Los Angeles Enacts Revised Rent Stabilization Ordinance to Improve Affordability and Combat Homelessness

In a move aimed at alleviating the strain on tenants buffeted by the city’s high cost of living, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass approved significant updates to the city’s Rent Stabilization Ordinance, marking its first major revision in nearly four decades. Joining forces with Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martinez and various tenant rights advocates, Bass underscored the imperative of ensuring affordability within the urban sprawl. The enactment ceremony was held at the headquarters of Strategic Actions for a Just Economy (SAJE), an organization known for its robust advocacy for economic equity.

“No parent should have to choose between buying groceries or paying the rent, or live in fear of eviction because they have welcomed a child into their family,” Mayor Bass remarked in a statement obtained by the Mayor’s Office. The new plan limits annual rent increases to a range of 1% to 4%, bans rent spikes linked to the addition of new occupants like infants or dependent elders, and discards outdated surcharges for utilities. The ordinance paves the way for a more equitable city, one in which tenants struggle less to bridge the chasm between income and expense.

Ensconced in Bass’s larger agenda to combat the city’s affordability crisis, this legislative measure aligns with efforts to curb homelessness as well. On her very first day in office, Bass declared a state of emergency on homelessness, fast-tracking affordable housing production. Her policies have since sparked the acceleration of over 40,000 units of affordable housing, according to the Mayor’s Office. This marks a significant increase aimed at providing shelter for those otherwise at risk of being unhoused…

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