Los Angeles Times

Mass evictions may become the new norm in Los Angeles

Corporate landlords are circumvent­ing local tenant protection­s to oust low-income renters.

- By Chelsea Kirk Chelsea Kirk is the director of policy and research for Building Equity and Transit at Strategic Actions for a Just Economy.

Last week, corporate landlord Douglas Emmett Inc., announced plans to evict all tenants in its 25-story Barrington Plaza apartment complex in West Los Angeles. The building comprises 712 rent-stabilized units, 577 of which are occupied by residents. The company, which owns 18.3 million square feet of office space and 4,209 rental units in Los Angeles and Honolulu, has cited a city order to upgrade the building’s sprinkler system as the reason for these evictions, which came after a 2020 fire injured 13 and killed one resident.

The Los Angeles Housing Department’s decision to allow these evictions is unusual, and it sets a dangerous precedent as Los Angeles gears up to mandate extensive renovation­s to residentia­l buildings as part of its Green New Deal decarboniz­ation efforts.

Douglas Emmett is using the Ellis Act, which drives California­ns into homelessne­ss, as the justificat­ion for the mass eviction. Passed in 1985, this California state law was created to allow mom-and-pop landlords who are planning to “go out of business” to evict tenants from rent-controlled units to take them off the rental market. But the Ellis Act has been routinely used by corporate landlords to circumvent local eviction protection­s in order to oust low-income renters and transform their homes into boutique hotels and pseudo-condominiu­ms. This has led to the removal of tens of thousands of rent-controlled units in Los Angeles, exacerbati­ng the city’s affordable housing crisis and displacing working-class communitie­s.

According to Los Angeles’ Rent Stabilizat­ion Ordinance, landlords may evict tenants from rentcontro­lled units if there is an “order to comply with a government­al agency’s order to vacate, order to comply, order to abate, or any other order that necessitat­es the vacating of the building housing the rental unit.” In this case, such an order exists, and for good reason — the building’s poor fire safety system has been a danger to tenants for decades.

Douglas Emmett’s position that this order “necessitat­es” eviction, and not temporary relocation for tenants, is a typical maneuver to raise rents by vacating rent-stabilized units. But why is the city of Los Angeles bending over backward to help a $2-billion corporatio­n sidestep anti-eviction laws? Douglas Emmett has already admitted that it has no intention of removing Barrington Plaza from the rental market when the renovation­s are complete, as the Ellis Act requires. Nor is Los Angeles using its mechanism to protect rent-stabilized tenants from harm or displaceme­nt due to city-mandated building renovation­s.

The Tenant Habitabili­ty Program (THP) assesses the effects of large-scale renovation work and helps mitigate disruption and displaceme­nt through temporary housing, financial assistance and the adoption of work procedures that allow tenants to remain in their units. Structural repairs for fire safety are among the program’s qualifying scope of work.

Unfortunat­ely, Barrington Plaza is not the first mass Ellis Act eviction in Los Angeles, and it won’t be the last. But it should serve as an urgent reminder that we must have strong tenant protection­s in place as the city begins legislatin­g decarboniz­ation for residentia­l buildings.

Last April, the Los Angeles City Council voted to establish a plan to reduce the carbon footprint of tens of thousands of buildings citywide by retrofitti­ng them with emissions-reducing and energysavi­ng technologi­es, as part of the Los Angeles Green New Deal to reduce carbon emissions by 2050. Under the plan, residentia­l property owners will eventually be required to retrofit their buildings to reduce their carbon footprint, which could include electrical panel upgrades, disconnect­ion from natural gas and new appliances. These retrofits can easily total tens of thousands of dollars per unit, with much of the costs due up front.

The city must do everything in its power to ensure that these costs aren’t borne by tenants. Two million people rent in Los Angeles, and a 2019 USC study found that more than 70% of households are severely rent-burdened. Los Angeles also has a scarcity of affordable housing. If the city allows mandatory retrofits to be funded by rent increases or used as an excuse to evict tenants, we will have an even greater reduction of affordable units and see more of our neighbors destabiliz­ed by displaceme­nt, debt and homelessne­ss.

California lawmakers should repeal the Ellis Act. In the meantime, the city must use its existing powers to protect our renter population, including upholding the Tenant Habitabili­ty Program wherever it applies and narrowly limiting the types of government orders that can trigger a no-fault eviction. It should also create and implement a public subsidy program for small landlords who keep units affordable. In fact, we already do this for homeowners: State and federal subsidy programs exist for improvemen­ts such as adding residentia­l solar power, low-flow toilets and showerhead­s, and energy-efficient windows. Subsidies for property owners should be means-tested so that the public is not footing the bill for corporate landlords and investors.

We urgently need environmen­tal measures that keep communitie­s healthy, but not at the cost of displacing tenants from their homes. Decarboniz­ation efforts must be developed with strong tenant protection­s, including restrictio­ns on evictions and rent increases. Otherwise, we just are replacing one set of problems with another.

 ?? Courtesy of Douglas Emmett ?? BARRINGTON PLAZA will close to tenants so the landlord can install fire sprinklers.
Courtesy of Douglas Emmett BARRINGTON PLAZA will close to tenants so the landlord can install fire sprinklers.

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