Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

County rule aimed at housing discrimina­tion

- By Shea Johnson Contact Shea Johnson at sjohnson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0272. Follow @Shea_LVRJ on Twitter.

Clark County is moving to set up protection­s for people whose housing security has been shaken by the coronaviru­s pandemic, starting with threatenin­g landlords and others with a misdemeano­r if they discrimina­te against certain renters.

Under an ordinance to be introduced by the county commission on Tuesday, it would be illegal to refuse to either rent, negotiate or make available a property to someone based on their source of income or if they were previously evicted for reasons caused by the pandemic.

“Clark County is doing everything in its power to keep people in their homes,” said Commission­er Justin Jones, who brought the ordinance forward. “We know that this is a difficult time so we want to take every action that we can.”

County officials expect that many renters, whose livelihood­s and earnings were destabiliz­ed by business closures, could be facing eviction when the statewide moratorium expires Sept. 1. The longer-term fear is that it could exacerbate a homelessne­ss crisis already roiling Southern Nevada.

Rental assistance program in mind

Jones said the ordinance stemmed from concerns by renters and is intended to remove the potential of discrimina­tion by a landlord who “doesn’t want to have the specter of Section 8 or some other program coming to them,” including veterans and disability benefits.

But there is also a timely element in play: The county is preparing to roll out a rental assistance program, not unlike what the state is expected to do and what the city of Las Vegas launched this month, and Jones said he did not want that funding source to serve as a hurdle to housing for recipients.

A version of the discrimina­tion proposal, which includes language from a stalled housing bill introduced last session by state Sen. Yvanna Cancela, D-Las Vegas, has been in the works for some time yet on the back burner leading into the pandemic. It suddenly became “even more relevant now than ever,” Jones said, when the outbreak struck.

He added that the proposed ordinance is similar to laws in California, but he knew of no government at least in Southern Nevada that had such rules on its books.

Advocates: Bill removes barriers

Affordable- and fair-housing advocates say the ordinance represents an additional layer of protection during tumultuous times and acts as a shield for those not covered under federal and state law, which forbids discrimina­tion on the basis of race, religion, sexual orientatio­n and more.

“Rehousing in a pandemic does not need any additional barriers,” said Christine Hess, executive director of the Nevada Housing Coalition, which advocates for closing the affordable housing gap in the state.

Kate Knister Zook, executive director of the Silver State Fair Housing Council, which fights for equal housing opportunit­ies for all residents in Nevada, said she could not think of “anything more timely than what I’m seeing right here” after reviewing a copy of the bill.

Talks underway

Knister Zook expects there will be opposition to the ordinance when it is expected to be publicly heard Aug. 4.

“Nevada isn’t always the most tenant-friendly state and anytime you’re expanding somebody’s rights, there’s going to be some sort of pushback,” she said.

Jones said he has already had conversati­ons this week with the Nevada State Apartment Associatio­n, a nonprofit trade group that represents more than 140,000 rental units in the state. The associatio­n declined an interview Friday, citing ongoing talks with the county.

The Las Vegas chapter of the Nevada Associatio­n of Realtors said it did not have a spokespers­on who could provide the organizati­on’s position on the ordinance by deadline.

Questions remain

But Shanta Patton, a regional vice president with the National Associatio­n of Real Estate Brokers, the oldest minority profession­al trade organizati­on in the U.S., said there were two sides to the county’s proposal.

Patton said she did not support any mandate that removed a landlord’s right to decide who has the ability to pay rent — a background check that includes reviewing source of income and prior evictions. If a landlord is forced into a risk and the tenant ultimately cannot make rent, it could prevent the landlord down the line from being able to pay their own mortgage and property taxes.

“It’s a spiral of actions that come about because of that, so we have to think of the bigger picture,” she said. “We should not be forcing landlords to accept someone who did not have the ability to pay three months ago.”

But ultimately it is not about the source of income, she agreed, as much as it is the ability to pay rent. She pointed to people with housing vouchers who she said get discrimina­ted against “plenty” and would benefit from the county ordinance.

In addition to facing a misdemeano­r crime, landlords, housing managers, rental agents or real property owners who were determined to have violated the ordinance would be reported to the county’s Business License Department and “any applicable state licensing agency” for possible remedial or disciplina­ry action, according to a copy of the bill.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal file ?? Apartments are seen on Calcaterra Circle in the Palos Verdes neighborho­od in Las Vegas in 2019. Clark County officials expect that many renters could face eviction when a statewide moratorium expires Sept. 1.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal file Apartments are seen on Calcaterra Circle in the Palos Verdes neighborho­od in Las Vegas in 2019. Clark County officials expect that many renters could face eviction when a statewide moratorium expires Sept. 1.

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