The City’s toughest housing rhetoric has been aimed at private landlords. But if equal accountability is the standard, New York’s own public housing should lead the way.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani has made holding private landlords accountable one of the defining themes of his administration. Press conferences. New inspection initiatives. Public hearings. Tough rhetoric. The message is clear: negligent landlords will be held accountable.
No reasonable person should oppose safe housing. Every New Yorker deserves to live in an apartment free of mold, leaks, broken heat, pests, and unsafe conditions. Private landlords who violate the law should absolutely be held accountable.
But there is one question City Hall has yet to answer.
If housing justice is truly the goal, why doesn’t it start at NYCHA?
The New York City Housing Authority is home to nearly 280,000 residents, including more than 120,000 Black New Yorkers. These are some of the poorest families in the city. Many are seniors, people with disabilities, veterans, and working families living on limited incomes. They often cannot simply move if conditions become unbearable. They depend on the City to provide safe, decent housing.
Yet the administration’s most visible housing campaign has been directed at private property owners through aggressive inspections, enforcement actions, and public “Rental Ripoff” hearings, while NYCHA continues to struggle with long-standing complaints involving mold, heating failures, broken elevators, water leaks, pests, and delayed repairs.
To be fair, Mayor Mamdani has committed significant funding to NYCHA. His administration has announced a long-term investment plan totaling approximately $5.6 billion for repairs, modernization, and restoring vacant apartments. Investment in public housing is necessary, and no one should dismiss the importance of funding.
But funding alone is not accountability.
Every mayor in recent history has announced new money for NYCHA. The question is not whether dollars have been allocated. The question is whether City Hall is holding itself to the same visible standards it demands of private landlords.
The contrast has not gone unnoticed by the very people City Hall says it wants to protect.
When Mayor Mamdani launched his highly publicized “Rental Ripoff” hearings, many NYCHA residents asked a simple question: Why aren’t we included? Residents pointed out that they continue to live with many of the same conditions the Mayor condemns in private housing. Their concern was not that private landlords should receive less scrutiny, but that NYCHA should receive the same level of urgency and accountability.
Those complaints are not new. For years, NYCHA residents and community organizations have documented deteriorating living conditions throughout the City’s public housing system. During this year’s budget debate, a coalition that included NYCHA residents criticized the Mayor’s housing priorities, arguing that he had retreated from campaign promises on housing assistance. The frustration reflects a broader concern that the City’s most visible housing campaign has focused on private landlords while public housing remains plagued by longstanding problems.
This is not an argument against enforcing housing laws. It is an argument for enforcing them consistently.
If aggressive inspections, public hearings, transparency, and public accountability are the right approach for private landlords, then why isn’t the City applying those same visible standards to NYCHA—the largest landlord in New York City?
Imagine if the same inspection model used against private landlords were applied to NYCHA. Imagine public hearings dedicated solely to NYCHA conditions. Imagine publicly released inspection reports for every development. Imagine firm repair deadlines with regular public progress updates. Imagine the Mayor standing inside deteriorating NYCHA developments with the same frequency he stands in front of privately owned buildings announcing new enforcement actions.
Government should lead by example. If the City expects every private landlord to provide safe and dignified housing, then it should hold itself to at least the same standard. Housing justice should begin with the housing the City owns.
Housing justice cannot be selective.
If Mayor Mamdani wants to build a lasting legacy on housing reform, that legacy should begin with the families who have the fewest choices. It should begin with NYCHA residents. They deserve not only billions in investment, but also the same inspections, transparency, public scrutiny, and accountability that the administration demands from every private landlord.
Until that happens, New Yorkers will continue to ask a simple question:
If housing justice is the goal, why doesn’t it start at NYCHA?












