Expanding Rent Control Will Not Make Housing More Affordable for the Disabled
Advocates unconvincingly argue that repealing California's limits on rent control will open up more housing for people with disabilities.

Rent control proponents like to argue that the policy will make housing more affordable. Now they're claiming it will also make it more accessible to people with disabilities.
That's the thrust of a new article from Mother Jones reporter Julia Métraux, who writes that California's state-level limits on local rent control policies "increasingly limits disabled and aging people's ability to get accessible, affordable housing—practically impossible on a fixed income."
On the ballot this year is Proposition 33, which would repeal those state-level limits. Disability advocates tell Métraux repeal would be a huge win for disabled tenants' ability to afford housing that's accessible to them.
Would it?
Neither Métraux nor the activists she interviews quite explain how that would work.
The basic argument appears to be that new housing is more likely to be accessible to those with disabilities, but California's Costa-Hawkins Act (which Prop. 33 would repeal) forbids localities from imposing rent control on newer housing units.
By repealing Costa-Hawkins, cities could use rent control to drive down the cost of newer housing, thus making it affordable for people disabilities.
There's a surface logic to this argument, but doesn't really make sense once one starts to walk through the mechanics of it.
For starters, rent control policies typically don't involve literally setting rents but rather limiting annual rent increases.
But if existing housing is already too expensive for people with disabilities, then limiting the rate at which it gets more expensive won't do them any good. Housing that's already unattainable will just grow increasingly unattainable at a slightly slower rate.
Should Prop. 33 pass, it would be legal for cities to require that new, handicap-accessible housing be offered at below-market rates from the get-go. On paper, that would make such units more affordable to disabled people.
A city that did adopt that policy however would effectively kill off new construction. Developers aren't going to build money losing, below-market-rate units out of the goodness of their heart. They would require subsidies to build affordable housing.
And Prop. 33 would do nothing to increase subsidies for affordable housing construction.
To be sure, there's also nothing about the status quo that prevents localities from offering (or increasing) subsidies to developers to build affordable, disability-accessible housing.
The net effect of repealing Costa-Hawkins and rent controlling new, unsubsidized housing is that few accessible units would get built. That would reduce housing options for disabled people who can currently afford newly built units.
In some extreme cases, localities have used rent control to cut legal rents. It's possible some California localities would try to do that following a repeal of Costa-Hawkins. Theoretically, they could make some pricy, accessible units affordable to more disabled people, but cutting rents on existing units would also make those units more affordable for everyone, therefore increasing demand for them. Disabled people would have to get in line with everyone else competing for newly affordable units that are in short supply.
When price controls create shortages and queues, producers manage that queue by using things other than price to discriminate against potential buyers.
Literal discrimination against people with disabilities is illegal. But it's eminently likely that landlords would use other, legal means of discrimination to manage the queue—say by requiring higher credit scores. Disabled people who already have a hard time affording housing wouldn't fare any better under that system.
Rent control already makes rental housing markets work less well for everyone. The research is unambiguous that where the policy drives rent down below market rates, landlords provide less rental housing (either by building less or converting units to owner-occupied housing) and invest less in the rental properties that do stay on the market.
Giving cities carte blanche to expand rent control would only make these problems worse. Disabled people who struggle to find housing now would suffer along with everyone else.
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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More controls restrict access. No matter the commodity.
It doesn't take a rocket scientist or even a rocket Nobel economist to understand the incentives of rent control.
* Look at all this property we can seize and control and pass out to our supporters!
* Look at how little tenants care for free stuff! Look at how little maintenance gets done and how buildings fall apart! Look at how uninterested builders are in building for an expanding population and for replacements for the unmaintained slums!
Look at all the housing being built in Nevada and Arizona!
being pro-rent control is the flat-eartherism of econ
I like to think of central planning as the creationism of the left.
^+1
Expanding Rent Control Will Not Make Housing More Affordable for the Disabled
Advocates unconvincingly argue that repealing California's limits on rent control will open up more housing for people with disabilities.
Ah, now it makes sense why Britches is strategically and reluctantly voting for Harris.
Rent control has proven to be a failure decade after decade.
So why is it these morons continue to try put a round peg in a square hole year after year?
Everything goes in the square hole.
The only thing Prop 33 does is allow for democracy so that a free people get to decide the laws which govern them. That is required to have a legit government. Kelptocrats do not want the citizens to decide what the laws should be, but the Declaration of Independence disagrees with the 1%.
"That to secure these (inalienable) rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. "
Of course, the billionaires do not like the idea that people may pass laws against thievery. Jeffery Dahmer did not like laws against cannibalism. What free Americans will decide about regulating the housing industry is the part of democracy.
totally not a paid shill
Naah. Abysmally stupid pile of steaming lefty shit.
I think we have a contender for today's 'Stupidest Comment on the Internet' contest.
Democracy has been charicatured as 'two wolves and a sheep voting on what's for dinner'. That's exactly what Prop 33 is - a return to the time when tenants could vote to exploit their landlord then act all confused when landlords leave for greener pastures or do other things to cut their losses. The Costa-Hawkins Act was passed because the local rent control practices were so abusive and so very counter-productive that even California legislators had to take notice.
You talk about a kleptocracy then advocate to do the same stealing you're whining about, just from different people. You're a hypocrite. Unconstrained "democracy" can be as fatal to freedom as the worst dictatorship.
typo - should be "caricatured". Apologies.
Are we talking about actual disabilities, like "my legs don't work and I literally can't walk" or are we talking about fake disabilities like "sometimes I'm nervous in crowds and I really really love my cat."