You are reading

Low-Income Immigrants, No Matter Their Status, Should be Eligible for DRIE: Dromm

Jessica Gonzalez-Rojas and Daniel Dromm at a rally last year in support of bail reform. The pair are currently calling for the expansion of DRIE to all eligible immigrant New Yorkers (Photo: Jessica Gonzalez-Rojas votejgr )

April 17, 2021 By Ryan Songalia

City Councilmember Daniel Dromm introduced a resolution Tuesday that calls on the state to pass legislation that would protect low-income disabled residents against rent increases–no matter their immigration status.

The resolution, introduced in the Immigration Committee, aims to tell Albany that the New York City council believes that all immigrants—including the undocumented—should be eligible for the Disability Rent Increase Exemption (DRIE) program, which assists low-income tenants in having their rent frozen at its current rate. It exempts those who qualify from future rent hikes dating back to their initial application approval.

Under the current program, residents must show proof that they receive federal benefits–such as Social Security Disability Insurance or Supplemental Security Income—which requires proof of immigration status.

To get rid of the status requirement, lawmakers in Albany must pass a state law.

“Many disabled individuals in my district and throughout the city are ineligible for no other reason than their immigration status,” Dromm said, who represents Jackson Heights and East Elmhurst.

“They do not qualify for the relevant federal programs and, therefore, do not qualify for DRIE. It is fundamentally unfair that the most vulnerable of the vulnerable are prevented from accessing the very programs that are supposed to be helping them.”

The Senior Citizen Rent Increase Exemption, or SCRIE—which provides similar protections for low-income people 62 years and older—does not require applicants to have status.

Dromm argues the state legislators should find a way where the undocumented are also eligible for DRIE.

“The purpose of the resolution is to give the state the signal that the council wants this,” Dromm said in an interview. He is confident the resolution will be passed by the council and expects it to be up for a vote in the next few months.

The bill is being sponsored in the state Assembly by Jessica Gonzalez-Rojas and in the State Senate by Gustavo Rivera.

“I am proud to be joining Senator Gustavo Rivera in introducing legislation that will expand eligibility for the Disability Rent Increase Exemption (DRIE) to our immigrant neighbors who are excluded from the program,” Gonzalez-Rojas said.

“I’m grateful to Councilman Dromm for his ongoing support of our most vulnerable communities via his resolution in the Council and look forward to getting this legislation passed,” she added.

Christian Murray contributed to this story

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Fresh Meadows MS-13 gang associate sentenced to nearly a half-century in prison for murder of Corona teen in Kissena Park: Feds

An MS-13 gang associate from Fresh Meadows was sentenced to 45 years in federal prison on Tuesday, Aug. 26, for the 2018 slaying of a Corona teenager in Flushing’s Kissena Park.

Juan Amaya-Ramirez, 27, and his co-defendant Oscar Flores-Mejia, 25, from Elmhurst, who is also an associate of the transnational criminal organization, pleaded guilty to the murder of 17-year-old Andy Peralta in Brooklyn federal court last September.

Plant Powered Metro NY helps reverse chronic illness with food and community

Aug. 28, 2025 By Jessica Militello

When Northern Queens resident Sherika Sterling discovered Plant Powered Metro NY’s Jumpstart program, she was struggling with a list of health issues that she thought she would have to deal with her entire life. After joining the program and changing to a plant-based diet, she was able to reverse many of her chronic ailments, including being pre-diabetic, after being equipped with practical tools, knowledge and plant-based recipes.

AG’s office launches investigation into death of man run over by police officer in Flushing Meadows Corona Park

The New York Attorney General’s Office of Special Investigations (OSI) has launched a probe into the death of a civilian on Saturday, Aug. 23, following a motor vehicle collision involving NYPD officers in Flushing Meadows Corona Park.

At approximately 4:37 p.m., an NYPD officer from the 110th Precinct in Elmhurst was driving westbound in a marked police cruiser, a 2015 Ford Taurus, at around 10 miles per hour in front of the Queens Theater on United Nations Avenue South, across from the Unisphere, when the vehicle ran over a man who was allegedly lying face up on the roadway prior to the collision, police said.