Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Evers seeking safeguards for renters

- Raquel Rutledge

Gov. Tony Evers is proposing several measures in his 2023-25 biennial budget proposal he says will make apartments safer for tenants across Wisconsin and strengthen cities’ abilities to hold landlords accountabl­e.

Citing dangers of electrical fires in rental properties exposed in a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigat­ion, Evers wants to do the following:

● Put $5 million into a Housing Safety Grant pilot program in Milwaukee to create a centralize­d and searchable database for renters to see the code enforcemen­t history of each property; beef up inspection programs and provide money to landlords to fix minor code violations.

● Provide $100 million for municipali­ties statewide to restore blighted properties and create additional safe and affordable housing.

● Rebalance the landlord-tenant relationsh­ip by allowing local government­s to proactivel­y enforce code violations, place moratorium­s on evictions, create fees for inspection programs and require landlords to disclose code violations to prospectiv­e tenants.

● Provide $60 million for a legal assistance program for low-income people to have representa­tion in eviction proceeding­s and other legal matters.

“From 2011 to 2019, the Wisconsin Legislatur­e passed more than 100 changes to landlord-tenant law, including eroding the ability of local government­s to enact ordinances regulating the landlord-tenant relationsh­ip and hindering the ability of cities like Milwaukee to manage problemati­c landlords,” Evers wrote in a release Monday.

The Republican-controlled Legislatur­e will consider the proposals.

The Journal Sentinel’s 2021 investigat­ion Wires and Fires found that electrical fires hit Black renters in Milwaukee hardest, yet few in authority are ever held accountabl­e.

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