- Put a rent cap on all properties built before 2009 of 5% over the Consumer Price Index (CPI, 2.1% last year)
- Institute “just cause eviction†for all tenants. Now if an owner wants to give notice to a tenant that has paid as agreed (No Fault Notice to Vacate), the owner must pay that tenant one month’s rent at move-out or allow them to skip the last month’s lease payment.
- Any property whose title is held by a corporation and/or multi-unit (2+) would be included.
- Owners with single family homes (including townhomes and condos) that are considered “separately alienable†(a legal term, meaning, can you transfer ownership of one unit separately from another unit).
- A duplex when the owner lives in one unit and rents the other out.
- Properties built after 1/1/2005 or fifteen years before the date of the active law. So in five years, properties built after 1/1/2010.
- For those renting a room in their own house.
- If a rental property is located in a city already under more strict regulations.
- Default in the payment of rent.
- A breach of a material term of the lease, including, but not limited to, violation of a provision of the lease after being issues a written notice to correct the violation.
- Criminal activity by the tenant on the premises.
- When a tenant gives written notice to vacate to the owner, but subsequently fails to deliver possession.
- Using the premises for an unlawful purpose.
- An intent to occupy the property by the owner or their spouse, domestic partner, children, grandchildren, parents or grandparents.
- Withdrawal of the residential property from the rental market.
- Intent to demolish or substantially remodel the residential property.
- The owner complying with a governmental agency order.
- Will local cities accept these measures and back down from passing more restrictive rental control laws (lower rent caps, higher tenant relocation fees, and adding legal assistance) or will these measures embolden them?
- Is this the end of statewide efforts to “protect†tenants or just the beginning? Do they attempt to include all rental housing (single family homes and condos)?
- Do they make all rental property owners register so they can better track those properties included in these measures?
- With mandatory Section 8, will the state require the “first†qualified tenant, and not the best one be allowed to rent a property, even if they participate in Section 8?
- Will Fair Housing crack down on owners denying Section 8 participates, even if they claim it was not because of Section 8?
- Lastly, is there an attempt to pass “legal assistance†for tenants? Owners would contribute funds to help pay for a free attorney when an owner is trying to evict a tenant.
