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NYC Property Owners Face New Wave of Compliance Violations

As New York City begins issuing 2026 failure-to-file notices, property owners are facing a mounting web of regulatory penalties. The Cotocon Group is warning that minor administrative oversights regarding Articles 320 and 321, alongside annual benchmarking requirements, are rapidly escalating into significant financial and operational liabilities for buildings.

Bio & NewsJune 26, 2026681 reads0

Many owners mistakenly categorize these violations as mere clerical errors, but the reality involves accumulating fines and long-term regulatory instability. Jimmy Carchietta, founder and CEO of The Cotocon Group, notes that missed filings often stem from simple unawareness or incomplete work by previous consultants. When a single building falls out of compliance, the interconnected nature of city laws—spanning Local Laws 84, 87, 88, 95, and 97—can complicate an entire portfolio's standing.

Stakeholders are now being urged to perform immediate compliance audits to identify open penalties and missed reporting years. The goal is to transition from uncertainty to a concrete resolution plan. For managers overseeing multiple assets, a proactive review is critical to prevent avoidable delays and resolve outstanding obligations before they impact future property decisions or valuation.

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