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CORRESPONDENCE - WS-1 SUPPORT
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CORRESPONDENCE - WS-1 SUPPORT
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2/8/2018 8:35:44 AM
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2/6/2018 12:29:15 PM
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City Clerk
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Agenda
Agency
Clerk of the Council
Item #
WS-1
Date
2/6/2018
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Alcala, Abigail <br />From: Ruben Barreto (SABHC) < <br />Sent: Tuesday, February 6, 2018 11:25 AM <br />To: eComment <br />Attachments: Work Study Session on Rent Control -Stabilization -Support Tenant Protections <br />Ordinace.docx <br />February 6th, 2018 <br />Mayor Miguel Pulido and Councilmembers <br />City of Santa Ana <br />20 Civic Center Plaza <br />P.O. Box 1988, M31 <br />Santa Ana CA, 92701 <br />RE: Work Study Session on Rent Control/Stabilization - <br />Support Tenant Protections Ordinance <br />Santa Ana Building Healthy Communities (SABHC) is committed to addressing health inequities and <br />improving opportunities for a healthy, thriving Santa Ana. SABHC understands that health is directly shaped by <br />the circumstances in which people are born, raised, live, and work. Improving these circumstances is a <br />collective responsibility and one that must be led by those directly affected. <br />SABHC, supports the efforts by community groups and stakeholders to pass an ordinance that will afford <br />tenants the protections that they need. Santa Ana has a large renter population with 56% of the city's total <br />households serving as rental homes (2017 American Community Survey). We believe that tenants have the <br />right to Pave in dignified housing; and we need a Tenant Protections Ordinance immediately as Santa Ana <br />tenants live in fear of recurring rent increases and retaliation in the form of unjust evictions. <br />The city's Housing Element illustrates the need for such ordinance for renters, especially our low income <br />residents. `Approximately 54 percent of households earn lower incomes... Renters typically have the <br />highest percentage of very low income households...' (pg A-10) These low income households have very <br />high rates of rent burden, as they're paying well over 30 percent of their household income on rent. `The 2011 <br />ACS reports 31,676 households (43 percent) overpaid for housing. Of this total, 57 percent were renters <br />(21,496 households)... Housing overpayment is most severe among extremely low and low income <br />households and special needs groups.' (pg. A-20) <br />It is important to protect our immigrants, workers, and youth from the traumatic effects that displacement has <br />on our communities. Policies such as Just Cause Evictions have been successfully implemented in jurisdictions <br />throughout California while protecting the rights of tenants and property owners. The City needs to deepen its <br />commitment to working alongside the community in the development process, to ensure that the community's <br />needs are being met and that tenants are being protected. Policies that include Just Cause Evictions, Rent <br />Control, and Rent Stabilization represent a key opportunity to do this. <br />
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