ACORN: New Starrett City Deal DeadNew York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times seemed to suggest that David Bistricer's (and Bruce Teitelbaum's) second bid for Starrett City might have a chance. Indeed, it was all about how Mr. Bistricer was enlisting the help of ministers to take his case to the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, which holds the mortgage to the housing complex and was the entity that doomed the first bid. But a letter last night from the state Department of Housing Conservation and Renewal (DHCR DHCR Division of Housing and Community Renewal ) may have killed the plan first. Commissioner Deborah VanAmerongen wrote that the plan "would be unworkable under existing statutory law... For these reasons we must disapprove dis·ap·prove v. dis·ap·proved, dis·ap·prov·ing, dis·ap·proves v.tr. 1. To have an unfavorable opinion of; condemn. 2. To refuse to approve; reject. v.intr. the plan." "We read it - and more importantly, we understand that DHCR reads it - to mean that HUD Hud (h d), a pre-Qur'anic prophet of Islam. Hud unsuccessfully exhorted his South Arabian people, the Ad, to worship the One God. or no HUD - the elements of the deal that require state approval will not be forthcoming - hence dead," Jonathan Rosen, a spokesman for the affordable housing advocacy group ACORN, said in an e-mail.
The DHCR letter says that the new plan would have raised rents to "street rents" and caused "the divestiture The breakup of AT&T. By federal court order, AT&T divested itself on January 1, 1984 of its 23 operating companies, which became known as the Regional Bell Operating Companies (RBOCs). of all potentially income-producing non-residential property." The Real Estate is waiting for a return call from Mr. Bistricer's spokesman. The Times' Empire Zone blog blog, short for web log, an online, regularly updated journal or newsletter that is readily accessible to the general public by virtue of being posted on a website. has more on whether the proposal is dead or not here. - Matthew Schuerman
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