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KNOW YOUR
REQUIRED DISCLOSURES
PRIOR TO TENANCY
Failure to Disclose
Can Hurt Owners Financially
As we begin
a new year, it's always helpful to review the legal disclosures
required for the rental housing industry. This California Apartment
Association report provides an overview of some of the legally
required disclosures that rental property owners and their agents
must provide to prospective tenants prior to entering into a rental
agreement.
Lead
Paint
Before renting pre-1978 housing, owners must disclose the presence
of known or suspected lead-based paint and lead-based paint hazards
in the dwelling. Tenants must receive a federally approved pamphlet
on lead poisoning prevention and must sign an acknowledgement
that signifies their receipt of the pamphlet. Owners must make
all reports about lead on the property available to tenants.
California
Data Base: Sex Offenders
The law requires that property owners include in all of their
written leases and rental agreements for residential rental property
a specific notice regarding the data base maintained by the State
of California on the locations of registered sex offenders. Specific
type size is required. The notice must read as follows:
Notice:
The California Department of Justice, sheriff's departments, police
departments serving jurisdictions of 200,000 or more and many
other local law enforcement authorities maintain for public access
a data base of the locations of persons required to register pursuant
to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 290.4 of the Penal
Code. The database is updated on a quarterly basis and a source
of information about the presence of these individuals in any
neighborhood. The Department of Justice also maintains a Sex Offender
Identification Line through which inquiries about individuals
may be made. This is a "900" telephone service. Callers
must have specific information about individuals they are checking.
Information regarding neighborhoods is not available through the
"900" telephone service.
Pesticide Contracts
Rental
property owners must provide new tenants with a copy of any notice
that is provided by the registered structural pest control company
when a contract for periodic pest control service has been executed
between the owner and the service company.
Rental
Payments
Rental property owners or their agents must disclose to each tenant
the telephone number, name, and address of the person or entity
to whom documents are to be served and rent payments are to be
made and the form or forms in which rent payments are required
by the owner. The owner or the agent must also provide a copy
of the rental agreement or lease to the tenant within 15 days
of its execution by the tenant.
Illegal
Drug Labs
A residential rental property owner who has actual knowledge,
or knows by receipt of a notice from a law enforcement official,
that an illegal substance is located on the property (e.g., via
a methamphetamine lab - even though the lab was abated from the
property) must provide written notice to the prospective tenants
prior to the execution of the rental agreement.
Hazardous
Chemicals: Proposition 65
The owner or company with 10 or more employees must warn tenants
prior to exposing them to chemicals that may be on the property
and which are known to the State of California to cause cancer,
birth defects, or other reproductive harm. While there are hundreds
of chemicals on the State's list, the chemicals most commonly
found at residential property are tobacco smoke, lead, asbestos,
carbon monoxide, and gasoline components.
Spanish
Contracts
When the lease period is for more than one month and the owner
negotiates with the tenant primarily in Spanish, the owner must
provide the tenant with a rental agreement written in Spanish.
The owner must also provide the tenant with all future notices
in Spanish.
The California Apartment Association has prepared forms and background
materials on the disclosures outlined above. For more information,
go to www.caanet.org.
Failure to provide some of these disclosures can result in hefty
penalties, so don't get caught undisclosed.

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