Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsRemodeling

Council nears vote on compensation for ousted renters

Plan would increase what tenants are paid to move when their units are converted to condos.

April 03, 2007|Steve Hymon, Times Staff Writer

With a flurry of last-minute lobbying underway this week, the Los Angeles City Council is moving toward a significant vote Wednesday on relocation fees paid to tenants whose apartments are being converted to higher-priced condominiums.

The fees, which are paid by building owners, have become one of the hot-button issues in Los Angeles over the last six months. The city has seen a wave of apartment-to-condominium conversions in the last five years, resulting in more than 11,000 rent-control units being lost.


Advertisement

That has been problematic in a hot real estate market, with many tenants often facing dramatic rent increases when trying to find new apartments.

On Monday, council President Eric Garcetti said he might not support the fees that are up for debate.

Most tenants currently receive relocation compensation of $3,450, or $8,550 for so-called qualified tenants who are 62 or older, disabled or have minor dependent children.

In December, the planning commission recommended increasing the payments to $9,040, or $17,040 for qualified tenants.

But instead the council has opted for what is called a means-based approach, in which the fees would be linked to both length of tenancy and tenants' financial need. The fees that will be on the table Wednesday are:

* $6,810 to tenants who have lived in their apartments for less than five years ($14,850 for qualified tenants).

* $9,040 to tenants who have lived in their apartments for more than five years ($17,080 for qualified tenants).

* $9,040 to tenants whose income is 80% or below the area's median income -- $55,450 for a family of four -- and $17,080 to any qualified tenant who is below the median income, regardless of length of tenancy.

Garcetti said that the so-called means-based approach could weigh on the city's bureaucracy and possibly slow down the payment process, and that a similar system has faltered in San Diego. He said he supported the planning commission's recommendation because "it seemed like a fair adjustment considering we neglected it for many years."

Garcetti is the former chairman of the council's housing committee, a post now held by Councilman Herb Wesson. Wesson has advocated the new payment structure as a compromise.

Jane Blumenfeld, a deputy city planner, said she believed the new approach would be an imposition on some tenants. "Proving your income seems very invasive," she said.

Wesson said he believes the means-based approach will work.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|