Org | Common People |
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Metropolitan Council on Housing | Michael McKee |
Tenants PAC supports candidates for political office in New York who are strong supporters of tenants' rights. Tenants PAC is the only organization in New York State devoted to advancing the tenant cause through election activity. Tenants PAC supports candidates with financial contributions, and by recruiting tenants to volunteer their time to help with the essential grunt work of election campaigns: phone banking, door knocking, visibility efforts, and Get Out The Vote activities on Election Day. Tenants PAC raises funds from tenants, progressive labor unions and other supporters of tenants’ rights and affordable housing. We recruit tenants as volunteers in targeted elections. We are an all-volunteer organization, so all contributions are used only for our modest costs of operation and to support our targeted candidates. While tenants will never be able to match the landlords' money, our financial contributions to pro-tenant candidates can make a big difference. And tenants can play a big role in elections by volunteering to knock on doors and to staff phone banks. Tenants PAC focuses on the New York State Legislature, which has ultimate power over all state and local rent protection laws. While we have succeeded in electing many pro-tenant candidates to the State Senate and State Assembly, and in defeating several pro-landlord incumbents, the power of real estate money remains a strong and corrupting influence in our state government. Please join our efforts by donating money, time and energy to the struggle for tenants' rights. - - - - - Tenants Political Action Committee, Inc., was founded in the aftermath of the Rent Wars of 1997. Tenant leaders from New York City and its suburban counties ― the only parts of New York State with rent control and rent stabilization laws ― founded Tenants PAC to give renters more clout with elected officials at the only place most politicians care about: the ballot box. Tenants PAC is governed by a board of directors of tenant activists from New York City, Nassau County and Westchester County. Tenants PAC is not affiliated with any other organization. Like many tenant activists, the Tenants PAC founders were frustrated at our inability to win enactment of pro-tenant legislation in Albany. The threat that the rent laws would not be renewed by the New York State Legislature in June 1997 was real. Tenants and our supporters mounted an enormous organizing and lobbying campaign and the rent laws were in fact renewed. But tenant protections were seriously weakened as the price of that renewal, hastening the decontrol of rent-regulated apartments and giving landlords an incentive to pressure and harass tenants in order to obtain vacancies. See How the Landlords Weakened Our Rent Laws (pdf) for the full story. The lesson was clear. The fact that tenants had done a good job of lobbying state legislators did not matter. Lobbying is important, certainly. But lobbying alone will not stop the continuing erosion of our rent-protected housing. Tenants must get involved in election work. Since 1997, some 300,000 affordable apartments (rent controlled, rent stabilized, Mitchell-Lama, and Section 8) in the downstate region have been converted to unaffordable, market rent status due to pro-landlord provisions in our rent laws - and the tenants moving into these apartments lack basic rent and eviction protections. The pace of decontrol has accelerated. And the New York State Legislature and Governor George Pataki weakened the rent laws again in 2003, the next time they came up for renewal. In 2011, the rent laws were renewed again, until June 15, 2015, and for the first time in two decades tenants did not have to swallow any weakening amendments in return for the renewal. While tenants did not win meaningful reforms to close loopholes and stop the loss of rent-regulated housing, we were able to fight the real estate lobby to a draw because tenants were in a stronger position than 1997 or 2003. Landlords understand the importance of elections. Every election cycle, New York City landlords and landlord organizations contribute staggering amounts of money to political candidates -- including upstate legislators who do not have a single rent-regulated apartment in their districts -- in effect, bribing these elected officials to weaken and phase out tenant protection laws. The only way that tenants can counter the enormous power of real estate money is to get involved in election activity. Politicians must learn to respect the power of tenants. Tenants PAC raises funds from tenants and recruits tenants as volunteers in targeted elections. We are an all-volunteer organization, so all contributions are used only for our modest costs of operation and to support our targeted candidates. In the last four election cycles (state legislative elections occur every two years) we have contributed more than $150,000 to candidates we endorsed, a drop in the bucket compared to the real estate lobby but effective because targeted. Tenants PAC targets races where the tenant vote can make a difference, and works to activate that vote in support of pro-tenant candidates. Tenants PAC is the only organization in New York State devoted to advancing the tenant cause through election activity. While tenants will never be able to match the landlords' money, our financial contributions to pro-tenant candidates can make a big difference. And tenants can play a big role in electing pro-tenant candidates by volunteering to knock on doors and to staff phone banks. Tenants PAC focuses on the New York State Senate, where Republicans have gone from a 37-25 majority a few years ago to a point where they have lost so many seats that they are now a numerical minority (33 Democrats to 30 Republicans) and able to hold onto control of the Senate only by allying themselves with five renegade Democrats. The Republican leadership of the Senate does the bidding of New York City landlords, who buy their support with huge campaign donations. According to a "Connect the Dots" study by Common Cause, in the three years leading up to the 2003 sunset (expiration) of the rent laws [in 2003], New York City landlords and landlord organizations gave some $3 million in campaign contributions to state elected officials and to the Republican and Conservative parties. Only 2 percent of this $3 million went to Democratic candidates. Since 1997 Tenants PAC has helped elect twelve pro-tenant State Senators, which includes replacing some pro-landlord Democrats with pro-tenant Democrats. Of course, some of our endorsed candidates have lost. But tenants are now a stronger force in elections. Of course, merely electing a Democratic majority in the State Senate does not guarantee that we can win significant pro-tenant legislation. Even pro-tenant legislators need to be reminded – and reminded again – of the need for stronger rent and eviction protections. Tenants must also work to reform Albany: above all, to reform our loose campaign finance laws, to eliminate the power of landlord money ― but also to reform the legislative process itself so that it is more open and transparent, and to win non-partisan redistricting, so that the legislative leaders do not control how the lines are drawn for the 63 State Senate and 150 State Assembly districts. Unfortunately, despite his pledge to veto any partisan redistricting plan, Governor Andrew Cuomo sold out, allowing the Senate Republicans to draw hyper-partisan lines that prevented Democrats from taking a super majority in the November 2012 election. See Campaigns for information about our current campaign for campaign finance reform. [Non-partisan redistricting and campaign finance reform will mean that elections are actually competitive. Our current porous campaign finance laws allow those with economic clout ― landlords among them ― to buy elections, and the partisan redistricting controlled by the legislative leaders is used to protect incumbents. The result is legislative gridlock.] Through our election work Tenants PAC reminds the Senate Democrats that we are helping them win [the] a real Democratic majority, and that we expect them to deliver on their promise of stronger rent laws and tenant protections ― as well as campaign finance reform, non-partisan redistricting, and reform of the legislative process so that individual members have some power, as in Congress, instead of concentrating all the power in the leadership. Tenants have enormous power at the ballot box - if we choose to use it. Updated 4/15/2013
Org | Common People |
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Metropolitan Council on Housing | Michael McKee |