L.A.'s Eternal Eviction Moratorium
Now that the pandemic is fading and much of the available rent relief has been spent, L.A.'s eviction moratorium seems like pure regulatory inertia.

By this spring, nearly all the eviction moratoriums imposed during the COVID-19 pandemic had ended, either because courts blocked them or because legislators repealed them or allowed them to expire. One conspicuous exception was Los Angeles, where tenants were still protected from eviction by the city's ongoing state of emergency.
L.A.'s moratorium, one of the strictest and most open-ended such policies in the U.S., is a major headache for landlords. David Greenhut is an owner of eight rent-stabilized properties in Los Angeles, totaling 221 units. As of late March, Greenhut says, he had 40 tenants who were not paying rent. He also complains that he is not allowed to evict tenants who blare music or who won't allow pest control into their homes.
The city's moratorium bars eviction for nonpayment or nuisances, provided either is related to COVID-19. It allows those tenants to self-certify that they have been affected by the pandemic. Landlords therefore have few means of removing people who game the system.
"If there is fraud, there's nothing [the landlord] can do," says Greenhut, who estimates that he is owed about $700,000 in back rent. Rising operating costs and the city's rent freeze for rent-stabilized units—another feature of the eviction moratorium—have forced Greenhut to take out loans to keep his business afloat.
The association representing L.A. landlords has sued the city over its eviction moratorium, including the provision that says a tenant's unverified claims are enough to qualify for protection. Last year, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a similar provision in New York's eviction moratorium violated the right to due process. But even if the courts provide relief from L.A.'s eviction moratorium, landlords have already suffered two years of financial damage.
In the early days of COVID-19, moratoriums were pitched as necessary to allow unemployed people to safely shelter in place. The bans then became a time-buying measure that would allow federally funded rent relief to reach renters in need. Now that the pandemic is fading, job openings are hitting record levels, and much of the available rent relief has been spent, L.A.'s eviction moratorium seems like pure regulatory inertia.
That is to be expected. Every temporary measure creates beneficiaries who have an incentive to fight for its extension even when the original justifications for it no longer apply. Politicians, meanwhile, don't want to be blamed for the sudden disappearance of a benefit to which people have become accustomed. L.A. politicians jumped on a tiger, and now they don't know how to get down.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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"once you have paid him the Danegeld/ You never get rid of the Dane."
“He also complains that he is not allowed to evict tenants who blare music or who won't allow pest control into their homes.”
Someone should inform the City Health Department about this menace, so they condemn these properties. Then the city can confiscate them.
You think you're funny but you're mot. California is a failed state, they will definitely do this.
I’m not mot. You take that back, sir.
you know who else was mot?
The Hoople Guy?
And all the young dudes.
And yes, I realized as I was typing they might actually try something like that.
The housing units confiscated by the state will be leased out at no cost (to the tenant) to homeless trannies.
Oh you have seen the fanny pack on the cute lesbian that just won
the MTV award as a reality actress selling sunset sand before egotistical men can seal the deal !o!
https://www.glamour.com/story/chrishell-stause-butt-shaped-bag-mtv-movie-awards?utm_source=nl&utm_brand=glm&utm_mailing=GLM_Daily_060622&utm_campaign=aud-dev&utm_medium=email&bxid=5bd671f13f92a41245dd28f9&cndid=26767417&hasha=7815ba45bd8674f91991b4713f1e3111&hashb=6445bcd1fe15a09d83857373c63b2faf2a656312&hashc=86e31cb3bb9b4cb2b637435a03d046e8affd34f704029e4749786058369699dc&esrc=newsletteroverlay&utm_content=A&utm_term=GLM_Daily
https://www.glamour.com/story/selling-sunset-a-reality-show-about-work
Are you telling me the Bloods and Crips left town?
A few bucks in the right pocket and those tenants are gone.
You might have to give up one apartment to the new 'security' firm, but the rest can be rented out at market rates, and no inspection hassles ever.
At this point I just sit back a laugh when people in CA get exactly what they voted for, good and hard. Now if only the other 49 states had laws barring entry of CA residents.
Texas seems to be hoovering them up I wish we'd stop.
Or at least a common sense waiting period before ex-Californians can vote. Say, 5 years?
Won't allow pest control into the units? Everywhere in the US, being a vector is the single most guaranteed way to get evicted. Even in rent controlled and eviction moratorium cities. Not Los Angeles. Gotta protect Willard and his army of vermin.
Spiritus Mundi has it right.
I cannot but wonder if some landlords may have (quietly) perfected the delivery of "an offer that cannot be refused" to encourage non-payers to "self-evict". I wonder even more if that has not happened why it has not happened??? Eviction "moratoriums" are a further evidence of breakdown of law and order - a form of property theft by the state - and when law and order are gone all that is left is . . . .
How is pure regulatory inertia different from entrenched Bolshevism?
seems like. lol
"The city's moratorium bars eviction for nonpayment or nuisances, provided either is related to COVID-19. It allows those tenants to self-certify that they have been affected by the pandemic. Landlords therefore have few means of removing people who game the system."
But appropriating the income from rental properties, which is akin to appropriating the actual properties, is totally not socialism.
OK, I'll bite. If "appropriating the income" (actually mandating the free use of one person's property by another for the second persons good) is not socialism, WHAT IS?
How is that different from income tax? Nearly half my income is appropriated by the state.
Emergency powers have been grossly abused by many government officials and agencies during COVID. It's time to end all "emergency powers". The technology exists for elected public officials to meet online at a moment's notice.
I certainly feel for the landlords, but what are they thinking owning investment property in LA? The writing has been on the wall for 30 years; they are just sheep to be fleeced, as far as the city government is concerned.
I have a vague memory of something about not impairing contracts in the U.S. constitution, or was that in an alternative universe?
Isn't that the entire Nazi(National Socialist) dream to give citizens the Gov-Guns to go out STEAL from others whatever they desire and throw matters of *EARNED* to the wind???
Heck the entire of USA has been playing this criminal-gang hood narrative for quite a while. No longer do people talk about *EARNING* what they want or creating for others... It's all about Gov-Guns and who's getting entitled at someone else's expense.
Welcome to a Nazi-Regime. So long the USA.