Los Angeles Times

Putting a burden on landlords

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Re “L.A. County OKs measure to restrict rent increases,” Sept. 12

If the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s feels that certain people should receive subsidies to make up the difference between what they can afford for rent and the current market rate, then it should propose funding such subsidies from the county budget.

It seems unfair that the burden of providing affordable housing should fall solely on the shoulders of the landlords by temporaril­y limiting annual rent increases to 3%. Certainly they alone are not responsibl­e for the increasing population in the region that drives the market rates upward. Kirk Norenberg

Redondo Beach

The decision by the L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s to implement an interim cap on rent hikes is a laudable first step in the right direction, but if we’re serious about combating the problem of homelessne­ss in Los Angeles, our city officials must be willing to stand up to landlords and developers and enact sweeping reforms to broaden and strengthen the rent control laws in this city.

Every rental property, including condominiu­ms and single-family homes (many of which are now owned by private investment firms), should be subject to reasonable caps on rent increases regardless of when they were built, as well as laws that make it harder to evict longtime tenants.

California voters must also do their part by supporting the state ballot measure this November that would repeal the ineffectua­l Costa-Hawkins Act and empower our officials to implement effective new rent control laws. Stephen Bulka Los Angeles

I own no rental property, and if I were seeking to become a tenant, I would surely feel the pain of the current rental rates. Still, I am appalled at the Board of Supervisor­s’ decision to target landlords who charge market-rate rents.

Tenants do not go to the grocery store, a game at Dodgers Stadium or a movie and protest “price gouging,” and yet these are all businesses in the same sense as rental property is. Landlords should not be forced to subsidize the obvious need of those in a housing bind.

Get it right, supervisor­s. Diane McDowell Los Angeles

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