Residents gathered at a Brooklyn high school on Thursday for the inaugural Rental Ripoff Hearing, one of Mayor Zohran Mamdani's key initiatives to address tenant issues in private housing. The event, led by Director of Tenant Protection Cea Weaver, focused on documenting violations and gathering feedback for future housing policies. While tenants shared stories of substandard conditions, critics highlighted exclusions and called for broader inclusion.
The hearing took place at a Brooklyn high school, marking the start of five planned events across New York City's boroughs, as promised by Mayor Mamdani during his campaign. Organized to uncover policy recommendations for protecting tenants, the session emphasized recording building violations, requesting repairs, and highlighting abusive landlords. Cea Weaver, who previously described homeownership as 'a tool of white supremacy,' presented under the title 'New Yorkers vs. Bad Landlords.' She stated that the mayor's office would use the collected feedback to shape housing policy.
Attendees included tenants voicing grievances about their living conditions. One resident, a comic artist in a rent-stabilized three-bedroom apartment, described severe issues: 'The ceiling caved in... There’s rodents and rats and we haven’t had heat the last two winters.' She pays $300 monthly for her share, with the unit's total rent at $900, far below the city's average of $4,841 for similar apartments. She remains due to affordability constraints.
Not all reactions were positive. The hearings exclude New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) properties, affecting about one in 16 New Yorkers. During the event, a masked woman in knee-high green socks interrupted by storming the stage, shouting, 'NYCHA should be allowed in the motherf*cking building... Poor people need a f*cking voice.' Officials allowed the disruption for nearly two minutes before Weaver explained that NYCHA residents could still provide input to representatives, then assisted her exit.
Landlords expressed dissatisfaction, with real estate broker Adam Frisch arguing the process is one-sided. 'They should pull from a combination of tenants, landlords, financiers, developers, and economists,' he told reporters. 'Everybody looks at the situation with their own biases, and it’s the role of the mayor to sit down with tenants and landlords and say I know you’re both unhappy. Let’s see what we can do.' Landlords attribute poor maintenance to rent stabilization laws, which limit revenue increases. For instance, major landlord Pinnacle Group filed for bankruptcy in 2025, citing that 'sharp increase in financing costs outpaced rental revenue, which could not be correspondingly increased due to rent stabilization.'
Mayor Mamdani did not attend, as he was in Washington, D.C., meeting President Donald Trump in the Oval Office to discuss strategies for increasing housing in New York City.