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Orozco, Norma <br />From: Kayleigh Levitt <kayleighlevitt@gmail.com> <br />Sent: Tuesday, August 17, 2021 12:23 PM <br />To: eComment <br />Subject: Public comment on non -agenda item in support of rent stabilization and tenant <br />rights <br />Dear Members of the Council, <br />As COVID19 infection numbers are on the rise again and our community is still attempting to recover from the <br />heavy impacts of the ongoing pandemic, we ask that the Santa Ana City Council prioritize community based <br />solutions to address the housing crisis. A coalition of community organizations under the guidance of Tenants <br />United Santa Ana have proposed to this city council the "City of Santa Ana Community Preservation, Rent <br />Stabilization and Tenants' Rights Act" which would limit rent increases to a maximum of 3% once a year to <br />residents who lease the land below their mobile homes and residents who rent inside of multi -family buildings <br />built prior to 1995. Likewise, this ordinance would extend just cause eviction protections to all renters in the <br />city. Under the state of California's emergency housing policies we currently have similar just cause <br />protections, but these are set to expire at the end of September. With this in mind and with the knowledge that <br />our community has been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19, we respectfully request that the city <br />council act boldly and swiftly to enact rent control and just cause as soon as possible. Arriving to a vote on the <br />ordinance by no later than the end of September. This is an urgent matter that must not be put -off any longer. <br />Although we applaud your efforts to amend the H.O.O (Housing Opportunity Ordinance) and to bring to Santa <br />Ana more affordable housing these moves are insufficient to ensure housing stability for our most vulnerable <br />residents and to help our community weather the aftermath of COVID19. It's unconscionable that given our <br />demographics Santa Ana doesn't already have rent control like other cities across the state. 18 cities/counties <br />across the state already have their own version of rent control. Renters with rent debt and renters who have <br />exhausted their savings to prevent rent debt cannot shoulder excessive rent increases any longer or they will be <br />permanently displaced from our city. <br />In the last year SAUSD had 5,717 students participate in the McKinney-Vento program. 87.8% of students <br />district wide are categorized as "socioeconomically disadvantaged". <br />According to the Out of Reach report recently published by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, <br />people working on minimum wage ($14) would need to work 89 hrs per week to afford a Ibdrm apartment. <br />However, in Santa Ana, minimum wage workers at $14/hr would have to work 104 hrs per week to afford a <br />modest 1 bdrm apartment (based on local rent prices). Additionally in Santa Ana, many people are making <br />below minimum wage so that number is even higher. <br />Warm regards, <br />Kayleigh Levitt <br />Tenants United Santa Ana Volunteer <br />