The Nation's Worst Rent Control Law Gets a Few Moderating Fixes
The St. Paul City Council passed a series of amendments to a voter-passed rent stabilization ordinance that exempt new construction and make it easier for landlords to factor inflation into rent increases.

The nation's harshest rent control law has become less so after the city council of St. Paul, Minnesota, approved a slew of moderating reforms to a voter-passed ordinance that had initially capped rent increases at 3 percent—no ifs, ands, or buts.
The severity of St. Paul's rent cap saw new building permit applications plunge and developers freeze in-progress housing projects, totaling thousands of units, as their financing partners skipped town. Landlords hiked rents in anticipation of the coming 3 percent cap or started adding separate fees for utilities and trash pickup.
The new amendments passed Wednesday are intended to coax developers back to St. Paul by softening that 3 percent cap on rent increases, while also cracking down on landlords' ability to evade the law.
It exempts buildings under 20 years old from rent control. Landlords can now also raise rents by 8 percent plus inflation after a tenant moves out or is evicted for "just cause"—such as repeated late payment or damaging the unit. Landlords who file an application with the city can also raise rents by rents by 3 percent plus inflation on existing tenants.
Since May, the city has allowed landlords to apply for exemptions to the 3 percent rent cap, and had been automatically greenlighting rent increases of up to 8 percent.
But housing providers complained that the process was cumbersome and required them to provide extensive documentation of their expenses to justify nominal rent increases. The owners of two St. Paul apartment buildings filed a lawsuit arguing the exemption process was arbitrary and unconstitutional.
Republican state lawmakers had pushed a bill that would have nullified St. Paul's ordinance, but that effort failed.
Wednesday's updates are intended to clarify and simplify the exemption process. The five city council members who supported the changes argued they struck the right balance between the interests of developers, landlords, and tenants.
The ordinance passed Wednesday forbids landlords from charging tenants new utility charges to evade the rent caps.
But supporters of the original rent stabilization ordinance, which 53 percent of voters approved in November 2021, argued that the policy was being essentially gutted.
"We shouldn't sacrifice racial equity for growth," said Councilmember Mitra Jalali, one of two councilmembers to oppose the amendments, at Wednesday's hearing.
While some adjustments to rent stabilization were necessary, many of the changes went "too far in stripping rent stabilization protections from large groups of renters that I represent," said Jalali.
In total, the changes approved Wednesday bring St. Paul's rent control in line with more moderate state-level rent control policies recently passed in California and Oregon. That doesn't make the city's rules harmless
So long as rent control achieves its purpose of stopping rent increases landlords would otherwise charge, it will have harmful secondary effects. On the margins, developers will be less likely to build new housing, and existing property owners will be less likely to rent units out or maintain the units they do own.
The fact that rent control policies are typically bundled with exemptions for inflation, vacancies, and new construction all tacitly concede that the policy is damaging. If rent control didn't suppress supply or discourage maintenance, these exemptions wouldn't be necessary.
St. Paul's rent control law is no longer the disaster it once was, but it's hardly an optimal policy.
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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"factor inflation into rent increases"
But Reason's leading economics expert says inflation is a myth.
#BestEconomyEver
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Seattle Times tries to gently coax its loyal readers into a moderate version of sanity.
Gee they sound like all us 'science deniers' did back in spring of 2020.
We told them then that they couldn't simply hide away until the virus disappears, yet here we are........
If that makes people feel safe, good for them. As long as it isn't imposed on others I don't care if idjits want to wear masks and make their hands chapped from sanitizer. Not my problem.
The problem is that people who live like this live in a state of fear of others, therefore they do insist on making everyone live like them. Very few who live like this don't try to impose on others. It's actually fairly common among germaphobes to try and impose their phobia onto others. Because they feel the only way be safe is for everyone to live like them.
And yes this is a true phobia, as most of their beliefs are not rational. Gloves, masks, hand sanitizers etc have such minimal to no benefit (and in some cases may actually be detrimental) as to make belief in them irrational.
And so what? Yes, it's irrational. But at some point we need to stop being Vulcans and give in to the fact that other people actually have emotions. We're not all robots.
Give in a bit. Make the old ladies less afraid.
Or to put it another way, don't be a dick. I know libertarians are supposed to refuse to wear masks while smearing their hands onto every available surface after sneezing, but we don't have to.
As long as they don't have power of law behind them, I don't care what they think, say or do.
Again their aim is to get the power of the law behind them. Have you been asleep for the past two years (or more like five decades)?
We’re at a point where we need to seriously discuss what to do about the democrats. This germaphobe shit has caused irreparable damage to the US. Most major cities are partially to completely lawless, we have a senile president backed by Marxists. And they’re obsessed with mutilating and raping our children.
How much are we going to take?
This article has nothing to do with the issue at hand (St. Paul is a hellhole and they are lucky anyone is even considering developing property in the crime filled wasteland, and the fact that the City Council thinks they have enough leverage to make it harder to invest was met with exactly the outcome anyone could have seen coming).
But since you brought it up, this article is so pathetic. You can just see the sad little mind of Tara Parker-Pope and the COVID propaganda ingesters desperately trying to hold on to some straw to keep from admitting that they were wrong and now they have to admit they are on the wrong side of science and history. Solutions: wear masks sometimes, get another booster that has been proven not to help and seems to prevent infection from leading to immunity etc.
And yes, Sarcasmic, I could care less if people want to wear masks and do any other precaution. The probelm is exactly as Soldiermedic76 states, that we have seen that these people tend to not want to stop at their own choices, they want to impose their will on others and our children. That is why it is worrysome, and it is particularily irritating for Tara Parker-Pope, writing for the NYT and WashPost and Seattle Times publishing articles like this that are asking the population as a whole to continue to follow non-sensical advice because she, and a large segment of our population, are embarrassed to admit that they were wrong.
"...The severity of St. Paul's rent cap saw new building permit applications plunge and developers freeze in-progress housing projects, totaling thousands of units, as their financing partners skipped town. Landlords hiked rents in anticipation of the coming 3 percent cap or started adding separate fees for utilities and trash pickup..."
It's a shame that these results were simply impossible to predict. How could anyone have foreseen them?
Indeed! Who'd've guessed?
I'm sitting here trying to think of a city where rent control has ever worked in the long term.
3% PLUS inflation?!? Pretty much admitting the whole point is wrong, and a slap in the face to both Biden and Buttplug, pretending there is no inflation.
I don't think anyone denies that there is inflation. The arguments are over how much and why.
Have you not been reading Mr. Buttplug's analysis over the past several months? He finds the idea of inflation so absurd that he often dismisses it with one of his trademark all-caps catchphrases: HAPERINFLATION!
When he elects to go into slightly more detail, he insists that exactly one item has risen in price since January 2021. That would be spittin' tobaccy, by 10 cents per pouch. But no matter which approach he uses, the underlying message is that inflation is a myth promoted by wingnut.com. Because the Biden economy is so awesome there is no intellectually honest way to critique it.
#DefendBidenAtAllCosts
#SpittinRenterbacky
Biden did.
He's a politician, and an especially idiotic one at that. What's your point?
Gee, my point is your previous comment:
If you'd meant "most", why not use it? You used "anyone". You probably should have stopped after "think".
Republicans say they will immediately 'repeal 87,000 IRS agents' if they retake Congress and launch a series of investigations including into the 'weaponization of the DOJ' as they roll out their 'Commitment to America' in Pennsylvania
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11243241/Republicans-say-immediately-repeal-87-000-IRS-agents-retake-Congress.html
They always talk a good talk about reducing government when they aren't in power. I'll believe this one when I see it.
Saying "Fuck you, you're unemployed" to almost a hundred thousand people with friends and families isn't a great way to win the vote. That's why libertarians go nowhere.
Once hired, government workers are almost impossible to fire, though.
Maybe they can transfer them into the ~200k border patrol officers they said they want to hire? At least the ones that have already passed their firearm training.
"We shouldn't sacrifice racial equity for growth," said Councilmember Mitra Jalali, one of two councilmembers to oppose
the amendmentspeople living indoors, at Wednesday's hearing.FTFY
Pop princess Kylie Minogue is voted the hottest celebrity over 50 - beating out actress Jennifer Aniston and model Elizabeth Hurley
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-11243569/Kylie-Minogue-voted-hottest-celebrity-50.html
Bollocks! Liz is the clear winner!
Must be a very bad photo of her. She’s not even attractive.
You vote for commies, you get what you deserve
I just feel sorry for all the sane people who are trying to survive and stay in Minneapolis. It's like california, being surrounded on all sides by stalinists. You can only go so long..
Just out of curiosity, when you sneer at the folks at Reason and say "You voted for Biden, you deserve this!" do you hold your nose to make it sound all whiny?
The Reason staff are allegedly libertarians, some of them voted for the least libertarian candidate on the ballot. Your stance is that we just shouldn't comment about that? Why?
some of them voted for the least libertarian candidate on the ballot
By what measure? What made you the arbiter of all things libertarian?
From what I've read most of them didn't vote for anyone. They voted against someone. They saw one of the candidates as being hostile to immigration and free trade, while watering the seeds of protectionism and cronyism. So they voted against the guy.
By the way, that's why I didn't vote. I wasn't going to fall into the trap of licking the shitcicle that smelt least bad.
Did you lick a shitcicle? I didn't. My conscience, and breath, is clear.
local elections are a whole different ball game and you know it.
but yeah, voting for Biden pretty much erases any and all libertarian bona fides one professed to have. Come on.
"We shouldn't sacrifice racial equity for growth," said Councilmember Mitra Jalali, one of two councilmembers to oppose the amendments, at Wednesday's hearing.
Wow, look at the brass balls on this motherfucker over here.
Los Angeles city rent control is worse. Because of COVID, you can't evict tenants for nonpayment of rent and no rent increases are allowed at all. Both mayoral candidates want to keep it this way forever. COVID will never be over.
What's better than rent control? A tax on vacant lots and unoccupied buildings. While rent control makes it less attractive to supply accommodation, a vacant-property tax makes it less attractive NOT to! Such a tax, although sometimes called a "vacancy tax", is not limited to what real-estate agents call "vacancies" — that is, properties available for rent. It also applies to vacant lots and empty properties that are not on the rental market, and is designed to push them onto the market and get them tenanted.
By the way, the desired *avoidance* of the vacant-property tax would initiate economic activity, expanding the bases of other taxes and allowing their rates to be reduced, so the rest of us—including tenants, home owners, and landlords with tenants—would pay LESS tax!