Miami Herald (Sunday)

Can my landlord raise my rent that much? Renters do — and don’t — have rights

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Here’s the not-so-new news: Florida law leans heavily in favor of landlords and property rights. So there’s no cavalry coming to the rescue of tenants facing jaw-dropping rent increases in South Florida.

There’s very little that government­s can do under state statute to protect renters from price gouging. But they can protect renters in other ways, such as through the ordinance that the Miami Beach City Commission unanimousl­y approved this month requiring landlords give 60 days’ notice before raising rent by more than 5%. That rule could be extended to the rest of Miami-Dade County under legislatio­n proposed by Commission­er Eileen Higgins.

Sixty days gives renters time to look for cheaper living options if they don’t plan to pay up. But a rent increase is a rent increase, and many tenants will not find greener pastures somewhere else.

So what else is available, or in the pipeline, to help renters?

The Herald Editorial Board compiled some important informatio­n renters should know.

State law preempts cities and towns from imposing caps on rent increases in most cases and Democratic bills in the Legislatur­e to change that are doomed.

There’s an exception if a local government can declare a “housing emergency which is so grave as to constitute a serious menace to the general public.”

If we’re not there yet in MiamiDade, we’re very close. The city or county would then ask voters to approve control measures for one year, after which the same process would have to happen again for renewal, including voter approval.

In December, two dozen Democratic state lawmakers signed a letter asking Gov. Ron DeSantis to declare a state of emergency because of the “ongoing affordable housing crisis” and direct the state attorney general to “recognize any rental price increases of greater than 10% as price gouging.” DeSantis ignored the request. No surprise there.

A RENT CAP

Meanwhile, the St. Petersburg City Council in December voted to explore the idea to cap rent prices for one year. A similar move is unlikely to happen in Miami-Dade County or the city of Miami, given the conservati­ve leaning of some commission­ers and the backlash it would face from builders and landlords, who have also seen their costs go up thanks to inflation.

Rent control isn’t the only option local government­s have. Other creative solutions include providing tax exemptions for landlords who don’t raise rent above a certain threshold, state Rep. Anna Eskamani, D-Orlando, told the Editorial Board. It’s time for local government­s to start thinking of them seriously.

One of the Legislatur­e’s solutions to the state’s housingaff­ordability crisis has been Senate Bill 884/House Bill 537, which would allow landlords to charge tenants a nonrefunda­ble monthly fee instead of an upfront security deposit.

On the surface, this would offer relief for renters who cannot afford expensive moving costs.

But here’s the catch: Landlords wouldn’t be required to return the fees at the end of the lease like they do with security deposits, nor would the payments apply toward damage beyond normal wear and tear.

NOT BEST SOLUTION

That means this purported fix might cause renters who don’t have another option more trouble and expenses. Of course, it’s being pushed by LeaseLock, a finance company that provides the fee option in 129 Florida communitie­s.

The Legislatur­e should offer more protection­s to renters, not make them more vulnerable to potentiall­y predatory practices that opponents compare to payday loans that trap workingcla­ss people in an endless cycle of debt.

Can I withhold my rent? Many renters don’t know they can withhold rent payment if a landlord has failed or refused to provide important maintenanc­e that renders “the leased premises wholly untenantab­le,” according to state law. The tenant must provide seven days’ written notice and give the landlord at least 20 days to make the repairs. The Florida Bar has a template of that notice on its website and instructio­ns on how and when to withhold rent.

However, what’s in the law often differs from reality. The horror stories of insect infestatio­ns, toxic mold in apartment units and hostile landlords are common in Miami-Dade, as Zaina Alsous, of the Miami

Workers Center, told the Herald Editorial Board. Her advice is for renters living in uninhabita­ble conditions to talk to their neighbors facing similar issues and organize — “There’s power in the union,” she said.

Where do I go for help? The Miami Workers Center is one of the organizati­ons that connect tenants at risk of eviction to legal and community defense. The Miami-Dade County Commission is in the process of creating an Office of Housing Advocacy, and commission­ers Raquel Regalado and Jean Monestime are working on an ordinance called the Tenant’s Bill of Rights to delineate what that office will do.

TENANT’S BILL OF RIGHTS

A draft ordinance shows that the office would, among other things, create a Tenant Informatio­n Helpline and a web page with resources and downloadab­le forms — i.e. eviction and rent-withholdin­g — approved by the Florida Bar and translated into Spanish and Creole.

Here are some of the things the bill would do:

Landlords could not require prospectiv­e tenants to disclose a prior eviction until their applicatio­n is approved. That informatio­n is public record, but Regalado said the rule would give applicants a face-to-face chance to get approved without a prior eviction weighing against them.

If a rental unit is sold, the seller or buyer must give 60 days’ notice to renters with a month-to-month agreement if the sale will result in tenancies being terminated.

Require landlords to provide tenants a notice of their rights no later than 10 days after a lease is signed or renewed.

Require landlords to notify renters within 14 days of receiving notice that a residentia­l building may be unsafe.

The Tenant’s Bill of Rights is “a first step,” Regalado told the Editorial Board. It won’t solve the No. 1 issue facing tenants: soaring rent costs. And there are other issues that need to be addressed, such as the fact that only 10% of renters have legal representa­tion when they face an eviction, according to the Workers Center.

But in a state where renters are often left to their own devices, they will take any help they can get.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL AP ?? Freddie Davis, of Miami, whose landlord raised his rent by 60% same month he lost his job as a truck driver, waits for a friend to help move his belongings to a storage unit, after receiving a final eviction notice.
REBECCA BLACKWELL AP Freddie Davis, of Miami, whose landlord raised his rent by 60% same month he lost his job as a truck driver, waits for a friend to help move his belongings to a storage unit, after receiving a final eviction notice.

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