Hopefully by now we can all agree that the rent in New York is too damn high. For residents, yes, but also for small businesses. The city is becoming a hollow shell.
In a story last week about 
our dying bodegas, the 
New York Times reported:  "According to a report from the Real Estate Board of New York, 
the   average commercial rent in Manhattan rose 34 percent from 2004 to 2014."
And  what's coming in to replace the bodegas (and everything else)? National  and international chains. "In 2014, the city experienced the 
largest increase in chain stores in  four years, and the sixth straight year of growth in chains."
 
In a story about 
our dying laundromats, which are vanishing from expensive and hyper-gentrified parts of town, the 
Wall Street Journal reported  that rents are going up--by large percentages--and forcing out the  laundromats. In addition, apps like Cleanly and Washio are taking  business and killing the mom and pops.
The problem is happening in San Francisco, too, where techies have completely taken over. Writes Jack Smith at 
Tech.Mic,  "As wealthy startup employees drive up rent and force out residents who  depended on the convenience of nearby laundromats, those laundromats  are now closing down... Services like Washio act like handmaids to  wealthy young elites."
One Google employee's response  to the problem was to dismiss it as "
the cost of disruption," saying  laundromats are no longer necessary. (Except, of course, for those of us  who still need them.)
It's  not just New York and San Francisco that are suffering from 
mass  corporatization and murder by rent hike, it's the whole country 
(and the  whole Western World). 
Grub Street just pointed to data that shows that, in another year or two, 
the majority of America's restaurants will be chains.
 
When  landlords know they can get chains to pay high rents, they kick out  small businesses--and leave the spaces empty for years. This creates  what Tim Wu at 
The New Yorker called "
high-rent blight." Entire neighborhoods are being wiped out and left as ghost towns. Think it's an exaggeration? 
Check out this piece over at Tribeca Citizen -- 
100 vacant storefronts, all photographed, one after another, all pushed out by landlords demanding too-high rents.
Here's how Alan Ehrenhalt at 
Governing explains the issue: "Landlords sometimes jack up the rent not because they have a chain tenant in the wings, but because they hope to snare one. 
The landlords call them 'credit tenants.' In the meantime, there are tax deductions to be claimed. And if the building was a recent purchase, the landlord is paying off the acquisition at interest rates much lower than those that would have prevailed at any time in recent history.
In any event, the die-off is real. The question is whether the local government has the power and the political will to do anything about it."
 Tribeca Citizen
Tribeca Citizen
Plenty can be done about this problem. And City Hall has the power. But no one is doing it.
This  is a crisis of culture. It is a crisis of individuality and diversity.  We can't save the world from this mind-numbing, soul-killing wave of  monoculture, but we can 
#SaveNYC. And New York has been a driver of global culture from its beginnings.
I've said it before and I'll say it again: Let's put a stop to exorbitant rent hikes on mom and pops by passing the Small Business Jobs Survival Act. Let's stop the spread of chains by passing a city-wide ordinance to control them. Let's fine landlords who leave their spaces open for longer than six months.
Here's what you can do to help. It's really not that hard. This city is worth saving.