People's Republic of Santa Monica
Today's topic comes to us courtesy of state Senator Sheila Kuehl, representing the People's Republic of Santa Monica and outlying communities. Ms. Kuehl offers us SB 464, a bill whose purported intent is to preserve (certainly not create) low cost rental housing stock. The bill would accomplish this in the following way: Owners of rental units in jurisdictions having rent control would be prohibited from going out of the rental business unless they had owned their property for at least five years.
Imagine this scenario: The Elders, just a couple of years away from retirement, decide that they would like to spend their golden years near the ocean, in a city like Santa Monica or San Francisco. So they make a financial move similar to one made by thousands of others in comparable circumstances. They sell (technically, exchange) their rental property in Fresno and use the equity to purchase a rental unit in the beach city of their choice. It doesn't really bother them that the city has rent control, because they will only rent the property out for a couple of years. Then they will sell their long-time residence, and move into the beach property. Unless SB 464 comes into effect. Were that to be the case, the Elders would have to hold that rental property as a rental for five full years, before they could move into it.
I'm not making this up. I know this is America. But that is what the bill proposes. Moreover, its proponents say it will stand up in court. To those of us living in the jurisdiction of the 9th Circuit Federal Court of Appeals, a large bet against them would seem unwise.
I would be the last to deny that California has a problem when it comes to affordable housing -- a problem for renters as well as would-be owners. Nor do I lack sympathy for those who suffer the effects of that problem. But it's fair to wonder if SB 464 proposes a viable, not to mention just, solution. Perhaps, just perhaps, even better results could be accomplished if our lawmakers would apply equal diligence to finding ways to lower the costs of construction by simplifying the permitting process, reducing and removing outlandish fees, and granting zoning concessions to providers of low cost housing.
Californians who have opinions about SB 464 certainly ought to let their elected representatives know about it. And those outside of California? Beware -- the political winds often blow from west to east.
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