One by one, Valentina Gonzalez is popping the water bubbles spreading through her Randall avenue apartment. She peels back the paint to show NY1 the layers of mold caused by a foul smelling yellow liquid. Gonzalez says it’s dripping down her ceiling for nearly a month.

"The smell is so horrible. It smells like a dead person, like something rotten inside the walls. I have to constantly keep cleaning with Clorox and disinfectant. I have an asthmatic son," she said.

Gonzalez lives in the Throggs Neck Houses.

Like many other city housing authority buildings the repair list here keeps growing.

Earlier this week, Bronx Borough president Ruben Diaz Jr attacked NYCHA for what he calls a mountain of trash piling up at another Bronx complex. After sharing pictures of it on social media he came up with a new shame campaign.

He’s urging people to post pictures and video of the leaks, rodents and other horrid conditions in public housing using the hashtag #CleanUpNYCHA.

"Post it and we will stay on top of it. If it takes this public shaming in order to get results then so be it. It certainly worked for the people of Sonia Sotomayor Houses," Diaz Jr. said.

A NYCHA spokesperson tells NY1 they’re "focused on solutions – not hashtags. The most efficient way for NYCHA to address resident concerns is by contacting NYCHA directly."

Gonzalez says she been submitting complaint tickets, but still not getting the help she needs.

"They always tell me 24 hours and nobody has been here. That’s why I had to call you again," she noted.

This was NY1's second visit to her home. Back in September part of her kitchen was moved to her living while crews worked on her apartment. She says if NYCHA needs more proof that the complaint line doesn’t cut it they just need to read the writing on her moldy walls.

Gonzalez is hoping to be transferred out of her apartment soon. The NYCHA spokesperson tells NY1 they will be taking a look at her case to see what can be done.