Trump’s big bill is prompting urgent action in some Democratic states, but not in Republican ones

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By DAVID A. LIEB, Associated Press

New Mexico lawmakers are to open a special session Wednesday to boost funding for food assistance and rural health care — actions the Democratic governor contends are needed to “minimize the damage from President Trump’s disastrous bill” cutting federal taxes and spending.

The special session follows one in Colorado, where the Democratic governor asserted Trump’s tax cuts wreaked havoc on the state’s budget. Oregon’s Democratic officials also are wrestling with whether a special session is needed. And California Democrats recently passed new spending measures meant to counteract Trump’s big bill.

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Nothing like that is happening in Republican-led states.

The diverging responses highlight the partisan schism over Trump’s signature legislative accomplishment of his second term and raise the question: Are Republican-led states ignoring the financial fallout, or are Democratic-led states overstating the urgency?

“Probably Democrats are doing a little bit for grandstanding,” said Steven Rogers, an associate political science professor at Saint Louis University who focuses on state governments.

“On the Republican side, they may also just be OK with it — or they don’t want to poke the Trump bear,” Rogers said.

The sweeping new law, dubbed the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” by Republicans, is likely to affect some states more than others. Federal tax cuts could reduce revenues for states that link their own income taxes to the federal code, starting with 2025 tax returns.

Federal spending reductions on Medicaid and food benefits also could cause states to spend more of their own money on social safety net programs. But new Medicaid work requirements, which are among the most prominent changes, don’t begin until 2027. Administrative cost shifts to states for food stamps begin in October 2026, with additional performance-based cost shifts in subsequent years.

New Mexico officials are taking ‘proactive’ steps

Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has called upon New Mexico lawmakers to preemptively earmark more money this fiscal year toward food assistance and rural health care.

FILE – Democratic New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham speaks at a news conference, March 22, 2025, in Santa Fe, N.M. (AP Photo/Morgan Lee, File)

Lawmakers also are looking to expand state subsidies for health insurance policies bought through the Affordable Care Act exchange, which covers about 75,000 residents. They point to the potential for enhanced federal subsidies to expire at the end of this year.

“We’re not going to sit idly and watch that disaster happen,” said Democratic state Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth.

Though New Mexico expects to lose about $200 million annually because of new federal tax cuts, starting this fiscal year, it still has a large surplus thanks to booming oil production.

“We’re in a position fiscally to be able to be proactive,” Wirth said, “and really try and hold New Mexicans as harmless as we can to these cuts that are coming.”

California boosts spending for food programs

Legislation recently signed by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom provides $255 million for California’s response to Trump’s big bill and other federal policy changes. That includes $84 million to try to reduce errors in benefit payments in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Those food benefits currently are fully covered by the federal government, but states with error rates greater than 6% could have to pay part of the cost starting in October 2027.

FILE – Mara Sleeter, marketing and communications project manager, stands near boxes of juice while being interviewed in the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank warehouse in San Francisco, July 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

Trump’s big bill also expands work requirements for adults participating SNAP, which is expected to force some people off the program in the coming months. The California legislation provides $40 million for counties to implement the new SNAP requirements and pumps $20 million into emergency food banks, a one-third increase over previously approved state funding.

“We have been as diligent, as strategic as we can to backfill as much of those dollars as we can,” Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, a Democrat, told The Associated Press.

The new spending comes as California budget officials warn of a looming multibillion-dollar deficit.

Colorado and Oregon cite tax cuts as a cause for action

Because their tax codes are closely linked to the federal one, most of the new federal tax breaks automatically apply to state income taxes in Colorado and Oregon.

In August, Democratic Colorado Gov. Jared Polis became the first to call lawmakers into special session while citing Trump’s bill. His administration said the federal tax cuts blew an estimated $783 million hole in the current state budget.

FILE – Colorado Gov. Jared Polis speaks to the National Governors Association at the Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs, Colo., July 25, 2025. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

The Democratic-led Legislature filled part of that gap by eliminating some corporate tax breaks and authorizing the sale of state tax credits to raise revenue.

In Oregon, Democratic officials are weighing whether to decouple from some of Trump’s tax changes to avoid losing hundreds of millions of state tax dollars. Such a move could allow the state to continue taxing tips and overtime wages.

“It is a very politically risky bill to pass, let alone have a special session again for ANOTHER tax vote,” Democratic state Rep. Rob Nosse said in a recent newsletter. “But at the same time it will allow us to stave off some of the cuts coming to health care and to food stamps.”

Republicans see no urgency from revenue losses

Like Colorado and Oregon, the Republican-led states of Iowa, Montana and North Dakota also use “federal taxable income” as the starting point for their state taxes and automatically incorporate federal tax changes. Yet officials there haven’t raised major concerns.

Montana stands to lose an estimated $114 million annually as a result of the new tax cuts. But lawmakers likely can wait until their next regular session in 2027 to address any impacts, said Republican state Rep. Larry Brewster, chair of the Legislature’s interim revenue committee.

“I think it’s a concern, but I don’t think it’s an urgent problem for us,” he said.

Leaders of the North Dakota Legislature, which isn’t scheduled to meet until 2027, are discussing holding a session early next year, but not because of federal tax cuts. Rather, lawmakers would decide how to spend the state’s share of $50 billion of rural health care grants included in Trump’s big bill.

Iowa’s conformity to the federal tax code could cost its general fund $437 million this fiscal year, according to the state revenue department. The state’s finances also could suffer from Trump’s trade war with China, a top export market for farmers. The state still has billions of dollars in reserves.

“We’re in a good position to weather some of the ag and some of the effects of the One Big Beautiful Bill,” Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds said, “but we also have to be mindful as we move forward.”

Associated Press writers Jack Dura in Bismarck, North Dakota; Hannah Fingerhut in Des Moines, Iowa; Morgan Lee in Santa Fe, New Mexico; Trân Nguyễn in Sacramento, California; and Claire Rush in Portland, Oregon contributed.

Airspace violations force NATO to tread a tightrope, deterring Russia without hiking tensions

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By LORNE COOK, Associated Press

BRUSSELS (AP) — NATO is stepping up aerial surveillance in the Baltic Sea, while France, Germany and Sweden are bolstering Denmark’s air defenses ahead of two summits in Copenhagen this week over a series of troubling drone incidents near the country’s airports and military bases.

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The number of serious airspace violations in Europe has spiked this month, including by Russian warplanes. But not all NATO allies agree on how to respond. Poland is ready to use lethal force. Others say that must only be a last resort.

Regardless of who is to blame in Denmark, European leaders believe that Russia is testing NATO. Military planners in Moscow can observe how Western forces react, and countering intrusions by relatively cheap drones is a financial burden on the allies.

In the wake of the drone incident in Poland, NATO launched operation Eastern Sentry, with Britain among the allies to send more air defense equipment.

However, these deployments might also deprive Ukraine of the air defense systems it badly needs from its allies. NATO must tread a tightrope in its response.

The use of lethal force

Poland’s message is blunt. It intends to shoot down intruders over its territory.

“If another missile or aircraft enters our space without permission, deliberately or by mistake, and gets shot down and the wreckage falls on NATO territory, please don’t come here to whine about it,” Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski told Russia’s U.N. delegation last week. “You have been warned.”

Poland activated its air defenses over the weekend during a major Russian attack on Ukraine.

Defense is a national prerogative, even within the world’s biggest military alliance. Poland or Finland, say, might use force to defend their territory. U.S. President Donald Trump has agreed that European countries should be able to shoot intruders down.

The responsibility for that act would lie with the nation concerned. NATO, though, is likely to be more cautious in any joint operation using aircraft and equipment drawn from across the 32-country alliance.

“We have to act decisively and quickly,” NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said last week, but he underlined that it’s important to “always assess the threat levels” to see whether force is necessary.

NATO’s top military officer decides

NATO’s supreme commander in Europe, U.S. Gen. Alexus Grynkewich, manages airspace violations.

A mobile radar installation is seen at the Danish military site on Amager, Pionegaarden, near the village of Dragoer and on the coast of Oresund, the sea between Denmark and Sweden, on Friday, Sept. 26, 2025. (Steven Knap/Ritzau Scanpix via AP)

NATO’s rules of engagement are classified, but Grynkewich knows what arms and ammunition he has and what restrictions allies might place on their use. More than 30 air bases have aircraft on standby.

His choice would be based on intelligence about the threat posed. It would involve understanding the aircraft’s intent and weaponry, and the risk it — or a shootdown — might represent to NATO forces, civilians and infrastructure.

The response should also be proportionate. Spending millions of dollars to deter relatively cheap drones is not sustainable. Sometimes it’s best just to escort aircraft away, as NATO did when three Russian jets flew into Estonian airspace.

“Each airspace incursion puts NATO in a bind,” Rafael Loss from the European Council on Foreign Relations said in a security analysis.

“If they intercept (and potentially engage) the intruders, they risk providing Russia with valuable insights about NATO’s reaction times and engagement procedures. If they ignore them, it risks inviting ever-escalating Russian violations of allied airspace,” he said.

Pressure on pilots

Retired French Navy Capt. Pierre-Henri Chuet, who flew Super Étendard and Rafale fighter jets for the French Navy, said the stress on pilots increases the risk of miscalculation and even actual confrontation.

“Pilots are going to have to be very careful. And the chain of command is going to have to be extra careful on the ways they brief pilots to know what is a hostile act, what is a hostile intent, what is an aggression, and what isn’t,” Chuet said in an Associated Press phone interview.

“Opening fire is really, really, really, really the last resort,” he said.

The price of miscalculation

An overreaction could incur even greater costs. Russia’s ambassador to France, Alexei Meshkov, has already warned that downing a Russian aircraft would trigger a war, and NATO does not want to be dragged into conflict with a nuclear armed adversary.

Already in 2015, Russia and NATO ally Turkey came to the brink of open conflict after a Turkish F-16 shot down a Russian bomber near the Syrian border, killing its pilot. Russia retaliated with sanctions.

In 1983, a Korean Airlines flight was shot down with an air-to-air missile after veering into Soviet airspace, killing all 269 people on board. It caused a major spike in tensions between the Soviet Union and the West.

The value of deterrence

Ultimately, NATO’s ability to prevent airspace violations rests on the strength of its deterrent effect: not just its military might but also the political will to use the weapons at its disposal.

Right now, though, U.S. leadership appears reticent. Coincidentally or not, the serious airspace violations have happened since Trump’s summit with President Vladimir Putin in Alaska in August, when the U.S. leader dropped his demand for a ceasefire in Ukraine.

In response to the drone incident in Poland, Trump said that it “could have been a mistake.” Last week he said the U.S. would “continue to supply weapons to NATO for NATO to do what they want with them,” almost as if America were not a member.

And so far, the United States has not sent military equipment to help counter the airspace violations.

“Through these successive incursions, Putin has shown he is undeterred. After all, by flaunting mischief at low cost, Putin aims to leave Europeans — lacking resolute American backing — with only bad options,” Loss said.

AP Writer John Leicester in Paris contributed to this report.

Top diplomats of North Korea and China agree to deepen ties and push back at the United States

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By HYUNG-JIN KIM, Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — The foreign ministers of North Korea and China agreed to deepen bilateral ties and resist hegemonism, a likely reference to their pushbacks against the United States.

Their meeting in Beijing on Sunday came about three weeks after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Chinese President Xi Jinping held their first summit in more than six years and pledged mutual support and enhanced cooperation. Kim and Xi earlier attended a massive Beijing military parade marking the end of the World War II, with other world leaders including Russian President Vladimir Putin.

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The joint appearance of Kim, Xi and Putin, the first of its kind, displayed a potential three-way unity against the United States, though it’s unclear how far China would go in such an anti-U.S. partnership.

In a meeting with her Chinese counterpart Wang Yi, North Korean Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui cited Kim as saying that further bolstering ties with China is North Korea’s unwavering position. Choe expressed an intent to deepen and develop friendly ties with China in line with the spirits of Kim-Xi summit, the North’s Korean Central News Agency reported Monday.

Wang said China maintains a firm position that it intends to solidify bilateral ties, saying it’s necessary to boost strategic communications and exchanges, KCNA said.

China’s Xinhua News Agency cited Wang as saying China oppose “all forms of hegemonism” and stands ready to strengthen cooperation with North Korea in international and regional affairs. It quoted Choe as saying that North Korea “is willing to closely cooperate with China in multilateral affairs, jointly resist unilateralism and power politics and promote a fairer and more just world order.”

The comments likely referred to their countries’ separate confrontations with the United States — China over strategic competitions with the U.S. and North Korea over its nuclear weapons program.

KCNA said Choe and Wang exchanged views on regional and international affairs reached a complete consensus on the issues, but didn’t elaborate.

Kim’s attendance at the Beijing military parade was his first attendance at a major multilateral event during his 14-year rule.

In recent years, North Korea has been focusing on expanding cooperation with Russia by supplying combat troops and ammunitions to support its war against Ukraine. But experts say Kim now feels the need to improve ties with China, North Korea’s biggest trading partner and aid benefactor, as he has to brace for the war’s end. They say China, for its part, would want to maintain influence over North Korea, as bilateral ties reportedly cooled in the past few years.

Attention has turned to the makeup of the delegation China might send to North Korea when it commemorates the 80th founding anniversary of its ruling Workers’ Party next month. North Korea is expected to mark the anniversary with its own military parade to display new weapons targeting the U.S. and its allies.

The Compliance Crisis in New York City’s Project-Based Rental Assistance Program

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Private managers of federally subsidized housing projects in New York City are systematically failing to properly screen tenants in the program, resulting in rent miscalculations and eviction filings, a City Limits investigation found. Tenants have little recourse to resolve issues.

PBRA tenant Jose Tolentino in his Upper West Side apartment last month. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

This is part one of an investigative series on the Project-Based Rental Assistance program in New York City, produced with support from the Fund for Investigative Journalism. Stay tuned for more.

Jose Tolentino, 56, was having a hell of a time reaching his property manager. He needed to get in touch with them to submit his annual income recertification packet for 2022.

Under the federally-subsidized Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA) program, he paid 30 percent of his income in rent for his Morningside Heights apartment—but he needed to cooperate with his property manager, Wavecrest, in order to submit proof of income.

For two years, Tolentino tried to get the paperwork done. He called and called, had his super fax the documents, and he’d asked for what he thought were reasonable accommodations given his disability. Because of his bad hips, he walks with a cane, and he wanted someone from the management company to come to the building to help him get the paperwork together. Now it was late.

Under the program, management is required to provide three notices of recertification deadlines to tenants, with clear instructions about how to reach management staff. Wavecrest provided no evidence that they served those notices properly, Tolentino’s lawyer would later allege, and simply told him to “go to the rental office.”

When his recertification wasn’t processed in time, Wavecrest terminated Tolentino’s PBRA subsidy, unbeknownst to him—and back rent was piling up at a rate of $2,860 per month.

Tolentino is one of 100,000 New York City residents who rely on the federal PBRA program, which helps low-income tenants afford their rent in subsidized buildings across the city. Every year, they work with their property management to recertify their subsidy so they can stay in their homes, a process requiring extensive documentation of their income and expenses.

But a City Limits investigation, which reviewed audits for over 400 PBRA buildings around the five boroughs, found that paperwork errors on the part of property managers are shockingly common—and can result in residents losing their subsidies, and even getting evicted. Tenants in PBRA buildings report that some property managers are hard to contact, difficult to work with, and sometimes retaliate against tenants who have ongoing issues.

Tolentino’s PBRA building in Morningside Heights. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

Tolentino hoped to settle his recertification problem for good by talking to a human. He called ahead and showed up at Wavecrest’s office in Richmond Hill, Queens, over 90 minutes away—not easy given his ambulatory disability.

When he got there, Tolentino said the front desk told him he didn’t have an appointment and that his property manager wasn’t there that day. He left his paperwork with the desk there, he said. But when he called back, they said they never got it. 

Management is also required to provide reasonable accommodations and investigate extenuating circumstances, like Tolentino’s disability and status as a veteran, that could contribute to untimely completion of a recertification. 

But his property manager, Wavecrest, provided no such accommodations even though they knew, from Tolentino’s disability income and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s public benefits database, that he was disabled.

“I think they change the rules as they see fit, whenever it benefits them,” said Tolentino.

Wavecrest filed for eviction against him in 2024. Anxious, Tolentino found himself quickly running out of options, looking for someone he could appeal to for help.

A maze of contractors

What happens when the authority overseeing your property manager is another private company?

That’s the case in the Project-Based Rental Assistance program, a lesser-known sibling of the federal housing voucher and public housing programs. Under PBRA, tenants receive rental assistance tied to a specific unit in a building full of subsidized apartments.

PBRA serves 2 million people nationally and about 100,000 in New York City. Over half of New York’s PBRA tenants are seniors and 90 percent are minorities, according to HUD data. Around 40 percent of households are led by someone with a disability.

But unlike Section 8 vouchers, Section 9 public housing, or even project-based vouchers used in the city’s PACT conversions for NYCHA properties, the PBRA program is overseen by a private contractor, not a public housing authority.

Three layers of contracts separate a tenant like Tolentino from the federal government that pays a portion of his rent. In New York, HUD subcontracts the program to the state’s Housing Trust Fund Corporation, a public benefit corporation managed by the Department of Homes and Community Renewal (HCR).

But the state housing agency has only a cursory involvement in the program: day-to-day management is contracted out to a $20 billion consulting firm called CGI.

CGI oversees the program through their CGI Federal office, fields complaints from tenants, coordinates payments to property owners, and alerts owners to ongoing health and safety issues reported by residents. The firm also audits property management companies’ compliance and policies annually, in what’s called a Management and Occupancy Review (MOR).

In New York City, HUD pays private owners to operate 441 PBRA buildings, covering more than 60,000 units citywide. Those private owners use separate management companies, like Wavecrest, to provide leases to low income tenants like Tolentino.

For tenants, all those acronyms and contracts mean it’s hard to tell who exactly is enforcing the rules. Responsibility often falls to property management companies that are stretched thin, hard to reach, and, as City Limits found, don’t always follow HUD procedures when it comes to recertification.

Widespread recertification failures

Every year, tenants in federally subsidized housing have to do what Tolentino tried to do: recertify their subsidy. They send in information about their income and various deductions, like those for medical expenses, disability, and childcare. 

Recertification complications are common—people change jobs, lose jobs, get married, have a family member move in, or have their income from public benefits adjusted. A medical issue, the birth of a child, or other family changes could mean new deductions to factor in.

The recertification process must be initiated by the property manager. All property managers are trained to follow HUD’s handbook, which lays out specific rules for recertification, like providing tenants with the proper notices, safeguarding those who are victims of domestic violence or have a disability, and calculating rent and deductions.

Owners calculate rent by taking 30 percent of a tenant’s income, minus any deductions.

The problem is, “property managers do that wrong all the time,” according to Molly Rockett, a staff attorney and Project-Based Section 8 housing specialist at Legal Services NYC.

Conditions at PBRA buildings vary, but property management’s handling of tenant files is a problem at nearly all of them.

City Limits reviewed over 1,400 Management and Occupancy Review audits of 418 PBRA buildings in the five boroughs conducted by CGI, the firm acting on behalf of public agencies for the program in New York. Between 2019 and 2024, the large majority of buildings passed their review with a “satisfactory” or better score. But those passing grades obscure deeper compliance issues.

In the audit’s subcategory: “review of tenant files,” where CGI examines a sample of tenant recertification packets, 95 percent of property managers failed.

According to an analysis of the data through 2021 by Legal Services NYC, 973 audits—almost two out of every three—showed management companies made errors in calculating rent. 

Tolentino’s PBRA recertification paperwork. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

Another 25 percent included errors like failing to provide legally mandated notices of rent increases, reminders of recertification deadlines, reasonable accommodations for people with disabilities, or lease riders informing domestic violence survivors of their rights. In 375 audits, Legal Services NYC found both rent miscalculations and recertification errors.

A spokesperson for HCR said it reports all findings of noncompliance to HUD for follow up action. But the agency only flags management companies with below average or unsatisfactory MORs—which would overlook the hundreds of properties that pass the overall audit but consistently fail tenant screenings.

HUD did not respond to detailed questions from City Limits about MORs and how they are or are not used in program enforcement.

“At Wavecrest, we recognize that ‘human error’ is part of any process,” a spokesperson for Wavecrest told City Limits in an email. 

They pointed to errors from both tenants and management as inevitable in a complicated and paperwork-intensive recertification process. They said they do not charge tenants for back rent when management is at fault for paperwork errors, though that would require catching the mistake.

Recertification errors were also common for tenants in public housing through NYCHA, who must follow the same recertification process each year. But NYCHA is under close watch due to a 2019 federal monitoring agreement that included upgrades and compliance standards for recertifications.

“NYCHA is under consent decrees for doing exactly the kind of misconduct that we see in PBRA buildings,” said Rockett.

The difference is, with PBRA, no one’s enforcing the rules—even when data shows widespread compliance issues. Instead of having a local housing authority to deal with, PBRA tenants have several layers of bureaucracy. 

“No one in the government seems to be grappling at all with the fact that [these laws] just don’t functionally exist for the tenants who live in this program,” said Rockett.

Evictions result

In theory, evictions should be rare in subsidized housing like PBRA, where rent is based on income, with households typically paying no more than a third of their earnings.

But when recertification disputes don’t get remedied, they often result in an eviction notice. Since 2016, according to data from the Housing Data Coalition and the Right to Counsel Coalition, PBRA managers in New York City have filed 34,000 evictions—one filing for every other unit.

When tenants couldn’t recertify on time, they were surprised with larger-than-expected rent bills.

Other times tenants disagree with property managers about income and deduction calculations, and have few pathways to appeal. 

“The stakes are very high in calculating that one-third. You are on the razor edge of livability and one millimeter over that is just pure financial ruin for the tenant,” said Rockett.

Property managers working in the PBRA program told City Limits that sometimes an eviction filing is an enforcement mechanism to get tenants to recertify.

Nearly 32,000 of those 34,000 eviction filings were for non-payment of rent, and just 2,165 were filed for other reasons, like a lease violation. Of those evictions filed, 1,412 PBRA households have been removed from their homes since 2016.

A spokesperson for HCR reiterated that property managers sometimes file for eviction to get a tenant to recertify. They emphasized that evictions should be a last resort, and that property managers may be reluctant to pursue eviction because of the costs of turning over a unit to new subsidized tenants.

People entering Brooklyn Housing Court located at 141 Livingston Street on the morning of March 20, 2023. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

“The eviction process is a last resort in all cases and commenced only when a stalemate or non-responsiveness of a household occurs,” a spokesperson for Wavecrest Management said in a statement. 

Staff for PBRA property managers told City Limits their hands are often tied when it comes to terminating subsidies—if they don’t get the right paperwork from a tenant, they have to turn off the subsidy faucet.

The program’s incentives, Rockett said, are set up to root out fraud. If property managers are caught letting tenants slide, they can be fined. 

“The only thing that they’re really worried about is getting themselves or their bosses in trouble with HUD,” said Rockett.

And if a tenant falls behind, property managers act like a collections agency: they can recoup their costs or get a 20 percent cut of rental debt if they catch a tenant underreporting income.

“If the program is working, people shouldn’t be in housing court facing eviction, especially not for non-payment of rent,” said Ashley Viruet, a supervising attorney at Legal Services NYC.

Thin operations

Property managers in New York’s PBRA program are often stretched thin, managing dozens of buildings and thousands of units at once.

One recertification specialist, who spoke to City Limits on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press, said they oversee 13 properties and thousands of apartments all across the city.

Residents report that just getting in touch with a property manager can be hard. Some are hesitant to raise an issue with management for fear of retaliation.

Tolentino says that after he criticized their recertification procedures, management would ghost him, ignore requests for repairs, and yell and harass him when they needed something from him.

“I didn’t want to be the headache, but this is the position that I found myself in, so I needed to do whatever I needed to do in order to try to resolve this issue and hopefully get back on the same page and move on without having to feel neglected, harassed, spoken down to, cursed at, being avoided,” he said.

When property management is hard to get in touch with, or not following correct procedures, it “looks like the tenant isn’t complying but it’s really the owner,” said Bridget Simmons, a staff attorney at the National Housing Law Project.

Housing advocates say that the thin staffing and compliance at property management companies is a consequence of private ownership.

“That means providing the service of managing subsidized housing at the lowest cost humanly possible to pocket the highest percentage of that money from HUD,” said Rockett.

Property managers and building staff who work on recertification and spoke with City Limits said they don’t want anyone to lose their housing, but some expressed frustration towards tenants.

“Ultimately, it is the resident’s responsibility to go and handle their business,” said one staff member. “I don’t want to see anyone lose their apartment… but I’m not going to babysit you.”

A sign in the leasing office of a PBRA building
in Harlem. (Patrick Spauster/City Limits)

A spokesperson for HUD did not respond to detailed questions about how it monitors staffing and compliance of property managers, but emphasized to City Limits in a statement that HUD-assisted tenants are themselves responsible for recertifying every year.

One building staff member said 40 percent of tenants are prepared with their paperwork each year, and another 60 percent, “act as if they don’t know anything about recertification.”

Tenants are also permitted to request a review and explanation of their recertification from management, a spokesperson for HUD told City Limits. But legal assistance groups called those reviews useless, since they’re conducted by the same building managers that just calculated the new rent in question.

CGI runs a tenant help line that tenants can call if they run into problems with their property managers. Many PBRA tenants City Limits spoke to didn’t know the help line existed, though the contact information was posted in management offices that City Limits visited.

City Limits called the help line multiple times and sent several emails. Representatives who picked up the phone said a supervisor would be in touch, but City Limits did not receive any communication from the call center before publication, despite following up over the course of several weeks. City Limits also left voicemails and emails with several CGI staff working on the program who did not respond.

In the last several years, HCR said it worked closely with local advocates regarding owner and tenant disputes and thoroughly reviewed tenant issues brought to them, escalating any noncompliance or nonresponse issues with HUD when necessary, according to a spokesperson for the agency.

CGI staffers themselves had trouble reaching the property managers they oversee on several occasions. In reports submitted to HCR and obtained by City Limits through a freedom of information request, CGI said it took nine unanswered inquiries and two full years to get management of one East Harlem property, Lexington Gardens, to respond to an inquiry about missing audit responses.

Another CGI report read: “The call center has extreme concerns with this managing agent, Manhattan North. This agent often doesn’t have updated contact information in [the data system] and doesn’t reply to inquiries for several weeks.”

Despite that complaint, Manhattan North received scores of satisfactory or better nearly 90 percent of the time across its 1,300 units and 11 properties. 

Manhattan North did not respond to City Limits’ requests for comment, and CGI did not respond to questions about how management companies could continuously fail tenant screening audits but still pass on their overall score.

A super at a PBRA building, who asked that their name not be shared because they did not want to jeopardize their job, said turnover in property managers at their building is high—and each new manager has their own staff and procedures.

“You don’t know what you’re gonna get. So it’s like starting over,” the super said.

Spiti Housing for the Elderly in Astoria went two years without responding to CGI’s inquiries, according to the call center’s reports, which cited transitions in management companies and staffing for the lack of communication.

Because of those communication difficulties, tenants and LSNYC both said they feel the problems are more widespread than CGI’s reporting covers.

“I know I’m not the only one having issues because I see other residents from the building in court,” Vivian Colado, another PBRA tenant, told City Limits in Spanish. “I can guarantee you, it’s an experience that many more folks are having.” 

Tenants told City Limits they are scared to speak up or push back, for fear of losing their subsidy.

A spokesperson for Wavecrest told City Limits that they take tenant complaints seriously and emphasized that employees are trained annually on reasonable accommodations policies and adhere to all city, state, and federal laws.

Tolentino ended up in housing court and, through the city’s Right to Counsel program, found a lawyer, Carly Gartenberg of Legal Services NYC.

“It’s just this kind of world of unanswered emails, unmet meetings, closed office doors, and then you pay the price,” Gartenberg said of navigating the system.

Nearly five years later, Tolentino was able to resolve his case in housing court and avoid eviction after showing his repeated attempts to recertify and unresolved repair issues. He feels betrayed by the ordeal, which worsened his depression and anxiety. 

For now, he’s stuck with Wavecrest, and they are stuck with him.

“They don’t care at all. As long as they get their check,” said Tolentino.

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