HomeMy WebLinkAboutCM Rental Housing Ordinances PPTRental Housing
Regulations: 1st Readings
Andrew Hening
Director of Homeless Planning & Outreach
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2018-2019 Council Goals
and Objectives: “Explore
protections to increase
rental and ownership
housing affordability.”
To -Date
August 20, 2018 -Community Development
Director’s “Housing Overview” Report
December 17, 2018 –Passed Source of
Income Discrimination Ordinance
February 4, 2019 –Introduced “Just Cause”
and “Mandatory Mediation” policies
The Council formed an ad hoc Rental
Housing Subcommittee
May 6, 2019 –Presented initial rental
housing policy recommendations
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Rental Housing Dispute Ordinance
Mediation is a process in which a neutral third party
facilitates the negotiation of a mutually acceptable
resolution to a dispute between parties. With
“Mandatory” Mediation,if a triggering event occurs
(e.g. rent is increased by a certain percentage), then
the tenant is able to request mediation services. It is
then mandatory that the landlord participates in the
mediation process, but the parties cannot be compelled
to reach a resolution. The goal of these programs is to
facilitate constructive conversations in a neutral and
accountable environment.
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Cause Required for Eviction Ordinance
Just Cause Eviction policies are intended to provide
stability for households who rent by regulating the
grounds for eviction. Just Cause ordinances typically
identify acceptable reasons that a landlord may
terminate a tenancy “for cause” (e.g. failure to pay
rent, nuisance behavior), as well as other reasons a
landlord could evict for “no cause” (e.g. the landlord is
moving back into the unit). Just Cause ordinances fully
retain the rights of landlords to terminate a lease for
valid reasons, but they also help to prevent the eviction
of responsible tenants, providing them with greater
security and stability.
Overall, the Subcommittee
recommends that the City
Council adopt both a Cause
for Eviction Ordinance & a
Rental Housing Dispute
Ordinance.
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May 6 th
Policy
Questions
Which units are covered by these
policies?
What triggers a mediation?
What type of eviction data can
and should we collect?
How do we pay for these
programs?
Rental Housing
Subcommittee
Mayor Gary Phillips Councilmember Andrew McCullough
Supervisor Dennis Rodoni David Levin, Legal Aid of Marin
Scott Gerber, Property Owner & Agent Omar Carrera, Canal Alliance
Final
Rec’s
1. The Rental Housing Dispute Ordinance will
apply to all units. Cause for Eviction will
apply to properties with three or more units.
Government units are exempted from both.
2. Mediations will be triggered by a rent
increase of 5% or greater during a 12-month
period
3. The City will NOT maintain a landlord
registry and will NOT receive eviction
notices.
4. Fund a one-year pilot with $40,000 of a
budgeted $66,000 in the FY19-20 Homeless
Initiatives Budget.
Council Questions /
Public Comment
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State Policy
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AB 1482
The California Assembly just passed a statewide
rent-cap proposal; still needs to clear the Senate
Would apply to most properties not covered by
local rent control ordinances —including rented
single family homes and condos in cities with rent
control.
Rent increases would be capped at 7% plus the
annual increase in the cost of living.
Exempts properties that are less than 10 years
old.
A recent statewide poll in late March / early April
found that 66% of California voters and 72% of
Bay Area voters supported a rent cap of 5% plus
an annual cost-of-living increase.
Cost Projection
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Mediation –Level of Demand
Jurisdiction Type of Mediation # Units Annual
Inquiries
Actual
Cases
Case to Unit
Ratio
Alameda Rent Review Board 13,389 188 17 .0013
Albany Contractor (ECHO)1,900 N/A N/A N/A
Fremont Rent Review Board 18,000 71 47 .0039
San Leandro Rent Review Board 9,000 175 29 .0032
Union City Contractor (ECHO)5,400 40 6 .0093
Concord Contractor (ECHO)8,100 N/A N/A N/A
Co. of Marin Contractor (DA)8,600 12 6 .0007
Fairfax Contractor (DA)385 N/A N/A N/A
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Mediation –Level of Demand
Jurisdiction Type of Mediation # Units Annual
Inquiries
Actual
Cases
Case to Unit
Ratio
Alameda Rent Review Board 13,389 188 17 .0013
Albany Contractor (ECHO)1,900 N/A N/A N/A
Fremont Rent Review Board 18,000 71 47 .0039
San Leandro Rent Review Board 9,000 175 29 .0032
Union City Contractor (ECHO)5,400 40 6 .0093
Concord Contractor (ECHO)8,100 N/A N/A N/A
Co. of Marin Contractor (DA)8,600 12 6 .0007
Fairfax Contractor (DA)385 N/A N/A N/A
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Potential Cost
ALL RENTAL UNITS
•11,500 total units
•Net out BMR –900
•Subtotal of 10,600
•$400 DA’s Office
•Union City Ratio
$39,400
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3+ RENTAL UNITS
•7,800 total units
•Net out BMR –900
•Subtotal of 6,900
•$400 DA’s Office
•Union City Ratio
$25,700
# of Units Covered
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24,011
Housing
Units
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48%
Renters
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San Rafael Rentals by Unit Type
Covering properties with 3 or more units
would impact up to 68% of San Rafael renters.
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Unit Type Estimated
Households
Margin of
Error
% of Total
Renters
1, detached 1,998 +/-298 18%
1, attached 655 +/-158 6%
2 711 +/-208 6%
3 or 4 891 +/-225 8%
5 to 9 1,645 +/-346 15%
10 to 19 1,782 +/-348 16%
20 to 49 1,670 +/-273 15%
50 or more 1,478 +/-278 13%
Mobile home 71 +/-66 1%
Boat, RV, van, etc.66 +/-78 1%
Unintended
Consequences
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Potential
Long-Term
Impacts
Could constrain new housing
supply
Could result in existing units
coming off the market (rental units
becoming condos)
Reduce investment in rental
housing quality
These trends could end up
accelerating displacement
What Does
the Data
Suggest?
The Cambridge study, the Stanford SF Rent Control
Study, etc. do show communities with rent control
can decrease the supply of rental units; A USC
analysis of the Stanford study found that policies
actually slowed displacement
Rent control, rental restrictions, rental regulations –
are these actually synonyms? Mediation programs
are generally quite new –not great data yet.
These insights raise a more fundamental question of
what most impacts new housing construction? Is it
rent control … or is it zoning, discretionary review,
building costs? Seems possible to address
displacement and spur growth at the same time.
The vacancy rate in Marin County is close to 3%. A
healthy rate is closer to 6 or 7%. Landlords already
have their choice of tenants.This is in part why the
County and Marin Housing Authority had to start the
Landlord Partnership Program.
Council Questions /
Public Comment
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