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The first thing to do before you dive in and read all the current updates is to figure out which rules are applicable to your property and which are not. Is it in the City of Los Angeles or not? Is it subject to Rent Stabilization Ordinance (ROS) or not?
To check if your property is in the City of LA, visit the LA City Neighborhood Information website at neighborhoodinfo.lacity.org and check if your property can be found there. If not, it means that you will only need to follow the LA County’s rules and updates.
Properties that are subject to RSO are those that are built prior to October 1st, 1978 and those that are built after July 16, 2007 as Ellis replacement units. But you can also easily find out going to zimas.lacity.org/. Enter you address there, and you should be able to see there if your property is under RSO or not. You can also text “RSO” to (855) 880-7368 and enter your address.
The City of LA Declaration of Local Emergency effective on March 4, 2020, terminated on February 1, 2023. This means:
Beginning February 1, 2023, you can now evict tenants for non-payment if they fail to pay their full current monthly rate with the exceptions of low-Income tenants with income impacted by COVID-19 continue to have protections through March 31, 2023, under the LA County provisions. Take note that these low-income tenants still must prove that they have been impacted by COVID-19 and must notify the landlord within 7 days of the rent due date.
If you have tenants who have incurred COVID-19 rental debt, mark August 1st, 2023, and February 1st, 2024, on your calendars because, yes, your tenant still must pay their debts to avoid eviction and you can definitely still take them to the small claims court if they don’t pay. See the guideline below:
If you have tenants who has unauthorized pets and occupants necessitated by COVID-19, you still cannot evict them until January 31, 2024.
If your property is subject to RSO, pay attention to these items: (If not, skip this!)
• Effective February 1, 2023, you can now go ahead and do “No-Fault” evictions (government order, owner/family/manager occupancy, demolition, withdrawal from the housing market) but remember that you are still required to submit a Declaration of Intent to Evict with LAHD and relocation fees to the tenants are required for all your no-fault evictions.
• Annual rent increases for rental units subject to the City of LA RSO are prohibited through January 31, 2024.
If your property is NOT subject to RSO:
Effective January 27, 2023, all residential units not subject to the RSO are now protected under the City’s Just Cause Ordinance which means:
• You can do at-fault evictions for the following reasons: non-payment of rent, lease violations, nuisance, illegal purpose, denial of access into the unit, subtenant not approved. Any written notice terminating a tenancy for a tenant at-fault legal reason must be filed with the Los Angeles Housing Department (LAHD) within three (3) business days of service on the tenant.
• You can also do no-fault evictions for the following reasons: Owner/family/manager occupancy, demolition, withdrawal, substantial remodel, comply with a government order, convert to affordable, conversion of Residential Hotel or HUD owned property to be sold but remember that you are still required to submit a Declaration of Intent to Evict with LAHD and relocation fees to the tenants are required for all your no-fault evictions.
Although this can be frustrating, remember not to do the following as these can be classified as Tenant Harassment and is punishable under the City of LA’s Tenant Anti-Harassment Ordinance:
• Taking away services provided in the lease (housing services).
• Refusing to do required repairs.
• Entering the apartment without proper notice.
• Threatening a tenant with physical harm.
• Coercing the tenant to move-out with offer(s) of payments.
• Using lies or intimidation intended to make a tenant move out.
• Threatening or serving an eviction notice based on false reasons. Interfering with a tenant's right to privacy.
• Intentionally disturbing a tenant's peace and quiet.
• Refusing to accept rent payment.
• Inquiring the immigration or citizenship status of a tenant.
• Threatening to disclose immigration/citizenship status information about a tenant.
• Threatening to disclose tenant information to a gov't agency to influence them to move.
• Engaging in activity prohibited by federal, state, or local housing anti-discrimination laws
• Threatening/interfering with tenant organizing activities (tenant associations and unions)
SKY Properties Inc., is a licensed property management company in Los Angeles and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws.
California Bureau of Real Estate License ID: 01242008
Kari Negri | President
Lic. #01214576
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