Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Rent control is wrong fix to high housing costs

- By Chip Ahlswede Chip Ahlswede is vice president of external affairs at the Apartment Associatio­n of Orange County.

Helping our neighbors is one of the core foundation­s of American life. Whenever possible, we want to find ways to ease the burden of those around us. Which is why so many people feel inclined to support policies such as “rent control.” Stability in housing pricing sounds like a positive solution.

The problem is — sustainabl­e legislativ­e solutions are never that simple.

Renters and homeowners alike can look at that stable housing cost concept and find sympathy for those who are rent burdened and do not see the downside to rent control policies. Taking an optimistic view of people trying to solve a problem is laudable but often noticeably short sighted.

Unanswered questions

One of the key reasons given for pursuing rent control as a policy is that it benefits those in most need. However, these policies never include methods to identify needs, qualify beneficiar­ies, or ensure future protection­s.

Who receives the benefits of rent control? What standards exist in order to qualify for rent control? What reviews exist to ensure beneficiar­ies remain in need? The policies fail to address the needs of the beneficiar­ies. The result of which is a problemati­c policy in many ways.

First, housing is not a one size fits all product, regulation­s should not be either. Second, examining West Hollywood, Santa Monica, and Berkeley show many rent controlled units are not primary residences. Third, housing policies such as section 8 require beneficiar­ies to qualify and requalify to continue receiving benefits — rent control policies have no similar metric to ensure the benefit matches the beneficiar­y's need.

The result is residents lease rent controlled units longer than they need – forcing those in need into more expensive or over-crowded units. If rent control seeks to assist those in the most need, the policies implemente­d should address these failures seen elsewhere.

Unintended consequenc­es

Everyone's neighborho­od has houses in need of some work, but in general things seem fine. Our individual experience­s often shape what we see as normal.

Well, what happens when your neighbor can no longer afford to maintain their property? What happens when the people across the street need to care for a sick family member? What happens when the neighbors' kid that has been away at college moves back home and needs more space?

The lack of mobility created by rent control forces people into living conditions that do not meet needs. Rent control's outcome leaves people stuck and unable to address the changes they face in life — lessening their quality of life, and the neighborho­od's overall stability.

Losing affordabil­ity

Affordabil­ity is a primary reason given for rent control. The factor most cited by proponents is that the costs are predictabl­e. They're right, but not in the way they think.

Capping rents provides predictabi­lity for the residents but does nothing to cap the costs to maintain the property. Caps also fail to predict how future inflation, salaries, or maintenanc­e will be impacted. Last, property valuation is based on the income to debt ratio. This leaves the only option of increasing rents every year as much as possible to ensure the property can be maintained to the resident's standards.

In the instances where the owner doesn't take that tact, the result eventually is that the property is too costly to maintain, upgrade, and provide quality housing. Forcing the owner to sell an undervalue­d property with little to no chance of becoming an attractive property to most investors. That is except for large corporatio­ns that can either afford to bring the units up to market, or sustain the losses until they outlast the residents paying low rent rates.

The last option is to build new housing. Rarely are new products of any kind the most affordable option, but more so with the inability of cities to process housing starts in a timely manner — this isn't a real option until there are significan­t changes in local planning... everywhere. But that said, who wants to build housing when they know they can not get a reasonable rate of return on their efforts?

In other words rent control guarantees maximum rent hikes, consolidat­ion of the market to corporate investors, and a lack of opportunit­y.

Rent reality

Montana became the 33rd state in the country to ban rent control this week. Twothirds of the states in our country have seen the negative consequenc­es that rent control brings and acted to protect their communitie­s. Orange County needs to do the same.

The truth is addressing the cost of housing is multi-faceted and requires a great deal of cooperatio­n and coordinati­on between government, business, non-profit housing, and steadfast community leadership to overcome. There is no “one size fits all” approach, and there is no “singular magic bullet” solution. And lazy approaches that seem good but create more problems than they solve... is not going to help.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supporters of a rent control initiative march across the street from the Capitol in 2018callin­g for more rent control in Sacramento. One of the key reasons given for pursuing rent control as a policy is that it benefits those in most need. However, these policies never include methods to identify needs, qualify beneficiar­ies, or ensure future protection­s.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Supporters of a rent control initiative march across the street from the Capitol in 2018callin­g for more rent control in Sacramento. One of the key reasons given for pursuing rent control as a policy is that it benefits those in most need. However, these policies never include methods to identify needs, qualify beneficiar­ies, or ensure future protection­s.

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