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Q&A
Monitoring expired Temporary Certificates of Occupancy
0:08:41
ยท
35 sec
Council Member Ariola inquires about the Department of Buildings' process for monitoring expired Temporary Certificates of Occupancy (TCOs). She specifically asks about measures in place besides 311 complaints that would trigger inspections for buildings with expired TCOs.
- Ariola expresses concern about relying solely on 311 notifications for expired TCOs
- She questions if there are any other notification systems in place to prompt inspections
- The discussion highlights the potential gap in monitoring expired TCOs without public complaints
Joann Ariola
0:08:41
Thank you so much.
0:08:42
So just just you say as as the department does not vacate a building only because a temporary certificate of occupancy has expired, you mentioned that three one one notifies you.
0:08:53
Are there any other measures in place besides three one one that would trigger you to send out an inspector to find out?
0:09:01
Like, is there any way you're notified that a certificate of occupancy has expired, an inspection needs to be done again besides three one one, is there any other measure in place that would let you know that you had to send inspectors to Building A?