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	<title>Managing New York City&#8217;s Rental Housing Catastrophe : The Once and Future Potential of Tax-Foreclosed Properties - commentaires</title>
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New York City faces a rental housing crisis, with homelessness at record levels, more than a million households spending over 30% of their incomes on rent, and the number of apartments renting for $1,000 or less plunging fast. The city has an opportunity to manage this catastrophe, argues John Krinsky, by reviving a policy it pioneered in the &#8220;dark days&#8221; after the 1974 fiscal crisis : that of taking control of tax-delinquent property neglected by private owners and transferring it to nonprofit
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		<title>Managing New York City's Rental Housing Catastrophe : The Once and Future Potential of Tax-Foreclosed Properties</title>
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