Seattle Banned Landlords From Rejecting Tenants Based on Criminal Records. Will the Supreme Court Step in?
The political push behind the law was well-meaning. But it will backfire on many prospective renters.

A yearslong battle over property rights in Seattle may soon have national implications as various groups pressure the Supreme Court to analyze the constitutionality of a law banning landlords from rejecting tenants based on their criminal histories.
In 2017, the city passed the Fair Chance Housing Ordinance, prohibiting landlords from conducting criminal background checks on potential renters, from using information on criminal histories to exclude tenants, and from increasing rents and security deposits for such applicants. The sole exception in the law pertains to prospective renters who have been convicted of a sex offense as an adult, but even then, landlords must convince the Seattle Office for Civil Rights that they have a "legitimate business reason" for denial.
The following year, the Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF) sued to end that law, arguing that the "unreasonable, overbroad, and unduly burdensome" regulation ran afoul of the 14th Amendment right to due process and that its block on analyzing public records violated landlords' free speech rights.
Judge John C. Coughenour of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington disagreed. In 2021, he sided with Seattle, writing that the law was "a reasonable means of achieving the City's objectives and does not burden substantially more speech than is necessary to achieve them."
Earlier this year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit reversed it—in part. "We conclude that the Ordinance's inquiry provision impinges upon the First Amendment rights of the landlords, as it is a regulation of speech that does not survive intermediate scrutiny," wrote Judge Kim McLane Wardlaw. "However, we reject the landlords' claim that the adverse action provision of the Ordinance violates their substantive due process rights." In other words, the government cannot bar landlords from looking at public records, the court ruled, but the judges left the ban on using that information to take adverse action.
Now, several advocacy groups—from the Buckeye Institute and the Manhattan Institute to the National Apartment Association and the Consumer Data Industry Association—are calling on the high court to weigh in.
"Instead of allowing political factions to inflict legalized trespasses on each other in the service of their own social and political desires, in a tit-for-tat that deprives all sides of their freedom to choose, the traditional rule is better by far: to allow property owners to decide for themselves who may and may not enter their land and on what conditions," wrote Timothy Sandefur of the libertarian Goldwater Institute in an amicus brief to the Court. "This is not only the more efficient means of resolving disputes over what restrictions on property use are wisest—while simultaneously respecting diverse views on that subject— but it is also the means that is deeply rooted in this nation's history and tradition."
The political push behind Seattle's ordinance had good intentions: People with criminal records indeed often have a harder time finding stable housing and employment. Yet as Reason's Christian Britschgi noted directly after the law passed, sensible policy requires more than simply wanting the best for your constituents.
"It's true that our current criminal justice system unnecessarily tars citizens with arrest records and criminal histories, and that those criminal histories make it more difficult to find jobs and housing," Britschgi wrote in 2017. "But attempting to mitigate the effects of a broken criminal justice system by foisting extra costs onto landlords—who have quite understandable reasons to want to know about tenants' criminal histories—is not the answer."
One reason it is not the answer: The rule would backfire on many tenants—the people the law is supposed to help—as landlords compensate by having more strenuous requirements for the remaining legal rent criteria, like credit scores.
But it's not just about a business' bottom line. Take Chong and MariLyn Yim, a Seattle couple represented by PLF who hope the high court will hear their case. The Yims own a triplex in Seattle where they lived in one unit with their three children. To support themselves, they rented the two remaining units, using the screening process to ensure their tenants wouldn't potentially endanger their children.
"Private rental property owners are not responsible for generalized adverse impacts of the criminal justice system, the high housing failure rates among ex-convicts, or high recidivism rates," wrote PLF in their petition to the Supreme Court. "Seattle's decision to place the burden of housing the most violent and dangerous ex-convicts on private owners violates due process."
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Those renting the space needle prospective tenants for moral turpitude.
I had to read that four times.
The goal was to get “space needle” in a sentence without it referring to the Space Needle while making it apply to the topic.
Yes, yes, even I got it.
Now try for a COHERENT sentence.
Actually, you TOTALLY FAILED your stated goal on all points.
If the constitution prohibits the quartering of soliders, why can they force people to quarter criminals?
Not sure they'll raise 3A but I'd love for it to ascend to it's rightful spot as a protection of all private property.
WHAT is a "housing failure rate?"
In an unrelated story, Seattle forms a committee to determine why so many greedy landlords have taken their property off the rental market, listed them for sale, and left town.
Meh. Empty properties don't have to be on any rental markets. Just forge a deed, move in, a few wait 2 or 3 years until the civil courts kick you put.
Even then you've got six months or so until Chief Wiggam can fit time in his schedule to put you & your stuff out on the curb.
Oh I understand there’s a problem with people who leave prison have trouble finding housing.
My mother taught me that the best predictor of future behavior, is past behavior.
So as a general rule, I try not to live near people who have been convicted criminals in the past.
They'll fix that too: with a vacant property tax, like SF has done.
Don't worry, abundant, cheap housing is right around the corner! Investors and landlords just love these kinds of laws and can't wait to spend their money!
https://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/san-francisco-voters-vacancy-tax-17584082.php
The political push behind the law was well-meaning.
I am curious: which parts of abridging landlords' rights to freedom of association and using their property as they see fit, not to mention the astronomical liability that will fall on their shoulders when they inevitably rent to a recidivist, falls under the category of well-meaning?
Exactly. Is the City of Seattle going to accept liability if a landlord rents to a person who was convicted of Rape and then the person rapes another tenant? I say the same thing about an Employer not being allowed to look into the criminal record of a prospective employee. I came here from the Overlawyered site. There was a story there about the owner of a hotel being sued because he hired a guy with a criminal record. Then the employee raped and murdered A woman, her daughter and the daughter's friend. The owner was being sued because he hired the guy.
If race and gender swap Nick Gillespie with Candace Owens as the editor of Reason Magazine, was my action “well-meaning”?
Not sure why the writers here always seemingly apply the good intentions defense to authoritarianism of the left. It is pernicious.
Forcing landlords to rent to criminals can lead to a lot more civil forfeiture. Think long term.
https://crosscut.com/news/2021/07/wa-civil-forfeiture-law-turns-minor-drug-offenses-major-losses
According the those that claim the political push was well meaning, helping those with criminal histories obtain housing is well meaning. That said, the BEST possible outcome given that goal is making it harder for ANYONE to obtain housing by increasing the costs inherent in offering rental housing.
Well meaning would be putting together a privately funded Real Estate fund of properties specializing in renting to criminals. No profit to politicians in that though.
It's Reason-style "libertarianism"; it is socialist/progressive-adjacent, except with more monocles.
The political push behind the law was well-meaning.
Who here remembers the old Reason drinking games? For those of us that do, we need a drinking game for every time far-left progressive lunacy gets the "well meaning" or "good intentions" qualifier.
Show some fucking balls. It ain't well meaning. It's meant to be an act of political revolution, explicitly designed to destabilize the private property paradigm and strengthen public ownership of the means of production.
You know, like all those Upzone YIMBY people that Reason keeps pimping who are also explicitly pro rent control.
Fascists gotta do fascism - - - - - - - -
What can be more well meaning than laws that punish property owners for having the temerity to rent to others? The consequences of this one are so blindingly obvious you have to have the IQ of a turnip to consider them unintended, or be a journalist, same thing.
I'd rather have the turnip on the Seattle City Council, honestly.
It ain’t well meaning. It’s meant to be an act of political revolution
Fine, then by your standard, Jan. 6 really was an insurrection.
Yes, and the pro Palestine protesters in New York should have been shot in the face.
No no, they should have been stripped of their citizenship and sent to Gaza on a one-way flight. That’s what anti-American traitors get for daring to protest on behalf of Hamas.
At least you recognize leftists like you are in support of Hamas as opposed to the Palestinian people.
britschgi and yglesias must each have a side hustle in homeless consulting
LOL at how the Federal judge, Coughenour (who should've retired long, long ago) said in his ruling that "the law was 'a reasonable means of achieving the City's objectives'" as if the City's objectives (smug, bleeding-heart feelings that ex-cons are entitled to someone else's housing because landlords are evil reactionaries and should be punished) are relevant to the case and on any kind of legal footing themselves.
Fuck "the City's objectives." Go achieve your ex-con housing utopia with the billions a year you fritter away on Homelessness Inc.
Judge John C. Coughenour of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington disagreed. In 2021, he sided with Seattle, writing that the law was "a reasonable means of achieving the City's objectives and does not burden substantially more speech than is necessary to achieve them."
Someone needs to inform this 'judge' that the City can only carry out it's objectives on property the City OWNS.
to allow property owners to decide for themselves who may and may not enter their land and on what conditions," wrote Timothy Sandefur of the libertarian Goldwater Institute
Sure Nazi, and let's just gas the Jews while were at it... *puts finger to ear mic* Oh, gassing the Jews is now a liberal progressive view... hang on... *puts finger to ear mic* Invade Gaza? Ok... sure, Nazi, let's just invade Gaza while we're at it.
End-goal.... Gov ran dumpsite. Ref: Detroit.
Let's play a reason game. If we were going to do a "well-meaning" race and gender swap of Reason writers, here's my first vote.
Put yours in below!
This could be justification for the government to outlaw criminal records keeping.
Why would anyone want that?
So criminals can keep repeating their crimes on the people?
There's a reason jobs and rentals require references.. I suppose that should be illegal too? People can change and that should be part of the equation but the numbers do not show very many do.
credit reports are so discriminatory
If the goal is to reduce rental property to near zero, this is certainly an effective way to do that.
Limit my ability to check the background of potential tenants, and I simply won’t rent.
And here’s the thing that really annoys me: There is no real way to prove or disprove someone decided to not rent to a person due to their prior criminal record.
Anyone with a criminal record can make the claim that’s what happened, sue for damages and a free payday, and I can’t even think of what a reasonable defense to that would be. It’s forcing the owner of the property to prove a negative.
And lastly, this seems to be yet another nail in the coffin of property ownership. Legislation like this is a terribly misguided way to try and ameliorate the damage done by the city to property ownership. If it's too expensive to buy a house for just about everyone, you've forced everyone to rent and now they're doing their best to destroy that too.
It seems they won't be happy until everyone is homeless or living in garbage government housing.
Terribly misguided, but well-meaning, apparently.
A well meaning attempt to house more convicted criminals in better neighborhoods, so they have more positive role models around them. Or at least neighbors with more expensive stuff to fence.
If "something" is deemed "well meaning" then there must be a substantial number of people who believe it is well meaning. And if there are a substantial number of people who believe that, then there are enough well meaning people to resolve the "something" without turning to armed government agents. So all you folks who think this is well meaning should be renting your space out to those with criminal records.
In real life, is something is referred to as well meaning, the VAST MAJORITY of people know it is NOT.
I have a nice little condo in Seattle that I rent out (right now, to my stepson, so he'll have a well-maintained, rent-stable place in a relatively-safe neighborhood). This bullshit is why the condo will only ever be "available" by word of mouth, *never-ever* in a public listing.
It’s my property, I’m able to look at the records, talk to the people involved and decide if they are a good fit for the property. I’ve rented to many criminals, but was it multiple assault and battery charges and destruction of property, or a person with drug charges and they are looking for a clean slate? The City should not get into those decisions with a blanket.
And you know this only applies to people that provide low income housing, the Silicon Valley people have to provide an incredible amount of information to move into the high end apartment complexes, and they are all giving high fives for “helping their fellow man” when they would never allow these guidelines in their own properties.
Being a residential landlord has become insanely risky over the last four years.
Something tells me that the inevitable market adjustment will catch these meddling government officials completely by surprise.
Then don't reject them based on criminal records. Reject them based on "better candidates" - and then be real cagey about what makes them better.
Y'know, the way universities do to accept dumb kids to meet race quotas.
The problem is that the courts in such areas ASSume the the reason is illegal discrimination even in the face of irrefutable evidence to the contrary.
Well yes, there's that.
In fact, I wouldn't put it past them to demand that the landlord show an equal distribution. "It says here you have 100 units. I'm going to need to see that your residency is 25 lawful citizens, 25 people out on bail pending trial, 25 who were convicted but not jailed, and 25 recently released violent felons."
Good intentions.
You keep using those words, I don't think they mean what you think they mean, to paraphrase one of the 20th centuries greatest thinkers.
"substantive due process"
Conservatives like to claim that there isn't any such thing as substantive due process rights. Hypocrites.
Lying, deceiving others and covering-up ones criminal tendencies is a 'substantive due process right'? Funny. You just as well be saying there's a right to be a criminal without paying any consequences.
Typical of the left-leaner ... "If the government prevents/blocks me from being a lying criminal, scamming, cheating and stealing then I'm an anarchist. If the government does criminal things like lying, scamming, cheating and stealing it's just good government."
Pure evil through and through is what the left is made of.