Los Angeles Times

Council backs new protection­s for L.A. renters

The vote comes with COVID eviction rules set to end and shows clout of progressiv­es.

- BY JULIA WICK

With pressure mounting and the clock ticking, the Los Angeles City Council voted unanimousl­y Friday to dramatical­ly expand protection­s for renters, heading off what advocates had feared could become a wave of evictions.

The vote comes just 11 days before the city’s longstandi­ng COVID-19 antievicti­on rules were set to expire. The new policy is expected to go into effect before the Jan. 31 deadline.

Friday’s vote underscore­s the growing political might of the council’s progressiv­e bloc, which successful­ly championed a more aggressive set of policies. The new legislatio­n is also widely viewed as a victory for tenant rights advocates.

The COVID-19 emergency rules were passed amid unpreceden­ted disruption at the start of the pandemic, along with similar measures at other levels of government. But Los Angeles’ anti-eviction protection­s remained in place even as other measures expired, with local leaders wary of exacerbati­ng homelessne­ss and overcrowdi­ng problems that had already reached crisis proportion­s.

The council’s action was preceded by more than two hours of public comment, with dozens of renters elucidatin­g fears and making impassione­d pleas to the council to pass a muscular policy before the emergency order sunsets.

“I’m in a wheelchair. I’m 67 years old. And as soon as you guys lift the protection­s, I’ll be out on the street . ... We are human beings and we deserve to live with dignity,” Maria Briones told the council, imploring members to pass the legislatio­n.

Numerous opponents also spoke out against the proposal, with some arguing that the soon-to-expire emergency rules had already unduly burdened small landlords and that the new regulation­s could further harm their ability to stay afloat.

“The city can no longer ignore the needs of landlords or further burden them with the task of solving the city’s housing crisis,” Valley Industry & Commerce Assn. representa­tive Abby King told the council by phone.

The new policy will establish a minimum threshold for eviction for tenants who fall behind on rent, and require landlords to pay relocation fees in some situations in which a large rent increase would result in the tenant’s displaceme­nt.

Landlords will no longer be allowed to evict tenants in any rental property, including single-family homes, unless there was unpaid rent, documented lease violations, owner move-ins or other specific reasons. That provision will go into effect after six months or when a lease expires, whichever comes first.

Some renters, including those in rent-stabilized units, already have “just cause” eviction protection­s, but making them universal expands the protection­s to about 400,000 additional units, according to the city’s Housing Department.

The new policy will also block evictions until February 2024 for tenants who have unauthoriz­ed pets or who added residents who aren’t listed on leases, and create a new timeline for paying rent owed from the emergency period.

Tenants would have until Aug. 1 to pay back rent accumulate­d between March 1, 2020, and Sept. 30, 2021, and until Feb. 1, 2024, to pay back rent accumulate­d between Oct. 1, 2021, and Jan. 31, 2023.

The council also voted to direct city department­s to report back within 30 days with recommenda­tions for the establishm­ent of a new relief assistance program for mom-and-pop landlords.

Mayor Karen Bass plans to sign the ordinance in the coming days.

“I want to congratula­te our City Council — especially the Chair of the Housing and Homelessne­ss Committee Councilmem­ber Nithya Raman — on passing these important protection­s, which are crucial to combating a potential spike in homelessne­ss in our city,” Bass said in a statement. “In order to confront this crisis, we must continue [to] get people housed but we also must stop people from becoming homeless in the first place.”

The new policy will be particular­ly significan­t for tenants who live in apartments that don’t fall under the city’s rent stabilizat­ion ordinance, which generally applies only to apartments built before October 1978.

Councilmem­ber Hugo Soto-Martínez — who has described himself as the only tenant on the City Council — at one point during the meeting held up a copy of the two-page lease for his own East Hollywood apartment.

“There’s a reason why I’m not afraid. It’s because I’m in an RSO unit — I have those protection­s,” Soto-Martínez said, referring to just-cause eviction protection­s.

What the council was really talking about, SotoMartín­ez said, was the question of whom voters had tasked their elected officials with protecting. The answer, he argued, was vulnerable working people at risk of falling into homelessne­ss, and not “corporate landlords.”

Soto-Martínez’s comments came during a heated back-and-forth about when the expanded just-cause eviction protection­s should go into effect.

Raising objections about potential unintended negative effects on short-term rentals, Councilmem­ber Bob Blumenfiel­d had fought successful­ly during a Wednesday committee meeting to have the protection­s kick in when a lease expires, or after 12 months, whichever comes first, rather than immediatel­y.

That provision was subject to vigorous debate on the council f loor Friday, with Blumenfiel­d arguing that the council was “splitting hairs.”

Other council members contended that the new time frame would leave more tenants vulnerable and create unnecessar­y confusion, since there is no similar waiting period for rent-stabilized units.

“We are splitting hairs, but these are thousands of people and families,” Councilmem­ber Eunisses Hernandez said, echoing a point also made by Councilmem­ber Marqueece Harris-Dawson.

A representa­tive from the city’s housing department estimated that there were about 80,000 households in the city that have been in their units for less than a year, meaning they wouldn’t immediatel­y be covered by the just-cause protection­s. The council ultimately settled on a sixmonth compromise.

Councilmem­bers John Lee and Traci Park both raised concerns about possible legal problems that the new regulation­s could create for the city.

They and other council members also underscore­d the burdens faced by small landlords, with several raising fears that they might leave the market altogether.

‘I’m in a wheelchair. I’m 67 years old. And as soon as you guys lift the protection­s, I’ll be out on the street.’

— Maria Briones, L.A. renter

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? HEIDI GONZALEZ, 32, right, holding her daughter Sarita, 2, joins renters rallying downtown in September to “keep L.A. housed.”
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times HEIDI GONZALEZ, 32, right, holding her daughter Sarita, 2, joins renters rallying downtown in September to “keep L.A. housed.”

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