HomeMy WebLinkAboutCommittee of the Whole - 05 Jun 2023 - Agenda - Pdf
CITY OF RENTON
AGENDA - Committee of the Whole Meeting
4:45 PM - Monday, June 5, 2023
7th Floor Council Chambers/Videoconference
1. TENANT PROTECTIONS AND RENTAL REGISTRATION PROGRAM
UPDATES
a) Presentation
If you would like to attend this week's meeting remotely, you can do so by going to
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Tenant Protections
&
Rental Registration
DEPARTMENT OF EQUITY,
HOUSING, AND HUMAN SERVICES
Maryjane Van Cleave
EHHS Administrator
mvancleave@rentonwa.gov
Hannah Bahnmiller
Acting Community Development
and Housing Manager
hbahnmiller@rentonwa.govAGENDA ITEM #1. a)
OVERVIEW
Local Need
Existing Conditions
Future Options
Questions & Feedback
1
3
4
2
AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
LOCAL
NEED
Rental Housing and Evictions
AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
RENTER HOUSEHOLDS
New Renton residents are increasingly likely to be renters.
The number of renters in Renton is growing. New population
growth is primarily renters. Between 2010 and 2021, Renton's
renter population growth has outpaced its owner population by
three times.
The increase in renters is expected to continue. Within CED
development pipeline, 7,200 of 7,800 (92%) housing units are
anticipated to be rental housing, primarily market-rate. AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
RENT PRICES
$1,000
$1,250
$1,500
$1,750
$2,000
$2,250
$2,500
$2,750
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
Bellevue Seattle Renton Kent Auburn
Source: Observed Rent Index, 2015-2023AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
RENT PRICES
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
Rents Home Prices Owner Income Renter Income Inflation
Home Prices +86%
Rents +61%
Owner Income +32%
Inflation +27%
Renter Income +45%
Sources: Zillow Home Value and Observed Rent Index, 2023
ACS 5-Year Estimates (2017-2021), US Census
CPI Inflation Calculator, Accessed April 2023
AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
EVICTION BASIS
Basis for Renton
Evictions 2022-’23 2021-’22 2020-’21 2019-’20 Total
Nonpayment of rent 92 17 0 290 399
Lease violation/
Behavior 11 25 3 8 47
Owner wishes to
sell/occupy 11 10 16 0 37
Unauthorized
occupants 1 9 4 3 17
No cause
termination/expired
lease
4 2 0 9 15
Mutual termination 3 0 0 5 8
Post-foreclosure 2 0 2 3 7
Other 3 0 0 2 5
Total 127 63 25 320 535
Source: Eviction Filing Data from King County Bar Association AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
EVICTION RATES BY CITY
City Rank Evictions Per
Capita
Evictions Per Capita
(Eviction
Filings/1000)
2022-23 Eviction
Filings 2023 Population
Pacific 1 318%23 7,235
Tukwila 2 239%52 21,798
Federal Way 3 208%210 101,030
Kent 4 168%229 136,588
Auburn 5 164%143 87,256
SeaTac 6 149%47 31,454
Des Moines 7 146%48 32,888
Enumclaw 8 136%17 12,543
Newcastle 9 123%16 13,017
Renton 10 119%127 106,785
Seattle 11 105%777 737,015
Shoreline 12 94%55 58,608
Burien 13 90%47 52,066
Kirkland 14 69%64 92,175
North Bend 15 67%5 7,461
Source: Eviction Filing Data from King County Bar Association AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
EXISTING
CONDITIONS
Current policies, programs,
and resources
AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
POLICIES, PROGRAMS, AND RESOURCES
Statewide
Tenant
Protections
Renton Human
Services Funding
Rental
Registration
Program
AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
RESIDENTIAL LANDLORD TENANT ACT
The Residential Landlord-Tenant Act (RLTA) regulates the
creation of residential tenancies and the relationship between
landlords and tenants of residential dwelling units. The RLTA
establishes rights and duties of both tenants and landlords,
procedures for the parties to enforce their rights, how and when
a tenancy expires or may be ended, and remedies for violations
of the RLTA.AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
RLTA AT A HIGH LEVEL
•Remedies pursued through a civil process, not state or locally
enforced
•Tenants and landlords have outlined rights, responsibilities,
and remedies
•Evictions must be pursued through a formal court process
•2023 State Legislative changes to RLTA were related to the
return of security deposits and definitions of “normal wear
and tear”AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
EVICTION AT A HIGH LEVEL
Day 1: Rent is due
Day 2: Rent is
unpaid; landlord
can serve 14-day
pay or vacate
notice
Days 3-15: Tenant
has 14 days to pay
rent in full.
Day 16: Rent is still
unpaid; landlord can serve
tenant for unlawful
detainer (eviction
summons and complaint)
Day 23: Tenant has 7 days
to answer summons and
complaint or lose by
default; tenant may file
for notice of appearance
Day 24: Show case hearing
occurs, and judgement is
issued; if tenant has responded,
both parties go to court; if no
response is received, default
judgement and writ of
restitution issued
Day 27: Sheriff
serves tenant writ
of restitution
Day 30: Tenant has 72
hours after posting of
writ of restitution
before Sheriff can
enforce
Day 31: Writ enforceable;
sheriff can come to
property and oversee
removal of tenant and
belongings AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
RLTA STATEWIDE PROTECTIONS
Selection of Adopted Policies at the State Level
Policy Citation and Description
Notice for Rent Increases RCW 59.18.140 to provide 60-day notice of a rent increase, and increases may not
take effect until the completion of the term of the current rental agreement.
Notice for Demolition or Substantial
Rehabilitation
RCW 59.18.200 requires 120-day notice to tenants of demolition or substantial
rehabilitation of premises.
Move-in Fees and Deposits RCW 59.18.610 provides that a tenant may request to pay deposits,
nonrefundable fees, and last month’s rent in installments.
Just Cause Eviction RCW 59.18.650 requires landlords to specify a reason for refusing to continue a
month-to-month residential tenancy, subject to certain limited exceptions.
Relocation Assistance RCW 59.18.440 authorizes cities and counties to adopt relocation assistance
ordinances for low-income tenants.
Source of Income Discrimination RCW 59.18.255, prohibits source of income discrimination against a tenant who
uses a benefit or subsidy to pay rent.
Prohibition on Rent Control RCW 35.21.830 preempts cities from adopting and enforcing residential rent
control ordinances AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
HUMAN SERVICES FUNDING
General Fund Biennial Grants
•$812,000 awarded to 64 programs for 2023 and 2024
COVID-19 Relief Dollars
•Sources include CARES, ARPA and CDBG-CV funds
•~$1.3 million in rental assistance allocated AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
2023-2024 Human Services Grant Funding
Rental/Emergency
Assistance
Multi-Service Center
Solid Ground
St. Vincent de Paul
St. Stephen Housing Association
Legal Assistance Navigation
Eastside Legal Assistance
Program (ELAP)
King County Bar Foundation/
Housing Justice Project (HJP)
2-1-1
El Centro de la Raza
Tenants Union of Washington
Vine Maple Place AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
RENTAL REGISTRATION PROGRAM
Rental Registration Program (RRP) aims to improve the health and safety
of long-term residential rental units.
Registration-based program that aims to achieve voluntary compliance
through annual completion of a self-certified Declaration of Compliance
Checklist.
RRP imposes no additional standards on landlords, other than those
already in place in city and state code.
Suspected violations can be further investigated by issuing a request for a
landlord to obtain a Certificate of Inspection from a qualified third -party
inspector.
Violations and penalties follow code compliance process (RMC 1 -3).AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
RRP OVERVIEW & STATUS
Introduced as CED Docket
item “Maintaining Health
Standards for Housing”
2015
Rental Registration
Program Ordinance 5913
adopted
February 2019
Housing Programs
Manager hired to
implement the program
Jan 2020
COVID-19 emergency
protections enacted; RRP
implementation paused
April 2020
Notification and
registration pilot;
identification of program
inefficiencies and barriers
April 2021
Code and IT system
changes implemented to
improve client and staff
useability
April –Dec 2021
Citywide reorganization
creating EHHS and
transfer of housing-
related staff
August 2021
Launch of online
registration system
Dec 2021
Registration live
Cross departmental work
to register priority
properties and respond to
tenant reports
2022-Now
AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
FUTURE
OPTIONS
Near-, mid-, and long-term
strategies to consider
AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
STRATEGIES TO CONSIDER
Near-Term
•Education and
Outreach
•Improve RRP
•Advance Policies
to SKHHP
Mid-Term
•Distribution of
Information
Requirements
Long-Term
•Other local policy
options
AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
NEAR-TERM ACTIONS
Education and Outreach
•Develop and implement a program of education and information events, materials, and
resources for tenants and landlords
•Encourage knowledge of and use of existing remedies and assistance
•Increase outreach to tenants through the Neighborhood Program
Improve Rental Registration Program
•Advance code changes to modify the RRP to include required periodic inspections
•Implement the program requiring landlords to complete and submit a periodic Certificate of
Inspection completed by a qualified third-party inspector
Advance Policies to SKHHP
•Advance a recommendation to South King Housing and Homelessness Partners (SKHHP) to
adopt a Resolution similar to that adopted by the ARCH Executive Board, recommending
certain tenant protection policies AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
LONGER-TERM ACTIONS
Distribution of Information Requirements
•Recommended as part of the Renton Housing Action Plan
•Requires landlords to provide tenants with information related to rental rules, regulations,
and resources
Other Local Policy Options
•ARCH Executive Board recommendations
1.Notice of Rent Increase: Require landlords to provide a minimum of 120 days' written notice of rent increases
greater than 3%, and 180 days' notice of rent increases greater than 10%, except in subsidized housing where rent
is set based on the income of the tenant. Note: Existing requirements in the RLTA requires landlords to provide at
least 60 days-notice for rent increases of any amount.
2.Limits on Late Fees: Establish a cap on fees for late payment of rent at 1.5% of a tenant's monthly rent.
3.Limits on Move-In Fees: Establish a cap on move-in fees and security deposits of no more than one month's rent
except in subsidized tenancies where rent is set based on the income of the tenant, and allow tenants to pay in
installments. Note: Existing requirements in the RLTA provides that tenants may request to pay deposits in
installments.
•Additional policies adopted in King County (next slide)AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
LONGER-TERM ACTIONS
Type Policy Description
Related to
Education and
Accommodations
Distribution of Information Requirements Requires landlords to provide tenants with information related to rental rules, regulations, and resources.
Reasonable Accommodation Requests Requires landlord to review and comply with requests for reasonable accommodations for notices to be
served in formats other than the default.
Social Security Numbers Prohibits landlords from requiring a social security number to be provided as part of rental application.
Due Date Adjustments Allow tenants on fixed-income and/or government assistance to adjust payment dates to align with
payment of benefits.
Related to Rent
and Fees
Notice for Rent Increases* Increases the required notice period for rent increases; can be graduated based on increase amount.
Move-in Fees and Deposits* Requirements related to the amount and acceptance installment payments of move-in fees and deposits.
Late Fees Establishes caps on the charging of fees for late payment.
Rent Increase on Defective Properties Prohibits landlords from increasing rent on properties failing to meet habitability standards.
Related to
Changing
Tenancy or
Ownership
Just Cause Termination*Extend state policy to require good cause in order to evict or refuse to renew or continue a rental
agreement; can require registration in local registration or licensing program before able to lawfully evict.
Relocation Assistance After local authorization, requires payment of relocation assistance to low-income tenants who are
displaced by demolition, substantial rehabilitation, and/or change of use.
Notice of Intent to Sell Policy requiring owners of multi-family rental housing notify the City a certain number of days before
listing the building or advertising it for sale.
*indicates local policy beyond state requirements AGENDA ITEM #1. a)
QUESTIONS
&
FEEDBACK
Maryjane Van Cleave
EHHS Administrator
mvancleave@rentonwa.gov
Hannah Bahnmiller
Acting Community Development
and Housing Manager
hbahnmiller@rentonwa.govAGENDA ITEM #1. a)