Wednesday, November 27

Apartment owners are suing the City of Los Angeles for keeping in place its emergency ban on rent increases first implemented at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a lawsuit filed July 24 in Los Angeles Superior Court, the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles is asking the court to put a stop to the city’s ongoing rent freeze on grounds that it violates the United States and California constitutions and deprives landlords of due process.

“For more than three years, rental housing providers have been saddled with cost increases impacting virtually every line item of their profit and loss statement,” said the association’s Executive Director Daniel Yukelson, in a statement July 24. “All of this comes after three years of lacking rent collections due to the city’s imposed eviction moratorium.” 

One of the measures adopted was the Rent Freeze Ordinance, which imposed a blanket ban on rental increases on any property already subject to the city’s rent stabilization law, which applies to rental properties built on or before Oct. 1, 1978.

This year, on Feb. 1, city leaders terminated the local emergency and many other pandemic-related regulations. But the Rent Freeze Ordinance is in effect until Feb. 1, 2024.

Landlords are usually allowed to raise rents on existing tenants from 3 percent to 8 percent each year, depending on inflation.

“It’s a bad thing when your costs aren’t controlled, but your revenues are,” said Irvine-based real estate attorney Anthony Burton, of AWB Law, in a January 2022 blog post. “Just ask landlords. They have taxes, trash hauling, mortgages, utilities, maintenance, and repairs to cover.”

Rent Freeze Hurts Landlords

Despite today’s higher cost of living and inflation, the City of Los Angeles has not reconsidered the ban, according to the lawsuit.

“If allowed to stand, the Rent Freeze Ordinance will not only continue to violate Plaintiff’s members constitutional rights but will continue to inflict widespread economic damage on property owners and landlords across the City, while unconstitutionally placing the burden of these increased costs of living on the backs of property owners and landowners, including Plaintiff’s members, who have already been financially crippled by the Pandemic,” attorneys for the association, which has more than 10,000 members, wrote in the lawsuit.

The city and county of Los Angeles also implemented bans in March 2020 on evictions in response to the pandemic. The city’s ban expired this year, on Jan. 31. Tenants were expected to begin paying rent again in February and are required to pay any back-rent owed from March 1, 2020, to Sept. 30, 2021, by Aug. 1. Any rent owed from Oct. 1, 2021, to Jan. 31, 2023, is due by Feb. 1, 2024.

Rent Prices Stabilize

Although rental prices in California rose slightly this month compared to June, the state’s average rental price began to drop earlier this year after two years of sharp increases, according to Realtor.com. The price declines were attributed to tech layoffs and the general weakening of the job market in the state.

“I think what you’ve probably seen since [the COVID pandemic ended] is simply people catching up for past years,” Molly Kirkland, director of public affairs for the Southern California Rental Housing Association, told The Epoch Times. “But we’re definitely seeing a leveling out of rents since last year. We’re getting back to a normal marketplace.”

Still, the Golden State still has some of the highest rents in the country. A lack of rental housing in Southern California could be to blame, according to Ms. Kirkland.

“There aren’t a lot of units out there, so there’s lots of competition for rentals and they tend to go quickly,” Ms. Kirkland added.

The average price in the state for all bedrooms and property types reached $2,913 this month, which was a $237 drop compared to 2022, according to national real estate company Zillow.

Los Angeles County’s average price was slightly higher than the state’s, reaching $2,950 in July.

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