The intent of this chapter is to attempt to ensure that all
rental dwelling units are safe, to provide necessary information for
essential communications between emergency responders and tenants
in the event of an emergency, and to prevent illegal rentals.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
DWELLING UNIT
A building within the Village, or part of such building,
occupied or to be occupied by one or more persons as a residence.
Such residence does not have to be the occupier's sole residence.
FAMILY
One individual or a collective group of individuals either:
A.
Related to each other by blood, marriage or adoption who live
together in the same dwelling unit, cook together and function as
a single, stable housekeeping unit with common access to all rooms
and facilities; or
B.
Not related by blood, marriage or adoption but who together
constitute the functional equivalent of a natural family, all living
together in the same dwelling unit, cooking together and generally
functioning as a single, stable housekeeping unit, all with common
access to all rooms and facilities, with no member or members of such
group subletting, subleasing or otherwise controlling any part of
the dwelling separately from the others.
OWNER
A.
The grantee of the property as set forth in the last deed of
record on file with the Clerk of the County of Nassau, every partner
of any grantee that is partnership, company, or firm, and every officer
of any grantee that is a corporation, except:
(1)
A public housing authority organized as such under the laws
of the State of New York;
(2)
A not-for-profit corporation organized to own and operate a
group home or assisted-living or moderate-income senior-citizen housing
in conjunction with New York State; and
(3)
A state-, county- or Village-operated group home or treatment
facility.
B.
A tenant in relation to its subtenant.
RENT
A return, in money, property, or other valuable consideration
(including payment in kind or services or other thing of value), for
use and/or occupancy or the right to the use and/or occupancy of a
dwelling unit, whether or not a legal relationship of landlord and
tenant exists between the owner and the occupant or occupants thereof.
RENTAL DWELLING UNIT
A dwelling unit established, occupied, used or maintained
for rental occupancy.
RENTAL OCCUPANCY
The occupancy or use of a dwelling unit by one or more persons
as a dwelling unit under an arrangement whereby the occupant or occupants
thereof pay rent for such occupancy and use. There is a rebuttable
presumption that any occupancy or use of a dwelling unit is a rental
occupancy if the owner of the building containing the dwelling unit
does not reside in the same building.
SUPERINTENDENT
The Superintendent of the Building Department or his or her
designee.
It shall be unlawful for the owner, owner's agent, real
estate agent, or any other person with actual or apparent authority
over any dwelling unit to allow, permit, suffer, or tolerate the rental
of such dwelling unit without having first obtained a rental occupancy
permit pursuant to this chapter.
A nonrefundable permit application fee for each dwelling unit
shall be set from time to time by resolution of the Board of Trustees.
The Superintendent shall review each application for completeness
and the legality of the proposed rental and, upon satisfaction of
the completeness of the application, the legality of the rental, the
payment of the required fee, and confirming that there is a legal
certificate of occupancy for the proposed rental and that there are
no outstanding violations on the property, whether or not a notice
of violation or a notice of appearance to the Village Justice Court
has been issued, the Superintendent shall issue the permit.
All permits issued pursuant to this chapter shall be valid for
a period of two years from the date of issuance, however, upon a change
in tenant, a new permit shall be filed.
It shall be unlawful for any real estate broker or agent to
list, show, or otherwise offer for rent any dwelling unit for which
a current rental occupancy permit has not been issued by the Superintendent.
It shall be both the broker and the agent's responsibility to
verify the existence of a current rental occupancy permit before offering
any dwelling unit for rental. In the event that a real estate broker
and/or agent is convicted of a violation of this section, the Superintendent
shall transmit a record of such conviction to the Division of Licensing
Services of the Department of State and to make complaint thereto
against such real estate broker and/or agent on behalf of the Village.
No person shall solicit, advertise, cause, permit, and/or allow
another person to solicit, advertise, or publish an offer to lease
a rental dwelling unit, unless the rental dwelling has in effect a
current rental occupancy permit.
If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, or
other part of this chapter shall be for any reason adjudged by any
court of competent jurisdiction to be unconstitutional or otherwise
invalid, such judgment shall not affect, impair, or invalidate the
remainder of this chapter, and it shall be construed to have been
the legislative intent to enact this chapter without such unconstitutional
and/or invalid parts therein.