The Bakersfield Californian

Tenant advocates launch effort for Delano rent control initiative

- BY MELANIE NGUYEN AND JOHN COX mnguyen@bakersfiel­d.com jcox@bakersfiel­d.com

DELANO — Delano tenant advocates kicked off a petition drive Monday to pass a voter initiative limiting rent increases in the city and putting in place new protection­s for renters.

The Fair Rents Delano campaign, organized by an informal coalition dubbed the Rural Justice Alliance, aims to gather and file 3,000 signatures to qualify the initiative for the November ballot.

Delano would be the first city in Kern County to put rent control regulation­s before voters. Other cities in California that are considerin­g parallel initiative­s — and receiving similar legal guidance from Los Angeles-based nonprofit ACCE Institute — are Larkspur, Pittsburg, Redwood and San Pablo.

The event followed about eight months after the Delano City Council tabled a rent-control proposal so city officials could take a formal look at how municipal finances might be impacted by the plan. In the meantime, no such study has begun.

Petition text submitted to the city Monday morning states the new draft ordinance would limit rent increases to a rate that’s 60% of the annual change in the federal consumer price index. Rents would not be able to rise more than 3% per year, though exemptions would apply.

There would also be new restrictio­ns on landlords’ ability to evict renters, along with new prohibitio­ns on actions such as intimidati­on of tenants and bad-faith negotiatio­ns.

The paperwork says tenants make up 42% of households in Delano and that, according to an American Communitie­s Survey, almost half the city’s renters are “rent-burdened,” meaning they pay more than 30% of their income toward rent.

One speaker at Monday’s event, lifelong Delano resident Humberto Ortiz, said he recently had to move to Bakersfiel­d so that he could find an affordable rental for his family. This was after he sent two of his seven children

to live with relatives elsewhere because he could not provide for them.

“Inside I’m hurting. Inside I’m struggling, I’m looking for help. I’m looking for the city to help their people,” Ortiz said. He said his family has moved into a three-bedroom apartment, but that he still struggles to pay rent despite the extra hours he works at Amazon.

Gladys Flores, a Delano resident, said there are landlords who are taking advantage of their tenants by telling them they do not have to live in their respective homes if they cannot pay rent.

“This is not about politics. This is not about organizati­ons. This is just community coming together and saying, ‘Let’s do this right for our community,’” Flores said.

Arturo Rodriguez, communicat­ions director with Central Valley Empowermen­t Alliance, said the initiative targets corporate landowners, not momand-pop landlords.

Executive Director Mari Perez-Ruiz at Central Valley Empowermen­t Alliance said the initiative is meant to invite the community to decide on rent control because it is a human issue. She said the City Council has been passing the buck on rent control, and because of that, the community has built a level of distrust.

“It’s very disappoint­ing that we have to be here today,” Perez-Ruiz said, “We have no choice but to be here today and do the job that our leadership is not doing.”

None of the members of the Delano City Council attended the announceme­nt Monday morning.

Reached later in the day by phone, Councilman and Vice Mayor Salvador Solorio-Ruiz said the council hesitated to embrace rent control when it came up in the spring because of the proposal’s potential administra­tive costs.

The council wants to study the expenses involved and other considerat­ions, he said, but the exploratio­n process has been delayed because the municipali­ty is looking for a new city attorney.

“It’s all about, you know, if we’re able to do it, in my opinion,” he said, noting no other city in the Central Valley has implemente­d such an ordinance.

“If we’re going to do a policy, we need to do it right,” Solorio-Ruiz said. He added that he sees constructi­on of new housing, together with the creation of good jobs, as the ultimate solution.

Some who spoke Monday voiced frustratio­n with Solorio-Ruiz, who was endorsed by the California Democratic Renters Council but later said he did not campaign on rent control and ran for office to tackle the housing crisis. Rodriguez called his actions “disappoint­ing.”

Despite the support of some community members, Perez-Ruiz said she expects to face opposition for this initiative.

“We understand what is coming down the pipeline. We understand the opposition will be coming hard. The opposition, the developers, the California Apartment Associatio­n will be coming hard because, once again, Delano is making history. We’re going to pave the way. As Delano goes so will the Central Valley,” Perez-Ruiz said.

If the initiative is approved during the 2024 election, Rodriguez said, there will be further discussion­s with Delano residents on how to best implement rent control.

 ?? JOHN COX / THE CALIFORNIA­N ?? Labor organizer and Delano Guardians adviser Lupe Martinez speaks Monday morning in front of Delano City Hall. He is joined by tenant advocates gathered to mark the introducti­on of a rent control petition supporters hope to qualify for the November ballot.
JOHN COX / THE CALIFORNIA­N Labor organizer and Delano Guardians adviser Lupe Martinez speaks Monday morning in front of Delano City Hall. He is joined by tenant advocates gathered to mark the introducti­on of a rent control petition supporters hope to qualify for the November ballot.
 ?? JOHN COX / THE CALIFORNIA­N ?? Amazon employee Humberto Ortiz speaks Monday in front of Delano City Hall about his struggles to keep a roof over his seven children after rent on a fourbedroo­m apartment in the city recently rose to $2,400 per month. “We had to go to a motel,” Ortiz said. He ended up having to send two of his children to live with relatives elsewhere.
JOHN COX / THE CALIFORNIA­N Amazon employee Humberto Ortiz speaks Monday in front of Delano City Hall about his struggles to keep a roof over his seven children after rent on a fourbedroo­m apartment in the city recently rose to $2,400 per month. “We had to go to a motel,” Ortiz said. He ended up having to send two of his children to live with relatives elsewhere.

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