Real Estate
Bed-Stuy NYCHA Sites See Near 100 Utility Outages Last Year: Data
Though a drop from the year before, the neighborhood's public housing was still plagued by 97 heat, hot water and water outages last winter.
BED-STUY, BROOKLYN — Bed-Stuy's public housing tenants' heat, hot water and water lapsed nearly 100 times last winter, according to new data.
New outage data revealed by the Legal Aid Society shows that the neighborhoods' eight public housing complexes suffered a total of 97 heat, hot water and water outages in the 2020-2021 heating season, which lasts from October to May.
And though that number is a slight drop from the year before — when 105 outages were logged — it is still part of a pattern of outages that worry advocates about conditions at the New York City Housing Authority complexes.
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Citywide, NYCHA buildings saw less overall utility outages in 2020-21 than the season before, but Legal Aid notes the 2,903 outages citywide were only a slight improvement from the 3,014 seen in 2019-20.
"While NYCHA has made some improvements to mitigate utility outages, residents still suffer lapses in service on a daily basis," Legal Aid Society's Lucy Newman said. "Our neighbors in public housing should not have to continue to suffer these conditions, especially in the dead of winter."
Find out what's happening in Bed-Stuyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The Legal Aid Society obtained data for the 2019-20 and 2020-21 seasons from NYCHA through a Freedom of Information Law request. NYCHA is required by law to provide hot water and water at all times of day and to provide heat between Oct. 1 and May 31 when temperatures fall below a certain degrees, the organization notes.
In Bed-Stuy, the complex with the most outages last season was the Marcy Houses, found between Nostrand and Marcy avenues. The complex's 27 buildings had a total of 27 unplanned outages throughout the season, data shows.
The Sumner Houses, which has 13 buildings between Lewis and Throop avenues, was not far behind with 14 total unplanned outages during the 2020-21 season, according to the data.
And while any number of unplanned outages are a disturbance, Bed-Stuy's developments actually landed in the middle compared to other nearby Brooklyn neighborhoods.
In Brownsville and East New York, for example, the Van Dyke Houses saw 34 outages in the 2020-21 season. The neighborhoods as a whole had more than 221 outages in the season across their two dozen NYCHA sites.
In Crown Heights, there were only 30 total outages in 2020-21 across all developments, according to the data.
The Legal Aid Society said the continued utility problems prove more help is needed to make public housing repairs.
"This moment demands greater attention from Washington, Albany, and City Hall, and we call on President Biden, Governor Hochul and Mayor Adams to allocate significant funding to address NYCHA's capital needs, which is now tens of billions of dollars," Newman said.
For their part, NYCHA agreed that "deteriorating infrastructure" and a lack of investment is a "critical issue" contributing to the outages, but said they have improved over the years.
"NYCHA has demonstrated significant progress since 2019 in addressing service outages at its developments through improvements to heating and hot water operations and response, including increased staffing, roving teams, mobile boilers, planned preventative maintenance and a 24-hour heat desk," a spokesperson told Patch.
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