NY Attorney General Files Suit Against Newburgh Apartment Owner Over Dangerous Conditions

Despite residents making hundreds of calls to management, these dangerous conditions have not been fixed.

NY Attorney General Files Suit Against Newburgh Apartment Owner Over Dangerous Conditions
Fire damage to a building that has not been repaired years after it occurred. Photo Credit: New York Attorney General’s Office

NEW YORK – New York Attorney General Letitia James announced on Feb. 2 that she had filed suit against the owners and managers of the Kenney apartment complex in Newburgh for leaving residents to endure dangerous and decrepit conditions, including a persistent lack of consistent heat and hot water. The Kenney apartments is an affordable housing development in Newburgh, home to more than 100 low-income families and seniors.

The lawsuit filed by the AG was against the building owner Bourne & Kenney Redevelopment Company, LLC and the management company All County Property Management, Inc.

For years, these residents have paid excessive electric bills on top of rent for homes that are frigid in the winter, mold-ridden, and rodent-infested, with unsafe stairways, holes in the floors, and water and sewage leaking through the ceilings, the Attorney General stated. Despite residents making hundreds of calls to management, these dangerous conditions have not been fixed. Attorney General James is seeking court orders requiring the buildings’ owners to repair and resolve all violations, as well as pay restitution for tenants and other financial penalties.

“It is outrageous that the Kenney residents have suffered in dangerous and inhumane conditions while their landlords ignored their calls for help,” said Attorney General James. “No one should be forced to endure a New York winter without heat or hot water. I am taking the owners of these apartments to court to get justice for the New Yorkers who have been cruelly neglected, and make sure they have a safe, clean, and warm place to live.”

Building owners in New York are required to provide their tenants with heat and hot water from October to May. Since 2023, residents of the Kenney apartments have lacked consistent heat and hot water, including a complete shutoff that lasted from October 2025 to January 2026. As a result, residents have been forced to heat their homes by boiling water, leaving their ovens on, or installing space heaters, which have caused their electricity bills to skyrocket and put their safety at risk.

In addition to enduring winter storms and record-setting cold without heat, Kenney residents have suffered for years in unsafe and unsanitary conditions. Residents of the Kenney apartments have reported mold and mildew that have caused illnesses and worsened a two-year-old resident’s asthma. Doors to several units do not properly close, causing a safety hazard and making the apartments even harder to keep warm in winter. Residents have also reported severely damaged floors with large holes in them, unstable stairs, sewage flowing out of toilets and into apartments, water leaks, peeling and moldy paint, exposed wiring, and broken appliances that have not been fixed in years. One resident, who suffers from diabetes and needs a working refrigerator for her insulin, has had her calls to replace her broken refrigerator ignored. The apartment complex has been cited for over 160 different building code violations for these conditions, according to the Attorney General.

The Attorney General James is seeking a court order requiring the owners of the apartment buildings to take all the necessary steps to fix the code violations within 30 days, ensure consistent heat and hot water access, and provide residents with safe and livable apartments.

This order would require the Kenney’s owners to:

  • Repair all outstanding code violations and rehabilitate all previously condemned apartments within 30 days.
  • Hire a heating systems and maintenance expert to assess the Kenney Apartments’ boilers and make recommendations for their repairs or replacement that would have to be followed within 30 days.
  • Hire a licensed mold assessor and mold remediation contractor to develop and implement a plan to rid impacted apartments of mold.
  • Provide housing for any tenant whose apartment needs significant renovations to bring it up to code.
  • Provide restitution to affected tenants and pay additional penalties to the state.

In addition, the owners of the Kenney apartments would be barred from retaliating against any tenant who complained about unsafe conditions or obtaining any judgment against a tenant who withheld rent due to unsafe conditions. Attorney General James is also seeking the appointment of an independent monitor, paid for by the Kenney’s owners, to ensure compliance with the order’s requirements.

“Families and seniors at the Kenney Apartments were living in conditions no one should have to accept—without reliable heat, without basic repairs, and without the peace of mind that comes from knowing your house is a home,” said Newburgh Mayor Torrance Harvey. “These are working parents, older residents, and neighbors who did everything right and still found themselves ignored by their landlord. When that happens, leadership has a duty to step in and insist on accountability.”

Author
Real Estate In-Depth

Real Estate In-Depth is the official publication of the Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors.

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