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07/06/2021 Regular
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Correspondence - Non-Agenda
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(a) Single -Family Owner -Occupied Homes. Single -Family Homes as specified in California <br />Civil Code Section 1954.52(a)(3)(A), except if the single-family dwelling is not owner -occupied, <br />the protections contained in Section 6, Just Cause Eviction Protections; Family Protections, <br />herein apply. <br />(b) Temporary Rentals Allowed. A homeowner who is the Primary Resident of a Single -Family <br />Home may create a temporary tenancy. The temporary Tenant must be provided, in writing at the <br />inception of the tenancy, the length of the tenancy and a statement that the tenancy may be <br />terminated at the end of the temporary tenancy and relocation shall not be provided. This <br />subsection only applies to tenancies lasting less than twelve consecutive months, and no <br />individual may have more than a single temporary tenancy within a 36-month period. <br />SECTION 6 Just Cause for Eviction Protections; Family Protections <br />A. General Provisions. <br />When terminating a Tenancy of a Tenant occupying a Covered Rental Unit or the Tenancy of a <br />Tenant who rents a Mobilehome, a Landlord must comply with all of the following: <br />1. The Landlord must serve a written notice in the language of the tenant (e.g., English, <br />Spanish, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, or Tagalog). The Landlord must serve this written <br />notice to the Tenant/Resident using one of the three following methods: <br />(a) by delivering the written notice to the Tenant/Resident personally; <br />(b) if the Tenant/Resident is absent from his or her place of residence, and from <br />his or her usual place of business, by leaving a copy of the notice with some <br />person of suitable age and discretion at either place, and sending a copy of the <br />notice through certified mail addressed to the Tenant/Resident at his or her place <br />of residence; or <br />(c) via certified mail to the Tenant/Resident. The written notice must advise the <br />Tenant/Resident that, in addition to any notice requirements required by federal or <br />state law, the Landlord will terminate the Tenant's/Resident's Tenancy because of <br />at least one Tenant Fault or No -Fault reason. In the case of a curable lease <br />violation, before a Landlord for a Covered Rental Unit, or Rental Unit/Dwelling <br />issues a notice to terminate a Tenancy for Tenant Fault that is a curable lease <br />violation, the Landlord shall first serve a written notice upon the Tenant/Resident <br />with an opportunity to cure the violation pursuant to paragraph (3) of Section <br />1161 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as may be amended. If the Tenant/Resident <br />fails to cure the violation within the time set forth in the notice, the Landlord may <br />23 <br />
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