said the $50
million inducement, part of the federal funds held by the Lower
Manhattan Development Corp., was needed because tax-free federal
financing offered to developers in the area isn't enough to "get
them to incorporate the low-income requirement."
Bettina Damiani of Good Jobs New York cautioned that the
affordable units represent just a fraction of the market-rate
apartments on tap for lower Manhattan.
HUD said 398 units have been approved for federal financing, with
5,000 more in the pipeline.
David Seifman