Los Angeles Times

State lawmakers pass moratorium on evictions

Legislatur­e passes the emergency measure. It now goes to Newsom, who said he’ll sign it.

- By Patrick McGreevy

The emergency bill extends protection­s for California­ns facing hardship. The governor says he’ll sign it.

SACRAMENTO — California­ns facing financial hardship because of the COVID-19 pandemic will be protected from eviction through June as long as they pay part of their rent under an emergency bill approved Thursday by the Legislatur­e, just three days before an existing moratorium was set to expire.

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office said he will sign the legislatio­n on Friday morning, providing eviction protection for tenants who pay at least 25% of their rent through June. The bill also provides $2.6 billion in federal funds for rent subsidies that will help pay most pastdue rent by low-income tenants dating from last April.

“We are painfully aware of the plight that California families are facing as they struggle to pay their rent or mortgages at no fault of their own because of the pandemic that we are in,” Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) said during the floor debate. “So today we help California­ns keep a roof over their head and keep their heads above water.”

The bill extends protection­s approved last summer that were set to expire Sunday.

Though some lawmakers had called for the protection­s to be extended through the rest of this year, the bill approved Thursday was the product of negotiatio­ns with interest groups and takes into considerat­ion landlord concerns that properties could go into foreclosur­e if rent is withheld that long.

State Sen. Anna Caballero (D-Salinas), who had proposed more extensive tenant protection­s last year, said she supports the compromise worked out with the governor.

“I believe it reflects a broad range of interests and protects vulnerable tenants from eviction and gets cash into the hands of small mom-and-pop landlords who have been struggling without their rental income,” Caballero said.

The coronaviru­s, which has killed more than 38,000 California­ns, has also wreaked havoc on the state’s economy as stay-at-home orders issued by health officials last March resulted in millions of workers losing jobs or income, putting many at risk of eviction.

About 90,000 California households are behind on their rent by a collective total of $400 million, according to an estimate last week by the independen­t Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office, although other estimates have been much higher.

Under the new bill and the measure approved last year, tenants cannot be evicted as long as they pay 25% of their rent. The measure was submitted as a budget bill, which allowed it to be approved with a majority vote. A regular bill requires a twothirds vote to take effect immediatel­y.

Under the bill, tenants can qualify for the protection­s if they pay 25% of their rent each month or in a lump-sum payment by June 30, and attest that they face a financial hardship because of the pandemic.

Unpaid rent converts to debt that landlords can pursue through the courts, but it can’t be used to seek an eviction.

By tapping $2.6 billion approved by Congress during the Trump administra­tion, the Legislatur­e is offering a rent subsidy that will pay landlords 80% of the total amount of rent in arrears from April 2020 to March 2021 as long as landlords agree to forgive the remaining 20% and not pursue evictions.

In cases in which landlords do not agree to forgive unpaid rent, the state would pay 25% of the rent in arrears.

The bill passed the Senate without any opposition votes. The Assembly approved the measure on a 71-1 vote, with Assemblyma­n Kevin Kiley (R-Rocklin) casting the lone vote in opposition. Kiley said he believes a better solution would be to reopen the economy and allow people to get back to work, and to fix problems with the state’s unemployme­nt benefits system that have deprived jobless California­ns of financial help.

“This measure is an excuse for neglecting those staggering problems,” Kiley told his colleagues. “I am not going to enable that neglect by voting for it.”

But Assemblywo­man Janet Nguyen (R-Huntington Beach) and other Republican­s voted for the bill, saying it will help landlords who own just one or two units whose income they depend on to make ends meet.

“They too have suffered,” she said. “They have gone a year now without any income. They also are trying to put food on the table for their families.”

Providing financial help to rental property owners was a key request of landlord groups.

“Getting dollars to landlords is imperative,” said Debra Carlton, executive vice president of the California Apartment Assn., which represents rental housing owners. “Many landlords have not received rent in over a year, and some owners are on the brink of losing their homes.”

Assemblyma­n Mike Gipson (D-Carson) said one resident of his district, a single mother of three children, had been out of work for eight months and was five months behind on her rent.

“If it wasn’t for this eviction moratorium, her family would be forced onto the streets,” Gipson said.

In the end, several Democratic lawmakers voted for the bill even though they said it does not go far enough to protect renters.

Newly elected Assemblyma­n Alex Lee (D-San Jose) cast a “yes” vote but said that if landlords decide not to accept the relief, tenants get less help and are at risk of eviction.

“I understand the motivation is to incentiviz­e landlords to opt in to the relief fund, but it is incumbent on us to do more to protect tenants,” Lee said during the floor debate.

Some tenant advocates also said the legislatio­n is inadequate, leaving many people at risk of eviction and burdensome housing debt because landlord participat­ion in waiving overdue rent is voluntary.

“It’s good that small landlords and nonprofit housing providers will get help staying afloat, but we must further protect tenants with rent debt forgivenes­s — and from corporate landlords, speculator­s and others just trying to get tenants out,” said Lupe Arreola, executive director of the advocacy group Tenants Together.

Arreola’s group is part of a coalition of tenant advocacy organizati­ons that said they were left out of the negotiatio­ns with the governor.

“Without tenants’ meaningful participat­ion in these discussion­s, we will continue to see pandemic evictions rubber-stamped by our courts, and tenant attorneys will have to fight not only landlords, but the deeply misleading public message that tenants are protected,” said Stephano Medina, staff attorney at the Eviction Defense Network.

“Tenant groups are frustrated and rightly so,” Lee said. “They did not have ample opportunit­y to provide input.”

 ?? A BROAD Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? coalition of tenant advocacy groups said they were left out of the eviction-protection negotiatio­ns with Gov. Gavin Newsom.
A BROAD Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times coalition of tenant advocacy groups said they were left out of the eviction-protection negotiatio­ns with Gov. Gavin Newsom.

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