ReportWire

Tag: property owner

  • ‘It’s real stressful’: Dozens evicted from Orlando motel amid safety concerns

    Dozens of people were forced to pack up their belongings and leave an International Drive motel where they had been living on Monday morning.The city of Orlando condemned the Howard Johnson by Wyndham motel because of what officials call “immediate life safety concerns.” The property has no working fire alarm system, and all utilities were cut off on Monday.Many people told WESH 2 they had nowhere to go. “I’ve been here for two years,” Candi Glenn said. “They collected everyone’s money. Turned the water off, everyone’s got to go. Look at all the people standing around with their kids.”Glenn had been living at the Howard Johnson with her three children. She did not know where she was going to move next.The Coalition for the Homeless stepped in to provide shelter for five families. The charity brought vans and SUVs to the motel and drove them to another motel.”They’re giving us a hotel for two weeks, and then they’re going to give us an apartment, we got blessed,” said Christopher Wilcox, who’s been staying at the motel with his family, including three young daughters.The property owner, Rore Orlando I-Drive LLC, is evicting them, leaving nearly 200 people searching for new housing options.Several residents, including a couple with three dogs, are struggling to find transportation for their belongings. The motel, located in a tourist area, has been home to about 60 families who have been paying weekly to live there. Motel resident Ronald Miller said flatly, “They deceived us!”He and his family have been living here while he works at a local restaurant.Now, they’re getting ready to find a new place to live on Monday morning. “It’s real stressful. Some people probably can’t sleep at night; it’s real. If anybody was to get in our shoes, they wouldn’t know what to do,” Wilcox said.The charitable Community Legal Services was on the property Monday as well to provide resources to evicted residents and gather information to take potential legal action against the owners.Many residents said the living conditions at the motel were horrible. They described moldy rooms with rodents and roaches. Trash could also be seen piled up in breezeways and in the parking lot.Despite its name, the motel is not owned by Wyndham. Records show the current owner is ROR Orlando I-Drive LLC. A man whom residents identified as the person who ran the property showed up at the motel on Monday, but refused to answer questions.

    Dozens of people were forced to pack up their belongings and leave an International Drive motel where they had been living on Monday morning.

    The city of Orlando condemned the Howard Johnson by Wyndham motel because of what officials call “immediate life safety concerns.”

    The property has no working fire alarm system, and all utilities were cut off on Monday.

    Many people told WESH 2 they had nowhere to go.

    “I’ve been here for two years,” Candi Glenn said. “They collected everyone’s money. Turned the water off, everyone’s got to go. Look at all the people standing around with their kids.”

    Glenn had been living at the Howard Johnson with her three children. She did not know where she was going to move next.

    The Coalition for the Homeless stepped in to provide shelter for five families. The charity brought vans and SUVs to the motel and drove them to another motel.

    “They’re giving us a hotel for two weeks, and then they’re going to give us an apartment, we got blessed,” said Christopher Wilcox, who’s been staying at the motel with his family, including three young daughters.

    The property owner, Rore Orlando I-Drive LLC, is evicting them, leaving nearly 200 people searching for new housing options.

    Several residents, including a couple with three dogs, are struggling to find transportation for their belongings.

    The motel, located in a tourist area, has been home to about 60 families who have been paying weekly to live there.

    Motel resident Ronald Miller said flatly, “They deceived us!”

    He and his family have been living here while he works at a local restaurant.

    Now, they’re getting ready to find a new place to live on Monday morning.

    “It’s real stressful. Some people probably can’t sleep at night; it’s real. If anybody was to get in our shoes, they wouldn’t know what to do,” Wilcox said.

    The charitable Community Legal Services was on the property Monday as well to provide resources to evicted residents and gather information to take potential legal action against the owners.

    Many residents said the living conditions at the motel were horrible. They described moldy rooms with rodents and roaches. Trash could also be seen piled up in breezeways and in the parking lot.

    Despite its name, the motel is not owned by Wyndham. Records show the current owner is ROR Orlando I-Drive LLC.

    A man whom residents identified as the person who ran the property showed up at the motel on Monday, but refused to answer questions.

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  • Pilot program offers Long Beach homeowners up to $250,000 in low-interest loans to build ADUs

    Pilot program offers Long Beach homeowners up to $250,000 in low-interest loans to build ADUs

    Eager to boost the supply of affordable housing, city officials in Long Beach devised a program that could help a limited number of homeowners build an extra unit on their land.

    But before they could launch it, they had to decide what to call it.

    “We’ve been playing with a name for a while,” Mayor Rex Richardson said, noting that a news release touting the program had been delayed days because of christening purposes. “We’re building the bike as we ride it.”

    Long Beach officials settled on the self-explanatory “Backyard Builders Program,” hoping a partial solution to a dearth of affordable housing lies in the unused spaces of city homeowners’ property. It’s a concept widely supported by advocates of low-income housing although some argue that the city’s version should have included more tenant protections.

    Long Beach’s pilot program uses one-time funding that will provide as many as 10 homeowners low- to zero-interest loans of up to $250,000 to build Accessory Dwelling Units, or ADUs, on their lots. Those units would have to be rented out to lower-income individuals or families for a minimum of five years.

    Interested applicants can apply at https://www.longbeach.gov/lbcd/hn/aduloan/.

    “Long Beach has been a leader on ADU production,” Richardson said. “And we’ve done all the things we need to do … to make it easy for people to develop ADUs in their backyard.”

    Claremont McKenna College’s Rose Institute confirmed in an April report that Long Beach was among the most ADU-friendly cities in the state, having issued 1,431 ADU permits between 2018 and 2022. While that total trails larger cities like San Diego (2,867), Long Beach produced 317 permits per 100,000 residents.

    An ADU, as defined by the city’s Community Development Department for this pilot program, must come with independent facilities that include a living room, sleeping area, kitchen and bathroom.

    In addition to agreeing to the temporary rent limit, property owners must live on site and have less than four units already on their land.

    The units may be rented to anyone earning 80% or less of the Los Angeles County median income, which translates into $77,700 for an individual, $88,800 for a two-person family, $99,900 for three people and $110,950 for four, according to the Los Angeles County Department of Regional Planning.

    But the program gives homeowners an extra financial incentive to rent these ADUs to recipients of Long Beach’s housing choice voucher program, which provides a portion of the rent for those who fall into extremely low income, very low income or low income categories.

    Building an ADU has grown more expensive in recent years, with labor and material costs jumping 11% and 9%, respectively in 2021 and 2022, while construction labor costs rose 34% between 2018 and 2023.

    The loan covers up to $250,000 in planning, permitting and construction costs, though Kelli Pezzelle, a Backyard Builders community program specialist, doesn’t anticipate the loans needing to be that high.

    The interest on the loan will remain at 0% as long as the owner rents the ADU to a low-income recipient. A stipulation for loan qualification is that the owner must rent the home to a voucher recipient for a minimum of five years or a nonvoucher, lower-income tenant for seven years.

    The loan’s interest rate will jump to 3% if rented to someone who doesn’t meet the income limits after the five- or seven-year period. An owner would incur a $2,500 monthly penalty if the ADU is rented to a nonqualified tenant ahead of time.

    The possible removal of low-income tenants concerns Long Beach Residents Empowered, or LiBRE, an advocacy group that pushes for the creation and preservation of affordable housing and renter protections.

    “We’re happy that the city is investing in affordable housing and trying to reduce the housing shortage,” said LiBRE’s Project Director Andre Donado, via a phone call. “Every single renter, however, is at risk of eviction after five years.”

    Donado also hoped the city would consider offering relocation assistance of $4,500 to low-income renters displaced through no fault of their own in all cases.

    The city offers $4,500 or two months rent if a landlord demolishes or substantially remodels a building, but only one month’s rent in other cases.

    “I think there are several positives with the program, and we’d like to see it made permanent, with some adjustments,” Donado said.

    The pilot’s loans are significantly larger than the up to $40,000 in aid provided by California Housing Finance Agency’s ADU Grant Program, which doled out $125 million to help homeowners cover permitting and planning costs before running out of funds.

    The city believes that house-rich, cash-poor homeowners, particularly seniors, could take advantage of the loan to build an ADU and create passive income. The program estimates that the ADUs built with its loans would generate more than $1,000 monthly for owners who rent to voucher holders.

    “You may be a grandma or someone who’s got way too much backyard, and you want to be a part of the solution, but it may be hard for you to navigate or identify financing,” Richardson said.

    To that end, the city is expected to appoint a project manager to help loan recipients choose an architect, builders, planners, contractors and others needed throughout the planning and construction process. That manager will work as an intermediary between the property owner and the general contractor.

    One caveat for interested property owners is that a qualified renter cannot be a relative or a caregiver for their household.

    As for the loan, payments will be deferred during the building process up to two years.

    Richardson said since the program is based on loans that will be repaid over time, it will be self-sustaining. If it’s deemed a success — meaning that ADUs are built and rented to lower-income tenants — he said the city would consider looking for more revenue streams to expand the project.

    The city is hosting a series of Zoom webinars to gauge interest in the program and answer questions.

    Andrew J. Campa

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  • Builders may fight ‘impact fees’ that fund municipal projects in California, Supreme Court rules

    Builders may fight ‘impact fees’ that fund municipal projects in California, Supreme Court rules

    The Supreme Court ruled Friday that developers and home builders in California may challenge the fees commonly imposed by cities and counties to pay for new roads, schools, sewers and other public improvements.

    The justices said these “impact fees” may be unconstitutional if builders and developers are forced to pay an unfair share of the cost of public projects.

    Developers have contended that limiting California’s high fees would lead to the construction of more affordable new housing.

    California state courts had blocked claims arising from “a development impact fee imposed pursuant to a legislatively authorized fee program” for new development in a city or county.

    But the 9-0 Supreme Court decision opened the door for such challenges. The justices revived a constitutional claim brought by an El Dorado County man who put a manufactured home on a small lot and was told he would have to pay a “traffic mitigation fee” of $23,420.

    The decision could have wide impact in California, since local governments have increasingly relied on impact fees rather than property taxes to pay for new projects.

    But the justices did not spell out when such fees become unfair and unconstitutional.

    Liberal Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson said they joined the majority opinion in Sheetz vs. El Dorado County because it merely allows such challenges.

    In a separate opinion, conservative Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh said he saw merit to the “common government practice of imposing permit conditions, such as impact fees, on new development through reasonable formulas or schedules that assess the impact of classes of development rather than the impact of specific parcels of property.”

    State and county attorneys had made just that argument. They said it was fairer to impose a development fee on all the lots in an area.

    But the justices nonetheless ruled that homeowners and developers may sue to challenge these fees as an unconstitutional taking of their private property. The case will now go back to the California courts.

    The Pacific Legal Foundation in Sacramento hailed the ruling as a significant victory for property rights.

    “Holding building permits hostage in exchange for excessive development fees is obviously extortion,” said attorney Paul Beard, who represented the El Dorado County homeowner. “We are thrilled that the court agreed and put a stop to a blatant attempt to skirt the 5th Amendment’s prohibition against taking private property without just compensation.”

    Beard said El Dorado County “failed to show — and cannot show — that the fee is sufficiently related and proportionate to the traffic impacts” of his client’s “modest home.”

    The debate over development fees is especially relevant in California, where local governments have increasingly relied on the charges to finance parks, streets, schools and other infrastructure and services since the 1978 passage of Proposition 13 limited property tax revenues.

    The fees have come under scrutiny in other cases as developers and others have blamed them for driving up the cost of housing and for a wide disparity in cities’ fees.

    A 2018 study by UC Berkeley’s Terner Center for Housing Innovation found that, depending on the city, fees for new single-family homes could range from $21,000 to $157,000, and could account for 6% to 18% of the median home price.

    For decades, the Supreme Court has cast a skeptical eye at California’s regulation of private property. In a pair of decisions, it limited the power of government officials to demand concessions from a property owner in exchange for a building permit.

    In 1987, justices ruled for the owner of a beach bungalow in Ventura who was told he could not obtain a permit to expand his home unless he agreed to allow the public access to the beachfront. The conservative majority at the time described this demand as akin to “extortion” and said it violated the 5th Amendment’s clause that forbids the taking of “private property … for public use without just compensation.”

    In a follow-up decision involving a store owner who was forced to allow a bike path on her property, the court said the government may not impose such special conditions on property owners unless it can show an owner’s new development would cause direct harm to the community.

    But since then, it has been unclear whether this property right applies to development fees or in situations where fees are set by legislation rather than imposed on a single owner seeking a permit.

    Writing for the court in Friday’s ruling, conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett said that “there is no basis for affording property rights less protection in the hands of legislators than administrators. The Takings Clause applies equally to both — which means that it prohibits legislatures and agencies alike from imposing unconstitutional conditions on land-use permits.”

    The case arose when property owner George Sheetz sought a permit to put a manufactured home on a lot he owned in Placerville, outside Sacramento. El Dorado County required him to pay a “traffic impact mitigation” fee to obtain the permit. Some of the money was to go toward upgrades to Highway 50, which runs through the area, but most was to go toward new or expanded roads in the county.

    Sheetz paid the fee and obtained his permit, then sued to challenge the fee as unconstitutional. He argued that the taxpayers of the county, not the new owner of a small home, should be required to pay for road building.

    The justices agreed to hear his appeal after he lost in the California courts.

    State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), who has supported legislation to rein in developer fees, said he didn’t expect Friday’s decision by itself to have a significant effect on the debate in Sacramento because it only called out one extreme situation.

    “Ultimately, the solution is the same today as it was yesterday,” Wiener said. “The California Legislature needs to put in place an actual structure for impact fees. Right now, it’s all over the map.”

    Wiener said he sympathizes with local governments that turn to the fees because it’s easier than raising revenue through broad-based taxes — but he said some cities use sky-high fees to block housing development.

    “There is something a little odd about effectively taxing new housing to pay for societal needs that should be paid generally by taxpayers — by the entire community,” he said.

    Graham Knaus, executive director of the California State Assn. of Counties, said in a statement Friday that the organization was still reviewing the ruling to understand its implications.

    But he said that “limiting the ability to legislatively enact fees will negatively impact the ability of our 58 counties to protect the health and welfare of their communities and drastically limit the building of vital local infrastructure.”

    “In many cases,” Knaus said, “these fees are the only tool available to pay for new infrastructure around certain development projects.”

    Times staff writer Liam Dillon in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

    David G. Savage

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  • City Council OKs $3.8 million to clean up and secure graffitied downtown L.A. skyscraper

    City Council OKs $3.8 million to clean up and secure graffitied downtown L.A. skyscraper

    The Los Angeles City Council voted Friday to allot nearly $4 million to remove graffiti and secure an unfinished downtown Los Angeles skyscraper, which has been heavily tagged in recent weeks.

    Councilmember Kevin de León introduced a motion this week to allocate the funds to secure the property and restore the public right of way, which is obstructed by plastic barriers, scaffolding and debris.

    “I’m not holding my breath waiting for the developer to clean up their property,” De León said Wednesday. “The purpose of my motion is clear: to prepare our city to take decisive action if the Oceanwide Plaza developer ignores their responsibility and to put them on the hook for costs incurred by the city.”

    The motion will move $1.1 million into a fund to fence and secure the ground floors of the building and place an additional $2.7 million into a fund for security services, fire safety upgrades and graffiti abatement.

    The motion also calls on the city attorney and city administrative officer to report back to the council within 30 days with a legal strategy to recoup all of the city’s related expenses from the property owners.

    The Oceanwide Plaza project, located across Figueroa street from Crypto.com Arena, has become a site for graffiti tagging and even paragliding in recent weeks and posed a headache for city officials and authorities alike. Ahead of the Grammy Awards held at Crypto.com Arena, dozens of floors of the skyscraper were tagged with colorful spray paint.

    More than two dozen floors of the skyscraper were tagged with graffiti ahead of the Grammy Awards that were held at Crypto.com Arena held across Figueroa Street.

    (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

    The owner, Oceanwide Holdings, is a publicly traded Beijing-based company that halted the project in 2019 when it ran out of money.

    At least 18 people have been arrested, including 12 on Sunday, on suspicion of trespassing at the site, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

    The City Council adopted a motion earlier this month, also introduced by De León, that ordered the owners of the property to fence and clean up the area by Saturday. If they miss the deadline, the city will secure the property and charge the owners for the cost, the motion said.

    Just one day before the deadline, the owners have not indicated whether they will comply with the city’s orders.

    The increase of activity at the site has also stretched resources at the Los Angeles Police Department, LAPD Chief Michel Moore said during Tuesday’s Los Angeles Police Commission meeting.

    Officers have spent “more than 3,000 hours” to secure the complex, Moore said.

    “We have called in some officers on an overtime basis, so that we can provide for these added patrols or station them at that site to deter vandals and others from gaining access to it while also ensuring that we meet the minimum deployment requirements for stations across the city,” Moore said.

    During a City Council meeting last week, Councilmember Imelda Padilla said she was surprised at how much attention the skyscraper was getting and attributed it to its large size.

    Padilla mentioned that at least four “mini versions” of the unfinished skyscraper exist across Los Angeles. The buildings include abandoned commercial, manufacturing and family business structures.

    Padilla was referring to abandoned buildings on Sepulveda Boulevard and Kester Avenue, as well as a Denny’s restaurant at Vineland Avenue and Sunland Boulevard, according to a spokesperson for Padilla’s office.

    The fourth building, a Roscoe hardware store, is located at Sunland Boulevard and San Fernando Road, according to her spokesperson. Padilla is currently working on getting it demolished.

    “It’s upsetting that blight gets more attention when it affects wealthier parts of the city,” Padilla said in a statement Thursday. “Yet, working-class neighborhoods like the ones I represent struggle with this issue every day. Blight is unacceptable no matter the ZIP Code, and we deserve to have the same sense of urgency.”

    The Oceanwide Plaza development sits among shops and restaurants near the LA Live complex.

    Summer Lin, Caroline Petrow-Cohen

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  • L.A. City Council votes to protect tenants while they await rental assistance

    L.A. City Council votes to protect tenants while they await rental assistance

    After a lengthy discussion, the Los Angeles City Council voted Friday to prohibit the eviction of tenants whose rental assistance applications have been approved but who have not yet received their funds.

    The move comes days before a deadline for tenants to pay pandemic-era rental arrears. Under the city’s plan to end COVID-19 eviction protections, unpaid rent accumulated from Oct. 1, 2021, to Jan. 31, 2023, is due Thursday.

    More than 25,000 applicants are waiting to find out if they are eligible for funds from the United to House L.A. Emergency Renters Assistance Program, which provides up to six months of unpaid rent for qualified and selected renters and property owners.

    Roughly 3,200 applicants were approved for the program, but most have not received their aid. Only 25% of the $30.4 million allocated for emergency assistance has been distributed.

    Renters who did not apply for the program or were not approved could face eviction if they do not make their outstanding payments by Thursday. The deadline to apply was in October.

    The City Council motion, introduced by Councilmembers Eunisses Hernandez and Paul Krekorian, originally aimed to protect every renter who applied to the United to House L.A. program, regardless of their application status.

    After pushback from groups representing property owners, the motion was amended to prohibit evictions only for applicants whose applications have been approved. Those individuals will be protected from eviction for 120 days after Feb. 1 while their rental assistance funds are processed.

    “Tenants who have already been approved for emergency rental assistance should not be evicted while they’re waiting for their checks,” Krekorian said. “Their landlords are going to get paid, so they shouldn’t be putting tenants out just because the city took a little longer to get them the money.”

    Applicants who have not yet been approved but are qualified will receive the same protections once granted approval.

    Daniel Yukelson, executive director of the Apartment Assn. of Greater Los Angeles, said the motion was unfair to small property owners who rely on rent payments for their livelihood.

    Before the amendment was enacted, the motion would have prevented landlords from evicting tenants for an indefinite period of time while they waited for their application to be processed.

    “Owners would not be participating in the program if they knew this would be the ramification,” he said. “It’s not as egregious as it would have been without this amendment.”

    Fred Sutton, senior vice president of local public affairs for the California Apartment Assn., also said the amendment was key. But he’s still wary of how long it might take for renters and owners to receive their money.

    “It’s just a matter of those funds getting to the individual,” he said, “but we are very concerned about the procedural bureaucracy that takes so long to get these dollars out the door.”

    Sutton also criticized the “rushed” timeline of the City Council motion, which was introduced on Wednesday.

    “There was one business day to review a very broad and somewhat complicated motion and on a procedural level, that shouldn’t be acceptable,” he said.

    Hernandez said it was necessary to get the motion approved prior to the rent payment deadline.

    “With the Feb. 1 rent debt deadline looming and thousands of tenants at risk of eviction, it’s incumbent on us to do everything we can to stop the eviction-to-homelessness pipeline and keep people in their homes,” she said. “The city can and must do more to keep Angelenos housed.”

    Caroline Petrow-Cohen

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  • Elizabeth Hirschhorn moves out of Brentwood Airbnb after 570 rent-free days. She said she had a right to stay

    Elizabeth Hirschhorn moves out of Brentwood Airbnb after 570 rent-free days. She said she had a right to stay

    Elizabeth Hirschhorn, the Brentwood tenant who did not pay rent for her luxury Airbnb rental for 570 days, moved out of the unit on Friday.

    The move was exactly one month after The Times chronicled Hirschhorn’s contentious tenancy, which began with a cordial stay on Airbnb and ended with her and Sascha Jovanovic, the landlord and property owner, suing each other.

    “I’m a little overwhelmed, but I finally have my home back,” Jovanovic said. “I had such a peaceful weekend once she left.”

    During her stay, which began in September 2021, Hirschhorn said that the lease was extended off Airbnb and that the unit was subject to the Rent Control Ordinance, so Jovanovic would have to evict her if he wanted her to leave. She also argued that she didn’t have to pay rent since Jovanovic never obtained an occupancy license for the guesthouse.

    Jovanovic, who lives on the property, was at the home on Friday being interviewed for a documentary detailing the battle between him and Hirschhorn when he saw three men, who turned out to be movers, walk into the guesthouse.

    He said he asked why they were there, and they didn’t clearly say why. He suspected she could be moving out but feared it also could be a home invasion, so he called the police.

    The police arrived, and once all of Hirschhorn’s belongings were packed, they escorted her off the property, Jovanovic said.

    Jovanovic and his attorney, Sebastian Rucci, knocked on the door to confirm she was gone and then entered the guesthouse and found it empty. Within an hour, a locksmith arrived and changed the locks.

    As of now, it’s unclear whether Hirschhorn moved out permanently, or if she’s planning to return to the property.

    Jovanovic and Rucci said they hadn’t heard anything from either Hirschhorn or her legal team, so they assumed she had moved out for good. On Saturday, Rucci emailed Hirschhorn’s attorney, Amanda Seward, to figure out the next steps regarding Jovanovic’s eviction lawsuit against Hirschhorn.

    “My review of the case law is that once a tenant abandons the unit, the unlawful detainer is dismissed. If you wish, I can file the dismissal, or we can file a joint dismissal,” Rucci wrote.

    Seward replied that they “may have jumped the gun,” according to the email exchange reviewed by The Times.

    “Ms. Hirschhorn had discussed with me concern over the constant harassment and surveillance, and also the desire to get the things repaired that needed to be repaired. Subject to my discussions with Ms. Hirschhorn, please be advised that you have no authority to change the locks or to assume abandonment of the unit,” Seward wrote. “Further, you have violated the law by entering without permission and changing the locks.”

    Neither Hirschhorn nor Seward immediately responded to a request for comment.

    Rucci said he’s planning to drop the unlawful detainer lawsuit, assuming Hirschhorn has moved out for good. But he’ll still pursue damages in a separate lawsuit, since he claims Hirschhorn owes roughly $58,000 in unpaid rent. Hirschhorn said she owes nothing since Jovanovic never had a license to rent the unit, and her lawsuit accuses him of multiple forms of harassment and intimidation in attempts to get her to leave the place, which Jovanovic has denied.

    Hirchhorn’s tenancy became a viral story in the days and weeks after The Times chronicled the saga. News vans posted up outside the home, and paparazzi followed Hirschhorn whenever she left.

    “Drones were flying above my house every day. It was crazy,” Jovanovic said.

    Now, he plans to address the mold damage in the unit, which was an issue during Hirschhorn’s stay that eventually soured their relationship. He also plans to get the necessary permits from the city, which was another issue; Jovanovic never obtained a license to rent the unit, and Hirschhorn argued in court that he wasn’t allowed to charge rent on a unit he didn’t have a license for.

    After that, he plans to turn the space into a recreation room for his two adolescent children.

    “We need to get the bad energy out and turn it back into a happy, family space,” he said.

    Jack Flemming

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