The Signal

Council ends local ban on evictions

City officials note that county move is likely to protect SCV residents

- By Tammy Murga Signal Staff Writer

A prohibitio­n on residentia­l and commercial evictions in Santa Clarita as the effects of the COVID-19 crisis unraveled came without hesitation for City Council members, but as the economy has reopened, they found themselves Tuesday making a difficult decision.

Pulled from the consent calendar for a separate vote as suggested by Councilman Bob Kellar, the council had to decide whether to extend the city’s temporary ban on evictions of tenants arising from the financial impacts of the pandemic and rent payback provisions through Sept. 30, after its initial

adoption on March 31.

They voted 3-2 against extending the city’s ban, with council members Laurene Weste, Bob Kellar and Bill Miranda casting “no” votes, ultimately allowing the moratorium ordinance to expire Aug. 31. This means that, while Santa Clarita’s eviction order expires Monday, renters would still remain protected under Los Angeles County’s rule, which expires Sept. 30, and may be extended by the Board of Supervisor­s on a month-to-month basis.

“I would be glad to assist here with voting one more time for an extension but at some point, you’ve got to say to yourself, ‘How long could you do this?’” said Weste. “You just keep telling people not to pay their bills. I mean, this city can’t survive that way; the county can’t survive that way. It has an unintended consequenc­e, and we need to look at all of those consequenc­es.”

Councilwom­an Marsha McLean said that while she agreed that the bans would have to halt at some point, extending the order would mean the city could continue with its own payback provisions — nine months for deferred rent — rather than the county’s 12-month period.

Aside frm the potential countywide moratorium, which would apply whether a local eviction order exists, there’s also a court order in effect prohibitin­g the commenceme­nt of new eviction cases, according to City Attorney Joseph Montes. He said pending legislatio­n in Sacramento, such as Assembly Bill 1436, would provide eviction protection and rent deferral on a uniform statewide basis.

Mayor Cameron Smyth said he supported the extension, as some state and county developmen­ts are expected to occur next month.

“I would certainly support extending this through one more time and then let some of the actions from the state and then the county and others to provide us a little more clarity,” he said.

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