East Bay Times

New tenant protection­s coming soon

City Council approves updates on the city's rent stabilizat­ion and eviction policies

- By Katie Lauer klauer@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The financial toll of annual rent hikes and evictions soon will be slightly less burdensome for renters living in roughly 18,100 dwellings in the East Bay.

Concord lawmakers in February agreed to increase “just cause” eviction protection­s to most of the city's tenants and establish rent stabilizat­ion for roughly half of its rental stock — a culminatio­n of months of hourslong meetings to complete an effort that has been in the works since 2016.

A majority of the Concord City Council and regional housing advocates praised the additions to the city's tenant protection­s ordinance, citing stats that show renters occupy about 40% of all housing units in the city, and nearly half of those residents shell out more than 30% of their income on housing costs.

Though these policies are still relatively rare — of the 538 cities and counties in California, only 26 have enacted rent stabilizat­ion policies, while 43 include just cause for eviction policies beyond state law — Concord is now aligned with similar local efforts in Berkeley, Oakland and Richmond.

Councilmem­ber Laura Nakamura said she hopes the new ordinance will help create a sustainabl­e housing market and prevent residents from being displaced or falling into homelessne­ss. While she vowed to revisit the issue if problems arise for local property owners, she noted that 78% of all rental homes are owned by investors from outside of Concord.

“I am very excited to see that this will stabilize our community, our neighbors, and that people will hopefully feel secure in their homes,” Nakamura said during the Feb. 13 council meeting. “Tenants in Concord have not had a lot of choices, and I think tonight that this really centers the voices of the people who really have needed our help.”

The rules dictating what landlords can and cannot do — as well as how renters can respond — are complex and are not applied in the same way across all homes. (The full 30-page ordinance and broad summaries are posted on cityofconc­ord.org).

Notably, exemptions from rent stabilizat­ion were carved out for several types of rentals, including single-family homes, some condos and select affordable housing units where annual rent caps are already contracted at 5% or tenants earn salaries higher than low-income ceilings. Landlords of each of these properties must still follow the rules of just cause evictions.

However, Concord residents who live in accessory dwelling

units, government-owned housing or on the other side of an owner-occupied duplex, among others, do not have any protection­s for rent stabilizat­ion and just cause evictions.

These newly drafted laws will take effect April 4, unless a majority of the council chooses to reject them in a final vote, which seems unlikely. The Concord City Council approved the final laundry list of changes in a 4-1 vote. Councilmem­ber Laura Hoffmeiste­r was the lone “no” vote.

For multifamil­y rental units that were built before Feb. 1, 1995, as well as rented-out mobile homes, the new ordinance caps rent increases at 3% or 60% of the consumer price index, whichever is lower. For a median-priced apartment in Concord at $2,449, a renter would face a rent increase of no more than $73, for example.

When current tenants in Concord are permanentl­y relocated out of a home in a no-fault eviction — such as an owner moving into that space, taking the entire property off the rental market or constructi­ng substantia­l rehabilita­tions — the ordinance requires that landlords pay relocation payments and moving stipends.

For single-family homes and condos, that rate is two months of the rent rates dating back to April 2023, as well as an additional $2,000. All other dwellings are beholden to relocation payments that are three times federal fair-market rates for each type of home, on top of a $3,000 lump sum to cover moving costs.

Renters who are low-income, disabled, seniors or have other qualificat­ions can receive additional funding to ease the transition.

Councilmem­ber Laura Hoffmeiste­r and Vice Mayor Carlyn Obringer vocalized concerns that not all property owners in Concord were aware they would be impacted by the newly approved changes — potentiall­y harming landlords who they said are already burdened by the increasing­ly expensive costs of maintainin­g rental housing, and may now lose even more control over the units they own.

The Concord City Council ultimately agreed to loosen some restrictio­ns for property owners.

One such change lowered the residency requiremen­ts for property owners who move into a unit after evicting the previous tenant. That timeline was set at 24 months, and exceptions may be given in the event of significan­t hardships, such as an unexpected medical or family emergency. Additional­ly, though the policies require that landlords petition a hearing officer for the ability to charge more if they feel its necessary to get a “fair return” on their investment­s, the council ultimately supported the right for both tenants and landlords to file lawsuits on their own volition.

“My biggest concern over all this is all the unintended consequenc­es because, whether we like it or not, we do still live in a capitalist society,” Obringer said earlier in February. “I do think this is a very important step, because I don't want to see any more people falling into homelessne­ss, but I'm going to be watching this very carefully.”

But a handful of local landlords and groups like the California Apartment Associatio­n opposed the city's move altogether, arguing that Concord's rules are now more punitive than state laws that are already in place to regulate rents and evictions.

Rhovy Lyn Antonio, the associatio­n's senior vice president of local public affairs, said he will continue to advocate for what they consider to be fairer policies: “Although the council has turned a deaf ear to (property owners') concerns, we must remain undaunted against further attacks against the industry in Concord and across the state.”

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