Antelope Valley Press

Prop 21 would let cities expand rent control

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — California­ns will vote on whether to let cities expand rent control as the state grapples with soaring housing costs and a dire need for more home constructi­on.

Propositio­n 21 would allow cities to adopt rent control measures for properties more than 15 years old. People who own one or two single-family homes would be exempt from the measure.

The proposal comes after years of rising housing costs have pushed many young adults to move back in with their families to make ends meet. Supporters say the measure is a critical attempt to slow rent increases and prevent homelessne­ss. But critics say it will dampen sorely-needed new constructi­on.

“The housing shortage has accumulate­d, and it’s so extreme that desperate solutions are necessary. And rent control is a desperate solution,” said Dowell Myers, professor of policy, planning and demography at the University of Southern California.

Prop 21 is one of a dozen questions on the Nov. 3 ballot. Early voting starts Monday.

California voters overwhelmi­ngly rejected a more expansive rent control measure two years ago known as Propositio­n 10. Last year, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law a decade-long limit on rent increases to 5% a year plus inflation and barred landlords from evicting tenants without a reason.

Propositio­n 21 aims to reduce the impact of a more than two-decade-old state law that says new rent control policies don’t apply to properties built since 1995.

California is home to nearly 40 million people and for decades as its population expanded the state failed to build enough housing to meet demand. Meantime, US Census data shows the median gross rent for a two-bedroom unit jumped 25% in the four years through 2019.

Catherine Mendonça, 36, said rent on her one-bedroom apartment rose from $700 to $1,100 since she moved in eight years ago. The videograph­er and organizer with San Diego Tenants Union said she hopes Prop 21 paves the way for more rent control in her city so she can stay where she lives.

She said it’s a “terrible circumstan­ce” for landlords “to squeeze whatever they can out of renters” while employers aren’t providing workers with raises.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Supporters of a rent control initiative march in 2018 near the Capitol calling for more rent control in Sacramento. California­ns will vote on whether to let cities expand rent control as the state grapples with soaring housing costs and a dire need for more home constructi­on.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Supporters of a rent control initiative march in 2018 near the Capitol calling for more rent control in Sacramento. California­ns will vote on whether to let cities expand rent control as the state grapples with soaring housing costs and a dire need for more home constructi­on.

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