
STOPPING
BAD LEGISLATION
Each
year, California Apartment Association members converge on Sacramento.
This year, over 750 members from CAA met with legislators to express
our opposition with bills that would be harmful to apartment owners.
The owners also lobbied for several bills sponsored by CAA. The
most notable bills are as follows:
AB
2582, (D-Lieber) would have required Written
Notice by property owners to prospective tenants concerning
the presence of hazardous substances that the landlord had actual
knowledge that the hazardous materials were in, on or beneath
the dwelling unit. Environmental hazards included, but were not
limited to, asbestos, formaldehyde, radon gas, lead base paint,
mold, fuel tanks or contained soil or water.
This bill would of also give attorneys a right to sue a property
owner and collect penalties if the owner allegedly failed to provide
the type of notice that the attorney claimed were required
by the bill. This bill would have provided for a civil penalty
not to exceed $5,000 for each separate violation. Also, a
tenant who entered into a rental agreement without written
notice could void the rental agreement.
This
bill died on the assembly floor on May 27th, 2004 after Lieber
was informed by her colleagues that the bill lacked the votes
necessary to move it out of the assembly.
AB 2583 (D-Lieber)
was a bill that would have prohibited a landlord from demanding
private or personal information from existing tenants as condition of
continuing tenancy. Apparently a landlord attorney in Los Angeles
came up with The Landlord Solution which was
to request extremely private information from the tenants,
including photographs of all residents, etc. in an attempt to
usher tenants out of rent controlled apartments. While we certainly
cannot condone overreaching information requests on existing
tenants, it is important that we be able to request necessary
information such as names of any additional tenants, make, model
and license number of vehicles, and emergency contact information.
This bill failed passage after three unsuccessful attempts to
gain enough votes to move off the floor. Thus, landlords still
have the right to request reasonable information from existing
tenants.
SB 1145 (D-Burton)
was an attempt to get around scheduled sunset clauses in previous
legislation. Currently owners must give long term tenants a 60-day
notice prior to terminating tenancy. Burton wanted to remove the
sunset date thereby allowing the law to remain in place indefinitely.
However, after much opposition, Senator Burton has amended his
bill to remove the 60-day notice termination notice provisions
from the bill. This means that the 60-day requirement is set to
expire January 2006. The bill currently removes the January 1,
2006 sunset provision which requires an owner to provide tenants
a 60-day notice when an owner increases the rent more then of
10%.
SB
1722
has moved off the Senate floor and is going to the Assembly Environmental
Committee. This is a California Apartment Association sponsored
bill that provides that a class action settlement based on Prop
65 can be used by owners as protection against bounty hunter attorneys
suing owners for a Prop 65 sign violation. Basically, res judicata
protects an owner from being sued for second time on the same
set of facts. By participating in a class action settlement agreement,
you can provide additional insulation from these bounty hunters.


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