{"url":"https://commercialobserver.com/2026/04/commercial-rent-regulation-new-york-business/","title":"Rent Regulation Will Hurt New York Businesses","domain":"commercialobserver.com","imageUrl":"https://images.pexels.com/photos/30102035/pexels-photo-30102035.jpeg?auto=compress&cs=tinysrgb&h=650&w=940","pexelsSearchTerm":"New York storefronts","category":"Politics","language":"en","slug":"2991eb94","id":"2991eb94-71df-428d-8d4a-2f57f49e1fce","description":"New York State Legislature considers commercial rent regulation to aid small businesses, but author James Wacht opposes it.","summary":"## TL;DR\n- New York State Legislature considers commercial rent regulation to aid small businesses, but author James Wacht opposes it.\n- Current landlord-tenant system works through good faith, with renewals for reliable payers and non-renewals for legitimate reasons like redevelopment.\n- Regulation would restrict owner flexibility, cut property values and tax revenue, spark litigation, and hinder new entrepreneurs.\n\n## The story at a glance\nJames Wacht, a veteran in New York's retail real estate as broker, attorney, landlord, and tenant, argues against proposed state legislation for commercial rent regulation. The bill aims to protect small businesses but, in his view, would harm them by freezing market dynamics. This column appears as the proposal gains traction in Albany amid ongoing small business struggles.[[1]](https://commercialobserver.com/2026/04/commercial-rent-regulation-new-york-business/)[[2]](https://commercialobserver.com/2026/04/commercial-rent-regulation-new-york-business)\n\n## Key points\n- Wacht draws on over 40 years of experience to say the current system functions well: good tenants who pay on time get reasonable renewals, while owners end leases for valid reasons like poor performance or redevelopment.\n- Regulation would block natural tenant turnover, making it tougher for new entrepreneurs to enter and test ideas in available spaces.\n- Owners need discretion to curate tenant mixes, as one bad business can drag down an entire property's value and appeal.\n- Many rent-regulated residential buildings depend on ground-floor retail rents, which make up **25% to 35%** of total rent rolls and fund property taxes; caps would slash values and city revenue.\n- The policy invites endless litigation over disputes, delays, and ambiguity, with lawyers as the main winners.\n- Neighborhoods need flexibility to evolve and stay vibrant; rigid rules risk stagnation in commercial corridors.\n\n## Details and context\nWacht owns retail businesses in Brooklyn and serves as managing principal at Lee & Associates NYC. He notes that fair deals have always been reachable without regulation for solid tenants.\n\nThe proposal revives ideas like the Small Business Jobs Survival Act, pushed by lawmakers such as State Sen. **Julia Salazar** and Assemblywoman **Emily Gallagher**, who want a Commercial Rent Guidelines Board to limit increases for non-chain retail.[[3]](https://commercialobserver.com/2026/02/new-york-commercial-rent-stabilization-state-bill)\n\nPast versions stalled for decades due to real estate opposition, as commercial leases differ from residential ones in complexity and market forces.\n\n## Key quotes\n\"This proposal is likely to do more harm than good.\" — James Wacht[[1]](https://commercialobserver.com/2026/04/commercial-rent-regulation-new-york-business/)\n\n\"Good tenants... are valuable and are typically renewed. Problematic tenants are not. That discretion matters.\" — James Wacht[[1]](https://commercialobserver.com/2026/04/commercial-rent-regulation-new-york-business/)\n\n## Why it matters\nCommercial rent rules could reshape New York's retail landscape, property investments, and tax base at a time of fiscal strain. Small businesses, landlords, and owners face reduced flexibility, fewer opportunities, and higher legal costs if enacted. Watch legislative progress in Albany and any board creation, though passage remains uncertain given historical resistance.\n\n\n**LANG:** en**","hashtags":["#newyork","#retail","#realestate","#regulation"],"sources":[{"url":"https://commercialobserver.com/2026/04/commercial-rent-regulation-new-york-business/","title":"Original article"},{"url":"https://commercialobserver.com/2026/02/new-york-commercial-rent-stabilization-state-bill","title":""}],"viewCount":2,"publishedAt":"2026-04-15T18:22:34.467Z","createdAt":"2026-04-15T18:22:34.467Z","articlePublishedAt":"2026-04-13T12:50:18.000Z"}