Marin Independent Journal

Law puts corporate home-buyers at back of line

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> Tenants, affordable housing groups and local government­s will get first crack at buying foreclosed homes under a measure approved Monday by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The bill is designed to keep corporatio­ns from snapping up homes and letting some fall into disrepair as they did during the Great Recession. The issue drew national attention a year ago when several homeless mothers calling themselves Moms 4 Housing moved into a vacant, corporate- owned house in West Oakland.

It was among 15 bills Newsom signed into law as renters and home-buyers again struggle during mass layoffs prompted by the pandemic. The governor said the measures “will directly lead to more affordable opportunit­ies for renters and homeowners.”

The law bars sellers of foreclosed homes from bundling them at auction for sale to a single buyer. In addition, it will allow tenants, families, local government­s, affordable housing nonprofits and community land trusts 45 days to beat the best auction bid to buy the property.

Owners of poorly maintained properties can be fined as much as $2,000 a day under the bill.

Democratic Sen. Nancy Skinner of Berkeley said her measure gives people who want to live in a house a fair shot at buying it. She said themeasure that takes effect Jan. 1 sends the message that “California homes are not yours to gobble up; we won’t tolerate another corporate takeover of housing.”

Newsom also signed bills increasing subsidies for dense, affordable housing projects; allowing school districts to use low- income housing tax credits to build affordable housing for teachers and school employees on district- owned land; and exempting bicycle, pedestrian, light rail and bus rapid transit projects from California’s strict environmen­tal reviews.

Another bill expands a law that allows crime victims to break their leases without penalty.

The law had applied only to victims of domestic violence, stalking, elder abuse or human traffickin­g. The expansion adds crimes that result in injury or death and bars landlords from refusing to rent to tenants who have taken advantage of the law. He also approved a separate bill allowing victims of violent crime and immediate familymemb­ers of homicide victims to take unpaid leave from work.

He vetoed two bills, one that would have created an Office to End Homelessne­ss within his administra­tion and the other that would have created a right to safe, decent and affordable housing.

Newsom said he already has made housing and homelessne­ss a priority, and the “laudable goal” of making housing a right could have cost more than $10 billion a year.

The bill is SB1079

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