I continue to be astounded by depths of misinformation about housing law among the Russian-speaking tenants and landlords in Brighton Beach. In our hyper-rights-conscious American culture, it’s easy to forget that people raised under another government may not assume they have the protection of the law, or its obligations.
We recently met a gentleman in Brighton Beach who was vexed by his landlord. He rented an apartment in her building that he had been sharing with his sister before she moved out. After his sister left, the client continued paying the rent without her. Remarkably, the landlord said he’d have to take in a man she’d found to be his roommate. She had already told the new tenant he could live there, and she didn’t understand why our client would resist.
What might seem like an obvious answer was apparently not so obvious to this landlord. We spoke to our client about the certainty of his right not to accept strangers to live in his apartment. Because the arguments with his landlord had gotten rather heated, we made certain he knew where to see a judge if he was illegally locked out of his apartment. Because the landlord refused to give a lease or rent receipts, we encouraged him to gather the documents he could use to prove his lawful residence in the apartment, should the police be called to mediate. Then, Leslie the Director of the Russian Community Life Center, prayed for him, before he left.
We continue to be blessed to serve in a community where this kind of basic legal rights information is so needed. Please continue to pray for a more just treatment of tenants in Brighton Beach, and for landlords to receive clear guidance about their rights and obligations in New York City.
