Los Angeles Times

Landlords need to stop whining about unfairness of California’s eviction ban

-

Gov. Gavin Newsom likes to talk about California “meeting the moment.” Well, for millions of renters, there’s perhaps no moment more worth meeting than Sept. 1.

That’s the day — a mere seven days from now — when a statewide moratorium on evictions is set to expire and families across the state, including many with children, could suddenly find themselves being booted from their homes into the street. At least one study has predicted that as many as 5.4 million households could go off the socalled eviction cliff.

The only thing that can

save them now is a lastminute legislativ­e compromise from state lawmakers, guided by the governor’s office. But when asked about the chances of doing so in time to, you know, meet the moment, Newsom has often veered from vague to flippant to defensive.

It’s a reflection of the worrisome political reality that, even now, with disastrous consequenc­es drawing ever nearer for a state that already leads the nation in homelessne­ss, his office and state lawmakers are trying to figure out a way to make landlords happy.

“Every day, I’m asked this question and every day I make the same point, and forgive me for all of you having to make it again,” Newsom said in a clipped tone on Friday, flanked by emergency personnel gathered to discuss the wildfires burning homes and forests across Northern California.

“As I’ve said, we’ve had very good conversati­ons and made tremendous progress. The progress includes considerat­ions of large landlords, large apartment owners, small apartment owners, advocates for tenants and the like.

“We are committed to getting it done,” he added tersely. “It is one of our top priorities. Everybody recognizes we need to deliver and I’m confident we will.”

To be sure, the cost of failure would be unacceptab­ly high for a state that, in addition to the number of people living in encampment­s under bridges and in alleys, leads the nation in poverty when the cost of living is factored in. Those most at risk for eviction come Sept. 1 were living paycheck to paycheck before the COVID-19 pandemic and now have lost their jobs because of it.

And yet, the powerful and well-funded California Apartment Assn. and California Chamber of Commerce have come out against the last anti-eviction bill standing. Assembly Bill 1436 from Assemblyma­n David Chiu (D-San Francisco) would prohibit the removal of renters who miss payments for either until 90 days after the COVID-19 state of emergency ends or April 2021, whichever occurs first.

The bill also would provide a year of mortgage relief, allowing a pause or reduction in payments to some property owners and landlords. But they are understand­ably skeptical about that promise of forbearanc­e because of concerns about whether out-ofstate banks would honor it. Instead, they would prefer to prevent evictions by receiving tax credits in place of rent — a proposal that was in another bill that state lawmakers sidelined this month.

Under AB 1436, warned Debra Carlton, the apartment associatio­n’s executive vice president, landlords “will lose their rental units and tenants will eventually lose their homes.”

It’s a sentiment echoed by dozens of landlords and property managers who flooded my inbox after I wrote about what the coming eviction cliff would do to the most vulnerable California residents.

“Why are we expected to bear nearly the entire financial burden of families who are out of work?” one wanted to know. Another, citing the need to pay property taxes and utilities and to make repairs, demanded: “Who is supposed to pay these expenses?”

Many griped about how tenants will abuse an extended eviction ban, using it as an excuse to skip rent even when they have the money to pay. Others pointed out that as momand-pop landlords, they use the rent they get from their tenants to pay their own mortgage and, without a reprieve, could soon end up homeless themselves.

I get it. The fear of foreclosur­e is real, as is the painful possibilit­y that corporate investors will come in to snap up their properties. There is no doubt that what has been happening to many landlords over the last few months has been deeply unfair.

But what has been happening to many tenants has been deeply unfair for a lot longer than that.

Consider that between 2010 and 2019, for example, the average rent in the city of Los Angeles climbed 65% to $2,527. During the same period, the median household income grew 36% to $64,036. There’s a reason about 150 people become homeless in L.A. County every day and only about 130 homeless people get into housing — and sky-high rental prices have a lot to do with it.

Statewide, the story is much the same. Today, according to Zillow, the median rent in California is $2,775, with many people using more than a third of their income to pay for it. And though there have been signs that rental prices have been falling lately, most of the declines seem to be for the most expensive apartments, while rents in more affordable neighborho­ods, at least in L.A., are essentiall­y flat, as my Times colleague Andrew Khouri reported.

It’s also worth noting that, according to the National Multifamil­y Housing Council, some 93% of tenants have been paying at least part of their rent every month during the pandemic. That’s a percentage, I imagine, that will decline as unemployme­nt checks shrink.

Meanwhile, the numbers show that California­ns who bought homes and investment properties after the Great Recession have seen mostly gains since then. The median home price has jumped from $251,000 in 2012 to $533,500 in 2020.

Study after study shows that property owners in general, and landlords in particular, tend to be better off financiall­y than those who rent. And it’s renters pulling in the most meager incomes who have found themselves most vulnerable to COVID-19 and the economic upheaval it has wrought.

For sure, there are exceptions. Not all renters are on the verge of financial ruin and not all landlords are sitting pretty. But landlords have indeed benefited from a system that, though not of their creation, has long been tilted in their favor with beneficial tax policies and a housing shortage that has allowed rents to rise mostly unchecked.

It could be that this is what a pandemic-induced market correction looks like. The fundamenta­l problem is that by giving too much weight to the demands of landlords, California would be enabling what could be construed only as a return to the status quo, in which renters — many of them Black and Latino — continue to pay exorbitant sums to keep a roof over their heads. As if the status quo was ever acceptable.

I do hope that Newsom and lawmakers can hammer out a compromise before the state goes off the eviction cliff. But if they must choose, there’s only one acceptable choice. This time, it must be renters.

 ?? Dorthy Ray Associated Press ?? NATASHA BLUNT owes thousands in back rent after she lost her porter job in New Orleans. Her family is getting by with food stamps and neighbors’ charity.
Dorthy Ray Associated Press NATASHA BLUNT owes thousands in back rent after she lost her porter job in New Orleans. Her family is getting by with food stamps and neighbors’ charity.
 ??  ??
 ?? Sam Hodgson San Diego Union-Tribune ?? IN JUNE, protesters outside San Diego City Hall demanded that the City Council extend the moratorium on evictions amid the the COVID-19 pandemic.
Sam Hodgson San Diego Union-Tribune IN JUNE, protesters outside San Diego City Hall demanded that the City Council extend the moratorium on evictions amid the the COVID-19 pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States