![]() NYC’s Department of Records and Information Services (DORIS) has issued a notice to the TLC that it is late in submitting the annual Office of Financial Stability report, which was due on November 1st.įrankly, we’re confused how David Do’s TLC is enacting any new legislation that impacts the existing taxi medallion fleet, when it hasn’t even issued this required report (a requirement stemming from legislation passed three years ago in a 49-0 City Council vote!). Well, it seems like others in City government are finally beginning to notice as well. He knows he’s being recorded once he enters my apartment.As we’ve mentioned previously in an article and a podcast, the TLC’s Office of Financial Stability had (at least it appeared) not submitted any report, as it was required to. As much as I’m having issues with the super he can have the duplicate key. I would feel the same way this lady did in 1995 especially without all the current technology that I have to keep myself safe. I sleep with the camera on in my bedroom 24/7 ( I keep the fire escape window closed and locked at all times, but burglars have been known to get in that way ) it records, has motion detection and person detection. If the super open my front door, not only will I see him in the camera, but notifications to my iPhone whenever the front doors open records the time and date when it was open. I have several cameras in and smart door alarms in my apartment. I’m guessing the difference between 1995 and now 2018 is Technology. I am having issues with my super and have concerns about personal safety, but I fully plan to comply with the law and give him a duplicate key immediately. Now I’m about to change the locks on my apartment to a 3 in 1 Smart lock with fingerprint, number pad and a key. But Krieger responds that, without Keysure, they would be paying $150 minimum for a locksmith if they needed to get into their apartment at night when the maintenance man was off-duty. Most of the time it's due to forgetfulness, says Krieger, who adds that the only complaint from residents relates to the $10 user fee. The box is usually broken because a resident has misplaced his key or an approved guest or contractor needs to get into an apartment. ![]() They are accompanied to their apartment with the doorman or maintenance person. To open a box, residents pay $10 and sign their name. The cost is about $1,000 for a 100-unit building.The Keysure product is foolproof, adds Perry Krieger, resident manager at Liberty Terrace Condominium, at 380 Rector Place, who keeps Keysure boxes with copies of the building's master key at the front desk. It protects you, and it protects him from false accusations. The landlord has to break the container, which indicates he has used the key, says Sideri. You put the key into the Keysure container, close it, put your signature on it. The key-owner also signs the inside and outside panels of the box. Once broken, the Keysure box cannot be put back together again. The keyless box snaps shut, and to gain access to its contents, it has to be broken open. No one thinks twice about tearing them open, says Leonardo Sideri, a New York entrepreneur and designer who developed Keysure, a simple two-piece plastic box large enough to store keys and access cards. Many residences still use security envelopes to store duplicate keys, but they are not exactly tamper-proof. According to Morse Watchman vice president Fernando Pires, electronic key boxes are useful in residential buildings because of the system's detailed tracking reports and alarm notification when a missing key is not returned at the set time. The system then records who took the key and when it was returned. To release a key, you punch in your personal code. Starting at about $2,700, these systems are contained in stainless steel cabinets with high security locks.Each key in the Morse Watchman cabinets is attached to a smartkey which slides into a specific location. Morse Watchman developed its KeyWatcher and KeyBank key management systems in the early 1990s. The traditional sheet metal cabinet or key lock box, with dozens of keys hanging on peg boards, has been transformed into microprocessor-based systems which limit access to keys to authorized individuals, and allow for electronic tracking. Residential key management has come a long way from the days when the superintendent dangled an overloaded key ring from his back pocket.
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