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Healtb <br />Mayor Pulido and Members of the City Council <br />c <br />City of Santa Ana <br />20 Civic Center Plaza <br />>. <br />P.Q. Bo 1988, M31 <br />Santa Ana, CA 92701 <br />RE: 8513: Support — Urgency Ordinance for Tenant Protections <br />450 West Fourth Street <br />Suite 130 <br />Dear Santa Ana City Council and Mayor, <br />Ana, <br />Santa Ana:; CA 4270 i <br />Ph: 71 92 <br />Latino Health Access, along with community residents and the groups listed below, is writing <br />Fax: 714-542-4853 <br />this letter in strong support of a temporary Urgency Ordinance for Tenant Protections while <br />latinohealthaccess.org <br />we await the implementation of the statewide Tenant's Protection Act (AB1482) to go into <br />effect January 2020. The Urgency Ordinance establishes that rent increases in the city not <br />exceed the local CPI of 3.3% from the date of signature of AB1482, October 8, 2019, to <br />December31, 2019. It also protects against evictions without just cause through December <br />31, 2019. <br />The state law will provide protections from evictions without cause and excessive rent <br />increases as of January 1, 2020. However, there is a 3-month gap between when the law was <br />signed and when it goes into effect that has left many families in Santa Ana vulnerable to <br />evictions without cause and excessive rent increases. Unfortunately, many landlords are <br />seeing this window as a last opportunity to capitalize on charging higher rents, including - <br />measures to evict long time tenants in order to reset the amount of rent they can charge as <br />of January. in the last 2 weeks, we have contacted 2,613 voters throughout the city, 1,273 <br />feel that their local officials need to identify a solution to this problem, and 55% of those that <br />are tenants told us they have experienced at least one rent increase in the last year. In our <br />door-to-door conversations, we have heard stories of mass evictions and rent increases of <br />over$500 from one month to another: <br />An excessive increase and an eviction, can be destabilize an entire family, and when this " <br />becomes a;larger scale problem our entire community is destabilized. Over 54% of residents <br />in Santa Ana are tenants and 65% are already rent burdened. This totals 214, 500 of your <br />constituents that are counting on you to protect their right to remain housed. We are just a <br />few days away from Thanksgiving, Christmas and the holidays where families want to spend <br />time with loved ones without the worry or fear of being evicted or not being able to pay rent. <br />The Urgency Ordinance will provide that peace of mind that our families deserve. <br />We urge you to join other cities like Los Angeles and Redwood City that have passed similar <br />ordinances and protect tenants in Santa Ana by supporting the Urgency Ordinance. As there <br />are new protections for Californians as of January 2020, we are simply urging you to close <br />the time gap and move up the date these protections will go into effect in Santa Ana. <br />e are working with attorneys at Public taw Center who have done extensive research on <br />ordinance language, and are ready to work with City staff. Please do not hesitate to contact <br />me at nmel-i_a_@Iatinohealthacess.org or ext 1021 if you have any questions. <br />Sincerely, <br />Nancy Meji- , MSWO MPH <br />Director of Community Engagement & Advocacy Programs <br />PREVENTION.. <br />