
FIVE RENT CONTROL PROBLEMS
THAT SHOULD NOT EXIST
One of the
most ironic features of Santa Monica Rent Control is the way it
perpetuates and aggravates the very problems that is it supposed
to solve. The stated purpose of the Rent Control Law is to protect
tenants from the effects of a shortage of affordable housing while
at the same time the City Council and elected Rent Control Board
acts in a manner which insures that the "housing shortage"
will never end.
For example,
during the week of January 3 - 8, 2001 the Santa Monica Mirror
published an article titled "Population Declines; Density
and Problems Rise." The opening paragraph of that article
states that the Census found that between 1990 and 2000 the population
of Santa Monica declined from 86,905 to 84,084. After raising
the subject of a population decline in the first paragraph, the
article then states, "Despite the drop, continuing increases
in density are creating a myriad of problems for residents as
well as City Council members they elect including higher
levels of noise, a shortage of parking, increased traffic congestion
more air pollution and alterations in the character of the city."
After I read the article, I scratched my head and asked myself,
"How it is possible for the City to lose population while
having 'continuing increases in density?'"
The article
never discussed rent control or down zoning as possible reasons
for the population decline. The article did quote City officials
who thought that more regulation of traffic and commercial development
were solutions to the density problem but nobody addressed the
"serious shortage of affordable housing" that supposedly
caused the need for rent control more than twenty-two years ago.
Unfortunately, the "housing shortage problem" will never
be solved because elected officials benefit from creating conflicts
between the tenant majority and the small "landlord"
minority. Five of the most egregious examples of unnecessary conflict
created by the Santa Monica Rent Control Board are stated below.
No
Rent Increases For Additional Occupants:
The biggest reason for unnecessary eviction actions and legal
fees is the Board's refusal to permit rent increases for additional
occupants. If Santa Monica apartment owners were permitted to
increase the rent by 15 % per additional person (as Los Angeles
owners are permitted to do) the number of evictions based upon
illegal subleasing would certainly be reduced. Additional reductions
would result by permitting additional rent increases for pets
(perhaps a rent increase of 5%). Contrary to the Rent Board's
assumptions, additional persons and pets do cause additional operating
expenses for the apartment owners, but instead of applying the
Rent Control Law in a reasonable manner, the Rent Board creates
needless conflict by blaming the owners for evicting too many
tenants instead of adopting reasonable regulations which would
reduce tenant evictions.
No
"Short Form" Capital Improvement
Rent Increases Permitted:
The Rent Board has steadfastly refused to permit "short form"
capital improvement rent increases not even for earthquake
retrofitting expenses. As a result of this unreasonable and destructive
attitude, thousands of housing units were lost in 1994 when the
Northridge Earthquake arrived. That woke the Board up and made
it more reasonable
but only for a short time.
For approximately
two years following the earthquake, the Board permitted short-form
rent increase petitions, but it soon returned to "business
as usual." Most owners don't realize that in 1999 the City
adopted very strict earthquake retrofitting code requirements,
which will eventually cause many of you to perform thousands of
dollars of retrofitting improvements without any means of recovering
the cost from existing tenants. Or maybe you will end up with
a lead paint abatement order or and mold infestations problem.
If you do then, "tough luck " because the Rent Control
Board, which was created to promote "public health, safety
and welfare, does not actually function in a manner to promote
those objectives.
No
Increases Permitted for Security Deposits:
State Law permits property owners to have a have a security that
is equal to two months of the rent. The Rent Board takes the position
that security deposits can never be increased, and as a result,
many owners are stuck with security deposits that were established
years ago, or none at all. The Rent Board has no logical justification
for taking the position that security deposits may never be increased.
On one hand, security deposits are defined by the Rent Control
Law as "rent" (although they are clearly not rent for
a number or reasons.) Therefore, the Board gets to regulate them
because they are defined as Rent. On the other hand, if security
deposits are "rent" then they should be treated the
same way as "rent" and increased with every general
adjustment.
This is another
example of where the City of Los Angeles approaches the issue
in a reasonable manner. When the rent is increased each year,
security deposits may be increased by the same amount. As a result,
there is less litigation and aggravation because most owners do
not request additional security deposits and most tenants do not
demand interest from the deposits. This is because one cancels
out the other and most landlords and tenants are content to leave
the issue alone.
Rent
Board Filing Rent Decrease Petitions
On Behalf of Tenants:
The Rent Control Law authorizes landlords and tenants to file
rent adjustment petitions. The Rent Board is authorized to resolve
those administrative disputes but is not authorized to file those
petitions or to be a party to those actions. Approximately ten
years after the Rent Control Law was adopted (and after more than
2,000 rent decrease petitions had been filed), the Board authorized
its Administrator to file rent decrease petitions on behalf of
tenants who never complained to the Board. These are known as
"common area" rent decrease petitions and begin with
the prefix "A" for "Administrator." There
have been approximately one hundred of these petitions, which
usually concern recreational services such as swimming pools,
saunas and recreation rooms.
These petitions
assume that the unidentified tenants are upset about these "reductions"
and want the Board's Administrator to represent their interests.
For example,
in one case, an owner converted a recreation room into a manager's
office and apartment unit to provide greater housing services,
and the majority of tenants supported this change. Although tenants
from 5 units supported a rent decrease petition for that issue,
tenants from 15 units signed a petition opposing it and tenants
from 10 units took no position. The Board responded by issuing
a decision that authorized rent decreases for all rental units.
See Rent Board Story, Part 81: More Harassment For Doctor Devenis.
Creation
Of New Penalties
And Damage Awards For Tenants:
Between 1983 and 1990, the Superior Court injunction in McHugh
v. Santa Monica Rent Control Board prevented the Rent Board from
imposing excess rent awards and penalties. Then, at the end of
1989 the California Supreme Court determined that the Board could
lawfully award restitution but it could not impose penalties.
Undeterred by the McHugh Decision, the Rent Board the Board adopted
new penalties known as "general adjustment blocking"
in 1990. For example, if an owner began collecting excess rent
10 years ago and the Board determines that this was the result
of a non-intentional calculation error, the ten years of general
rent adjustments are included as part of the "lawful rent."
But if the Board decides that the error was intentional (which
happens at least 90% of the time) the "lawful rent"
remains frozen at the rent level of 10 years ago so that each
general adjustment creates results more excess rent to be paid
to the tenant. In many cases this penalty is worse than the treble
damages penalty of the original Rent Control Law, which was invalidated
by the McHugh decision.
The Rent
Board also created new damage awards for tenants by inventing
a new type of petition at Regulation 4400, which is titled, "Rent
Decreases for Construction Impacts." As I reported in Rent
Board Story Part 80, the Board was ready to adopt that Regulation
at the meeting of August 13, 1999, when a Court of Appeal issued
decision in the case of Golden Gateway Center v. San Francisco
Rent Stabilization and Arbitration Board (1999) 73 Cal App 4th
1204, 87 Cal Rptr.2d, 232. That decision concerned rent decreases
that were authorized for repair and rehabilitation of an existing
building and housing services, which inconvenienced the tenants.
The Court of Appeal held that landlords who undertake to perform
necessary repair and maintenance work on residential properties
cannot be penalized with rent decreases because they have not
decreased housing services in any meaningful way.
Although
the Golden Gateway decision caused the Board to pause for a short
time, it simply modified Regulation 4400 (b)(ii) and began awarding
tenants compensation for the past inconvenience they suffered
during rehabilitation and construction. In other words, the Board
changed the Rent Decrease process from a rent adjustment proceeding
which could only affect future rent levels were affected to a
judicial-type proceeding where tenants were awarded for past inconvenience
as determined by a the Board's hearing examiners. As a result,
the tenants have their own court system where they can have nuisance
claims adjudicated by friendly hearing examiners appointed by
a local Rent Board where every Commissioner is also a member of
the Santa Monican's for Renter's Rights. It reminds me of George
Orwell's book titled Animal Farm, where all animals are equal,
but some are more equal than others.
The
five problems identified above have the following features in
common.
First,
none of the issues identified above exist in the City of Los Angeles.
That is because the City of Los Angeles Rent Stabilization Commission
functions as an administrative price control agency, not a government-funded
tenants' rights organization.
Second,
none of the problems are required by the Santa Monica Rent Control
Law itself. All of the problems were created by the Rent Control
Board after the Rent Control Law was adopted. Nothing in the Law
prohibits "short form" capital improvement rent increases,
or requires that security deposits be frozen or authorizes the
Board to create and apply new remedies and penalties.
Third,
none of the issues identified above are reasonably related to
solving the "serious housing shortage" that purportedly
led to adoption of the Rent Control Law more than twenty-two years
ago. Each of the policies make it more expensive and aggravating
to operate rental units in Santa Monica, which can only make the
"housing shortage" worse.
Unfortunately,
the "serious housing shortage" is one of those problems
that the local politicians would rather not solve because its
existence assures their continued political existence.


|