S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
 ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                  2617--A
 
                        2021-2022 Regular Sessions
 
                           I N  A S S E M B L Y
 
                             January 19, 2021
                                ___________
 
 Introduced  by M. of A. NIOU, RICHARDSON, JOYNER, CARROLL, REYES, SIMON,
   GOTTFRIED, SEAWRIGHT, BARNWELL, DAVILA, L. ROSENTHAL, DICKENS, BARRON,
   DE LA ROSA, KIM, FAHY, PICHARDO, FERNANDEZ,  EPSTEIN,  BICHOTTE HERME-
   LYN, PERRY, FRONTUS, CRUZ, GLICK, WALKER, J. RIVERA, TAYLOR, ANDERSON,
   BRONSON,  GONZALEZ-ROJAS,  MITAYNES  --  read once and referred to the
   Committee on Housing -- committee discharged,  bill  amended,  ordered
   reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee
 
 AN ACT to enact the "COVID-19 housing relief and recovery for all act"
 
   THE  PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEM-
 BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
 
   Section 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as  the  "COVID-19
 housing relief and recovery for all act".
   § 2. Legislative findings. The legislature hereby finds that a serious
 public  emergency  exists  in the state of New York due to the impact of
 the global outbreak of novel coronavirus, COVID-19, which as of the date
 of this legislation, created destabilized housing,  loss  of  employment
 and  income,  closure of businesses and schools, and greatly exacerbated
 financial insecurity in the state of New York. The  legislature  further
 finds  that  it  is  currently  impossible to accurately assess the full
 scope, duration, and severity of impact this public  emergency  has  and
 will  have  on  the  residents of New York and that, in response to this
 crisis, on March 7, 2020 the executive declared a 'State Disaster  Emer-
 gency' which has put extraordinary constraints on individuals, families,
 homeowners,   not-for-profits,  residential  housing  cooperatives,  and
 local, state, and federal agencies. The legislature further  finds  that
 the  loss  of  employment,  illness  and  deaths  caused by the COVID-19
 outbreak have rendered many individuals and families unable to  pay  for
 the costs of housing and other life necessities. The legislature further
 finds  that  safe  and  affordable  housing is a key measure of positive
 individual, family, and public health outcomes.  The legislature further
 finds that without government intervention, individuals and families who
 
  EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                       [ ] is old law to be omitted.
              
             
                          
                                                                            LBD04972-04-1
 A. 2617--A                          2
 
 are unable to pay the costs of housing will  be  displaced,  which  will
 result  in  an  increase in families who are cohabiting with one or more
 other families and an increase in the population of unhoused individuals
 and  families,  both  of  which  will  accelerate the spread of COVID-19
 infection and, therefore, measures to prevent such individual and house-
 hold displacement are necessary to  prevent  increased  COVID-19  trans-
 mission.  The  legislature  further finds that without rent and mortgage
 relief, the number of eviction case filings for nonpayment of  rent  and
 the  number of mortgage foreclosures will increase tremendously, result-
 ing in overburdened court systems which will not have the  resources  or
 space  to  operate functionally and also resulting in massive congestion
 and increased human contact in courthouse spaces,  both  of  which  will
 exacerbate  the  spread  of  COVID-19  creating a worsened public health
 hazard. The legislature further finds  that  a  tremendous  increase  in
 evictions  and foreclosures will overburden social services agencies and
 resources and that the shelter system does  not  have  the  capacity  to
 accommodate a significantly increased homeless population, both of which
 will  also  worsen the spread of COVID-19. The legislature further finds
 that public housing authorities have incurred  expenses  resulting  from
 the  COVID-19  outbreak  and  have  lost rental income due to widespread
 financial hardship suffered by public housing tenants and occupants as a
 result of the COVID-19 outbreak. The legislature  declares  that  it  is
 both  in  the  public  interest  and the responsibility of government to
 provide and secure federal and state emergency funding  to  ensure  that
 individuals  and  families  are not rendered homeless or severely finan-
 cially burdened because of an inability to pay for the cost  of  housing
 and  other  necessities  due to the COVID-19 outbreak and to ensure that
 public housing entities, not-for-profits, residential cooperatives,  and
 landlords  unable  to  afford necessary expenses as a result of COVID-19
 outbreak, not be encumbered with severe financial burden, and to promote
 the stability and proper maintenance of the  housing  stock  and  assist
 communities  in  recovering from the adverse social and economic impacts
 of the COVID-19 outbreak, and that, consistent with articles 17  and  18
 of  the state constitution, it is therefore incumbent on the legislature
 and the executive to implement protections and to provide rent and mort-
 gage relief so as to reduce the harm to New York  residents  and  ensure
 safe,  decent,  sanitary,  affordable  housing  and  financial stability
 during the novel coronavirus, COVID-19,  crisis  and  all  other  public
 emergencies.
   § 3. Definitions. (a) "Residential tenant" shall have the same meaning
 as  in paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 235-f of the real prop-
 erty law, those who otherwise pay for the use and occupancy of  a  resi-
 dential dwelling unit, occupants as defined by paragraph (b) of subdivi-
 sion  1  of  section  235-f  of  the  real  property  law, or tenants or
 occupants of residential dwelling units funded  pursuant  to  42  U.S.C.
 1437g.
   (b)  "Small  homeowner"  shall  mean  an owner of a dwelling with 6 or
 fewer units where such owner also resides as a primary residence.
   (c) "Affordable housing operator" shall mean a  not-for-profit  entity
 as  defined  in the not-for-profit corporation law or a housing develop-
 ment fund company as defined in  section  572  of  the  private  housing
 finance  law  that  owns  and  operates a housing project for persons of
 low-income.
   (d) "Rent" shall have the same meaning as defined in  section  702  of
 the real property actions and proceedings law.
 A. 2617--A                          3
 
   (e)  "Residential  cooperative" shall mean any housing project, of any
 size, operated for persons of low income by  a  housing  corporation  as
 defined in section 572 of the private housing finance law, or any corpo-
 ration  or entity owning and operating a residential cooperative with 10
 or fewer units.
   (f)  "Public  housing  authority"  shall  mean  any  municipal housing
 authority created under article 13 of the public housing law.
   (g) "Commissioner" shall mean the commissioner of housing and communi-
 ty renewal.
   § 4. Cancellation of rent in the case of residential  tenants;  fines;
 termination  of  tenancy and eviction proceedings; debt; consumer credit
 reports. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the  obligation
 of a residential tenant to pay rent shall be suspended for a period that
 shall  run  from March 7, 2020 until the expiration of 90 days after the
 executive declares that the state disaster emergency has ended.
   (b) No tenant or tenant household may be charged a  fine  or  fee  for
 non-payment of rent in accordance with this section.
   (c) The nonpayment of rent by a tenant in accordance with this section
 shall not be grounds for any termination of tenancy or eviction proceed-
 ing or civil judgment.
   (d)  No tenant or tenant household may be treated as accruing any debt
 by reason of suspension of rent under this section.
   (e) No tenant or tenant household may be held liable for repayment  of
 any amount of rent suspended under this section.
   (f) The nonpayment of rent by a tenant in accordance with this section
 shall not be reported to a tenant screening agency or a consumer report-
 ing agency nor shall such nonpayment adversely affect a tenant or member
 of  a  tenant's  household's  credit  score nor shall such nonpayment be
 grounds for denying any future application for rental housing made by  a
 tenant or a member of a tenant's household.
   §  5.  Mortgage payment suspension, fees and penalties, credit scores.
 (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of  law,  the  obligation  of  a
 small  homeowner to make mortgage payments of principal or interest that
 become due during the period running from March 7, 2020 until the  expi-
 ration  of  90 days after the executive declares that the state disaster
 emergency has ended, is hereby suspended.
   (b) No mortgagor who is a small homeowner may be held responsible  for
 payment  of mortgage payments suspended under this section or treated as
 accruing any debt by reason of suspension  under  this  section  of  the
 obligation to make mortgage payments.
   (c)  A  mortgagee, or servicer for such mortgagee, under a residential
 mortgage loan to a small homeowner may  not  commence  or  continue  any
 judicial  foreclosure  action or non-judicial foreclosure process or any
 action for failure to make a payment due under  such  mortgage  that  is
 suspended pursuant to this section.
   (d)  No  fees,  penalties,  or  additional interest beyond the amounts
 scheduled or  calculated  as  if  the  mortgagor  made  all  contractual
 payments on time and in full under the terms of the mortgage contract in
 effect  as  of  the commencement of the COVID-19 suspension period shall
 accrue.
   (e) The nonpayment of a mortgage payment by a  mortgagor  pursuant  to
 suspension  of  the  obligation  to make such payment under this section
 shall not be reported to a consumer  reporting  agency  nor  shall  such
 nonpayment adversely affect a mortgagor's credit score.
 A. 2617--A                          4
 
   (f)  Assistance may not be provided under this section with respect to
 any dwelling for which assistance is provided pursuant to section  seven
 or eight of this act.
   § 6. Assistance to residential housing cooperatives losing maintenance
 and rental income.  (a) Except as modified in this section, any residen-
 tial  housing cooperatives that can demonstrate they lost maintenance or
 rental income during the period from March 7, 2020 until the  expiration
 of 90 days after the executive declares that the state disaster emergen-
 cy has ended shall be entitled to a payment of the total amount of main-
 tenance or rental income lost during that period.
   (b) (i) The commissioner of housing and community renewal, shall issue
 regulations  establishing  an  application  procedure  for a residential
 housing cooperative  seeking  payment  of  lost  maintenance  or  rental
 income.
   (ii)  Such  regulations  shall  provide  that  as  a condition of such
 assistance payments, a residential housing cooperative shall  agree  and
 shall  be obligated, through executing an instrument in a form specified
 in the regulations issued hereunder to provide any tenants  residing  in
 the  housing cooperative with a renewal lease of at least 1 year, at the
 same rental amount actually charged and collected 6 months prior to  the
 application for relief.
   (iii)  Such  regulations shall further provide that any rental housing
 cooperative shall not be eligible for the  relief  provided  herein  for
 rental or maintenance income imputable to any illegal unit or unit occu-
 pied  in  violation  of  the  cooperative's  bylaws or for rental income
 imputable to a unit containing uncorrected, as of the time of the appli-
 cation, immediately hazardous violations of a state or local housing  or
 building  code  that  existed  prior  to March 7, 2020 and which are the
 housing cooperative's legal duty to remedy.
   (c) Any residential cooperative that receives payment for unpaid main-
 tenance under this section shall waive all rights to receive said  main-
 tenance  payments  from the cooperative shareholder of the dwelling unit
 for which payment was received.
   § 7. Assistance to affordable housing operators losing rental  income.
 (a)  Except as modified in this section, any affordable housing operator
 that can demonstrate they lost rental  income  during  the  period  from
 March  7,  2020  until  the  expiration  of  90 days after the executive
 declares that the state disaster emergency has ended shall  be  entitled
 to a payment of the total amount of rental income lost during that peri-
 od.
   (b)  The  commissioner  of  housing and community renewal, shall issue
 regulations establishing an  application  procedure  for  an  affordable
 housing operator seeking payment of lost rental income.
   (c)  The  commissioner  may  provide a payment under this section only
 with respect to rental dwellings that meet all  the  following  require-
 ments:
   (i)  The  affordable  housing operator of the rental dwelling has made
 such certifications to, and entered into such binding  agreements  with,
 the  commissioner as the commissioner considers necessary to ensure that
 during the five year period  beginning  upon  initial  receipt  by  such
 affordable  housing  operator  of  payment  under  this section for such
 dwelling, such dwelling shall be subject to the following requirements:
   (1) the monthly rental amounts for the rental units within the proper-
 ty may not be increased from the amount of such rent charged as  of  the
 date of the enactment of this act;
 A. 2617--A                          5
 
   (2)  tenants of the rental units may be evicted only for the following
 reasons:
   (A)  the tenant is violating a substantial obligation of their tenancy
 other than the obligation to surrender possession of such housing accom-
 modation and has failed to cure such violation after written  notice  by
 the  landlord  that  the violation cease within 10 days, or within the 3
 month period immediately prior to the commencement of the proceeding the
 tenant has willfully violated such an obligation inflicting serious  and
 substantial injury to the landlord;
   (B)  the tenant is committing or permitting a nuisance in such housing
 accommodation or  is  maliciously  or  by  reason  of  gross  negligence
 substantially  damaging  the  housing  accommodations,  or  the tenant's
 conduct is such as to interfere substantially with the comfort or safety
 of the landlord or of other tenants or occupants of the  same  or  other
 adjacent building or structure;
   (C)  occupancy  of the housing accommodations by the tenant is illegal
 because of the requirements of law, and the landlord is subject to civil
 or criminal penalties therefor, or both;
   (D) the tenant is using or permitting such housing accommodation to be
 used for an illegal purpose;
   (E) the tenant who had a written lease or other written rental  agree-
 ment  which  terminates  on or after the effective date of this statute,
 has refused upon demand of the landlord to execute a  written  extension
 or  renewal thereof for a further term of like duration not in excess of
 one year but otherwise on the same terms and conditions as the  previous
 lease  except  in  so  far as such terms and conditions are inconsistent
 with this act; or
   (F) the tenant has unreasonably refused the  landlord  access  to  the
 housing  accommodations  for  the purpose of making necessary repairs or
 improvements required by law or for the  purpose  of  inspection  or  of
 showing  the  accommodations  to  a  prospective purchaser, mortgagee or
 prospective mortgagee, or other  person  having  a  legitimate  interest
 therein;  provided, however, that in the latter event such refusal shall
 not be grounds for removal or eviction if such inspection or showing  of
 the  accommodations  is contrary to the provisions of the tenant's lease
 or other rental agreement;
   (3) the rental dwelling shall not have any outstanding violations  for
 hazardous or immediately hazardous conditions;
   (4)  the affordable housing operator may not refuse to rent any rental
 dwelling unit, or discriminate in the renting  of  any  rental  dwelling
 unit,  to  a  household based on the source of income of such household,
 including income under the program under  section  8(o)  of  the  United
 States  Housing  Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)) or any similar tenant-
 based rental assistance program;
   (5) the affordable housing operator may not restrict  tenancy  of  the
 dwelling  unit  on  the  basis of sexual identity or orientation, gender
 identity or expression, conviction or arrest record, credit history,  or
 immigration status;
   (6)  the  affordable  housing  operator  may  not retaliate in any way
 against a tenant of the dwelling unit; and
   (7) the affordable housing operator may not report the tenant  of  the
 dwelling unit or provide any adverse information regarding the tenant to
 any credit reporting or tenant screening agency.
   (ii) Assistance may not be provided under this section with respect to
 any  dwelling  unit for which assistance is provided pursuant to section
 five, six or eight of this act.
 A. 2617--A                          6
 
   (d) (i) Subject to paragraph (ii) of this subdivision, the amount of a
 payment under this section with respect to a  rental  dwelling  may  not
 exceed  the  aggregate  amount of rent for the rental dwelling suspended
 pursuant to subdivision (a) of section four of this act and attributable
 only  to  days  from March 7, 2020 until the expiration of 90 days after
 the executive declares that  the  state  disaster  emergency  has  ended
 during  which  the  dwelling  unit  was  occupied  by a tenant otherwise
 required to pay rent for such occupancy.
   (ii) In making payments under this section with respect to any  rental
 dwelling unit for which a tenant made a payment of rent during the peri-
 od  run  from  March  7,  2020 until the expiration of 90 days after the
 executive declares that the  state  disaster  emergency  has  ended  the
 commissioner of housing and community renewal agency shall:
   (1)  reduce the amount of the payment to the affordable housing opera-
 tor under paragraph (i) of this subdivision by the amount  of  any  such
 rent paid; and
   (2) make a payment to such tenant in the amount of any such rent paid.
   (iii) In making payments under this section with respect to any dwell-
 ing  for which the affordable housing operator received mortgage payment
 relief under section five of this act the commissioner shall reduce  the
 amount  of  the payment to the affordable housing operator for lost rent
 by the amount of mortgage payment relief received under section five  of
 this act.
   (e)  If  an  affordable housing operator violates any requirement with
 respect to a covered rental dwelling unit  under  any  certification  or
 agreement  entered  into pursuant to paragraph (i) of subdivision (c) of
 this section, the commissioner shall recapture from the affordable hous-
 ing operator an amount equal to the entire amount of assistance provided
 under this section that is attributable to such dwelling unit and ensure
 that such amount is recaptured.
   (f) There is hereby authorized to be appropriated such sums as may  be
 necessary  to  reimburse  all  affordable housing operators for all rent
 payments suspended pursuant to subdivision (a) of section four  of  this
 act.
   (g)  (i)  Any  affordable  housing operator may apply for an exemption
 from one or more of the requirements set forth  in  subdivision  (c)  of
 this  section  and  the  commissioner  shall  grant  exemptions from the
 requirements set forth in subdivision (c) of this section upon determin-
 ing that the affordable housing operator would  otherwise  suffer  undue
 financial  hardship  resulting from the requirements for which exemption
 is sought.
   (ii) Any affordable housing operator aggrieved by  the  commissioner's
 decision  on  an  application  under  this  section  or  for  a hardship
 exemption pursuant to paragraph (i) of this subdivision  may  within  30
 days  of  the  commissioner's  decision seek judicial review pursuant to
 article 78 of the civil practice law and rules. In the  event  that  the
 court  may  find  that  the decision of the commissioner constitutes the
 equivalent of a taking without compensation, it may, at the election  of
 the  commissioner, either set aside the decision or order the payment of
 just compensation by the commissioner.
   § 8. Landlord relief  fund,  application,  fair  rental  requirements,
 prohibition  on duplication of assistance. (a) The commissioner of hous-
 ing and community renewal shall establish and manage a  landlord  relief
 fund,  or  in this section referred to as "the fund", to provide lessors
 payments under this section to reimburse such lessors for rent  payments
 cancelled pursuant to subdivision (a) of section four of this act.
 A. 2617--A                          7
 
   (b)  The commissioner shall provide for lessors of rental dwellings to
 apply for reimbursement payments from the fund, which applications shall
 include the certifications and binding agreements required  pursuant  to
 subdivision (c) of this section.
   (c)  The  commissioner  may  provide a payment under this section only
 with respect to rental dwellings that meet all of the following require-
 ments:
   (i) The lessor of the rental dwelling has made such certifications to,
 and entered into such binding agreements with, the commissioner  as  the
 commissioner  considers  necessary  to  ensure that during the five year
 period beginning upon initial receipt by such lessor  of  payment  under
 this  section  for  such dwelling, such dwelling shall be subject to the
 following requirements:
   (1) the monthly rental amounts for the rental units within the proper-
 ty may not be increased from the amount of such rent charged as  of  the
 date of the enactment of this act;
   (2)  tenants of the rental units may be evicted only for the following
 reasons:
   (A) the tenant is violating a substantial obligation  of  his  tenancy
 other than the obligation to surrender possession of such housing accom-
 modation  and  has failed to cure such violation after written notice by
 the landlord that the violation cease within ten days, or within  the  3
 month period immediately prior to the commencement of the proceeding the
 tenant  has willfully violated such an obligation inflicting serious and
 substantial injury to the landlord;
   (B) the tenant is committing or permitting a nuisance in such  housing
 accommodation  or  is  maliciously  or  by  reason  of  gross negligence
 substantially damaging the housing accommodations;  or  his  conduct  is
 such  as  to  interfere  substantially with the comfort or safety of the
 landlord or of other tenants or occupants of the same or other  adjacent
 building or structure;
   (C)  occupancy  of the housing accommodations by the tenant is illegal
 because of the requirements of law, and the landlord is subject to civil
 or criminal penalties therefor, or both;
   (D) the tenant is using or permitting such housing accommodation to be
 used for an illegal purpose;
   (E) the tenant who had a written lease or other written rental  agree-
 ment  which  terminates  on or after the effective date of this statute,
 has refused upon demand of the landlord to execute a  written  extension
 or  renewal thereof for a further term of like duration not in excess of
 one year but otherwise on the same terms and conditions as the  previous
 lease  except  in  so  far as such terms and conditions are inconsistent
 with this act; or
   (F) the tenant has unreasonably refused the  landlord  access  to  the
 housing  accommodations  for  the purpose of making necessary repairs or
 improvements required by law or for the  purpose  of  inspection  or  of
 showing  the  accommodations  to  a  prospective purchaser, mortgagee or
 prospective mortgagee, or other  person  having  a  legitimate  interest
 therein;  provided, however, that in the latter event such refusal shall
 not be grounds for removal or eviction if such inspection or showing  of
 the  accommodations  is contrary to the provisions of the tenant's lease
 or other rental agreement;
   (3) the rental dwelling shall not have any outstanding violations  for
 hazardous or immediately hazardous conditions;
   (4)  the  lessor  may  not refuse to rent any rental dwelling unit, or
 discriminate in the renting of any rental dwelling unit, to a  household
 A. 2617--A                          8
 
 based  on the source of income of such household, including income under
 the program under section 8(o) of the United States Housing Act of  1937
 (42  U.S.C.  1437f(o))  or  any  similar  tenant-based rental assistance
 program;
   (5)  the  lessor  may not restrict tenancy of the dwelling unit on the
 basis of sexual identity or orientation, gender identity or  expression,
 conviction or arrest record, credit history, or immigration status;
   (6)  the  lessor  may not retaliate in any way against a tenant of the
 dwelling unit; and
   (7) the lessor may not report the  tenant  of  the  dwelling  unit  or
 provide  any  adverse  information  regarding  the  tenant to any credit
 reporting or tenant screening agency.
   (ii) Assistance may not be provided under this section with respect to
 any dwelling unit for which assistance is provided pursuant  to  section
 five, six or seven of this act.
   (d) (i) Subject to paragraph (ii) of this subdivision, the amount of a
 payment  under  this  section  with respect to a rental dwelling may not
 exceed the aggregate amount of rent for the  rental  dwelling  suspended
 pursuant to subdivision (a) of section four of this act and attributable
 only  to  days  from March 7, 2020 until the expiration of 90 days after
 the executive declares that  the  state  disaster  emergency  has  ended
 during  which  the  dwelling  unit  was  occupied  by a tenant otherwise
 required to pay rent for such occupancy.
   (ii) In making payments under this section with respect to any  rental
 dwelling unit for which a tenant made a payment of rent during the peri-
 od  run  from  March  7,  2020 until the expiration of 90 days after the
 executive declares that the  state  disaster  emergency  has  ended  the
 commissioner shall:
   (1) reduce the amount of the payment to the lessor under paragraph (i)
 of this subdivision by the amount of any such rent paid; and
   (2) make a payment to such tenant in the amount of any such rent paid.
   (iii) In making payments under this section with respect to any dwell-
 ing  for which the lessor received mortgage payment relief under section
 five of this act the commissioner shall reduce the amount of the payment
 to the lessor for lost rent by the amount  of  mortgage  payment  relief
 received under section five of this act.
   (e)  In  making  payments  under  this section, the commissioner shall
 establish a tiered system  for  priority  for  such  payments  based  on
 assets,  revenues,  and disclosure requirements with respect to lessors.
 Such system shall provide priority for making payments to eligible small
 homeowners and lessors having the fewest available amount of assets.
   (f) If a lessor violates any requirement with  respect  to  a  covered
 rental  dwelling  unit under any certification or agreement entered into
 pursuant to paragraph (i)  of  subdivision  (c)  of  this  section,  the
 commissioner  shall  recapture  from  the  lessor an amount equal to the
 entire amount of assistance provided under this section that is  attrib-
 utable  to  such dwelling unit and ensure that such amount is recaptured
 into the fund.
   (g) There is authorized to be appropriated for  the  fund  established
 pursuant  to this section such sums as may be necessary to reimburse all
 lessors for all rent payments suspended pursuant to subdivision  (a)  of
 section four of this act.
   (h)  (i) Any lessor may apply for an exemption from one or more of the
 requirements set forth in  subdivision  (c)  of  this  section  and  the
 commissioner  shall  grant  exemptions  from  requirements  set forth in
 subdivision (c) of this section upon determining that the  lessor  would
 A. 2617--A                          9
 
 otherwise  suffer  undue  financial hardship resulting from the require-
 ments for which exemption is sought.
   (ii)  Any lessor aggrieved by the commissioner's decision on an appli-
 cation to the Fund or for a hardship exemption pursuant to paragraph (i)
 of this subdivision may within 30 days of  the  commissioner's  decision
 seek  judicial  review  pursuant to article 78 of the civil practice law
 and rules. In the event that the court may find that the decision of the
 commissioner constitutes the equivalent  of  a  taking  without  compen-
 sation,  it  may,  at the election of the commissioner, either set aside
 the decision or order the payment of just compensation  by  the  commis-
 sioner.
   § 9. Assistance to public housing authorities. (a) The commissioner of
 housing  and community renewal shall establish and manage a public hous-
 ing relief fund, or in this section referred to as "the  public  housing
 relief  fund",  to  provide  public  housing  authorities  with funds to
 compensate for expenses related to COVID-19 and unpaid rent  that  would
 have  been  payable  by  residential tenants pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 1437a
 during the period from March 7, 2020 until the  expiration  of  90  days
 after  the  executive  declares  that  the  state disaster emergency has
 ended.
   (b) The commissioner shall provide for public housing  authorities  to
 apply for payments from the public housing relief fund and shall promul-
 gate  regulations  establishing  the  procedural  requirements  for such
 applications.
   (c) It is hereby declared to be the intent of the legislature that  to
 the  extent that any part of this section is inconsistent with article 4
 of the public housing law, this statute will prevail.
   § 10. Civil action. (a) Any individual aggrieved by an adverse  action
 taken  by a lessor, affordable housing operator, public housing authori-
 ty, or mortgagee for exercising rights under section  four  or  five  of
 this  act  may  commence  a  civil action under this section against the
 lessor, affordable housing operator, public housing authority, or  mort-
 gagee  violating  such  section in an appropriate state court or a local
 court of competent jurisdiction  not  later  than  2  years  after  such
 violation occurs for damages under subdivision (b) of this section.
   (b) Any lessor or mortgagee found to have taken adverse action against
 any lessee or mortgagor for exercising rights under section four or five
 of this act shall be liable:
   (i)  to  the  individual  aggrieved  by such violation, for any actual
 damages as a result of such adverse action; and
   (ii) for a fine in the amount of:
   (1) $10,000, in the case of a violation that is the first violation by
 such lessor or mortgagee;
   (2) $20,000, in the case of a violation that is the  second  violation
 by such lessor or mortgagee; and
   (3) $100,000 or forfeiture of the property, in the case of a violation
 that is the third or subsequent violation by such lessor or mortgagee.
   (c) In an action brought under this section, the court:
   (i)  may award preventative relief, including a permanent or temporary
 injunction or other order, to ensure the full rights granted by sections
 four and five of this act; and
   (ii) shall award any prevailing plaintiff reasonable  attorney's  fees
 and costs.
   (d)  The  attorney general may bring a civil action in any appropriate
 court against any individual or entity which violates  section  four  or
 A. 2617--A                         10
 
 five  of  this  act for fines under paragraph (ii) of subdivision (b) of
 this section.
   § 11. Non-severability clause. If section four of this act is adjudged
 by  a  court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, then sections six,
 seven and eight of this act shall also be deemed invalid and it is here-
 by declared to be the intent of the legislature that sections six, seven
 and eight of this act would not have been enacted  if  section  four  of
 this act had not been included herein.
   §  12. Severability clause. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdi-
 vision, section or part of this act other than section four of this  act
 shall  be  adjudged  by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid,
 such judgment shall not affect, impair or invalidate the remainder ther-
 eof, but shall be confined in its operation  to  the  clause,  sentence,
 paragraph, subdivision, section or part thereof directly involved in the
 controversy in which such judgment shall have been rendered. It is here-
 by declared to be the intent of the legislature that this act would have
 been enacted even if such invalid provisions had not been included here-
 in.
   § 13. This act shall take effect immediately.