California Renters Will Owe $1.7B in Back Rent by Year End: Report Statewide, renters on average owe their landlords just under $7K each
THE REAL DEAL: LOS ANGELES TRD STAFF
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alifornia renters will owe their landlords a total of nearly $1.7 billion by the end of the year. That’s according to a new study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, which estimates 240,000 renter households statewide are behind on rent, with an average debt of $6,953, the Los Angeles Daily News reported. The state’s eviction moratorium runs through Feb. 1. It allows landlords to pursue back rent through small claims court starting in March. Tenants are required to pay at least a quarter of their rent between Sept. 1 and Jan. 31 to qualify for eviction protections. Back rent owed by California renters accounts for more than a quarter of all back rent owed nationwide, which the report concluded will total $7.2 billion by the end of the year. Californians on average owe about $1,500 more than the national average. California’s eviction moratorium is meant as something of a stopgap while state lawmakers draw up a more permanent solution to the question of evictions and foreclosures. There are statewide concerns that a wave of foreclosures and evictions could hit once
Resilience — continued from 34 • Pre-1996 steel moment frame buildings Orange County’s canyon communities are vulnerable to fire and residents should continue to take action to guard
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Apartment News
Federal Reserve officials expect back rent across California will total nearly $1.7 billion
protections at various governmental levels expires. The federal government, through the CDC, has an eviction moratorium in place through Dec. 31. The Philadelphia Fed warns that thousands of tenants nationwide are at risk of eviction when that expires. Cities and counties can and in most
cases have put their own eviction protections in place. The Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles is fighting L.A.’s eviction moratorium in court, arguing that it does not afford landlords the same protections as it does renters. [LADN] — Dennis Lynch www.therealdeal.com/la
against them. Similarly, all of Orange County is vulnerable to earthquakes. Owners and property managers should act now to protect against the risks their apartment buildings face.
About the Author: Ali Sahabi, a licensed General Engineering Contractor (GEC), is an expert in seismic resilience and sustainability. He is Co-Founder of Optimum Seismic, Inc., which has completed more than 3,500 seismic retrofitting and renovation projects for multifamily residential, commercial, and industrial buildings throughout California.
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December 2020