The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kemp signs landmark tenant protection­s bill

New law requires rental properties be ‘fit for human habitation’ and follows a 2022 AJC six-part series ‘Dangerous Dwellings.’

- By Matt Reynolds matt.reynolds@ajc.com

Gov. Brian Kemp signed into law Monday a bill providing some standards for people living in neglected rental homes.

Kemp’s signature rep- resents a hard-fought victory for lawmakers, policymake­rs and housing advo- cates who pushed for House Bill 404 after it stalled in the Senate in 2023.

The Senate approved the measure toward the end of the legislativ­e session in March. The Georgia House passed it shortly after by 168-1.

HB 404 creates a habitabili­ty standard, a threeday grace period so tenants can catch up with their rent before landlords file for evic- tion and places limits on secu- rity deposits to the equiva- lent of two months’ rent.

Rep. Kasey Carpenter, a Dalton Republican and lead sponsor, proposed the bill on the back of The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on’s 2022 investigat­ion, “Dangerous Dwellings.” The six-part series exposed dangerous conditions — including rats, mold, raw sewage, roaches and violent crime — at hun- dreds of Atlanta-area hous- ing complexes.

Carpenter was relieved Kemp signed the bill into law.

e just glad we got it across the finish line,” Car- penter said. “We always say that we want Georgia to be the best place to live, work and play. I think this is a step in the right direction for a lot of renters out there.”

The bill mandates that rental properties should be “fit for human habitation” without making clear what habitable or uninhabita­ble means, or what penalties landlords would face if they fail to comply.

Still, Carpenter said before the bill passed the legislatio­n would help protect renters from landlords and management companies who let their properties fall into disrepair or harass and mis- treat tenants.

Georgia has some of the weakest tenant protection­s in the country, according to housing advocates. They roundly supported the bill, while highlighti­ng some of its shortcomin­gs — some wanted stricter limits on security deposits; others called for a longer grace period before landlords could move to evict tenants.

Atlanta-based lawyer and public policy advocate Eliza- beth Appley lobbied for the bill. She said the new law would help Georgians get into safe, stable and afford- able housing.

“Georgia is an outlier in failing to provide basic tenant protection­s, and this is an important step in the right direction,” she said, adding the “fit for human habi- tation” standard would give courts the power to enforce the new measure.

“We have real problems with code enforcemen­t in Georgia. But this is going to give courts the authority to act ... To give meaning to that protection,” she said.

Appley added that some of the most vulnerable people are at risk from eviction, including Black women and children.

Next, advocates should push for even greater protection­s, including a permanent emergency rental assistance program and transparen­cy and accountabi­lity for corporate property owners, the lawyer said.

“This is a particular problem in the metro area where a significan­t part of our housing that would be accessible to first-time homebuyers is being snapped up by these real estate investment trusts and converted into rental property — without the kind of transparen­cy to hold the landlords accountabl­e for the conditions of the housing,” she said.

 ?? ?? Gov. Brian Kemp
Gov. Brian Kemp

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