Opinion: One Way To Stop The Rats? Turn Away From Fines.

14.05.2025    City Limits    3 views
Opinion: One Way To Stop The Rats? Turn Away From Fines.

A system that centralizes fines ignores two crucial facts about our rodent dilemma rats do not abide by property boundaries and a large number of homeowners are asset rich but cash poor and do not have the tools to pay for either the fine or the requested intervention A rat poison on the building in Brooklyn Emil Cohen NYC Council Media Unit If there s one thing every New Yorker hates it s rats And coming in at a close second is the ubiquitous orange envelope tucked under their windshield wiper or a summons number with a hearing date posted on their door We re a city of dreamers and hustlers being a New Yorker is synonymous with fighting for one s goals and not stopping at any cost But there are times in our relentless pursuit of the New York hustle when we mess up and forget to move our car for the street sweeper or put our trash out too early That s when we find ourselves facing fines Fines have a place in any modern city If utilized properly and equitably they could ensure proper compliance with a number of laws that otherwise would go unheeded But in specific cases fines unfairly penalize hardworking New Yorkers without fixing the underlying issue Rats are a part of the cultural fabric of New York We have rats of all shapes and sizes pizza rat street performer rat who happens to be a District resident and inflatable protest rats We have so numerous rats that our city had to appoint its very own Rat Czar who also happens to be a District resident to help handle our growing problem But our city has largely used a single tool to manage a predicament that has spanned generations fines The wellbeing department uses fines in an attempt to persuade property owners to enact strong rodent mitigation protocol on their property But as city statistics shows fines alone don t solve the obstacle In Brooklyn the city issued percent more rodent summonses for the last half of compared to the first half but rodent sightings still remain strong RELATED READING Crown Heights Homeowners Say They re Bearing the Brunt of Mayor Adams War on Rats While fines can help keep tenants safe from hazardous building conditions due to negligent landlords or curb dangerous driving they aren t the answer for keeping our rat population down for chosen smaller properties A system that centralizes fines ignores two crucial facts about our rodent situation rats do not abide by property boundaries and several homeowners are asset rich but cash poor and do not have the tools to pay for either the fine or the requested intervention This means a homeowner could receive a fine for a perceived repeated rodent infestation if gnaw marks or rat droppings were identified at a property even if rats just ran by that building and have no burrows nearby That both dissuades residents from calling for fear of unfairly securing a hefty fine for their neighbors and leads to dissatisfaction with the city s response to rodent infestations since the matter never gets addressed Not to mention that a large number of New Yorkers never even pay their fines fines are largely levied against Black and brown homeowners and enforcement sometimes costs more than the city gets back in fines It s clear that our strategy of relying on sticks alone to solve our rat difficulty has not worked Now the city must instead turn toward carrots and provide solutions rather than punishment This vision drove us to co-establish the District Rat Task Force which convenes constituents block associations and agency personnel to share best practices to address existing rodent infestations and prevent them in the future We ve succeeded in securing funding for rat-proof litter bins supplemental sanitation services carbon monoxide treatments and greater educational materials There are a number of common sense non-punitive solutions we can secure to reduce our city s rat population such as schooling and advocacy to share best practices and push the city to invest in systems that address the root causes of rodent outbreaks like easy access to food The largest variable in rat infestations is the availability of food Rats only need an ounce of food per day and food for a rat could mean anything from litter to dog waste to garbage Thankfully our city already has tools to stop this mandatory curbside composting and residential waste containerization We must continue to increase compliance with organics recycling laws and ensure every building separates out organics waste We must continue expanding our push to containerize all residential waste including by passing our bill to mandate on-street containers for large residential buildings And the city should consider tax breaks or other financial benefits for properties that abide by these programs even if there s a rat sighting or two to show property owners that the city understands they re doing everything in their power to fight back against our growing rat population and thank them for their cooperation In a time when trust in governing body is at a near historic low we have an opportunity to show New Yorkers what effective governance looks like Let s stop focusing on penalizing hard-working New Yorkers and instead invest in solutions that work and promotion our neighbors who are doing the right thing Crystal Hudson is the councilmember for District and submitted this oped in coordination with the District Rat Task Force Established in the District Rat Task Force is a group of residents who share materials advocate for plan changes and organize to stop rodent infestations in Crown Heights Prospect Heights Fort Greene and Clinton Hill The post Opinion One Way To Stop The Rats Turn Away From Fines appeared first on City Limits

Similar News

Harvard joins colleges moving to self-fund some research to offset federal funding cuts
Harvard joins colleges moving to self-fund some research to offset federal funding cuts

Harvard has been hit hardest by the Trump administration's use of federal funding cuts for political...

14.05.2025 0
Read More
Italian restaurant Bastone closes after three years on Howell Mill Road
Italian restaurant Bastone closes after three years on Howell Mill Road

Via Bastone/Facebook.Bastone, the Italian restaurant and mozzarella bar owned by Chef Pat Pascarella...

14.05.2025 0
Read More
Former Langhorne police officer charged with trying to dupe 76-year-old woman out of $500,000 estate
Former Langhorne police officer charged with trying to dupe 76-year-old woman out of $500,000 estate

Carlito Cortez, a former officer for the Langhorne and Yardley Borough police departments, allegedly...

14.05.2025 0
Read More