News: CAA
Filter
The
Inglewood City Council this week adopted a long-term rent control policy that
caps annual increases at 3%.
The Housing Protection Initiative also creates a per-unit fee of up to $168, with 50% of the fee eligible for a pass-through.
Tagged: News Los Angeles
An urgency ordinance preventing termination of tenancies
without cause in Sacramento County failed to muster enough votes to pass.
The ordinance was intended to stop rental owners from ending
tenancies in order to avoid rolling back rents or being stuck with below market
rents once a new state law, Assembly Bill 1482, takes effect on Jan. 1, 2020.
Similar ordinances were recently passed in several jurisdictions throughout California, including Los Angeles and Milpitas.
The ordinance was proposed by Supervisor Phil Serna after several residents of Bell Oaks Apartments, with the support of tenant-advocacy organizations, demanded that the Board of Supervisors… Read More
The city of Fresno next week will begin
levying harsher penalties against landlords who chronically violate city codes
at their rental properties.
The steeper fines, which go into effect Nov. 11, are reserved for property owners with more than 10 citations in one year — a distinction that will earn them the label of “serial violator.”
The Sacramento County Board of Supervisors will consider an emergency “just cause” ordinance Tuesday, Nov. 5.
To pass, an urgency ordinance requires approval from four of the five board members. The ordinance would immediately impose just-cause restrictions similar to those in AB 1482, the statewide rent control and just-cause eviction law taking effect Jan. 1.
Tagged: News Sacramento Valley
The Inglewood City Council has decided to make its cap on rent increases even more draconian.
Despite opposition from the California Apartment Association, the council Tuesday voted unanimously to lower the city’s annual cap on rent increases to 3% — two percentage points lower than the 5% interim rent cap adopted earlier this year.
The rent control ordinance green-lighted this week, dubbed the Housing Protection Initiative, is scheduled to sunset in five years.
The City Council still must formalize approval of the ordinance with a second reading expected in 30 days.
Several more cities this week approved stopgap ordinances to begin enforcing elements of Assembly Bill 1482 before the statewide rent control and “just cause” eviction law takes effect Jan. 1.
On Monday, the municipalities of Redwood City and Daly City, both in the San Francisco Bay Area, approved measures that prohibit no-cause evictions on housing that will be covered by AB 1482, the newly approved statewide rent-cap legislation. In Southern California, the city of Bell Gardens also approved a stopgap measure Monday.
On Tuesday, the city of Santa Cruz on the Central Coast adopted an urgency just-cause measure during a special council meeting. While this ordinance mirrors the just cause… Read More
High winds and resulting fires and evacuations prompted the governor this past weekend to declare a statewide emergency, a move that’s triggered protections against price gouging, including rent increases over 10% anywhere in California.
The cap applies to both existing and prospective tenancies, meaning a landlord cannot raise the rent on a vacant unit beyond the 10% mark. Further, an owner cannot terminate at tenancy in order to charge a new renter more than the cap would allow for the evicted renter.
The rent-gouging protections apply to all housing types, including vacant units. The state of emergency is slated to… Read More
Tagged: ComplianceWildfires
The Mountain View City Council next
month is expected to move forward with a city-sponsored ballot measure aimed at
changing the local rent control law approved in 2016.
On Nov. 12, the council is expected to decide whether to place such a measure before city voters in the 2020 election.
Tagged: News Tri-County
The California Apartment Association has issued an “Industry Insight” paper to help rental housing owners comply with a Section 8-related ordinance that’s taken effect in the city of Alameda.
Effective Oct. 18, the city’s “Fair Housing and Tenant
Protection Ordinance” requires that landlords consider for tenancy all
applicants with the ability to pay for a given unit, including those who would
pay their rent using Section 8. The ordinance, approved by the Alameda City Council in
September, bans blanket policies against renting to voucher holders, as well as
advertisements to that effect. It also prohibits landlords from rejecting an
applicant… Read More
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday signed a bill that will make it illegal to reject a prospective tenant solely based on the applicant’s use of a Section 8 federal housing voucher.
Beginning Jan. 1, 2020, SB 329 by Sen. Holly Mitchell, D-Los Angeles, will ban blanket policies against taking Section 8 applicants and require landlords to treat voucher-holders like any other applicant. The law also will prohibit “No Section 8” advertisements.
Sen. Holly Mitchell
Throughout the legislative process, Mitchell
repeatedly stated that owners will retain the ability to reject voucher-holders
after giving them a fair vetting. The senator, however, refused… Read More
Tagged: LegislationNewsSection 8