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Cooperative Hall of Fame inductee spotlight – Andrew Reicher

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Through his leadership at the Urban Homesteading Assistance Board (UHAB), Andy has brought homeownership to thousands.

Andrew Reicher


  • Architect During his four decades at helm of the Urban Homesteading Assistance Board, Andy helped design policies and programs that grew New York City’s low-income resident-owned/run housing cooperatives from several dozen to more than 1,300 buildings, providing homeownership and permanent affordability to more than 30,000 households.
  • Champion A champion of tenant empowerment, Andy’s career has centered on providing permanent, affordable housing that allows residents a voice in how their buildings are run.
  • Leader With a capacity to unlock purpose and ingenuity in those around him, Andy is also generous in sharing his limited-equity housing experience with developers across the country.

Add your name to the Hall of Fame’s “Friends of Andrew Reicher”

Show your appreciation for Andrews work by adding your name as a “Friend of Andrew Reicher.” Your name will appear on the Andrew Reicher page of Heroes.coop and in the Hall of Fame Commemorative Program. The Hall of Fame will be held on October 7, 2021 at the National Press Club in Washington, DC.


 

Andrew Reicher: A Champion of Affordable Housing

A quiet, self-effacing hero, Andrew Reicher has devoted his entire career to improving the lives of people struggling to rise from poverty through access to stable, affordable housing. Andy’s efforts have helped create programs within the New York City government crucial to fostering the development of housing cooperatives for low-income New Yorkers. Through his leadership at the Urban Homesteading Assistance Board (UHAB), Andy has brought homeownership to thousands of city residents and is generous in sharing his expertise with others in the U.S. turning to the cooperative model as a source of homeownership for low-income residents.

Andy’s unique combination of persistence, creativity and leadership has paved the way for cooperative development through many cycles of New York’s housing landscape. Andy’s career developed in tandem with UHAB, which was founded in 1973 during New York City’s economic crisis to help residents without stable housing reclaim and rehabilitate abandoned buildings as their homes. During his four decades at UHAB’s helm, the city’s low-income resident-run and resident-owned housing cooperatives have grown from several dozen to more than 1,300 buildings, providing homeownership and permanent affordability to more than 30,000 households. The conversion of small abandon buildings was unique and unprecedented in the U.S. and is a significant chapter in New York City’s story.

UHAB realized that while self-help rehabilitation using sweat equity was a catalyst for revitalization and growth, there was still a need to address the issue around foreclosure of physically deteriorating buildings in the city’s poorest neighborhoods. Turning the buildings over to community control was the idea that sparked the Tenant Interim Lease (TIL) Program. The program allows tenants in city-owned and tax-foreclosed buildings to form an association to manage and then purchase their buildings as limited-equity cooperatives.

For nearly 40 years, New York City contracted with UHAB to provide technical assistance to income-restricted cooperatives in the TIL program. Under Andy’s leadership, the program grew to include accounting, bookkeeping and, pre-paid legal assistance, and training and education programs on everything from how to run a heating system and boiler to how to run a meeting. More recently, Andy has steered UHAB’s programs towards climate and social justice goals through access to share loans and expanded use of renewable energy in low-income communities and communities of color.

Today, New York City has the largest community of shared-equity housing cooperatives in the country. In 1989, UHAB and the Tenant Interim Lease Program were jointly awarded the prestigious Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence.

In 2015, Andy pioneered a vision for a nationwide coalition of cooperative housing practitioners and members to come together to grow, serve, and strengthen the model of shared equity housing cooperatives. The Sixth Principle Coalition embodies the spirit of “cooperation among cooperatives” and united the national limited-equity cooperative community of over 165,000 units of housing, 40 organizations, and more than 100 practitioners across the U.S.

Because of Andy’s selfless dedication, constant innovation, and high achievement, low-income housing cooperatives in New York City exist and thrive. Strongly rooted in the communities he serves, Andy’s insight, experience, and tireless efforts has had a lasting and profound impact on the lives of thousands.


The Cooperative Hall of Fame is administered by the Cooperative Development Foundation (CDF), the 501(c)(3) affiliate of the National Cooperative Business Association CLUSA International (NCBA CLUSA). Nominations are received annually from the cooperative community, with the final selection made by the NCBA CLUSA Board of Directors on the recommendations of a selection committee of national cooperative leaders. The Cooperative Hall of Fame Gallery is on display in NCBA CLUSA’s offices in Washington, DC and can also be visited online at www.heroes.coop.

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