Residents in Manhattan’s East Village are suing New York City to block plans to convert a local building into a temporary homeless shelter, despite the area strongly supporting Mayor Zohran Mamdani in the last election. The legal challenge highlights tensions within a neighborhood that backed Mamdani by a wide margin.
The lawsuit was filed Monday in the New York Supreme Court by a group of residents along with the Village Organization for the Integrity of Community Engagement, known as VOICE. It seeks to halt the city’s plan to turn a building at 8 East 3rd Street into a homeless intake shelter for adult men, Fox News reported.
Election data shows strong local support for Mamdani in the area. In Election District 45, which includes the East Village, Mamdani received 70.1% of the vote compared to 26.0% for independent candidate Andrew Cuomo.
Election data shows strong local support for Mamdani in the area
Despite that margin, some residents are now pushing back on one of the administration’s housing initiatives. Ten residents joined the lawsuit, arguing the city moved too quickly without following required procedures.
“It challenges the city’s hastily made and legally invalid decision to locate a new citywide homeless adult male intake center at 8 East 3rd Street without following any of the legal requirements that must precede such a significant and consequential decision,” the filing states.
The complaint alleges that city officials bypassed environmental and legal safeguards in order to move forward with the project. It also claims the administration relied on emergency powers issued in 2022 to expedite the process.
The complaint alleges that city officials bypassed environmental and legal safeguards in order to move forward with the project
Those emergency powers were originally enacted to address a surge in asylum-seekers entering the city. The lawsuit argues they are now being used beyond their intended scope.
The proposed shelter is part of a broader plan to reconfigure the city’s homeless intake system. Mamdani’s administration announced the project earlier this year following plans to close the Bellevue Shelter.
City officials said the Bellevue site had deteriorated and could no longer be used effectively. The administration moved to relocate its operations and the individuals housed there.
Oops. https://t.co/dyRTYEuhXE
— Ted Cruz (@tedcruz) April 23, 2026
City officials said the Bellevue site had deteriorated and could no longer be used effectively
“The Department of Social Services and Department of Homeless Services will immediately implement an operational plan to vacate 30th Street and relocate the critical functions to other sites,” the mayor’s office said in a statement. Officials said approximately 250 individuals were being relocated.
The administration has also outlined plans for an additional facility. A second site at 333 Bowery is expected to open on May 1 to house families without minor children.
The lawsuit has drawn attention beyond New York, particularly on social media. Critics have pointed to the situation as an example of residents opposing policies in their own neighborhoods.
The administration has also outlined plans for an additional facility
Sen. Ted Cruz responded to the news in a post online. “Oops,” Cruz wrote.
Other political figures also weighed in on the controversy. Michael Henry, a former New York attorney general candidate, criticized what he described as a “not in my backyard” response.
“No one is more ‘not in my backyard’ than white progressives. This community voted for Mamdani in a landslide but don’t want to live with the consequences,” Henry wrote.
Other political figures also weighed in on the controversy
Sen. Rick Scott also commented on the situation. “Not shocked,” Scott wrote in a post.
The New York Supreme Court has not yet ruled on requests for emergency relief in the case. A decision could determine whether the city is allowed to move forward with the project while the lawsuit proceeds.
For now, the dispute reflects a broader challenge facing city leaders. Balancing homelessness policy with neighborhood concerns continues to be a point of tension as officials move to expand housing options across the city.
