Las Vegas Review-Journal

County Commission takes measures to protect renters

- By Shea Johnson Las Vegas Review-journal

The Clark County Commission passed a bill Tuesday that makes it illegal to discrimina­te against certain renters, upping protection­s for vulnerable tenants amid rising fears that a surge of evictions could be looming across the state.

By unanimous vote, county lawmakers approved an emergency ordinance that outlaws refusing to rent to someone based on a person’s “lawful, verifiable” source of income or housing assistance, or a prior pandemic-related eviction that occurred because they lost a job or saw their income take a hit.

The county joins more than 80 cities and counties in 17 other states that have adopted a similar policy, but its reasons are hyperlocal: It does not want struggling renters participat­ing in a $30 million county rental assistance program to face housing hurdles and it is also trying to set up protection­s for others in advance of the expiration of a statewide freeze on evictions Sept. 1.

“If we allow for discrimina­tion against those with county housing assistance or other housing choice vouchers, people already in dire circumstan­ces will be denied the opportunit­y to find stable housing or they may end up homeless,” said Commission­er Justin Jones, who introduced the ordinance.

The bill was met by pushback from some trade associatio­ns, whom Jones had been engaging in discussion­s, although the groups said they understood the intent of the ordinance and the situation from which it evolved.

“We recognize the gravity of the COVID-19 pandemic and it’s a stress on not only tenants but property owners as well,” said Joe Locatelli, a lobbyist for Las Vegas Realtors.

Locatelli had sought an assurance that the bill would sunset when Gov. Steve Sisolak’s statewide emergency declaratio­n ended, an exemption for single-family homes, and removing property managers from facing penalties since he believed the onus should lie on property owners.

Between the ordinance’s introducti­on last month and its adoption Tuesday, the county added an exemption for single-unit property owners — which includes Jones — but it did not remove housing managers from its list of individual­s who could be determined to violate the policy.

The ordinance, which went into effect immediatel­y, is set to expire Dec. 31, but that timeline could be amended by county lawmakers.

As many as 142,000 Nevadan households could struggle to pay rent by September, according to a report last month from the Guinn Center, a nonprofit and bipartisan research and policy analysis center.

The grim findings equates to 327,000 tenants, or more than 25 percent of the state’s renting population, the report said. Individual­s with low income, people of color and undocument­ed renters are particular­ly at risk.

With the start of virtual school around the corner and the eviction moratorium expiration nearing, “it’s panic mode for many,” according to Commission Chairwoman Marilyn Kirkpatric­k.

Kirkpatric­k also wondered aloud if any extra federal dollars from the county’s business assistance programs might be kicked to property owners struggling to pay mortgages. And Commission­er Lawrence Weekly noted that he routinely fields phone calls from such owners having a hard time meeting financial obligation­s and who also do not wish to put out anyone on the street.

“This ordinance is not requiring that people rent to folks who are unable to pay their rent. It is to those who come with a voucher, or other source of income, and are able to pay,” Jones said. “So it ought to be a benefit to the property owners to have that assurance that they’re going to get paid.”

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

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Commission­er Justin Jones said the approved ordinance will assure property owners “that they’re going to get paid.”
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal Commission­er Justin Jones said the approved ordinance will assure property owners “that they’re going to get paid.”

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