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Tag: rent

  • See how your cost of living has changed with the ABC Price Tracker

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    The app includes prices for many of your basic needs, from food to housing to transportation, spanning a decade of data points.

    Tuesday, September 9, 2025 3:00PM

    The ABC Data Team has launched the Price Tracker, an interactive tool that provides up-to-date information on the price of household necessities in your area.

    It displays regional prices of essentials for the 100 largest U.S. metro areas over the last decade. Simply search for your area to see how the cost of living has changed for households like yours. Then select groceries, housing or utilities to drill down into each category of basic expenses.

    The ABC Price Tracker can help you answer questions like:

    • How have rent and other housing expenses changed over the last 10 years?

    • Which grocery items have seen the biggest price hikes nationwide?

    • When was the last time gas cost less than $3 per gallon in my area?

    The interactive tool will automatically update with the latest data available, so you can give your sticker shock a gut check.

    Go here to use the ABC Price Tracker.

    Copyright © 2025 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.

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    WLS

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  • How a Macy’s parking structure became L.A. latest luxury apartment complex

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    An unlikely corner of one of L.A.’s once-famous/now-dead malls is open for business again this week as residents move into luxury apartments on the spot that used to be a Macy’s parking lot.

    The Westside Pavilion was one of the city’s premier shopping venues and a cultural touchstone for generations of Angelenos, appearing in movies, television shows and music videos.

    1992 photo of interior of Westside Pavilion that was designed like a Paris arcade.

    (Randy Leffingwell)

    Built on the site of California’s first drive-in movie theater, the center played prominent roles in the 1995 film “Clueless” and the video for musician Tom Petty’s 1989 hit “Free Fallin’.”

    But like many other indoor malls, the Westside Pavilion fell out of favor in the 21st century before closing in 2019 to be converted to offices for rent.

    Now the former mall also has housing, which is even more in demand than offices these days. New residents will be allowed to start moving in this week.

    On a spot once occupied by what the developer called an “absolutely horrible, obsolete” parking structure, there are now 201 luxury apartments — a six-story complex that includes townhouses with front doors that open onto a residential street.

    “You have your own stoop,” developer Lee Wagman said of the townhouses. “It’s kind of like a brownstone.”

    Developer Lee Wagman of GPI Companies stands in the rooftop lounge.

    Developer Lee Wagman of GPI Companies in the rooftop lounge area at the Overland & Ayres apartments.

    (Juliana Yamada / Los Angeles Times)

    Wagman is managing partner of GPI Cos., the Los Angeles real estate company that built the Overland & Ayres apartments and converted the mall’s former Macy’s building into the West End office complex. The combined cost of both builds was $350 million.

    Wagman said the company got the temporary certificate of occupancy for the apartment complex just last week and move-ins can start as early as this week.

    The rest of the former mall was in the process of being converted to offices for rent to Google when it was purchased last year by UCLA. The university is turning the old shopping center into a nearly 700,000-square-foot research center that will focus on immunology, quantum science and engineering.

    The biomedical research center, which is set to open as early as next year, will be trying to tackle towering challenges such as curing cancer and preventing global pandemics.

    The pool area at Overland & Ayres.

    The pool area at Overland & Ayres.

    (Juliana Yamada / Los Angeles Times)

    The new apartments will be convenient for people working at the research center or other nearby job centers, such as UCLA in Westwood, Century City or Culver City.

    As has grown more common for buildings competing at at the top of the apartment market, Overland & Ayres has amenities such as a gym with a resort-style pool deck and spa, an outdoor lawn for working out, a sauna and a cold plunge tub.

    It has a large rooftop space with both indoor and outdoor lounging, dining areas and gas grills. There is a game room and two event kitchens. The building also includes an outdoor dog park and a spa for pets.

    The dog park at the new Overland & Ayres Apartments.

    The dog park at the Overland & Ayres Aapartments.

    (Juliana Yamada / Los Angeles Times)

    Services available to tenants for a fee include personal training and private yoga instruction, dry cleaning pickup and delivery, car washing, dog walking, grocery delivery and housekeeping. Plans also call for commercial tenants along Overland Avenue that would serve the building, such as a restaurant or Pilates studio.

    Rents range from $3,800 per month for a studio apartment to $8,500 per month for a townhouse.

    The mall makeover is part of a decades-long trend of repurposing dead shopping centers, devastated by the pivot to online shopping.

    Once the kings of retail, indoor shopping centers fell out of favor and lost customers to e-commerce, as well as outdoor “lifestyle” centers — places such as the Grove and Westfield Century City, which feature fancy restaurants, entertainment and pleasant spaces to hang out, even if you’re not buying anything.

    The kitchen and living room area of a two-bedroom den unit at the new Overland & Ayres Apartments.

    The kitchen and living room area of a two-bedroom den unit at the Overland & Ayres apartments.

    (Juliana Yamada / Los Angeles Times)

    The Sherman Oaks Galleria, a legendary indoor mall used in the filming of “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” and “Valley Girl,” is now mostly offices.

    Lakewood Center, one of the largest enclosed malls in Los Angeles County, spanning 2 million square feet, has been sold to developers who plan to transform it by adding housing, green spaces and entertainment venues.

    “A lot of malls now are going towards mixed use,” said Wagaman, who helped turn an indoor mall in Pasadena into an outdoor mall with apartments more than two decades ago.

    It is not just old mall space. Struggling office buildings are also looking at transitioning to residences.

    With downtown L.A.’s office rental market struggling with high vacancies and falling values, stakeholders are lobbying for city support to convert high-rises to housing. The hope is that this could help address the city’s persistent housing shortage.

    Among the suggested targets for conversion are elite Financial District towers that commanded top rents before the COVID-19 pandemic’s stay-at-home orders shut down offices, leaving many buildings more than one-third vacant.

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    Roger Vincent

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  • Supreme Court turns down claim from L.A. landlords over COVID evictions ban

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    With two conservatives in dissent, the Supreme Court on Monday turned down a property-rights claim from Los Angeles landlords who say they lost millions from unpaid rent during the COVID-19 pandemic emergency.

    Without comment, the justices said they would not hear an appeal from a coalition of apartment owners who said they rent “over 4,800 units” in “luxury apartment communities” to “predominantly high-income tenants.”

    They sued the city seeking $20 million in damages from tenants who did not pay their rent during the pandemic emergency.

    They contended that the city’s strict limits on evictions during that time had the effect of taking their private property in violation of the Constitution.

    In the past, the court has repeatedly turned down claims that rent control laws are unconstitutional, even though they limit how much landlords can collect in rent.

    But the L.A. landlords said their claim was different because the city had in effect taken use of their property, at least for a time. They cited the 5th Amendment’s clause that says “private property [shall not] be taken for public use without just compensation.”

    “In March 2020, the city of Los Angeles adopted one of the most onerous eviction moratoria in the country, stripping property owners … of their right to exclude nonpaying tenants,” they told the court in GHP Management Corporation vs. City of Los Angeles. “The city pressed private property into public service, foisting the cost of its coronavirus response onto housing providers.”

    “By August 2021, when [they] sued the City seeking just compensation for that physical taking, back rents owed by their unremovable tenants had ballooned to over $20 million,” they wrote.

    A federal judge in Los Angeles and the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in a 3-0 decision dismissed the landlords’ suit. Those judges cited the decades of precedent that allowed the regulation of property.

    The court had considered the appeal since February, but only Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil M. Gorsuch voted to hear the case.

    “I would grant review of the question whether a policy barring landlords from evicting tenants for the nonpayment of rent effects a physical taking under the Taking Clause,” Thomas said. “This case meets all of our usual criteria. … The Court nevertheless denies certiorari, leaving in place confusion on a significant issue, and leaving petitioners without a chance to obtain the relief to which they are likely entitled.”

    The Los Angeles landlords asked the court to decide “whether an eviction moratorium depriving property owners of the fundamental right to exclude nonpaying tenants effects a physical taking.”

    In February, the city attorney’s office urged the court to turn down the appeal.

    “As a once-in-a-century pandemic shuttered its businesses and schools, the city of Los Angeles employed temporary, emergency measures to protect residential renters against eviction,” they wrote. The measure protected only those who could “prove COVID-19 related economic hardship,” and it “did not excuse any rent debt that an affected tenant accrued.”

    The city argued that the landlords are seeking a “radical departure from precedent” in the area of property regulation.

    “If a government takes property, it must pay for it,” the city attorneys said. “For more than a century, though, this court has recognized that governments do not appropriate property rights solely by virtue of regulating them.”

    The city said the COVID emergency and the restriction on evictions ended in January 2023.

    In reply, lawyers for the landlords said bans on evictions are becoming the “new normal.” They cited a Los Angeles County measure they said would “preclude evictions for non-paying tenants purportedly affected by the recent wildfires.”

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    David G. Savage

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  • Housing Tracker: Southern California home prices dip in May

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    Southern California home prices declined slightly in May compared to a year earlier, the first annual drop since 2023.

    In May, the average home price across the six-county Southern California region fell 0.07% from April to $876,044, according to data from Zillow. Prices were down 0.2% from May 2024.

    Economists and real estate agents say a variety of factors have slowed the market, including high mortgage rates, rising inventory levels and economic uncertainty stemming from tariffs.

    The year-over-year price decline last month marked the first since July 2023. At the time, home prices had been falling because rising mortgage rates knocked many buyers out of the market. Values started increasing again when the numbers of homes for sale plunged as sellers also backed away, not willing to give up mortgages they took out during the pandemic with rates of 3% and below.

    The inventory picture, however, is changing.

    In May, there were 38% more homes for sale than a year earlier in Los Angeles County, with similar increases seen elsewhere in Southern California.

    Real estate agents say existing homeowners increasingly want to move rather than hold onto their ultra-low mortgage rates. But many first-time buyers, without access to equity, remain locked out.

    Add economic uncertainty and you get a market that’s noticeably downshifted.

    If the Trump administration’s policies end up pushing the economy into a recession, some economists say home prices could drop much more.

    For now, Zillow is forecasting the economy avoids a recession and for home prices to decline only slightly. By May 2026, the real estate firm expects home prices in the Los Angeles-Orange County metro region to be 1.1% lower than they are today.

    Map showing L.A. County housing prices from June 2025

    Zillow Research, Times analysis

    Note to readers

    Welcome to the Los Angeles Times’ Real Estate Tracker. Every month we will publish a report with data on housing prices, mortgage rates and rental prices. Our reporters will explain what the new data mean for Los Angeles and surrounding areas and help you understand what you can expect to pay for an apartment or house. You can read last month’s real estate breakdown here.

    Explore home prices and rents for May

    Use the tables below to search for home sale prices and apartment rental prices by city, neighborhood and county.

    Rental prices in Southern California

    In 2024, asking rents for apartments in many parts of Southern California also ticked down, but the January fires in L.A. County could be upending the downward trend in some locations.

    Housing analysts have said that rising vacancy levels since 2022 had forced landlords to accept less in rent. But the fires destroyed thousands of homes, suddenly thrusting many people into the rental market.

    Most homes destroyed were single-family houses, and some housing and disaster recovery experts say they expect the largest increases in rent to be in larger units adjacent to burn areas in Pacific Palisades and Altadena, with upward pressure on rents diminishing for units that are smaller and farther away from the disaster zone.

    A recent L.A. Times analysis of Zillow data found that in ZIP Codes closest to the fires rent rose more than the rest of the county between December and April.

    Other data sources show similar trends.

    In Santa Monica, which borders the hard-hit Pacific Palisades neighborhood, the median rent rose 5.1% in May from a year earlier, according to data from ApartmentList.

    Across the entire city of Los Angeles, which includes the Palisades and many neighborhoods not adjacent to any fire, rents dropped 0.33% last month.

    ApartmentList does not have data for Altadena, but it does for the adjacent city of Pasadena. Rents there rose 6.2% in May from a year earlier.

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    Andrew Khouri, Phi Do

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  • Price-gouging charges slowly mount after the fires, but some say it’s not enough

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    California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta accused real estate agent Iman Shaghyan this week of increasing the price of a Beverly Hills rental by more than 30% in the days after the Jan. 7 fires. It’s the fourth charge Bonta has filed since price-gouging rules went into effect that prohibit rent hikes of more than 10% after a natural disaster.

    “Profiting off Californians’ pain through price gouging is illegal and I will not stand for it,” Bonta said in a news release.

    In the weeks after the fires, city officials vowed to crack down on violators as thousands of complaints poured in, with some organizers even compiling spreadsheets documenting the skyrocketing rents. Bonta enlisted teams of lawyers to evaluate complaints, and his office has primarily targeted real estate agents.

    But some critics claim that government officials aren’t doing enough to address the rampant price gouging that appeared across the region in the wake of the fires, saying that the charges filed represent only a small fraction of the complaints submitted to the city and state.

    “More needs to be done,” said Chelsea Kirk, co-founder of the activist organization the Rent Brigade. “It’s been de-prioritized, and all discourse from elected officials and the press around rent gouging has ended.”

    Kirk’s organization checks Zillow for examples of price gouging and said there are currently more than 10,000 active listings that qualify. Her team submits weekly reports to government officials but said transparency is a problem since no one knows exactly what is being investigated.

    As a result, her team worked with L.A. City Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martínez to draft a motion that, if passed, would require L.A. City Atty. Hydee Feldstein Soto to produce monthly reports detailing the total number of price-gouging complaints received, response times and enforcement actions. The motion has been introduced but not yet placed on the agenda.

    “There’s an utter lack of urgency,” Kirk said.

    In addition to Shaghyan, Bonta filed charges in January against La Cañada Flintridge agent Mike Kobeissi and Glendale agent Lar Sevan Chouljian. In February, he charged Hermosa Beach agent Willie Baronet-Israel as well as Edward Kushins, the landlord of the property.

    All of the cases are active. If convicted, the maximum penalty for the misdemeanor is a year in prison and a fine of $10,000.

    In addition to the charges, state Department of Justice officials said they have sent out more than 750 warning letters to hotels and landlords accused of price gouging. The department also is investigating fraud, scams and low-ball offers on burned properties.

    Bonta is investigating on behalf of the state and Feldstein Soto is filing lawsuits on behalf of the city. So far, she’s been targeting more than just real estate agents.

    In February, Feldstein Soto’s office sued rental giant Blueground, citing more than 10 cases of price gouging. In one instance, Blueground allegedly jacked up the rent of a downtown L.A. apartment by 56% on Jan. 7, the day of the fires.

    In March, Feldstein Soto’s office sued a group of homeowners and companies for $62 million, citing not only price-gouging violations but also violations of the city’s short-term rental ordinance, which places restrictions on rentals such as Airbnbs. The group of defendants included four homeowners and five limited liability companies: Akiva Nourollah, Micah Hiller, Haim Amran Zrihen, Rachel Florence Saadat, Hiller Hospitality, Hiller Hospitality Group, 1070 Bedford, Red Rock and Coastal Charm.

    The Times reached out to all the individuals charged with price gouging or short-term rental violations — except for Zrihen and Saadat, whose contact information could not be located — and did not receive any on-the-record responses.

    In the first few weeks after the fire, Feldstein Soto’s office issued more than 250 cease-and-desist letters to owners, landlords and property management groups based on price-gouging tips.

    The price-gouging rules are set to expire July 1.

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    Jack Flemming

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  • For 20% of California, half the paycheck or more goes to housing

    For 20% of California, half the paycheck or more goes to housing

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    “How expensive?” tracks measurements of California’s totally unaffordable housing market.

    The pain: Housing eats up at least half of paychecks in one-fifth of California households.

    The source: My trusty spreadsheet looked at the latest Census Bureau stats tracking household expenses in 2023, focusing on what government experts call “extreme burdens” – folks paying 50% or more of their income for housing.

    The pinch

    California is by far the nation’s largest housing market, so it’s not terribly surprising that it’s also home to the most households spending half of their income on shelter – 2.7 million, or 14% of the nation’s 19.3 million. Next is Texas at 1.7 million, Florida at 1.6 million, New York at 1.5 million and Pennsylvania at 687,900.

    What’s distressing is the size of the 20% slice of the Golden State’s population that it represents. That’s the largest slice among the states, and well above the 15% slice nationwide.

    New York and Hawaii are next in shares of households spending half-plus on housing at 19%. Then comes Florida and Nevada at 18%. Texas was No. 14 at 15%.

    And where is it the hardest to find deeply housing-pinched households? North Dakota and West Virginia were at 9%, South Dakota at 10%, and Iowa and Missouri at 11%.

    Pressure points

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    Jonathan Lansner

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  • Angel Reese Says Her Paltry Pay In The WNBA Doesn’t Cover Her $8,000 Rent–‘I’m Living Beyond My Means’

    Angel Reese Says Her Paltry Pay In The WNBA Doesn’t Cover Her $8,000 Rent–‘I’m Living Beyond My Means’

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    Angel Reese is making light of “living beyond her means” while playing for the WNBA. According to the Chicago Sky star’s latest video, her (ridiculously low) $74,000 annual salary isn’t enough to cover her expensive rent.

    Source: John Nacion / Getty

     

    In an Instagram Live video shared on Oct. 15, the 22-year-old athlete revealed that she only makes $74,000 as a rookie with the league. Reese, who rose to fame as a forward with the Louisiana State University Tigers, encouraged her haters to keep on doubting her as “hating” helps her to pay “them bills.”

     

    How Much Does Angel Reese Make With The WNBA?

    Reese was selected as the seventh overall pick by the Chicago Sky this year and is set to earn $324,383 over the next four seasons. Her salary started at $73,439, according to Sports Rac, with increases leading to a team option of $93,636 in her fourth year, but that apparently isn’t enough to cover her daily expenses.

    “I just hope you know the WNBA don’t pay my bills at all,” the Maryland native told fans in her video which was reposted by the SpilledMilkSM blog on Tuesday. “I don’t even think that pays one of my bills. Literally, I’m trying to think of my rent for where I stay at. Let me do the math real quick. I don’t even know my [WNBA] salary. $74,000?”

    Luckily, Reese has the option of boosting her salary thanks to additional incentives with the WNBA. For example, if she was selected to participate in an All-Star game, she could boost  her salary by an additional $2,575, according to USA Today. The extra dough would help Reese pay her expensive rent in Chicago, which after crunching some numbers with a friend off camera, she revealed to be $8,000 a month. 

    “I’m living beyond my means!” she gasped, before letting out a huge chuckle. “Babe, if y’all thought… That WNBA check don’t pay a thing. Did that even pay my car note?… I wouldn’t even be able to eat a sandwich with that. I wouldn’t even be able to eat. I wouldn’t be able to live,” the baller added toward the end of the clip, according to Vibe.

    Reese Makes Millions Off Her NIL Deals

    Fortunately, Reese has multiple revenue streams to help cover her expenses. In 2023, she signed a name, image, and likeness (NIL) deal with Reebok, a major financial boost that raised her NIL valuation to $1.7 million—making her one of the top-ranked women’s basketball athletes in this area, according to On3. Reese ranks No. 7 in the On3 NIL 100, the first comprehensive ranking of high school and college athletes based on their NIL valuation. 

    As reported by Yahoo Sports, Reese secured 17 NIL deals from 2022 to 2023, partnering with notable brands such as Sports Illustrated, Calvin Klein, ZOA Energy, and Goldman Sachs, among others. In a campaign ad for Goldman Sachs released in March, the basketball champ thanked her mother for instilling a strong work ethic and dedication into her throughout childhood.

    “I owe so much to my mom,” the star shared in the campaign video posted to her Instagram account on March 18. “She instilled in me my confidence, work ethic and my commitment to my community. It’s clear that from her generation to today, Black women are still facing challenges. But I believe change is possible.”

    Angel Reese is out here hustling! What do you think of her tight WNBA salary?

     

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    Shannon Dawson

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  • Former ICE field director seizes on immigration in race against Rep. Jason Crow to represent Aurora

    Former ICE field director seizes on immigration in race against Rep. Jason Crow to represent Aurora

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    John Fabbricatore enforced federal immigration laws in his position as an ICE field office director until two years ago, and now he hopes to help secure America’s borders as a congressman.

    The Republican candidate in Colorado’s 6th Congressional District is drawing on his career with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement as he runs against U.S. Rep. Jason Crow in the Nov. 5 election. Crow, a Democrat, just finished his third term in Congress as the representative of the district, which includes Aurora, Littleton, Englewood, Greenwood Village and Centennial.

    The odds weigh heavily in Crow’s favor. The nonpartisan Cook Political Report doesn’t consider the fight for the 6th District to be competitive. It’s ranked as solidly Democratic, in part because Crow, 45, won all three of his elections by double-digit percentages and redistricting in 2020 resulted in boundaries more favorable to Democrats.

    That’s a change from 2018 when the district was seen as a battleground and Crow won his first race by unseating then-U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman, now Aurora’s mayor.

    But this time, Fabbricatore, 52, says voters are looking for a candidate who will prioritize the economy and lower taxes — and he contends that he’s the person for the job.

    “They want someone that wants to fight,” Fabbricatore said.

    He and Crow share certain traits. They’re both veterans: Fabbricatore served in the U.S. Air Force, and Crow was an Army Ranger. They’re hunters, each having longstanding experience with firearms. Neither hails from Colorado originally, with Fabbricatore raised in New York City and Crow in Madison, Wisconsin.

    And the candidates, both fathers of two children, reside in Aurora.

    Beyond that, their stances on major issues diverge — including on immigration, which Fabbricatore refers to as his “subject matter expertise.”

    He argues jobs are going to immigrants compensated with lower wages, taking positions that could be filled by Americans for higher pay. Fabbricatore says he supports “legal, vetted” immigration and more stringent enforcement of existing laws.

    “If we actually just enforce those laws, we will be doing much better than we are doing today with immigration,” he said.

    In recent weeks, Fabbricatore has raised the alarm alongside former President Donald Trump and other conservatives about the presence of Venezuelan gangs in Aurora — while Crow has called out exaggerations and criticized Trump for distorting the problems in certain apartment complexes.

    Crow notes that he represents “one of the most diverse districts in the nation,” with nearly 20% of his constituents born outside of the U.S. He wants to use federal grants and other programs to help immigrants and defend them against racist rhetoric.

    He said he backed a bipartisan immigration deal that ran aground earlier this year after failing to earn enough Republican support. It would have boosted the number of border patrol agents, immigration judges and officers that oversee asylum cases, as well as established more legal pathways for migrants and others without documentation.

    Fabbricatore said in a Denver Post candidate questionnaire that he would not have supported the bipartisan bill, instead preferring another bill with a greater focus on border security.

    Gun violence is what motivated Crow to run for office. He backs a ban on assault weapons and supports universal background checks. He’s also working to pass a bill that would apply the same restrictions to out-of-state residents when they purchase long guns and shotguns as they face when buying handguns — requiring that the gun be shipped to a federally licensed seller in their home state, with a background check performed there.

    Gun violence is “just an unacceptable, avoidable, ongoing national tragedy,” Crow said. “We don’t have to live with mass shootings.”

    Fabbricatore says he believes in gun rights and is instead pushing for investments in mental health.

    The candidates differ on abortion. Crow favors abortion rights, saying he aligns with the majority of Coloradans who back legal access to abortion — and he would support a federal law establishing that as a right. Fabbricatore says Congress should leave abortion’s legal status to the states. He opposes abortion, but he says he recognizes a need for exceptions, including in cases of rape.

    “Having been someone who worked in sex trafficking and saw what many women went through, I could never tell a woman that she couldn’t have a medical procedure to end what happened to her,” he said.

    Fabbricatore points to the economy as his No. 1 issue, saying it’s impacted by energy policy and immigration. He sees Colorado’s potential to participate in the energy sector through solar, wind, fracking and coal.

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    Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton

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  • Your guide to Prop 33: Local expansions of rent control

    Your guide to Prop 33: Local expansions of rent control

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    What would it do?

    With Proposition 33, Californians will vote again on whether to OK the possibility of local expansions of rent control. The measure is essentially another referendum on the Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act, after similar attempts failed in 2018 and 2020.

    That 1995 law restricts the reach of local rent control, barring cities and counties from capping rent increases on apartments built after Feb. 1, 1995, as well as on condominiums and single-family homes of any age. It also bans a practice known as vacancy control that bars landlords from raising rents on vacant units up to the market rate and limits those increases.

    Prop. 33, then, would let cities and counties enact or expand rent control and let them implement vacancy control. It wouldn’t enact any regulations on rents statewide, however — it would just open the door for local governments to do so.

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    Currently, no city in San Diego County has any rent control policies in place, other than those mandated by the state. Throughout California, landlords are beholden to a 2019 law that caps annual rent increases either at 10 percent or at 5 percent plus the local inflation rate — whichever is lower — for many apartments at least 15 years old.

    Why is this on the ballot?

    Because the nonprofit behind Prop. 33 keeps trying but failing to get a Costa-Hawkins repeal passed. Prop. 33 is similar to measures that failed respectively in 2018 and 2020. Despite those losses, another effort to repeal Costa-Hawkins qualified for this November’s ballot. Like the previous two, the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, a Los Angeles-based nonprofit, is behind it.

    Who supports each, and why?

    Prop. 33’s biggest backers are the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and its affiliated tenant advocacy groups. They argue rent regulations are essential to fighting the state’s housing and homelessness crisis by keeping Californians in homes they can afford.

    • 38 QUESTIONS: What can fix California’s housing mess? CLICK HERE!

    Meanwhile, perhaps surprisingly, some Republican critics of state housing mandates also support Prop. 33. That’s because, to them, the measure “gives local governments ironclad protections from the state’s housing policy,” as one Orange County lawmaker put it.

    Who opposes it, and why?

    Prop. 33 is opposed by the California Apartment Association, which says it would discourage homebuilding and encourage landlords to sell rather than rent their homes.

    • HOW NIMBY ARE YOU? Ponder common objections to new housing. TAKE OUR QUIZ!

    But it isn’t just landlords and the AIDS Healthcare Foundation at odds over it.

    Some prominent, pro-housing Democrats — including Sen. Toni Atkins of San Diego — have come out hard against Prop. 33, saying it could dramatically hinder new housing construction. Atkins called it “as deceptive as it is dangerous.”

    Such critics say the rent-control measure would give wealthy coastal cities that oppose new development a powerful tool to block it: It would let them impose affordability requirements so prohibitively high that they’d ultimately shut out any new development at all.

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    Cameron Fozi, Clara Harter

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  • Office vacancy levels soar to record highs in biggest Bay Area markets

    Office vacancy levels soar to record highs in biggest Bay Area markets

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    SAN JOSE — The Bay Area’s three primary office markets, haunted by empty buildings, have reached forbidding new milestones of record-high vacancy levels, according to a grim new report.

    Silicon Valley, which roughly equates to Santa Clara County; downtown Oakland; and San Francisco all hit record-high office vacancy rates in the most recent three-month period, JLL, a commercial real estate firm, reported in separate surveys of those markets.

    Downtown Oakland, as seen in a July 2024 drone picture. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

    Tenants continue to seek ways to reduce their corporate footprints, a dynamic that is keeping office vacancies at brutal levels.

    JLL measured the vacancy levels for the July-through-September period.

    San Francisco's skyline silhouettes against a scarlet sunset, Thursday, Jan. 4, 2024. Weather forecasts predict return of rain to the region on Saturday. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
    Sunset arrives in San Francisco. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

    Here are the details for each market in the third quarter:

    — San Francisco, which is locked in what numerous experts believe is an economic “doom loop”, posted a third-quarter vacancy rate of 34.5%.

    — Downtown Oakland’s office vacancy rate was 29.1%.

    — Silicon Valley reported an office vacancy level of 22%.

    In all three instances, the vacancy levels rocketed to record highs, according to JLL researchers for each market.

    Despite the ominous statistics, JLL researchers believe some signs of hope have begun to emerge for the battered Bay Area office markets.

    “Leasing activity in Silicon Valley is up 21.6% from the previous quarter,” JLL reported in their assessment of the South Bay office market for the third quarter. “The San Jose Airport and Santa Clara submarkets led the activity, accounting for 22.7% and 18.2% of deals, respectively.”

    In downtown Oakland, the July-through-September quarter was bleak with little room for optimism. Downtown Oakland’s office market was sluggish at best.

    Leasing activity, the number of rental deals and the average lease size declined in the July-September period compared with the April-through-June quarter in downtown Oakland.

    Downtown Oakland also faces an ominous challenge due to huge blocks of office space being vacant.

    “Two more full floors came to the market this quarter” in downtown Oakland, JLL reported. “Clorox listed another floor for sublease at 1221 Broadway and APEN’s former space at 426 17th Street was listed. This brings the total number of full floors available to 133 in downtown Oakland.”

    Put another way, if a typical Oakland office highrise is 20 stories high, 133 empty floors could equate to six or seven completely vacant office towers in downtown Oakland.

    San Francisco is — by far — the worst of the three office markets, with a vacancy rate that is 5 to 12 percentage points higher than downtown Oakland or Silicon Valley.

    “Vacancy increased to 34.5%” in San Francisco, “largely due to continued consolidation” by office tenants in the city’s Financial District, JLL reported.

    Even worse, office rental rates are particularly weak in San Francisco. Rents are roughly 33% below the levels seen in 2019, the final full year before coronavirus-spawned business shutdowns began in 2020.

    The JLL report did offer some hope for these three key office markets — although the reports warned that any real improvement in vacancy levels won’t materialize until sometime in 2025.

    “Return-to-office rates have trended upward, 6% higher than this time last year” in San Francisco, JLL reported. “Remote job postings are also down 16% year-over-year. Both indicate that companies are shifting away from a remote-friendly work environment.”

    Some encouraging signs for downtown Oakland have emerged due to government entities seeking to rent or own office spaces in the East Bay city’s urban core.

    “Downtown Oakland has seen stabilization among its public sector tenants, including major commitments from BART PD, the FBI, and FEMA,” JLL reported. “As remote work mandates shift, so will workweek activity shift in downtown Oakland.”

    Silicon Valley is starting to see a big increase in tenant demand as companies scout for office space to a greater extent, JLL reported.

    “JLL is tracking approximately three million square feet of office requirements, a 21.4% increase” in the third quarter compared with the second quarter, JLL reported.

    Plus, more tenants scouted for much larger spaces in the July-through-September third quarter than they did in the April-through-June second quarter.

    “While smaller requirements see higher demand and activity, 100,000-plus square feet requirements have tripled this year, signaling potential new deals,” JLL stated.

     

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    George Avalos

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  • Single-family landlord Invitation Homes misled consumers over cost of a home, the FTC alleges

    Single-family landlord Invitation Homes misled consumers over cost of a home, the FTC alleges

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    Invitation Homes, the nation’s largest single-family landlord, has agreed to pay $48 million to settle a handful of allegations, including that it illegally charged undisclosed junk fees, withheld tenant security deposits and engaged in unfair eviction practices.

    The settlement was announced Tuesday by the Federal Trade Commission. Among the main allegations made by the FTC was Invitation Homes deceived tenants over the total cost of renting one of its homes.

    The company, which owns or manages more than 100,000 homes nationwide, including more than 11,000 in California, did not include mandatory “junk” fees when advertising its rental rates, according to the FTC.

    These fees — for things like smart home technology and utility management — at times raised the cost of rent by more than $1,700 a year and were only disclosed when consumers went to sign their lease, the FTC alleged.

    By that time, the agency said consumers were in a bind because they had already paid a nonrefundable application fee of up to $55. They may have also forked over $500 to reserve a specific home, which they would only get back if they signed the lease.

    Sometimes, consumers weren’t made aware of the junk fees until after they signed the lease and moved in, authorities said.

    In addition to junk fees, the FTC alleged Invitation Homes rented out homes that were often in disrepair and systematically withheld security deposits for items that were not the tenant’s responsibility.

    Invitation Homes also engaged in several unfair eviction practices, the agency said. Among them, the company told struggling tenants during the pandemic that their only options were to pay, move out or face eviction and failed to inform them of federal eviction protections available at the time, the FTC alleged.

    “No American should pay more for rent or be kicked out of their home because of illegal tactics by corporate landlords,” Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina M. Khan said in a statement. “The FTC will continue to use all our tools to protect renters from unlawful business practices.”

    In a news release, Invitation Homes said it made no admission of wrongdoing as part of the settlement and described its disclosures and practices as “industry leading.”

    “Today’s agreement brings the FTC’s three-year investigation to a close and puts this matter behind the Company, which will, as always, move forward with its continuous efforts to better serve its customers and enhance its practices,” Invitation Homes said in a statement.

    The company, which started buying thousands of homes in the wake of the Great Recession, has reached multiple settlements this year.

    In July, it agreed to pay nearly $20 million to resolve allegations it made unpermitted renovations across its portfolio in California. In January, it agreed to pay several million to settle allegations it violated the state’s rent cap law.

    Under the settlement announced Tuesday, which still must be approved by a judge, consumers would receive refunds and Invitation Homes will be required to include all mandatory monthly fees in its advertised rent.

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    Andrew Khouri

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  • 1st Latina appointed to a key DC government role says she wants to help others prosper – WTOP News

    1st Latina appointed to a key DC government role says she wants to help others prosper – WTOP News

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    Thirty-four years after coming to the U.S., Jackie Reyes-Yanes is the director of the Mayor’s Office of Community Affairs, the outreach arm of city hall, overseeing a dozen community affairs offices.

    WTOP celebrates National Hispanic Heritage Month this Sept. 15 through Oct. 15, with stories spotlighting the contributions, culture and accomplishments of Hispanic people and places across the D.C. region.

    Jackie Reyes-Yanes, director of the Mayor’s Office of Community Affairs, said she became a point person for the Latino community, who would come to her with issues that weren’t being addressed.(WTOP/Shayna Estulin)

    If Jackie Reyes-Yanes could talk to her younger self, newly arrived in D.C. from El Salvador, she would tell Little Jackie, who didn’t speak any English: “This is the best city in the world if you want to become somebody. I wouldn’t have these opportunities back home.”

    Now, 34 years later, she’s the director of the Mayor’s Office of Community Affairs, the outreach arm of city hall, overseeing a dozen community affairs offices.

    Reyes-Yanes fell into politics. She started as a single mother of three, advocating for better schools. From there, she was hired to work as a liaison to Ward 1 — which has a large Hispanic population — under then D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty and his administration from 2007 to 2011.

    Despite going into politics to fix education, she said she soon became a point person for the Latino community, who would come to her with issues that weren’t being addressed.

    “When COVID hit, it was an eye opener,” she said.

    She was the director of Latino Affairs under Mayor Muriel Bowser when the pandemic broke out. When the first Latino person died, he didn’t get into the ambulance because he lacked documentation, Reyes-Yanes said.

    “And the mayor said, ‘We have a problem,’” she said.

    Soon after, Reyes-Yanes’s office began working round the clock on education and health campaigns and helping Latinos with rental and housing assistance through the pandemic’s economic upheaval.

    While things have greatly improved for the Latino community in D.C. since her arrival in 1990 — when her lack of English was treated like a disability at school —  Reyes-Yanes said more work needs to be done. Some of the major issues that needs to be addressed are housing, immigration, jobs, schools and integrating newcomers into the city.

    With around 80,000 Hispanic people living in D.C., Reyes-Yanes said the community is the backbone of the city and vital to its economy.

    “If you go into a restaurant, go into the kitchen. Who’s cooking?” she said. “If you see the landscaping, who are the people doing the landscaping? If you see a construction company, and you go outside, who’s doing the construction?”

    Coming to this country young also meant Reyes-Yanes was never put into a cultural box. She was open to embracing different communities.

    “I love Ethiopian food. I love Mexican food,” she said, “I love culture, and I love to learn.”

    Now, as director of community affairs, she oversees education campaigns in multiple languages, packaging the mayor’s policies in culturally sensitive and easy to understand ways for various communities.

    “I just want to make sure that everybody who wants to prosper in Washington, D.C., they have the ways how to do it,” she said.

    She’s the first person from the Latino community to ever be appointed to that role.

    She told WTOP that the sensitivity forged growing up in a vulnerable population is a responsibility she now carries to help all vulnerable populations, serving as a bridge between the mayor and the diverse mosaic that is the city.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Shayna Estulin

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  • Colorado’s new housing law helping Evergreen woman spend more time with family

    Colorado’s new housing law helping Evergreen woman spend more time with family

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    DENVER — A Colorado family is taking advantage of the state’s new housing law to spend more time together.

    House Bill 24-1152 was signed into law in May and allows homeowners to build accessory dwelling units (ADUs), also known as mother-in-law suites, by requiring certain communities to allow them to help ease the housing crunch.

    Laurel Triscari and her daughter Ami Roeschlein love to spend time together. As Roeschlein’s mom got older, they talked about her moving closer to family.

    “So she lives up in Evergreen where it, you know, it gets snowy. She’s under 80, but getting closer to it, and so having to shovel her driveway or her front steps is just not feasible. We wanted a place for her to be able to age in place,” said Roeschlein.

    The two looked into ADUs for two years and found a company to help them. Triscari could be closer, and the family could have grandma in their backyard.

    The company, Anchored Tiny Homes, said that since the new law took effect, business has really picked up.

    “We are busy. There are three to 400 folks reaching out a week right now asking to see if they can get an ADU built in their backyard,” said Brent Dowling, the co-owner of Anchor Tiny Homes.

    Dowling said that not only are ADUs cost-effective, but you also have the power to craft a home of your own.

    As Triscari and her daughter wait for their ADU to be finished, they look forward to more time together.

    Colorado’s new housing law helping Evergreen woman spend more time with family

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos

    At Denver7, we’re committed to making a difference in our community. We’re standing up for what’s right by listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the featured videos in the playlist above.

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    Wanya Reese

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  • Moving Out of Your Apartment? Here’s How to Write a 60 or 30-Day Notice to Vacate Letter

    Moving Out of Your Apartment? Here’s How to Write a 60 or 30-Day Notice to Vacate Letter

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    There comes a time in every rental agreement when you want to move out. Whether you’re moving across the country, buying your first home, or simply looking for more space, you’ll need to follow a few steps before your lease ends. And sending your written notice to vacate letter is one of those steps.

    Outlined below are all the essential details you need to know about writing your notice to vacate letter, including why it’s important and what it needs to include. From protecting your security deposit to keeping a good relationship with your landlord, we’ve got tips and tricks to keep your move-out easy. Plus, we’ve provided a simple template to make things even easier for you to check this off your to-do list.

    What is a notice to vacate letter?

    A notice to vacate letter (aka lease termination letter) is a formal letter a tenant writes to their landlord or property manager to end their lease agreement. It’s an important legal document that protects the tenant and serves as proof they sent their notice within the required time frame. It also gives the landlord ample notice and enough time to find a new tenant or make other plans for their rental property

    The tenant should include their contact information, intent to end the lease, and the date they wish to vacate. In most cases, a landlord or property managers require a notice to vacate letter from their departing tenants. But even when not needed, it’s a good idea to send one anyways.

    Is a notice to vacate letter the same as an eviction notice?

    Confusingly, an eviction notice is sometimes called a “notice to vacate.” But generally, a notice to vacate letter is sent from a tenant to a landlord, whereas a landlord can send an eviction notice to a tenant if they violate the terms of the lease agreement

    Landlords can also send a “no-cause notice to vacate letter” to a tenant. This is not a credit-destroying eviction notice, though it can also be called a “no-cause eviction notice.” Instead, a no-cause notice is a notice of non-renewal. In other words, your landlord can decide not to offer you a new lease agreement. This is usually the case when a landlord plans to sell or renovate the property. 

    Do you need to give a 60 or 30-day notice to vacate?

    In most cases, you need to provide some sort of notice that you intend to end your lease. Some landlords require you to provide written notice. Some are less formal and ask for an email or phone call. Whatever the case, always get a receipt or confirmation when your landlord gets the notice. Failure to provide proper notice can result in fines owed to your landlord.

    The notice period you’re required to give depends on your municipal and state laws. In most cases, 30 days’ notice to vacate is required for long-term leases. But 60 days is also common, though less popular. On the other hand, some cities don’t require such advanced notice. In Seattle, WA, tenants only need to give two weeks notice and only seven days are required in Raleigh, NC..Always double-check your lease agreement as well as state and local laws to ensure you know and follow the rules. Following what your landlord prefers usually makes things easier for you.

    How much notice do you need to give for a short-term lease?

    A short-term lease, sometimes called a tenancy-at-will agreement or a rental agreement, follows similar rules. A rule of thumb here is that a tenant should provide notice of at least one billable period before they wish to vacate. So in a month-to-month lease, you would need to provide one month’s or 30 days’ notice. In a week-to-week lease, seven days notice is usually enough.

    person writing a notice to vacate letter template

    Notice to vacate letter template (tenant to landlord)

    You can use the template below as a guideline when writing your formal notice to vacate. Keep in mind that the “reason for leaving” section is optional. If your reason for leaving has nothing to do with your landlord, it’s nice for them to know. For example, if you currently live in an apartment in Seattle, WA, and are moving out-of-state, you can consider saying, “I’m not renewing my lease, because I’m moving to Boston, MA, for my new job.”

    If there was an issue with the apartment, this isn’t the best place to bring it up for the first time. You can include information about an ongoing problem if you want to, but it’s not required.

    Below is a sample letter template for a 30 or 60 notice to vacate:

    [Your Name]

    [Street Number, Apartment Number]

    [City, State, Zip]

    [Your Phone Number]

    [Your Email Address]

    [Today’s Date] 

    [Landlord or Property Manager Name]

    [Landlord or Property Address]

    [City, State, Zip]

    Dear [Landlord or Property Manager’s Name],

    In accordance with my lease, I am writing this letter to provide a [number of days] notice that I will move out of my apartment [rental property address and unit number] on [move-out date].

    (Optional) I am not renewing my lease because [reason for leaving].

    Please contact me via [preferred contact method] to schedule the final inspection. Please send my security deposit of $[amount] to my new address: 

    [New address or forwarding address]

    If you believe the security deposit should be deducted for any reason in accordance with our lease agreement, please send me an itemized list of costs. 

    You’re welcome to [call or email] me with any questions. 

    Sincerely,

    [Your name]

    [Signature]

    How to send your written notice to vacate letter

    Email is the most convenient way to send your notice to vacate letter, but you can also hand over a physical copy of your notice to vacate letter or mail it to their preferred address. If you want to be extra diligent when handing in your letter, you can ask your landlord to sign a receipt of notice. It’s a great idea to send a  follow-up email to your landlord a week or two after sending your lease termination letter, especially if you haven’t heard from them regarding the inspection.

    tenant typing a lease termination letter to give to their landlord

    6 tips to consider when writing your intent to vacate letter

    1. Read your lease agreement again

    There’s likely a paragraph or two about the proper way to notify your landlord about moving out. Sometimes an email is acceptable, or your landlord has a preferred template. You’ll also want to note your security deposit amount and any special terms in the agreement.

    2. Include the date

    Whether you use this template or a template provided by your landlord, the date is very important. That’s what proves you met the requirements for adequate notice — the 30 or 60 days required by your lease. 

    3. Be kind and straightforward

    Consider your letter a professional courtesy and a future investment. If you continue to rent, you may need a landlord recommendation or two in the future. This is an opportunity to continue to stand out as an excellent renter. 

    4. Make your new address and contact information prominent

    You want to make things as easy as possible for your landlord to return your security deposit. Be sure to make your new address legible and prominent for your landlord in your letter.

    5. Make scheduling the walkthrough easy

    If there’s an issue with the condition of your apartment, your landlord or property manager will point it out during the final move-out walkthrough. And you want to be present to make sure you know what your landlord is noting.

    6. Know the rules for breaking your lease early

    If you’re breaking your lease, you’ll likely have to pay an additional fee. Sometimes you have the right to terminate early, like for medical reasons or military deployment. Follow the rules, document everything, and work with your local tenant’s rights office for guidance.

    moving boxes for moving out of a rental unit

    What if I change my mind about moving?

    If you change your mind, you can reach back out to your landlord or property manager to see if you can still renew your lease. Just know that you don’t have the right to renew your lease after you’ve sent your letter (unless local laws allow it).

    But that’s no reason not to ask your landlord or property manager if your current apartment is still available to rent again. Most of the time, it’s easier and cheaper to keep a renter in place rather than find a new one. And many landlords are happy to keep a renter they have a good relationship with.

    What are the next steps after sending the notice to your landlord?

    After sending a proper notice to vacate to your landlord and establishing your move-out date, there are a few additional things you can expect.

    The unit may be shown to prospective tenants

    Your landlord may ask for the right to show your apartment where a prospective tenant does a walkthrough. Your landlord is supposed to arrange showing times in advance, usually at least 24 hours. In some cases, you have the right to refuse a showing. Try to work with your landlord to create a showing schedule. For example, you can give them the most manageable days and times for you. This will maintain a good landlord-tenant relationship.

    Schedule your move-out inspection

    Your inspection should take place after you’ve moved out all or most of your stuff. If you have cleaning responsibilities, it’s best to have the walkthrough after you’ve cleaned. During the inspection, your landlord will check the apartment’s condition and point out anything they think is outside normal wear and tear. This is also an opportunity to discuss any repairs beforehand and gives you a chance to address them. Always ask for an itemized list of repairs to prevent any disputes with the security deposit. 

    Move into your next place

    Now it’s time to unpack those boxes. You’ll also want to update your mailing address with your bank, student loan company, and other important entities. It’s also a great idea to set up a mail forwarding address, which you can do easily online through the USPS website. And don’t forget to update your voter registration. 

    Receive your security deposit back

    As long as you leave your apartment in good condition, your landlord must return the security deposit within a specified time period according to the rules in your state. Generally, it’s between 15 and 60 days, but it’s a good idea to review local laws. Be sure your landlord knows where to send it and how to get in touch with you if they have any questions.

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    Chibuzo Ezeokeke

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  • Californians won’t pay more than one month’s rent for security deposits under new law

    Californians won’t pay more than one month’s rent for security deposits under new law

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    The days of needing to save two to three months’ worth of rent for a security deposit are largely over in California.

    Legislation took effect Monday that limits a security deposit on a rental property to no more than one month’s rent for all but the smallest landlords. The law, passed as Assembly Bill 12, was authored by Assemblymember Matt Haney (D-San Francisco).

    “Massive security deposits can create insurmountable barriers to housing affordability and accessibility for millions of Californians,” said Haney, who chairs the California Legislature’s Renters Caucus, in a statement.

    Previously, owners could charge two months of rent for unfurnished property and three months for furnished.

    The median rent in Los Angeles is $2,795, according to Zillow, an online real estate marketplace.

    An exception in the bill was carved out for landlords who own two or fewer properties that collectively have no more than four rental units.

    The bill was written in December 2022, passed by the Assembly and Senate last fall and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom in October.

    Along the way, it earned support from the Los Angeles County Board of Trustees.

    Supervisor Lindsey Horvath noted in May 2023 that she was unable to move into a rental a couple of years earlier because she was asked to pay “nearly a half a year’s rent upfront.”

    “As someone with a well-paying job, making more than the median income of the county, it was difficult for me to rent a new apartment because of the substantial deposits that were required,” she said.

    But the legislation raises concerns among some in the real estate industry.

    Sharon Oh-Kubisch, a partner at Irvine-based Kahana Feld, which practices real estate law, noted two potential drawbacks to the legislation.

    While she supports the bill’s aim of alleviating high costs of renting, financial burdens are being flipped to landlords, she said.

    She noted that security deposits are intended to cover damages when a tenant moves out. Lower deposits mean landlords are more likely to have to sue clients who cause considerable damage.

    “A landlord can demand damages at the back end, but then they’re more than likely going to have to sue and hire counsel to get that money,” Oh-Kubisch said.

    Additionally, she said that reducing security deposits may work against tenants who have less than perfect credit or lack a strong history of renting.

    Higher security deposits allowed landlords to be more flexible, Oh-Kubisch said. With those “safeguards” gone, she expects landlords to be “more precise and heighten scrutiny for tenants.”

    Still, others say the legislation will benefit those who have the most trouble finding housing.

    Masih Fouladi, executive director of the California Immigrant Policy Center, said in a statement that the law will help vulnerable communities.

    “In California’s high-cost rental market, expensive security deposits are often imposed on immigrants and people of color, effectively limiting access to safe and affordable housing,” he said. “By capping high security deposits, AB-12 advances a measure of equity.”

    Catherine A. Rodman, director and supervising attorney of San Diego-based Affordable Housing Advocates, a tenants rights legal group, said the news received mixed reviews among her mainly working-class clients.

    “I know that it’s been a big relief to many throughout the state, but at least here in the San Diego area, it’s not a big issue,” Rodman said.

    Zillow lists the median rent in San Diego at $3,095.

    She said “soaring rents” have already led most area landlords to require no more than one month’s rent as a security deposit.

    “I’ve been here for 40 years, and I’ve only encountered security deposit gouging on a few occasions,” Rodman said. “Our issue is rent.”

    Rodman said she didn’t want to “pooh-pooh” the legislation but hoped it was part of a broader vision to make housing affordable for larger swaths of the state.

    “I’m sure it helps, but we need to address the cost to rent, because that’s really the big roadblock,” she said.

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    Andrew J. Campa

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  • Editorial: If the ban on occupancy limits is combined with legalized ADUs density will come to single-family neighborhoods

    Editorial: If the ban on occupancy limits is combined with legalized ADUs density will come to single-family neighborhoods

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    Gov. Jared Polis just signed legislation to ban almost all occupancy limits, and coming rapidly toward his desk is a bill to allow ADUs on almost every single-family lot in big Colorado cities.

    The occupancy ban still allows cities and counties to enforce fire codes and to regulate unhealthy and unsanitary conditions, but for the most part, cities will no longer be able to restrict how many unrelated people live in a house or apartment together.

    Very few cities still have occupancy limits on their books, and those that do rarely enforce them. Most of the enforcement was occurring in areas near colleges where neighbors complained about cars blocking driveways and too many loud, late-night parties, and landlords use the law as an excuse to limit the number of tenants in an apartment (a discriminatory trick that can intentionally restrict units from less affluent renters).

    But late-night disturbances in college neighborhoods can occur whether it is guests or residents making the problems. And we know that both rich and poor tenants can trash a condo or fail to make rent payments on time.

    The reality is that with housing reaching unsustainable costs in places across the state, more and more families are doubling up to be able to afford housing. Those families should not live in fear of being “caught” and also should be afforded the protections that come with having their name on the lease as legitimate tenants.

    Colorado cities will just have to get more aggressive in enforcing nuisance ordinances that already exist in most places. Anyone can have a problem neighbor whether there is one person living in a house or 15. The problem most generally isn’t density, but rather is the behaviors that can be associated with many college-aged tenants living together. We doubt families will be a concern.

    Gov. Jared Polis was right to sign House Bill 1007, and unlike Denver’s effort in 2021 to alleviate occupancy limits, this bill was met with less fearmongering and more common-sense requests for amendments.

    Next up Polis will likely have to consider a bill to allow ADUs on every lot in large cities. Accessory Dwelling Units are a way to bring gentle density to single-family neighborhoods. We understand concerns that coupled with the occupancy limit ban, this bill may bring more than gentle density.

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    The Denver Post Editorial Board

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  • Renters across L.A. are under strain and many fear becoming homeless, survey finds

    Renters across L.A. are under strain and many fear becoming homeless, survey finds

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    Nearly 4 in 10 renters in Los Angeles County have worried about losing their homes and becoming homeless in the last few years, according to the results of a new survey from UCLA. A similar share have worried that they or their family would go hungry because they cannot afford the cost of food.

    The 2024 Quality of Life Index, prepared by UCLA’s Luskin School of Public Affairs, suggests that the county‘s renters are feeling particularly intense strain from the steep cost of housing combined with inflation.

    “Everybody feels they’re being squeezed by the cost of living, even affluent people,” said Zev Yaroslavsky, the former longtime county supervisor and city councilmember, now director of the Los Angeles Initiative at the Luskin School. But for renters, that pressure is especially acute, he added.

    Overall, researchers found the high cost of living, especially housing, is pushing down quality of life for people across the county.

    This year, the overall quality of life rating reported by survey respondents dropped to 53 on a scale of 10 to 100 — tying with 2022 for the lowest rating since the survey launched in 2016. The rating for cost of living dropped to 38, the lowest score ever observed in any category.

    Renters reported lower satisfaction with the cost of living and jobs and the economy than nearly every other major demographic group in the survey of 1,686 county residents.

    Fewer than a quarter of renters said they thought they would ever be able to buy a home in a part of L.A. where they would want to live. And about half, 51%, of renters reported being pessimistic about their economic future in L.A. County, while 61% of homeowners said they felt optimistic.

    Pablo Estupiñan, campaign director for the tenant advocacy group Strategic Actions for a Just Economy, or SAJE, said the findings reflect his experience working with tenants across Los Angeles.

    “Community members are very concerned about facing an eviction or becoming homeless,” he said. “That’s kind of been the trend we’re seeing, with wages that are pretty stagnant as rents keep going up.”

    Median rent in Los Angeles is $2,083, according to Apartment List. That’s down slightly from last year but still high enough to create significant challenges for renters across the region.

    Earlier this year, a report from the Housing Initiative at Penn estimated that between 97,000 and 153,000 households in the city of L.A. were behind on rent as of August 2023. While much of that rent debt was accumulated during the pandemic, a lot of it piled up more recently, indicating that economic strains since the pandemic are challenging renters.

    “As much as possible, it will be easier and less expensive to keep people housed than to find people new housing after they are evicted or become homeless,” the Penn report concluded.

    Last year, there were more than 47,000 eviction court filings across the county, the most since 2016, according to data compiled by Kyle Nelson, senior policy and research analyst for SAJE.

    Advocates expect that number could increase again this year, after the last of COVID-era renter protections expired in February.

    The survey, conducted in English and Spanish from late February to mid-March, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3%.

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    Paloma Esquivel

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  • Downtown San Jose economy faces fresh jolts as two tenant exits loom

    Downtown San Jose economy faces fresh jolts as two tenant exits loom

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    SAN JOSE — The decision by two tenants to exit downtown San Jose might worsen the maladies that already afflict the urban core’s economy in the wake of the coronavirus.

    PwC, a professional services titan, and its recently purchased tech company, Surfaceink, are poised to leave downtown after PwC signed a lease for a big chunk of space in a new office building at Santana Row in west San Jose.

    The prospect of tenant departures comes at a time when downtown San Jose already struggles with office vacancy levels that have soared to worrisome heights.

    “This is going to raise the vacancy rate in downtown San Jose,” said David Taxin, partner with Meacham Oppenheimer, a commercial real estate firm. “With the amount of vacancy downtown, this won’t help the cause.”

    At the end of 2023, downtown San Jose’s office availability rate was at an all-time high of 35.7%, according to a report from Savills, a commercial real estate firm. Office availability measures the combination of empty office space offered directly by building owners and space that tenants are offering through sublease.

    As further evidence of a feeble real estate market in downtown San Jose, within the last four months, two large office properties were sold at a big loss compared with their prior sales.

    In December 2023, an office tower at 303 Almaden Boulevard was bought for slightly under $23.8 million — which was 70% below the price paid for the highrise at the time of its prior sale in 2017 for $80.2 million.

    In February 2024, a two-tower office complex at North Market Street and West St, John Street was bought for $34.2 million — a nosedive of 77% compared with the $141.4 million paid in 2019 for the highrises.

    While the price declines are jaw-dropping, experts such as David Sandlin, an executive vice president with Colliers, a commercial real estate firm, point out that the newly established prices at least set a current value for office buildings for office buildings in downtown San Jose.

    “We now know the price that a Class A building in San Jose will trade for,” Sandlin said in a prior interview with this news organization on the topic.

    The price for the 303 Almaden tower worked out to $151 a square foot while the price for the 111 Market Square tower was $105 a square foot. Some experts note that the 303 Almaden highrise is deemed to be of greater quality than the two-tower office complex.

    Also of interest with these deals is that the buyers of each of the office properties are separate groups that both are headed up by George Mersho, chief executive officer of Morgan Hill-based retailer Shoe Palace.

    PwC, as a result of its decision to move to Santana Row, a destination mixed-use neighborhood in San Jose, will also shift its new subsidiary, Surfaceink, into the same One Santana West office building near the corner of South Winchester Boulevard and Stevens Creek Boulevard.

    “The great thing about the PwC deal is that they stayed in San Jose,” said Bob Staedler, principal executive with Silicon Valley Synergy, a land-use consultancy. “With the amenities at Santana Row, it’s understandable why PwC would go there.”

    About 1,200 PwC employees will be located at the One Santana West office building. That move is slated to occur in 2026.

    Still, downtown San Jose appears more than capable of being a vibrant host for office tenants and conventions.

    The recent Nvidia artificial intelligence convention, in addition to compelling keynotes and packed events, was also the catalyst for lively crowds that poured into the downtown in search of meals, drinks, or entertainment.

    “The activation of downtown San Jose and the energy downtown is what is going to appeal to companies with younger employees,” Staedler said. “Having a constant stream of events and activities such as jazz festivals, live performances and other exciting events is the way to attract companies to downtown San Jose.”

    PwC is expected to vacate 80,000 square feet at an office tower in downtown San Jose, property experts say. Surfaceink leased 7,000 square feet on Stockton Avenue on the western edges of the downtown.

    “You could get a new AI company or software company that wants to be in an urban environment in the PwC spaces,” Staedler said.

    Political and city leaders will need to adjust their thinking regarding the downtown in order for the city’s urban core to truly rebound.

    “Antiquated dreams of a Trader Joe’s or a Safeway in the heart of downtown are days gone by. They are over,” Staedler said. “Downtown needs to focus on vibrancy.”

     

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    George Avalos

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  • California is building fewer homes. The state could get even more expensive

    California is building fewer homes. The state could get even more expensive

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    Ken Kahan makes a living building homes.

    A specialty? Luxury apartment complexes in Los Angeles neighborhoods such as Palms and Silver Lake filled with mostly market rate units, but with a handful of income-restricted affordable ones as well.

    It can be a good business, but lately less so.

    “We have pulled back,” said Kahan, the president of California Landmark Group. “The metrics don’t work.”

    Across California and the nation, developers moved to start fewer homes in 2023, a decline some experts say could eventually send home prices and rents even higher as supply shortages worsen.

    Developers cite several reasons for delaying new projects. There’s high labor and material costs, as well as new local regulations that together make it harder to turn a profit.

    Perhaps the biggest factor — and one hitting across the country — is the high cost of borrowing. Rising interest rates not only make it more expensive for Americans to buy a home, but they add additional costs for developers who must shell out more money to build and manage their projects.

    As a result, fewer projects make financial sense to build and fewer homes are built.

    “More than anything it is debt costs,” said Ryan Patap, an analyst for real estate research firm CoStar.

    In all, preliminary data from the US. Census Bureau show building permits for new homes nationwide fell 12% in 2023 from the prior year and 7% in California. Drops were recorded in both single-family homes — most of which tend to be for sale — as well as multifamily homes — which are chiefly rentals.

    Dan Dunmoyer, president of the California Building Industry Assn., said one major reason for the decline is that many for-sale home builders foresaw “a massive downturn” and stopped buying lots to develop when mortgage rates soared in 2022.

    Then a funny thing happened. Demand for their product didn’t crater as much as expected, in large part because existing homeowners didn’t want to sell and rid themselves of ultra-low mortgage rates.

    “Builders kind of woke up and realized ‘Oh, it’s just us [selling homes],‘” Dunmoyer said. “But we don’t turn on a dime.”

    As for-sale builders restart their engines to take advantage of a shortage of listings, there are signs of improvement. During the first two months of this year, builders in California pulled 35% more permits for single-family homes than during the same period a year earlier, according to census data.

    Permits for multifamily continued to decline — dropping 33%.

    The diverging paths are probably due to several factors, said Rick Palacios Jr., director of research for John Burns Research and Consulting.

    On a whole, single-family home builders have access to a wider source of debt that isn’t as vulnerable to rising interest rates. In the single-family market, the supply shortage has also worsened and home prices are climbing.

    Meanwhile, rents in many places — including Los Angeles — have dropped slightly as vacancies have risen, in part because apartment construction has been relatively robust in recent years.

    “Single-family solid, multifamily weak is a pretty consistent theme across most of the country,” Palacios said. “You’re hard pressed to find a market where developers and investors are gung ho on apartments.”

    In the city of Los Angeles, developers must contend with another factor — Measure ULA.

    The citywide property transfer tax took effect last year to fund affordable housing and has drawn the ire of the real estate industry.

    Though it’s known as the “mansion tax,” except for rare exceptions it applies to all properties sold for more than $5 million, no matter if they are gas stations, strip malls, apartment buildings or actual mansions. Under the measure, a seller is charged 4% of the sales price for properties sold above $5 million and below $10 million.

    At $10 million and above, the tax is 5.5%.

    Apartment developers and real estate brokers said additional costs from ULA make it even harder to earn a reasonable profit in what can be a risky business.

    That’s because when building apartments, developers often sell their finished product, which would probably trigger the ULA tax for any building over 15 units, according to Greg Harris, a real estate broker with Marcus and Millichap. Even developers who hold onto their properties typically need to take out a mortgage on the finished building — and Harris said lenders are willing to give less because they too would need to pay the tax if they foreclose and sell the property.

    “ULA is like the last nail in the coffin,” said Robert Green, a Los Angeles developer. “It couldn’t have come at a worse time.”

    Many apartment projects got their start under different economic circumstances and have opened in recent years or will soon. That supply should help keep rents down for a while, but not forever, said Richard Green, executive director of the USC Lusk Center for Real Estate.

    In two or three years, as fewer apartments are finished “we will see rent start to go up again,” he said.

    That would be a hit for Californians struggling to find housing in an expensive state where thousands sleep on the streets.

    Economic cycles, of course, ebb and flow and construction may rebound.

    The Federal Reserve plans to cut interest rates later this year, which may help more projects make sense financially, as could rising rents.

    Land sellers could also drop their asking prices to adjust for rising developer costs, including ULA in Los Angeles.

    Normally, real estate analyst Patap said he’d expect apartment construction to rebound as land costs adjust downward. But he noted developers say they are also cautious about building in L.A. because of a broader political shift in the city that’s more supportive of restrictions on landlords and more supportive of protections for tenants.

    In the city of Los Angeles, multifamily permits dropped 24% in 2023 compared with 19% in Los Angeles County, census data show. (Data from the Construction Industry Research Board show even larger drops: 49% in the city and 39% in the county.)

    Laurie Lustig-Bower, a commercial real estate broker with CBRE, said some L.A. landowners have reduced their prices to sell, but “if they don’t have a gun to their head” they are waiting until developers can pay more.

    In recent years, state lawmakers have taken action to make it easier to build housing, in part by eroding local control over land use decisions.

    Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has also fast-tracked 100% affordable buildings under her Executive Directive 1, while the city recently exempted smaller projects from some storm water capture requirements.

    Mott Smith, chairman of the Council of Infill Builders, said more must be done to increase the number of new homes in Los Angeles and cited the storm water decision as the kind of steps government should take.

    “The city has no influence over interest rates … [but] what it controls is the process to get a project approved,” Smith said. “There are so many opportunities.”

    For now, developers say it’s tough to find opportunities.

    Kahan said his company runs the numbers on potential land purchases constantly and at least once a week finds it doesn’t make sense to buy and build.

    He expects to purchase some land in Southern California by year’s end, though mostly outside of the city of Los Angeles where Kahan said he’s increasingly looking because of costs from ULA, which unlike current interest rates aren’t expected to change.

    So far, Kahan said he’s yet to find a deal that will work — within or outside city borders.

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    Andrew Khouri

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  • What’s the average rent in Canada? – MoneySense

    What’s the average rent in Canada? – MoneySense

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    The data released Monday by Rentals.ca and Urbanation, which analyzes monthly listings from the former’s network, shows the average monthly cost of a one-bedroom unit in February was $1,920, up 12.9% from the same month in 2023.

    The average asking price for a two-bedroom was $2,293, up 11.3% annually.

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    How much have rent costs increased in Canada?

    The report says asking rents in Canada have increased overall by a total of 21%, or an average of $384 per month, from two years ago, just before the start of interest rate hikes by the Bank of Canada (BoC).

    Alberta maintained its status as the province with the fastest-growing rents, with total average asking prices up 20% annually last month to reach $1,708.

    British Columbia and Ontario posted the slowest growth in February, with annual increases of 1.3% and 1%, respectively. But the provinces remain Canada’s most expensive for renters, with total average asking rents of $2,481 in B.C. and $2,431 in Ontario.

    What’s the most expensive city in Canada for rent?

    On a municipal basis, the largest cities in those two provinces also remain the most expensive major cities to live in Canada for renters. The average asking price for a one-bedroom unit in Vancouver last month was $2,653, down 1.1% from a month earlier, though still 0.5% higher than February 2023.

    In Toronto, landlords were listing one-bedroom units for $2,495 on average, down 0.6% on a month-over-month basis and 0.2% from a year ago.

    Condos vs. apartments

    Traditional purpose-built rental apartments posted the fastest year-over-year price growth in February with a 14.4% increase, as rents averaged $2,110. Condominium rentals, with an average rent of $2,372, and apartments in houses, at $2,347, had slower annual growth of 5% and 5.3%, respectively.

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    The Canadian Press

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