Reliable electricity, elevators, heat, hot water, and water are aspects of safe and accessible housing. Interruptions to these services represent a persistent challenge faced by public housing residents in the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA). We compiled outage data spanning 2020-2022 from NYCHA's online service interruptions portal and paired these data with demographic and meteorological sources to understand the burden of these outages. To ease dissemination of these data-a spatiotemporally granular outage dataset that could fill gaps surrounding urban outage health impacts-we provide a public dashboard for visualization and download of the service interruption data in an analysis-ready format. We demonstrated that (1) outages often exceeded health-relevant restoration windows (e.g., 8 h for electrical interruptions); (2) senior developments (exclusively residents 62 +) had the longest duration of elevator, heat, and hot water outages; and (3) outages sometimes overlapped with temperature extremes-potentially increasing their health risk. Residents of NYCHA, who are predominately low-income, Black, and Hispanic face a disproportionate burden of service interruptions. Like all New Yorkers, NYCHA residents deserve to live in dignified housing that is safe and accessible. Addressing service interruptions are one way to make public housing safer and push toward climate and environmental justice.
Keywords: Extreme temperatures; Outages; Public housing; Service interruptions.
© 2024. The New York Academy of Medicine.