来自GPT。我的名字叫雷锋。
Here are three well-regarded non-profit tenant-advocacy organizations in New York that you might find useful, especially given your background in housing/discrimination matters. If you like, I can send a longer list of 8-12 groups (with contact info).
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- Metropolitan Council on Housing
https://www.metcouncilonhousing.org/
What they do:
• City-wide tenants’ rights membership organization in NYC; formed 1959. 
• They operate a free tenant-rights telephone hotline for any tenant in New York City. 
• They engage in tenant education (workshops, fact sheets), organizing and advocacy around rent regulation, repairs, eviction, etc. 
Why it’s good: They have long experience, broad coverage, and serve as both a first-stop resource and an organizing anchor.
Tip: If you or someone you know has issues like landlord harassment, lack of repairs, possible eviction or rent-increase issues, reaching out to their hotline could give you a good steer.
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- Tenants & Neighbors
What they do:
• A statewide organization in New York that is grassroots and member-led, focused on empowering tenants, preserving affordable housing, and strengthening tenant protections. 
• They engage in campaigns (e.g., rent freeze, tenant leadership training). 
Why it’s good: If you’re interested not just in individual tenant rights but in organizing, systemic change, or joining coalitions, this is a strong option.
Tip: Even if you don’t join as a “member,” their publications and campaign tools may be useful in your housing-discrimination context.
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- New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG)
https://nylag.org/tenants-rights/?utm_s ... hatgpt.com
What they do:
• Legal services provider that defends tenants facing eviction, displacement, homelessness; works to preserve housing, ensure economic security. 
• Represent tenants in Housing Court, before administrative agencies (e.g., public-housing authorities). 
Why it’s good: If your issue gets into a legal dispute (eviction, harassment, mis-application of rent/subsidy) you’ll likely need legal representation. NYLAG is one of the go-to organizations.
Tip: Contact them early if you have a case forming (rather than later) — they can advise whether you meet eligibility and how to proceed.
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If you like, I can pull together a list of 10 more tenant protection organizations in New York (including those that focus on specific boroughs, immigrant communities, older tenants, etc.), with a table (name, focus area, contact) for easy reference. Would you like that?

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