Boston Herald

Ban on rent control up for debate today

- By erin Tiernan

Lawmakers considerin­g peeling back a statewide ban on rent control are slated to hear from supporters pressing for action on the “urgently needed tenant protection­s” and opponents who say any kind of rent stabilizat­ion will slash real estate tax collection­s and cut into housing production goals.

“There has been rent control in Massachuse­tts at multiple points in history. They had it in the 1920s, in ’40s-’50s and again in the ’70s and beyond. There is no reason to conclude that we can’t simultaneo­usly have housing production and tenant protection­s,” state Rep. Mike Connolly said.

The Cambridge Democrat is a lead sponsor on one of two rent control bills before the Legislatur­e’s Joint Committee on Housing today. Connolly’s Tenant Protection Act would lift the statewide ban on rent control — or rent stabilizat­ion as the bill describes it — and give municipali­ties local control and the ability to address rent caps in ways that meet the unique needs of their communitie­s.

A second bill proposes tying rent caps to the Consumer

Price Index or up to 5%. The practice of rent control was banned in Massachuse­tts following a tight statewide referendum in the 1990s.

“Twenty-seven years after real estate giants organized to ban rent control ordinances in the Commonweal­th, rents in many parts of the state have spiraled far out of reach for working families and especially for people of color. Communitie­s in Massachuse­tts are facing displaceme­nt due to pre-pandemic forces, and the housing crisis has only been exacerbate­d by COVID-19 and unemployme­nt,” Homes For All Massachuse­tts said in a press release.

The coalition of housing advocacy groups will host a Zoom rally at 10:30 a.m. ahead of today’s hearing where tenants and landlords convene in support of rent control.

More than 25,000 eviction notices were filed with the Massachuse­tts Housing court since the pandemic started and the coalition says the numbers of no-fault evictions have been rapidly rising since the start of 2021.

But a study commission­ed by the Greater Boston Real Estate Board and the National Apartment Associatio­n, which represent landlords’ interests, shows rent control could “drasticall­y reduce” the supply of apartments, property values and tax revenue in Boston and throughout Massachuse­tts.

 ?? BOSTOn HERAlD FIlE ?? STILL A HOT TOPIC: Demonstrat­ors attend a rent control rally on the State House steps on Jan. 14, 2020, in Boston.
BOSTOn HERAlD FIlE STILL A HOT TOPIC: Demonstrat­ors attend a rent control rally on the State House steps on Jan. 14, 2020, in Boston.

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