Imperial Valley Press

As housing prices surge, rent

Control is back on the ballot

- BY JANIE HAR AND MICHAEL CASEY

SAN FRANCISCO – Liberty McCoy was out Saturday urging voters to pass a Nov. 8 ballot measure to limit rent increases in Pasadena because she’s afraid she’ll be priced out of the city where she grew up and where her aging parents live.

The librarian and her husband, a freelance consultant, received notice of a $100 monthly rent increase last year and another for $150 this year, bringing the rent on their home outside Los Angeles to $2,350 a month. They can absorb the increases for now – but not forever.

“A lot of times people are like, ‘ Well, just try and pick up and move to someplace cheaper,’” the 44-year-old said. “But I have a job locally, my family, my friends. It would be a big challenge to uproot my entire life chasing cheaper rent.”

With rental prices skyrocketi­ng and affordable housing in short supply, inflation-weary tenants in cities and counties across the country are turning to the ballot box for relief. Supporters say rent control policies on the Nov. 8 ballot are the best shortterm option to dampen rising rents and ensure vulnerable residents remain housed.

Opponents, led by the real-estate industry, say rent control will lead to higher prices for tenants in housing not covered by rent caps, harm momand-pop landlords relying on rental income for retirement, and discourage the constructi­on of badly needed affordable housing. They have spent heavily to stop ballot initiative­s, even going to court to halt them.

In Orange County, Florida, home to Disney World and other theme parks, voters will consider a ballot initiative to limit rent increases to the annual increase in the consumer price index. But a court ruling last week means that even if it passes, it could be nullified.

Proponents in Orlando and other Orange County cities point to a population that has increased 25% since 2010 and rents that jumped 25% between 2020 and 2021 – and experience­d another double-digit increase this year. The housing shortage was magnified by Hurricane Ian, with an estimated 1,140 rental properties suffering $44.5 million in damage.

“I’ve had a lot of constituen­ts reach out to me, and they are fearful of becoming homeless. They don’t know what to do,” said Orange County Commission­er Emily Bonilla, who authored the ballot initiative ordinance after hearing from tenants facing rent increases upwards of 100%.

Last year, voters in St. Paul, Minnesota, passed a ballot measure capping rents at 3% a year while residents across the river in Minneapoli­s backed a measure allowing the city council to enact a rent control ordinance.

This summer, Kingston, New York, became the first upstate city to enact rent control. The measure means around 1,200 units – buildings built before 1974 with six or more units – must limit rents to a percentage set by a rent guidelines board.

Boston’s Mayor Michelle Wu was elected last year and made bringing back rent control to the city part of her campaign. The biggest hurdle to that proposal is that Massachuse­tts voters narrowly approved a 1994 ballot question banning rent control statewide.

“Rent stabilizat­ion can provide protection­s for everyone, but do so in a way that really targets benefits to low-income renters, renters of color, renters who are most desperatel­y impacted by housing instabilit­y,” said Tram Hoang, a housing policy expert who was involved in the St. Paul campaign.

The fight over rent control has been most intense out West, where in 2019, lawmakers in California and Oregon approved statewide caps on annual rent increases. California’s annual cap cannot exceed 10% and Oregon’s is set at 7%, plus the consumer price index.

Both laws exempt new constructi­on for 15 years, a compromise to encourage developers to keep building, and apply only to certain units.

But that hasn’t quelled tenant activism in California, where nearly half the state’s 40 million residents are renters. Advocates say the statewide law – which expires in 2030 – does not go far enough.

Voters in the San Francisco suburb of Richmond and Southern California beachside city of Santa Monica will consider measures to further tighten existing rent caps to a maximum of 3%.

In the city of Pasadena – home to the annual Rose Parade and Rose Bowl college football game – voters will consider a measure to create a rent oversight board and limit rent increases to 75% of the consumer price index, which supporters say translates to 2% to 3% a year.

Rent stabilizat­ion advocates failed to collect

enough signatures to qualify for the 2018 ballot, and they thought it would be hard this time around because the state had enacted protection­s. But campaign field director Bee Rooney said tenants financiall­y wrecked by the pandemic were eager to back the initiative.

“Any amount when you’re not expecting it is a lot,” Rooney said. “Some people, their rent doubled or went up by 50%.”

Pasadena retiree Paulette Brown received the state-allowed increase of 10% in July, bringing the rent on her two-bedroom apartment to $ 1,175 a month. Budgeting will be tighter.

“I really can’t afford any mishaps, because I’m not able to save anything,” said the 64-year-old Brown, who lives with her daughter and grandson.

 ?? AP PHOTO/DAMIAN DOVARGANES ?? Yes on Measure H! volunteer Ed Washatka canvases the neighborho­od in Pasadena, Calif., on Saturday.
AP PHOTO/DAMIAN DOVARGANES Yes on Measure H! volunteer Ed Washatka canvases the neighborho­od in Pasadena, Calif., on Saturday.

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