


The New York City Housing Authority booted the politically powerful president of a Bronx tenants council for abusing her power by treating staffers as personal helpers, The Post has learned.
Throggs Neck Tenant Association honcho Monique Johnson is accused of a variety of conduct violations, including wearing a “revealing pink nightgown the entire time” a NYCHA employee cleaned her apartment in a termination letter sent to Johnson by NYCHA’s interim vice president and general counsel David Rohde in May.
Aside from peek-a-boo cleaning, the letter also said Johnson directed NYCHA workers to rearrange items in her cabinets, remove her trash, pick up and deliver food, style her hair, fluff her wigs, and carry shopping items to her apartment.
“NYCHA is notifying you that these Code of Conduct violations are unacceptable, constitute grounds for removal from Office, and further, it has determined that you are, in fact, no longer eligible to serve as President of the Throggs Neck Tenant Association,” added Rohde.
Johnson quietly resigned soon after, a source familiar with the probe said Tuesday.
The city Department of Investigation has conducted several probes of Monique Johnson going back to 2013 — and again 2019. But Johnson survived — until now.
The former Bronx tenant leader claimed she had not received the NYCHA letter when contacted by The Post.
“Have a good day, sir,” Johnson said before hanging up.

An NYCHA spokesman had nothing to add, saying, “The letter speaks for itself.”
NYCHA serves 360,970 residents in 177,569 apartments across 335 conventional public housing developments.