"This is one part right here, this living room that fell down," New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) tenant Daniel Jeter said, pointing to a patched-up part of a ceiling.

Two days after a ceiling collapse inside his apartment at the Weeksville houses, Daniel Jeter said NYCHA put his family in a dangerous situation.

"Nobody should be in here," Jeter said, standing in the apartment. "These guys are professionals — they shouldn't even be in here. This apartment is about to fall down." 

Workers spent Tuesday evening clearing out debris and making repairs. Early Sunday morning, the ceiling caved in on Jeter's son and two friends, leaving his bedroom unrecognizable and debris all over them.

"It hit him in the face, busted his lip," Jeter's wife Tricia said. "When the whole thing came down, it was all over their bodies."

Tricia said a water leak caused a partial collapse in their home last year. When the ceiling started leaking again, she said she complained to NYCHA but nothing was done until her son was injured.

"I was like, 'You can't be serious, this is 2017 all over again,'" she said, fighting back tears.

The family has been relocated to emergency housing, bringing their pets and just what they could fit into a cab.

Mayor Bill de Blasio said Tuesday that the family's case will be reviewed to see what went wrong.

"This was a crisis situation, obviously, and we need to know more to understand why it happened to begin with," the mayor said. "But I don't like the way it was handled."

That will include asking why the family has been placed in an empty apartment that didn't have furniture until the mayor vowed action. Now, they've been given mattresses. But while that investigation plays out, Tricia Jeter said it will be a while before she feels safe inside her own home again.

"It's kind of traumatizing to me. Still is," she said. "I wake up and look around to make sure the ceiling is safe."

Bags stacked on the sidewalk are filled with debris from the apartment. Jeter is especially outraged about the health risks, because several members of the family suffer from asthma and have had to make several hospital visits since the ceiling collapse.

City officials said Tuesday night that they will fully furnish the emergency housing unit where the family is staying and provide the Jeters a new home.