Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani on Tuesday defended his plan to finish sweeps of the town’s homeless encampments, assembly with actual property builders and homelessness advocates as he seeks enter on shaping his housing and homelessness insurance policies earlier than taking workplace subsequent month.
Picture by Lloyd Mitchell
Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani on Tuesday defended his plan to finish sweeps of the town’s homeless encampments.
Talking to reporters throughout a Dec. 9 press convention, Mamdani rejected earlier criticism from Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams, who’ve mentioned enforcement should stay a device to handle public security and sanitation issues.
“What I’m opposed to is the failure that you’ve seen characterize the Adams administration’s approach,” he mentioned. “What I’m opposed to is looking at an entire calendar year and seeing the Adams administration be unable to connect a single homeless New Yorker that was affected by those sweeps to permanent housing.”
Pressed on encampments in high-traffic areas, Mamdani mentioned his administration would intervene solely by offering assured indoor options, emphasizing that enhancing shelter security is essential to creating indoor choices extra interesting than encampments.
“I don’t think pushing those New Yorkers to sleep elsewhere is the answer either. We have to create a policy that actually puts New Yorkers in a warm place, not just a marginal improvement in conditions,” he mentioned.
“We need to ensure that when homeless New Yorkers look at their options, they no longer think that the best option for them is to sleep out on the bench like the one behind me, but instead to be in a shelter that is safer than the ones that we have today.”
Mamdani’s criticism of Mayor Adams’ sweep coverage drew rapid pushback from the outgoing administration, with Deputy Mayor for Communications Fabien Levy calling Mamdani’s declare that sweeps failed to attach anybody to everlasting housing “false,” stating that the town has positioned 9,000 individuals in shelters from the subways alone and related greater than 4,000 New Yorkers from the streets to everlasting housing.
“We all agree that there’s nothing dignified about living on the streets — particularly in this frigid cold — and we’ll continue to use proven methods to connect every New Yorker we can to a safe and stable home,” Levy mentioned.
Levy added that greater than 120 people have been immediately moved from encampments into shelter this yr, whereas metropolis efforts additionally give attention to cleansing websites to keep up public security and well being.
Whereas the Adams administration highlights its broader figures on transferring homeless New Yorkers into shelter and everlasting housing, THE CITY discovered that knowledge particular to encampment sweeps reveals that these operations haven’t produced a single everlasting or supportive-housing referral in additional than a yr.
Mamdani talks to builders about inexpensive options
Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani.Picture by Lloyd Mitchell
Mamdani held the press convention following a roundtable dialogue he mentioned he had with actual property builders and homelessness advocates as he seeks enter on shaping his housing and homelessness insurance policies earlier than taking workplace subsequent month.
The mayor-elect framed the discussions as a step towards collaborative options. Nonetheless, his feedback provided few actual particulars of how the coverage will work in motion and are, within the meantime, unlikely to appease critics who’ve warned that ending sweeps might worsen quality-of-life situations in public areas.
Mamdani mentioned he mentioned with builders methods to speed up housing manufacturing and cut back bureaucratic limitations, citing challenges equivalent to navigating a number of metropolis companies and the 252-day common wait to fill an inexpensive housing unit as proof of systemic inefficiencies.
“The quicker we can fill those units, the fewer New Yorkers will be living outside,” he mentioned.
“I spoke not only about my continued commitment to freeze the rent… but also my commitment to understanding the roadblocks they have faced with building more housing across the city,” Mamdani added.
Kathryn Wylde, president and CEO of the Partnership for New York Metropolis, said that the roundtable included roughly 20 senior representatives from corporations concerned in financing and growing inexpensive housing.
Wylde mentioned the Mayor-elect requested the group what the town authorities might do to encourage personal funding in advancing his housing targets, together with rising the availability and decreasing the time and price concerned within the building and preservation of inexpensive housing. She famous that the dialogue left contributors “very hopeful that there will be openness to public-private collaboration in this administration.”
Later Tuesday, Mamdani met with New Yorkers who’ve skilled homelessness and longtime advocates to tell his plans for enhancing shelter situations and increasing inexpensive housing.




