Los Angeles Times

City proposal would force landlord to sell building

Councilman says use of eminent domain is necessary to maintain 59 affordable units.

- By David Zahniser

Los Angeles leaders have relied on different strategies for slowing the growth in housing prices — limits on rent hikes in older buildings, new restrictio­ns on Airbnb and incentives for developers who build affordable housing.

Now, City Councilman Gil Cedillo has another idea for keeping rents low in his district: Force a landlord in Chinatown to sell its building to the city.

On Friday, Cedillo announced plans for having the Board of Public Works — the agency that oversees sidewalk repairs, street repaving and the constructi­on of bridges — use its power of eminent domain to acquire a 124-unit apartment building from landlord Thomas Botz.

Cedillo said the strategy is needed to keep 59 units of affordable housing inside the building, known as Hillside Villa, from switching over to market rate prices. A 30-year agreement to keep rents low between the property owners and city expired in 2018 — and attempts at reaching a new deal have fallen apart.

“We will use all of the resources of the city, both legal and fiscal, to protect these tenants,” he said. “The city is in crisis ... with respect to housing and affordabil­ity.”

Rents in 51 of Hillside Villa’s apartments are slated to go up an average of 50% in September, said Botz, whose company, 636 NHP LLC, owns the building. In at least one three-bedroom unit, the monthly rent is expected to go from $889 to about $2,500, he said.

Hillside Villa was originally built with the city’s help. In 1986, the city’s Community Redevelopm­ent Agency provided $5.45 million in loans to the developers, who, in turn, agreed to keep rents at affordable prices for 30 years, according to officials in Cedillo’s office.

Botz said he intends to fight any effort by the city to take his property. And he argued that Hillside Villa’s owners never would have agreed to provide the afford

able housing three decades ago if they knew the city would renege once the agreement expired.

“If the city goes and expropriat­es buildings from private developers like us — who have made their 30-year deal and kept their end of the deal — just to have the building taken away at the end, no private developer would build another unit of housing in cooperatio­n with the city of L.A. ever again,” he said.

Still, Cedillo’s proposal has drawn widespread support from renter rights groups, who have spent nearly a year pressing him to have the city acquire the building. They say eminent domain is the best way to keep households from being forced onto the street by skyrocketi­ng rents — and would be less expensive than building affordable housing from the ground up.

Jacob Woocher, an organizer with the Los Angeles Tenants Union, said he thinks Hillside Villa could be worth as much as much as $15 million, roughly $2 million more than the city was looking to spend to ensure that rents on the property stay low for another 10 years.

At a rally last week with Hillside Villa’s tenants, Woocher and other activists said city leaders have had no problem providing taxpayer help to wealthy private interests, such as developers of hotels in downtown L.A.

“I don’t want to hear about price tags. I don’t want to hear about how much it will cost,” said Damien Goodmon, executive director of Crenshaw Subway Coalition, a group focused on fighting displaceme­nt in South Los Angeles. “Because the cost of homelessne­ss for these tenants and the many others is far greater.”

Elected officials, both at City Hall and in other local agencies, have long used eminent domain powers to purchase private property for the constructi­on of schools, bridges, train stations, fire stations and other public facilities. But the city’s housing department has no such legal authority, said agency spokeswoma­n Sandra Mendoza.

Instead, Cedillo’s proposal calls for the Bureau of Engineerin­g, which operates within the city’s Public Works Department, to report back in 30 days with recommenda­tions for acquiring the Chinatown property — and possibly other residentia­l buildings that have expiring affordable housing agreements.

Elena Stern, spokeswoma­n for the Bureau of Engineerin­g, said her agency acquires property only for infrastruc­ture projects in the public right of way. Meanwhile, one lawyer who specialize­s in eminent domain law said he thinks Cedillo is “posturing” to look good in front of the tenant groups.

Under state law, the city officials would need to demonstrat­e that they have the legal authority to seize property for the purpose of preserving housing, said Christophe­r Sutton, an attorney based in Pasadena. Furthermor­e, Sutton said, the city cannot legally purchase the property unless it pays fair market value — a matter that could take years to resolve in court.

“I think the city has both a legal problem and an economic problem trying to carry this out,” he said.

Cedillo said he offered Botz a deal last year that would have called for the city to cancel the remaining debt on the property if the owners agreed to keep the lower rates for another decade. As part of the deal, the city also would have provided $7.3 million to cover the difference, the councilman’s aides said. The deal was never signed. Botz said he liked the proposal, but concluded that he would face another demand from tenants to extend the agreement within a few years.

Cedillo’s proposal, which was also signed by Councilman Marqueece HarrisDaws­on, now heads to the City Council’s Housing Committee, which Cedillo chairs.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? COUNCILMAN Gil Cedillo wants the city to buy a Chinatown apartment building using eminent domain, a move the owner says he will fight.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times COUNCILMAN Gil Cedillo wants the city to buy a Chinatown apartment building using eminent domain, a move the owner says he will fight.

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