Proposed New York City Hotel Regulation Threatens To Push Prices Even Higher
With prices skyrocketing, the city is weighing whether to regulate hotels further by barring them from hiring contracted workers.

Since banning most short-term rentals in 2023, New York City has seen hotel prices skyrocket. Now the city is considering a measure that would almost certainly force prices even higher.
The bill, proposed by New York City Councilwoman Julie Menin, targets non-union hotels, prohibiting hotel owners from hiring contracted workers for many positions, such as housekeeping, security, and bartending. The measure would require hotel owners to directly employ these workers rather than rely on cheaper subcontracting services.
Further, the proposed law would also require all hotels to obtain a license in order to operate. As a condition of licensing, hotels would need to hire a 24-hour security guard, who is also licensed.
Many hotel owners say the measure would increase their costs and reduce margins, forcing them to increase already-high prices, cut staff, or close entirely.
"This is like a nuclear bomb" Vijay Dandapani, president and CEO of the Hotel Association of New York City, told the New York Post. "It will destroy a major segment of the industry. This is a bazooka to kill a gnat."
So far, the proposal has received strong support from the Hotel and Gaming Trades Council, an influential union representing the hotel industry.
"Licensing, quite frankly, is one of the most powerful and effective tools we have to regulate business," Menin told The Post. "Hotels are an important economic driver of this city and we want to make sure that they are properly regulated in a way that benefits all."
In 2023, the average nightly cost of a hotel room in New York City was just over $300, up 8.5 percent from 2022. Much of the increase can be attributed to the city's decision to ban most short-term rentals, coupled with a flood of migrants the city is legally required to house. (According to The Wall Street Journal, over 11 percent of the city's hotel rooms have been contracted to house migrants.)
Instead of focusing on measures that could help lower prices—like lessening the giant regulatory hurdles toward building and operating more hotels and apartments—New York City might be heading toward erecting another barrier that will make the high prices at the city's hotels even higher.
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https://x.com/Partisan_O/status/1818014771670646966?t=W2JtZ8JzCCKH17Rh5GeKsQ&s=19
I’m still sifting through details, but the assassination attempt on Trump becomes more inexplicable as time passes by, not less. Moreover, the media’s lack of curiosity and what appears to be a coordinated effort to minimize or erase the attack from public memory just deepens my suspicions. This is one of the most important events in American history, and I can’t imagine what the country would look like now had the shooter been successful, but the only people who seem at all interested in getting to the bottom of it are institutional outsiders… Very strange, but we’ve seen this before, and that makes my blood run cold.
Meanwhile, CNBC blames "climate change" for Florida real estate bubble spreading from the coast to cheaper areas inland:
https://www.cnbc.com/2024/07/27/climate-gentrification-fuels-higher-prices-for-longtime-miami-residents.html?utm_source=pocket-newtab-en-us
Minorities hardest hit.
No explanation as to why wealthy people would want to move to Florida when the heat will be unbearable in 5 more years, hurricanes will wipe them off the map, and the whole state will be underwater before their mortgages are paid off....
...rising seas and more frequent and intense flooding have made neighborhoods such as Little Haiti, Overtown and Liberty City — historically occupied by lower-income households — more attractive to wealthy people, Moody’s said. The rich “have an upper hand” since they have the financial means to relocate away from intensifying climate hazards, it said....
“These areas, previously overlooked, are now valued for their higher elevation away from flood-prone zones, which leads to development pressure...” In Little Haiti, the Magic City Innovation District, a 17-acre mixed-use development, is in the early stages of construction.... He said the elevation was a factor in the location of Magic City, as were train and highway access, proximity to schools and views. “We’re 17 to 20 feet above sea level, which eliminates flooding,” he said. “We’re the highest point in Miami.”
Who ever heard of flooding in Florida before now?
Only poor people deserve to not get flooded?
No need to do actual research or science - when you have talking points.
I thought making a trip to NY unaffordable was one of the goals? Gotta keep that shit exclusive or it won't be special.
NYC doesn't have hotels anymore. It's all free illegal alien housing now.
That's what I was thinking.
Also: Nothing on Biden threatening to kill Speaker Johnson yesterday? When asked to clarify, he repeated it.
Good thing he's not running for re-election then.,