Real estate, business leaders blast Mamdani’s NYC housing plan as heavy-handed big government
New York City real estate leaders and business groups criticize Mayor Zohran Mamdani's housing plan, warning that union mandates and government restrictions will stifle rather than accelerate construction.
Mamdani’s ambitious plan targets 200,000 new affordable housing units but relies on stringent minimum wage requirements and restrictions on property sales that industry experts say will cripple development.
Steve Fulop, president of the Partnership for New York City, acknowledged the goal as worthy but condemned the execution. He cited St. Paul, Minnesota, as a warning, where aggressive housing regulations allegedly led to an 80% collapse in construction activity.
New York Post reports that Fulop warned on social media that St. Paul has since reversed course on those policies. He cautioned that New York cannot afford similar missteps.
Fulop argued that positioning government as the chief driver of housing production while treating private investment as an adversary ultimately harms the working-class New Yorkers the plan claims to serve.
Union Mandates Under Fire
James Whelan, president of the Real Estate Board of New York, took aim at the plan’s dependence on union-backed project labor agreements. In a statement, Whelan questioned why the city would deliberately inflate construction and financing costs through inflexible union contracts at a time when maximum housing output is needed.
He warned that the city risks undermining its own production targets by burdening projects with expensive labor mandates that will slow development.
Progressive Groups Offer Support
Mamdani’s left-wing allies, predictably, rallied behind the proposal. Annemarie Gray, executive director of Open New York, praised what she called a comprehensive progressive housing strategy.
Gray expressed enthusiasm for the administration’s focus on increasing construction, particularly in neighborhoods she claimed have resisted contributing to solutions for the housing crisis.
With information from New York Post