Los Angeles Times

Scaring away good landlords

- Los Angeles

Re “How Airbnb tenant has stayed rent-free so long,” Oct. 14

I am appalled at the dispute between property owner Sascha Jovanovic and his nightmare Airbnb tenant, Elizabeth Hirschhorn.

I don’t know anything about real estate law or the pandemic-era rules regarding housing, but where is common sense in this dispute?

Hirschhorn reportedly has a documented history of disputes with her landlords, including not paying rent for a year at a two-bedroom cottage in Northern California in 2019, citing COVID-19 regulation­s and health concerns.

Now, she is citing health concerns again. If the health risk is real, why has she refused to move unless she is paid a $100,000 relocation fee? This is an obvious abuse of the rules. I hope the courts can find a way to do justice in this matter.

Frima Telerant

The city of Los Angeles understand­s that without landlords, there are no tenants. Though tenants rightly need strong protection­s against abusive landlords, landlords need rental income to pay taxes, loans and maintenanc­e.

And landlords are not protected by the city during a dispute due to tenant nonpayment.

The unintended and paradoxica­l consequenc­e of overzealou­s tenant protection­s is landlords selling their properties, often to developers, and buying elsewhere.

This decreases the amount of affordable housing in L.A., evidenced by the recent proliferat­ion of luxury apartment units in formerly affordable neighborho­ods.

Jonathan Kaunitz Santa Monica

Our legal system provides a remedy based on the principle of unjust enrichment. That’s precisely what this tenant has received in the form of free tenancy. Alan Goldsmith Pacific Palisades

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States