N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 19, § 1203.5
(2) Comply with an order to remedy. To remedy completely each violation described in the order to remedy.
(c) Time for compliance with order to remedy.
For the purposes of subdivision 2 of section 382 of the Executive Law, the time within which a person or entity served with an order to remedy is required to comply with such order to remedy is hereby fixed at 30 days following the date of such order to remedy.
(d) Statement to be included in order to remedy.
For the purpose of complying with that part of subdivision 2 of section 382 of the Executive Law that provides “such time period to be stated in the order,” an order to remedy shall include a statement substantially similar to the following: “The person or entity served with this Order to Remedy must completely remedy each violation described in this Order to Remedy by _ [specify date], which is 30 days after the date of this Order to Remedy.”
(e) Service.
An order to remedy shall be served personally or by certified or registered mail within five days of the date of the order. For the purposes of this section:
(2) an order to remedy served by certified or registered mail shall be deemed to be served on the date it is mailed.
(f) Requiring immediate commencement of corrective action.
Nothing in this section shall be construed as prohibiting any authority having jurisdiction that issues an order to remedy from including in such order to remedy provisions ordering the person or entity served with such order to remedy:
(2) to take such other protective actions (such as vacating the building or barricading the area where the violations exist) which are authorized by the code enforcement program of the authority having jurisdiction or by any other applicable statute, regulation, rule, local law or ordinance, and which the authority having jurisdiction may deem appropriate, during the period while such violations are being remedied.
(g) Other means of enforcing the Uniform Code.
Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring an authority having jurisdiction to issue an order to remedy in a given situation where violations of the Uniform Code are found to exist if, in the judgment of the authority having jurisdiction, such violations can be addressed adequately by the use of other enforcement tools or by other means. Nothing in this section shall be construed as limiting the authority of an authority having jurisdiction to employ any other means of enforcing either or both of the codes, including, but not limited to:
(11) issuing orders to remedy violations of the Energy Code pursuant to subdivision (1) of section 11-108 of the Energy Law.
(h) Office of Fire Prevention and Control.
For the purposes of this section, the term order to remedy shall not include any order issued by the Office of Fire Prevention and Control pursuant to section 156-e of the Executive Law (or pursuant to any regulation promulgated thereunder) requiring the remedying of any condition found to exist in, on or about any building under the jurisdiction of a public college or independent college (as these terms are defined in section 807-b of the Education Law) which violates the Uniform Code. Nothing in this section shall be construed as fixing the time within which a public college or independent college shall have to comply with any such order, or as requiring any such order to include the statement prescribed in subdivision (d) of this section.
(a) Introduction and purpose.
Section 381 of the Executive Law provides for the administration and enforcement of the codes and authorizes the Secretary of State to promulgate regulations establishing minimum standards for such administration and enforcement. In addition, subdivision 2 of section 382 of the Executive Law provides, in part, that any person, having been served, either personally or by registered or certified mail, with an order to remedy any condition found to exist in, on, or about any building in violation of the Uniform Code, who shall fail to comply with such order within the time fixed by the regulations promulgated by the Secretary of State pursuant to subdivision 1 of section 381 of the Executive Law, such time period to be stated in the order, shall be punishable by a fine of not more than $1,000 per day of violation, or imprisonment not exceeding one year, or both. The purpose of this section is to fix, for the purposes of subdivision 2 of section 382 of the Executive Law, the time within which a person or entity served with an order to remedy is required to comply with such order to remedy.
(b) Definitions.
In this section, the following terms shall have the following meanings: