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Middleton, Samuel <br /> From: Kayleigh Levitt <kayleighlevitt@gmail.com> <br /> Sent: Tuesday, September 6, 2022 1:16 PM <br /> To: eComment <br /> Subject: Public Comment for Item #26: In Support of Establishing a Rental Registry and Rent <br /> Board <br /> Dear City Councilmembers, <br /> My name is Kayleigh and I'm writing as a Tenants United Santa Ana volunteer. I'm writing to address item <br /> 426. As a renter I am in support of the city of Santa Ana establishing a rental registry and Rent Board as part of <br /> the long-term implementation plan for the rent stabilization and just cause eviction ordinances that were passed <br /> in 2021. <br /> There is no argument to be made about how significantly the ongoing housing crisis has affected Santa Ana <br /> residents over the last several decades, and how much the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated these inequities <br /> and injustice which disproportionately affects working class communities of color in our city. Establishing the <br /> rent stabilization and justice cause eviction ordinances was a crucial, groundbreaking step in protecting tenants. <br /> With these housing inequities continuing to persist, we must ensure that these ordinances are strengthened by <br /> enacting a rental registry and a rent board that can oversee their implementation and increase transparency, <br /> renter protection, and accountability within the city's rental properties. <br /> I urge the city of Santa Ana to implement a rental registry that includes the following information: <br /> Unit address <br /> Number of bedrooms <br /> Current rent <br /> Date of the last rent increase <br /> Move-in date of the current tenant <br /> A general description of the amenities (i.e. a parking spot, a storage space, etc.) <br /> The date of the last inspection by a City's Code <br /> The City's registry should also be publicly searchable, which will allow community stakeholders and public <br /> officials to more readily identify shifts in the housing market, identify bad actors, and make it convenient for <br /> tenants to check if rent increases are legal. Several rent-controlled jurisdictions throughout the state, such as <br /> Mountain View, Richmond, Los Angeles County and Berkeley require landlords to register their residential <br /> rental units. <br /> Furthermore, I urge the city council to adopt a Rent Board that consists of the following composition with(7) <br /> members: <br /> at least four (4) members who are Tenants/Mobilehome Owners/Residents as those terms are defined under [the <br /> RSO and JCE]; <br /> at least two (2) members of the community who neither own nor manage a Rental Unit or Property as is defined <br /> under [the RSO and JCE]; <br /> (1) member who is either a Landlord or manages a Rental Unit or Property as that term is defined under [the <br /> RSO and JCE], <br /> but no more than two (2) Landlords or persons who manage a Rental Unit, Dwelling or Property, shall sit on the <br /> Rent Board at any given time. <br /> i <br />