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LANDLORD-TENANT
LEGISLATION
NOW APPEARING AT THE STATE CAPITOL
With the
February 2002 deadline for bill introductions at the state capitol
behind us, CAAs Legislative advocates have identified a
number of bills that, if signed into law, will impact the everyday
business operations of rental property owners.
Heres
an overview of the most crucial bills:
SB
1403 by Senator Sheila Kuehl, is the tenant advocates
primary bill for 2002. It does three things. First, it authorizes
a local city or county, upon a finding that the local residential
rental vacancy rate is less than 10 percent, to require that rental
property owners provide tenants with a 60-day notice prior to
terminating a tenancy.
Second, the
bill requires an owner to give a tenant a written notice prior
to entering the rental unit. Current law does not specifically
require that the notice be in writing.
Third, it changes the existing state Ellis Act law, which currently
mandates that if an owner goes out of the rental housing business
in a rent control community, the owner must rollback
the rents if they put the rental housing back on the market within
two years. SB 1403 extends the time period to five years.
SB 617 by Senator Deborah
Ortiz also extends the termination notice provisions. This legislation,
however, was introduced specifically to address the recent events
in Sacramento and Santa Rosa where one rental property owner served
30-day termination notices to approximately 500 tenants living
in his single-family rental homes. SB 617 requires an owner to
give tenants a 90-day notice if an owner serves notices of termination
on 50 or more dwelling units within a 5-mile radius. This bill
is slated as urgency legislation and needs a 2/3 vote
of the Assembly and Senate members in order to move to the Governor.
It will become effective immediately if the Governor signs it.
AB 2330 by Assembly Member
Carol Migden prohibits a rental property owner from retaliating
against a tenant if a court has allowed the tenant to remain in
the unit due to hardship even though the owner has attempted
to evict the tenant. The tenant must continue to pay the rent
and follow all the rules.
AB 1433 by Assembly Member
Horton is a bill that extends eviction protections for enlisted
members of the National Guard who are called to service. The bill
language is currently in transition, and we will report to you
more specifics as the bill is amended.
CAAs State Government Committee members meet in April to
discuss these bills and a host of others. We will report to you
their recommended positions on all bills next month. Stay tuned.
For current updates, go to CAAs website at www.caanet.org.

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