Overview

United for Small Business NYC (USBnyc) is a coalition of community organizations across New York City fighting to protect small businesses and non-residential tenants from the threat of displacement, with a focus on owner-operated, minority-run businesses that serve low-income and minority communities.

Our Platform

As New York City attempts to recover and heal from the COVID-19 pandemic, it is critical for the next administration to understand the challenges facing small businesses, especially commercial tenants, and to take bold and comprehensive action to ensure that local economic development is supported.

Click here to view our 2020 platform:

  • Confront speculation and rising rent
  • Prioritize racial equity and accessibility in funding opportunities
  • Ensure access to legal resources
  • Put forward a neighborhood-centric vision for commercial corridors.

Get Involved

Do you belong to an organization that wants to prevent speculation and displacement of small businesses? Are you a small business owner or commercial tenant who wants to organize for a more equitable system?

  • Follow us on Twitter and use our hashtags: #NoSmallBizNoNYC #FairRentNYC
  • Email balanda.j@anhd.org to learn how you can become part of our coalition!

Past Victories

  • Commercial Tenant Harassment Law

The Commercial Tenant Harassment Law in New York City prohibits a landlord from harassing their commercial tenants by way of making discriminatory threats (e.g., age, race, gender, sexual orientation, etc.), requesting citizenship status, and interfering with a tenant’s construction or repairs. If a landlord does harass their tenant, they can be fined up to $50,000 per property and a court can deny that landlord construction plans at the building until the harassment has ceased.

  • Legal Support for Small Businesses

The NYC Department of Small Business Services launched the Commercial Lease Assistance Program, which provides small businesses with legal services on leasing as a way to address the power imbalance between commercial tenants and the landlords who exploit them.

  • Commercial Vacancy Registry

The City now has to maintain a public and searchable database - a Storefront Registry - that shows counts of vacant and occupied first and second floor commercial spaces, as well as average and median rents by council district, borough and citywide. Landlords are required to report information by property, and the city is also required to publish a searchable database of specific property information. These databases will allow policymakers, advocates, and community members to track vacancy trends in their own neighborhoods and communities while holding landlords accountable for failing to register.

  • State of the Storefronts Legislation

The City is now required to conduct a comprehensive analysis of neighborhood commercial corridors every five years. Very little data exists about commercial spaces in the city, which means we have a very unclear picture of how vast our commercial vacancy issue is. This legislation - the State of the Storefronts - gives policymakers and advocates the necessary information to create meaningful protections for New York’s commercial tenants.

Recent Blogs and Media

Blog
January 25, 2016
The New York Daily News recently reported that the City brokered a deal with a Brooklyn manufacturer to keep over 200 jobs in the City. ANHD commends the de Blasio Administration for its commitment to prioritizing industrial and manufacturing jobs for New York City.
Blog
January 14, 2016
Rendering of 25 Kent Ave
Last week, a  Crain's story covered a little known special permit application for a 480,000-square-foot office building in the Greenpoint/Williamsburg Industrial Business Zone.  This application at 25 Kent Avenue has much broader implications, and is the start of a new citywide zoning text amendment to create a new model of a mixed use industrial / commercial district.
Blog
October 22, 2015
New York City is experiencing major financial growth. But despite its economic dynamism, the city’s economic vitality remains unevenly distributed, and income inequality is at an all-time high. The City’s economic successes remain particularly out of reach for the low-, middle- and working-class communities that constitute the backbone of New York City.

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