RI State Rep. Candidate is in Business with One of the Most Notorious "Slumlords"

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

RI State Rep. Candidate is in Business with One of the Most Notorious "Slumlords"

LA Times Story
Rhode Island State Representative candidate Michael Gazdacko has been working with Lance Robbins for more than a decade starting in California, where Robbins garnered the reputation as one of the most infamous "slumlords" in the country.

Robbins was cited with 105 health and building-code violations, piled up 32 convictions, paid a $1 million settlement, just to name a few of his legal problems, according to press reports.

“Residents of a dilapidated building who say they regularly fight off armies of giant rats, swarms of cockroaches and youth gangs that roam their hallways have sued the building's owner for $10 million,” wrote the Associated Press in a 1986 article.

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For more than 15 years, housing advocates, consumer groups and government attorneys took dozens of legal actions against Robbins and his companies. After years of legal battles, he pleaded to some crimes, and paid more than a million dollars in fines. 

The battles between housing advocates and Robbin were epic, sparking hundreds of press articles about Robbins’ rat infested apartments.

Fast forward to today. Gazdacko, Robbins' long-time business mate, is now running against the embattled Anastasia Williams in House District 9.

Rep. Anastasia Williams
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Gazdacko's Ties

For voters, little is known about Gazdacko and his ties to the controversial Robbins. Gazdacko repeatedly refused to answer questions about Robbins' housing violations and fines in Los Angeles.

"I'm an employee, not a partner. I think the work that we've done here in Rhode Island speaks for itself," said Gazdacko in a phone interview. "Most of the people who meet me want to talk about me, they believe this race is based on the current state of Rhode Island. None of this [about Robbins] has any bearing on the race."

Page was deleted from website this summer
According to documents filed with the Rhode Island Secretary of States office and other documents, Gazdacko has been tied to Robbins in a number of his business interests. The business in Rhode Island that Gazdacko and Robbins manage is called Urban Smart Growth and the management team page was removed in the past few weeks. GoLocal was able to secure an achived Internet page of the site and found that Gazadacko and Robbins constituted two of the three members of the company's management team.

Repeatedly Gazdacko refused to answer questions about Robbin's violations, the difficulties tenants had or whether Rhode Islanders should be concerned about the track record of his company, his involvement, or Robbins. 

"I came here to work on Hope Artiste village and Greystone Lofts, that have been rehabbed to new communities. Hope Artiste Village now holds 150 small businesses," said Gazdacko.

Controversies Surrounding Robbins 

The 1986 AP story on Robbins continued,”Attorneys for the Spanish-speaking residents related nightmarish stories of cockroaches biting sleeping children, a rat they said tried to drag a baby from its bed and another that allegedly attacked a man in the shower.”

Robbin’s battle with tenants was just one of his high profile battles. The Los Angles Department of Water and Power sued Robbins for defrauding the agency for unpaid bills; in 2002, Robbins agreed to pays a court settlement of $1 million.

Robbins was twice disciplined (1991 and 1994) by the State Bar for "facts and circumstances surrounding habitability violations in properties" that his companies owned.

"In January of 2001, Robbins pleaded "nolo contendere" and was convicted of three misdemeanor violations of the fire protection and prevention provisions of the Los Angeles Municipal Code," according to Realty Times.

LA Times

"Robin Hood" Fought Against Robbin

For years, Lauren Saunders battled Robbins in Los Angeles. Today, Saunders serves as Managing Attorney at National Consumer Law Center. The Harvard Law Bulletin featured Saunders' Robin Hood like efforts — and said her efforts should create a new category of law, “Slumlord Slayers.” 

The Harvard publication story that featured Saunders’ efforts for enforcing housing laws against Robbins. The Harvard article said, “And for the last three years, she’s battled Los Angeles landlord Lance Robbins. The case, she acknowledges, ‘has really consumed me.’ Working with city attorneys, she created a novel legal strategy that targeted all of Robbins’ business practices at once rather than attacking a single housing code violation at a time. Saunders pored over housing records to identify all of his properties, which are hidden within a maze of shell companies.”

Robbins left much of his business in Los Angeles and started buying up properties in New England - Pawtucket was his first target. Like his empire in Los Angeles, Robbins created a series of corporations to manage the range of financial interests.

 

LA Times

A Chicago Tribune article from 2006 wrote:

In California, from the mid-1980s to the mid-to-late 1990s, Robbins was cited with 105 health and building-code violations ranging from operating apartment buildings with blocked emergency exits to failing to maintain fire extinguishers, according to California Superior Court records.

Robbins says the charges were politically motivated. He says he was championing policy changes in the city that would allow landlords to remove rent control if they invested in upgrading buildings. That made enemies for him among affordable-housing backers, he says.

The citations also included operating buildings with unsanitary bathrooms and the presence of "vermin," according to records from the State Bar Court of California. They resulted in 32 convictions-- some with summary probation and fines attached, according to California Superior Court records.

The Los Angeles city attorney's office "has had seven criminal cases against Mr. Robbins," for building-code violations, said Jonathan Diamond, a spokesman for that office, in an e-mail.

Robbins says his push to refurbish properties and revitalize neighborhoods was seen by some as "gentrification" and generated a personal backlash.

"What happened was, they would periodically pick a landlord, target him and get press for prosecuting them," he said.


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