Lewis County Landlord-Tenant Law: Dairy Country, the Tug Hill Plateau, and Rural North Country Landlording
Lewis County sits between two of New York’s most distinctive geographic features — the Tug Hill Plateau to the west and the Adirondack foothills to the east — in a landscape defined by dairy farms, forested ridges, and small communities that have sustained themselves through agriculture for generations. The Tug Hill Plateau is one of the snowiest inhabited areas east of the Rocky Mountains; annual snowfall totals in the plateau communities routinely exceed 200 inches, and individual storms can deposit several feet in a matter of days. This geographic reality shapes the most consequential maintenance obligation for any Lewis County landlord: the warranty of habitability’s heating requirement takes on an urgency in the Tug Hill corridor that it has nowhere else in New York State.
New York State Real Property Law Article 7 governs every residential tenancy in Lewis County. The one-month security deposit cap of RPP § 238-A, the $20 application fee limit, the 5-day grace period before any late fee, and the cap on late fees at the lesser of $50 or 5% of monthly rent apply uniformly. The tiered notice requirements of RPP § 226-C require 30, 60, or 90 days’ written notice for any rent increase of 5% or more or any non-renewal, based on total tenancy length. The warranty of habitability under RPP § 235-B is implied in every lease. In Lewis County’s extreme winter environment, these are not abstract legal obligations — they are operational necessities with real human stakes.
Dairy Farming and the Agricultural Economy
Lewis County is one of the most intensively dairy-farmed counties in New York State. The combination of favorable terrain, ample water, and a farming tradition that has been passed down through generations of farm families has made the county a significant producer of milk and dairy products. Kraft Heinz operates a cheese plant in Lowville that processes milk from the county’s farms and employs a meaningful number of county residents. The dairy economy creates a specific tenant profile: farm workers who may have employer-provided on-farm housing, dairy plant workers who need conventional rental housing in or near Lowville, and farm family members who rent while farming operations continue under family ownership.
Agricultural income in the dairy sector can be relatively stable compared to some other agricultural sectors — milk prices fluctuate but dairy farming is a year-round operation without the dramatic seasonal income swings of crop farming. Dairy plant workers at Kraft Heinz and similar facilities have conventional manufacturing employment with verifiable W-2 income. For landlords screening dairy industry applicants, standard income verification applies: pay stubs from the processing plant, or for farm workers, documentation of wages and any employer-provided benefits that offset living costs. The distinction between farm workers in employer-provided on-farm housing (which has its own regulatory framework under agricultural worker housing rules) and farm workers seeking conventional rental housing in town is important — RPP Article 7 applies fully to the latter but the former may be subject to different regulations.
The Tug Hill Winter and Maintenance Imperatives
Annual snowfall on the Tug Hill Plateau regularly exceeds 200 inches — nearly 17 feet — and individual lake-effect events can produce several feet of snow in 24 to 48 hours. The communities of Montague and Barnes Corners in Lewis County consistently record some of the highest annual snowfall totals of any weather station in the eastern United States. A heating system that fails during a major Tug Hill snowstorm is a life-safety emergency, not a maintenance inconvenience. Pipes freeze, temperatures drop to dangerous levels rapidly, and the structural loads on roofs from accumulated snow can cause catastrophic failure if not managed.
For Lewis County landlords, annual pre-winter preparation is not optional. Furnace and boiler service before the first freeze, documented and retained, is the absolute minimum. Roof inspection after heavy snow events, gutters kept clear to prevent ice damming, and building envelope maintenance to prevent infiltration are all part of responsible winter property management on the Tug Hill. The warranty of habitability under RPP § 235-B requires landlords to maintain habitable conditions throughout the tenancy — which in Lewis County means maintaining the structural and mechanical systems that keep a building livable during some of the harshest winter conditions available anywhere in New York State.
Emergency contractor availability in Lewis County during major winter events is severely limited. The same storms that stress heating systems also make roads impassable and contractors unavailable for extended periods. A landlord who calls a heating contractor during a Tug Hill blizzard may be told that the earliest available appointment is days away — which is not an acceptable timeline when a tenant’s heat has failed. Preventive maintenance and established contractor relationships are the only reliable strategy. Know your emergency options before winter begins, not during a crisis.
Lowville’s Conventional Market and Good Cause
Lowville, Lewis County’s only incorporated village of significant size, is a community of roughly 3,400 people that functions as the county’s commercial, governmental, and healthcare hub. Lewis County General Hospital is the county’s anchor healthcare institution and its most stable large employer. County government employment, the school district, and local businesses fill out the employment base. The rental market in Lowville is small but conventional — working families, healthcare workers, county employees, and agricultural sector workers seeking housing near the county’s commercial center. Rents are very affordable by any New York State standard.
The Good Cause Eviction Law applies to covered buildings throughout Lewis County. Given the county’s small-building rental stock — virtually all residential development in Lewis County consists of small houses, modest apartment conversions, and owner-occupied two-family structures — the owner-occupancy exemption for buildings with fewer than four units where the owner genuinely resides may apply to the vast majority of Lewis County’s rental inventory. For the small number of covered buildings in the county, Good Cause requires a stated reason for every non-renewal and treats rent increases above the lower of 10% or 5% plus CPI as presumptively unreasonable. In a county where rents are already among the lowest in the state and have not experienced significant appreciation pressure, the Good Cause threshold is unlikely to be triggered frequently — but the procedural requirements apply regardless.
The practical lesson of landlording in Lewis County is one that applies throughout the smallest and most rural New York counties: the legal framework is identical to what applies in New York City, but the operational context is entirely different. A county of 26,000 people with a thin rental market, extreme winters, and limited contractor infrastructure demands a different set of operational priorities than a large urban market. Maintenance comes first. Tenant retention is critical. The warranty of habitability is not just a legal obligation — in Lewis County’s winter climate, it is a practical commitment to human welfare that shapes every landlord decision from October through April.
This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Lewis County landlord-tenant matters are governed by New York Real Property Law Article 7 (RPP §§ 220–238-A) and the Good Cause Eviction Law. For active-duty military tenants, the federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) applies additionally. Security deposit cap: 1 month’s rent. Application fee cap: $20. Late fee cap: lesser of $50 or 5% monthly rent; 5-day grace period. Notice requirements: 30/60/90 days based on tenancy length. Consult a licensed New York attorney before taking any action. Last updated: March 2026.
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