Last week, the City Planning Commission listened to the voices of countless New Yorkers and said ‘yes’ to the “City of Yes for Housing Opportunity” — the most pro-housing changes in the history of the city’s zoning code. New Yorkers cannot afford to wait any longer for affordable housing. With a 1.4 percent vacancy rate and the rent being too damn high, families are getting priced out left and right.
To deliver the affordable housing New Yorkers need and deserve, every level of government has a role to play. Our administration and the state came together to meet this generational crisis head-on, and now, the City Council has their moment in front of them.
Every new home in our city means more jobs, lower rents, a stronger economy, and a better future for all New Yorkers.
Mayor Adams
I urge council members to join New Yorkers in supporting this proposal and building a future that’s more affordable for working-class families, that provides peace of mind for older adults who want to age in place, and that allows our young people to live comfortably in the greatest city on the globe. That starts with them saying ‘yes’ to this once-in-a-generation housing proposal.
New Yorkers from every corner of our city are joining us in saying ‘yes.’ From housing advocates and labor to clergy and New Yorkers who were on the verge of homelessness, everyday people see the importance of advancing bold ideas and big solutions to this current crisis.

The proposal also received favorable recommendations from Bronx Borough President Vanessa Gibson, Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine, and Queens Borough President Donovan Richards.
The numbers show that these proposals are widely popular. A new poll found that 72 percent of voters approved of the City of Yes when it was explained to them. And when New Yorkers hear the facts about of City of Yes, they leave saying “yes” to the proposal. This is why it is critical for all New Yorkers to spread the word about the proposal in houses of worship, their workplace, or wherever you may go.
Affordable housing has been a day one priority of our administration and we have the track record to show it.
Mayor Adams
We hope every councilmember will take this opportunity to join New Yorkers in saying ‘yes’ to our City of Yes for Housing Opportunity proposal, and help us build a future that is more affordable for working families, veterans, families, immigrants, and older adults. We have already done so much good work together on housing, and I know we can continue to do even more.
Affordable housing has been a day one priority of our administration and we have the track record to show it. We have had back-to-back record-breaking years in both creating and connecting New Yorkers to affordable housing, committed a record $26 billion in housing capital in the current 10-year plan, and successfully advocated for several new tools in Albany to build faster, more affordable housing — to name a few of our wins. Together, with all these wins and City of Yes for Housing Opportunity, we are striving to achieve our moonshot goal of 500,000 new homes by 2032.
Every new home in our city means more jobs, lower rents, a stronger economy, and a better future for all New Yorkers. I look forward to working together to build our way out of this housing crisis and to open the doors of opportunity to the next generation of New Yorkers.
READ ALSO
Mayor Adams On Getting 20,000 Illegal Guns Off Streets For A Safer New York
From the moment I was sworn in as your mayor three years ago, our primary mission has been to create safer streets, safer subways, and a safer city for New York families. That means tackling the issue of gun violence head-on and working to get illegal guns out of the hands of criminals before they…
Keep readingOp-Ed By Mayor Eric Adams: Safe Neighborhoods For Every New Yorker
Since day one, this administration has been committed to making New York City a safer, more affordable city. And we have fought to ensure that New Yorkers can pursue their dreams by improving quality of life. New Yorkers have raised their concerns about public safety across the five boroughs — they asked for more cops…
Keep readingOp-Ed By NY Mayor: How We Are Supporting Small Business And Working-Class People Through M/WBEs
Since day one, our administration has had a clear mission: build a safer, more affordable city for working-class New Yorkers, and every day, we are delivering on that mission. Jobs are up, our streets are safer with crime down across the city every month this year, and we have a record 183,000 small businesses across…
Keep reading
The mayor ignores the inconvenient facts that this proposal does not actually require any affordable housing; cedes land use decisions to developers; and will worsen the effects of climate change by eliminating green space. My neighborhood is a lovely community with a mix of single-family homes, small multi-family homes, and larger apartment buildings, and it is more dense near the LIRR station than it is a few blocks away. Isn’t that what we want? We have available space along commercial corridors where builders could put apartment buildings right now, today, but they don’t want to – because they would profit more from jamming quick-and-dirty new buildings into residential blocks than by taking on the kind of larger-scale projects that we need, and that would deliver more homes in appropriate locations. Developers should not be deciding how our communities grow – we should. But by ignoring this reality and publishing sunny articles that claim to have the support he needs for this horrible proposal, our Mayor is flat-out lying to us. We should all be asking why – who profits from this? Developers, that’s who. Let’s put a stop to this misguided proposal, fix the outdated zoning rules that Planning Commission keeps citing as the reason why we can’t get housing built, and create housing without destroying communities.