Page 5 - NY Cooperator April 2020
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COOPERATOR.COM  THE COOPERATOR —  APRIL 2020   5  ROSENWACH TANK  THE FIRST NAME IN QUALITY CEDAR WOOD TANKS  WE ARE CERTIFIED and IT MATTERS!  718.729.4900   43-02 Ditmars Boulevard, 2nd Fl., Astoria, NY 11105  www.rosenwachgroup.com  Rosenwach is proud to announce that Rosenwach’s tanks are certified to NSF/ANSI 61 by NSF   International, a leading global independent public health and safety organization. NSF/ANSI 61   addresses crucial aspects of drinking water system components such as whether contaminants   that leach or migrate from the product/material into the drinking water are below acceptable levels   in finished waters.  To receive certification, Rosenwach Tank submitted product samples to NSF that underwent rigorous   testing to recognized standards, and agreed to manufacturing facility audits and periodic retesting   to verify continued conformance to the standards.  The NSF mark is our customers’ assurance that our prod-  uct has been tested by one of the most respected indepen-  dent certification organizations. Only products bearing the   NSF mark are certified.  QUESTIONS & ANSWERS  Legal  Q  A& Privatizing a Mitchell-Lama Co-op  Q   I have lived in a Mitchell-Lama   co-op in Brooklyn for 43 years.   Th  e company is taking a vote on   whether to privatize or not. I am personally   in favor of privatizing. I am currently on dis-  ability, and am unemployed but looking for   work. I can pay my maintenance and still af-  ford food.   Here is what I know: Th  ere is no sense of   community in our building, and there hasn’t   been a sense of community for a long time.   Th  e complex is made up of a lot of seniors   who are afraid of going private. I feel they just   want to be safe for as long as they can. Th  e   maintenance may not go up. You get your   equity back. I am paying for damages, re-  modeling, and costs out of pocket. I can sell   at market price if I move out or away from my   current location. Th  erefore, I am interested in   privatizing.  Do you recommend that someone in my   situation privatize? Do I have to pay a mort-  gage? Do I have to buy my apartment back? If   the building does privatize, can I get a reverse   mortgage?                              —What Are My Options?  A  Andrew Brucker, a partner   at the New York City law of-  fi ce of Armstrong Teasdale,   says: “Obviously, we cannot tell your reader   whether privatization is good for them. Go-  ing private (sometimes referred to as recon-  stitution) is very complicated, and since each   shareholder’s personal fi nances and the plan   to go private are always diff erent and unique,   it would be impossible to answer the specifi c   reader’s question.  “What does reconstitution mean? It basi-  cally changes the certifi cate of incorporation,   the bylaws, and the occupancy agreement   (sometimes called the ‘lease’) so that the co-  op is no longer under the supervision of a   governmental agency (which might be either   a state or city agency). It also changes how a   shareholder would sell—and how a purchaser   would buy—an apartment. Th  e fi rst vote the   shareholders must consider is a vote to fund   a feasibility study. Aft er a feasibility study is   completed and reviewed by the shareholders,   there is another vote to actually prepare an of-  fering plan, which will outline everything the   shareholders need to know. Th  en there is one   last vote: whether to actually go through with   the reconstitution.  “It certainly sounds like the building in   this case is at the fi nal stage, since the reader   states that the upcoming vote is to determine   whether to reconstitute or not. Th  e other two   votes (to authorize the feasibility study and  the stock and the lease for the apartment, and   the off ering plan) do not approve a reconstitu-  tion; they only move the process along to get  the apartment again. And although there may  cannot obtain a reverse mortgage. Th  ese loans   more information to the shareholders.  “Every reconstitution is a little diff erent,  penses, the value of the apartments, etc.), no  ments due to rules promulgated by HUD.   but typically there are certain things common  one can predict if the maintenance will go up  Such mortgages are permitted with condos   to all: the shareholder does not have to pay for  or down. Th  ere can only be a guess and esti-  their apartment. Aft er all, they currently own  mates based upon certain assumptions.  there is no reason you should have to purchase  mortgages, at the present time a co-op owner   be  projections  in  the  off ering  plan  (for  ex-  “As to the reader’s question about reverse   are not yet permitted in cooperative apart-  continued on page 18 


































































































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