FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November
2, 2009
Contact: Adam Radinsky, Deputy City
Attorney
310-458-8327
Over the years staff from various Santa
Monica City departments have received reports that some property owners evicted
rent-controlled tenants under the Ellis Act – claiming to go out the rental
business – but then re-rented the same units in violation of state and local
law. The City’s Ellis Task Force (“ETF”) was created to investigate and address
these issues. Its goal was to learn the scope of the potential problem and
address potential violations through enforcement, education and deterrence. The
group is comprised of staff from City Attorney, Rent Control, Code Compliance,
Police, and Planning.
The ETF began work in early 2008. Its
first task was to find out which properties in Santa Monica might contain illegal
rentals of formerly Ellised units. Staff started by identifying properties that
had been withdrawn from the rental market under the Ellis Act but had not been
accounted for by demolition or change of use. Staff found 59 such properties,
comprising 245 units. Staff then conducted a field investigation as to which of
these properties were occupied. This revealed that approximately 42 properties
had currently occupied units.
Re-Occupancy Permits
The first issue that the ETF addressed
with these occupied properties was enforcement of the City’s re-occupancy
permit ordinance. Pursuant to Municipal Code Section 4.32.030, Ellised units
may not be re-occupied without the owner first obtaining a re-occupancy permit
from the Planning Department. Staff identified 32 (of the original 42)
properties that appeared to be out of compliance with the re-occupancy permit
requirement. Staff is currently in the process of pursuing the owners of these
properties to assure compliance with the re-occupancy permit law.
Enforcement Litigation
Rent Control staff brought an Ellis
enforcement lawsuit against the owners of an Ocean Avenue property that
resulted in a settlement of $100,000. The Rent Board’s lawsuit alleged illegal
re-renting of Ellised units. (Santa Monica Rent Control Board v. Santa
Monica Ocean Star et al., L.A.S.C. Case No. SC 094603.) Some former tenants
of that property also filed private lawsuits seeking damages from the owners
for their displacement. The City Attorney’s office is currently pursuing a
civil lawsuit against a local landlord for tenant harassment. (City of Santa
Monica v. Cheryl Kautzky et al., L.A.S.C. Case No. SC101788.) In that case,
the City alleges that the owner illegally re-rented recently Ellised units in
addition to committing illegal harassment against a new tenant.
City Attorney and Rent Control legal
staff continue to confer about other potential properties that may be in
violation of the Ellis rules and that could be the subject of enforcement
action.
Other steps
City staff has added new warnings with
more conspicuous language to the application documents used by owners who
withdraw properties from the market under the Ellis Act. Staff also added a new
information sheet to this packet for all Ellis withdrawals. Staff also added a notice
of any Ellis filing to all Residential Building Reports when residential
properties are sold in the City; and added staff contact information for those
seeking more information.
For more information or to report a
violation of the Ellis rules, call 310-458-8336.
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