Back Home Act
As a homeowner, renter or someone leasing a property. Something we cannot control is natural disasters. Whether it is a earthquake , state wide flood, a tree falling and many more. These events are out of our restriction , but yet impact us with little to no consequences. In 2024 , Brooklyn, NY; A mother by the name of Estrella Singleton's apartment where she stayed with her 18 year old son had burned down. Destroying clothes, furniture, personal belongings, and prized possessions. Forcing this family to be left with nothing besides what's on there backs and into the city's shelter system. Where they would be re located to the Bronx without a say, leaving the community they've been around their whole life.
On October 29, 2012 hurricane sandy demolished over 300 homes, 43 fatalities, 19 billion in damages and 2 million people without electricity. The worst thing of it all is that the worst impact was suffered by low income families occupying vacancies in Coney isalnd and far Rockaway. 81% of the the impacted people were black/african descendant, 73% over the age of 55 and 87% were women. This is one of the biggest natural disasters to strike NYC leaving shelters overcrowded , people sleeping in the trains and chaos. And according to data 20% of those homes aren't inheritable.
Now in 2025, the City Council has passed the Back Home Act introduced by Shekar Krishnan and Jennifer Guetaraz who are city council members. To help aid tenants better when emergencies events occur or natural disasters. Promising accountability, tenant protection and “a path back to home”. Addressing the failing system that has long prioritized property owners over people. Negligent landlords faced little to no consequences for leaving buildings in horrible conditions that often leading to fires, f looding, and other disasters in the near future. And once tenants are forced out, those landlords are under no real pressure to expedite repairs or keep displaced residents informed about their chances of returning.
The Act changes that. It strengthens enforcement of the 7A program, allowing the city to step in when landlords fail to act. It mandates that displaced tenants be temporarily housed in their own neighborhoods, compared to being sent to a new community without any say or control like the calamity that occured.. It holds landlords accountable for starting repairs promptly, and limits the ability of building owners to collect insurance indefinitely while doing nothing to make units livable again.
With everything going on, it's good to say that there are laws out there to benefit us , but at the same time there to destroy us. But here at Gravity Foundation we try to give you access to all the resources you need to help make a confident and good decision. Fill out this form if your ready to take the next steps. Untitled form – Google Forms
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