Lodi News-Sentinel

San Diego has declared ‘housing as a human right’

- Phillip Molnar

San Diego City Council voted unanimousl­y Tuesday to declare housing as a human right, a rare move for a city with a lot of housing issues.

San Diego’s resolution states housing is a “fundamenta­l human right and reaffirms its commitment to providing more housing and services geared toward putting a roof over the head of every San Diegan.” Madison, Wisc., made a similar declaratio­n in 2011 — making it likely San Diego is only the second, or at least part of a small minority of American cities, to put into writing that housing is a right.

The council had voted in October for the resolution to be reviewed by the City Attorney’s Office over concerns about legal liability. It needed to come back Tuesday for an official vote.

Legal concerns might have clouded the debate in October, but this time the City Attorney’s Office expressed no reservatio­ns about the resolution. Council’s resolution is broad and most legal analysts describe it as more of a guiding principle — not a legal liability to house everyone.

“I am opting for a future where everyone deserves a home,” said council President Sean Elo-Rivera. “This resolution is an important first step. The status quo in San Diego isn’t working, in California, or in America, for that matter.”

San Diego attorney Dan Eaton, who reviewed staff reports and the resolution ahead of the meeting, said Monday afternoon that the effort was only aspiration­al — not a binding law. He noted the staff report said there would be no financial obligation to the city to pay the rent for thousands of people.

“It’s pretty clear it doesn’t have any legal effect,” Eaton said.

Councilmem­ber Kent Lee acknowledg­ed the declaratio­n was aspiration­al and must be followed up with policy changes if San Diego was serious about housing being a right.

“We have significan­t work to consider ahead,” he said.

The council had considered a variety of tenant protection­s last year, such as a landlord paying a renter if they are evicted at no fault of their own. The package of potential laws is set to be heard by the council in the next few months.

In October, some landlords, members of the public and business leaders expressed concern that it would become an obligation that people would need to be housed for free. The meeting Tuesday only drew two public comments opposed — compared to roughly 50 in support. A possible reason for the light showing was confusion in October that the city had passed the resolution, when the council had only voted for the City Attorney’s Office to review.

“What is the true intent of this resolution?” asked Carol Watterson, a resident that called into the meeting. “You recognize that you are counting on private property owners to provide housing? I disagree in a free market that the city is responsibl­e for housing.”

Still, tenant rights groups dominated the meeting, primarily members of the Alliance of California­ns for Community Empowermen­t. They argued the resolution was needed after several years of rising rents, increasing homelessne­ss and a lack of housing options. In the first quarter of 2022, rents were up their highest year-overyear — 14 percent — in CoStar records for San Diego County going back to 2000.

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