Statewide Rent Control & Eviction Protections Signed into Law

Rent protections

For over 20 years, Costa Hawkins has set the parameters for rent control in California by limiting a city’s ability to enact rent control regulations that apply to units built after 1995. Many local rent control ordinances provide a much earlier cutoff than what is permitted under State law. For example, San Francisco’s rent control ordinance applies to housing built before June 1979. And although cities are allowed to enact rent control ordinances within the limits set forth under Costa Hawkins, many have not.

AB 1482, which was authored by Assemblymember David Chiu and signed into law by Governor Gavin Newson last week, upends the current system by mandating a statewide rent cap for housing built more than 15 years ago, which will apply on a rolling basis. The legislation will also provide statewide eviction protections in cities that do not already provide their own just cause eviction ordinance. According to the California State Assembly’s analysis, AB 1482 will affect nearly three million households across California.

Rent Cap

Beginning on January 1, 2020, AB 1482 will apply a cap on annual rent increases of 5% plus the percentage change in the Consumer Price Index or 10%, whichever is lower. The legislation does not affect vacancy decontrol, meaning owners are able to set initial rents for new tenancies. After the initial rent is set, the cap will apply to any subsequent increases.

This legislation applies to all units that have been issued a certificate of occupancy more than 15 years ago. This 15-year exemption applies on a rolling basis. That means starting in 2020, units built in 2005 will be subject to the rent cap. In 2021, units built in 2006 will be subject to the rent cap, and so on until 2030 when the legislation expires.

AB 1482 will not apply to units in cities that are already subject to lower rent caps. Therefore, it will not preempt San Francisco’s existing rent control provisions for housing constructed prior to June 1979. However, housing units built after June 1979 that have received a certificate of occupancy more than 15 years ago will be subject to the rent cap.

Aside from exempting units built within the last 15 years, AB 1482 also exempts:

  • Duplexes if one of the units is owner-occupied;
  • Dorms;
  • Affordable housing units; and
  • Single-family homes or condos that are not owned by a real estate investment trust, a corporation, or an LLC where one member is a corporation, if the tenants were provided notice of the exemption.

Just Cause Eviction

The just cause eviction protections set forth under AB 1482 only apply to cities that have not enacted their own just cause eviction ordinance prior to September 2019, so the legislation will not apply in San Francisco. AB 1482’s eviction protections will apply in all other cities unless new local ordinances enacted after September 2019 are more protective than AB 1482.

In cities where AB 1482’s eviction protections apply, tenants that have legally occupied a unit for more than 12 months cannot be evicted without just cause. The legislation provides two categories for just cause evictions—at-fault and no-fault. An at-fault eviction applies in the following circumstances:

  • Nonpayment of rent;
  • Breach of a material term of the lease;
  • Nuisance, waste, criminal activity, use of the unit for an unlawful purpose;
  • Failure to sign a written extension or renewal of the lease;
  • Assigning or subletting in violation of the lease;
  • Refusal to allow the owner to enter the unit; or
  • Failure to vacate after terminating the lease.

A no-fault just cause eviction applies when the owner withdraws the unit from the rental market, intends to demolish or substantially renovate the unit, moves into the unit (also applies to the owner’s family members), or when the unit is required to be vacated under a local ordinance or due to a court order. For no-fault evictions, the owner must either provide relocation assistance in the amount of one month’s rent or waive the final month’s rent.

Written notice of these protections must be provided for all new tenancies and to all existing tenants by August 2020. Like the rent cap provisions, the eviction protections are set to expire on January 1, 2030.

The just cause eviction protections do not apply to housing that was issued a certificate of occupancy within the last 15 years, owner-occupied units, ADUs in owner-occupied single family homes, duplexes if the owner occupies one of the units, affordable housing units, dorms, hotels, and certain residential care facilities. The legislation also exempts single-family homes and condos that are not owned by a real estate investment trust, a corporation, or an LLC where one member is a corporation, if the tenants were provided notice of the exemption.

 

Authored by Reuben, Junius & Rose, LLP Attorney Sabrina Eshaghi.

The issues discussed in this update are not intended to be legal advice and no attorney-client relationship is established with the recipient.  Readers should consult with legal counsel before relying on any of the information contained herein.  Reuben, Junius & Rose, LLP is a full service real estate law firm.  We specialize in land use, development and entitlement law.  We also provide a wide range of transactional services, including leasing, acquisitions and sales, formation of limited liability companies and other entities, lending/workout assistance, subdivision and condominium work.