Syllabus/content/session/rentstruggles.md

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---
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title: "Rent Struggles"
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---
# What is the politics of rental relations?
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Rent. It arrives every month and it takes a portion of the value of our labour, handing it over to our landlord. Rent that is negotiated on the market is usually perceived as a question of two-way agreement between two actors in the market - landlord and a tenant. But renting a home is not the same as renting a bike or a yacht, and it should be a subject of strict regulation. States and local municipalities in some cases, enforce rent control that protects tenants against eviction and price increase. Market apologists argue against rent control by claiming that if the state and/or municipal administration push for the rent control, developers will not invest into new housing and therefore we will have a shortage. This, however, has never been proven true. As rent is taking up a large portion of our incomes, it is not surprising that tenant unions are one of the main forms of organizing. Because tenants usually don't live in the same place, organizing tenants calls for innovative tactics. In rent struggles, as our experience shows, it can prove a challenge to collectively secure something that is deemed the most fundamentally existential thing: a home.
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## Proposed resources
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- **Read the basic info about what we fight for when we fight for better tenant rights:**
- ![](bib:1076eac2-ee29-40d1-b90d-88facc539c66)
- ![](bib:3ac3912f-5eab-431a-9b6e-d4b714fade67)
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## For inspiration on how we organize rent struggle check out
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- [London Renter Union](https://londonrentersunion.org/)
- [Glasgow living rent](https://www.facebook.com/LivingRentGlasgow/)
## How to learn together
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Read the proposed articles and look into the proposed material before you come to the session. Create together a fictional story about a renter struggle. Create different characters and determine their roles in the overall narrative. You can use one of these deeply embodied typologies: estate agent, landlord, local government representative, tenant etc. Your story could tackle issues such as the history of rent struggle in Glasgow, a 30-minute meeting of renters facing eviction in the place where you come from, description of renters' protest set in the near future etc. Use the information from the reading resources. Write it up. Share your story with other Pirate Care Syllabus users.
---
# Amee Chew & Katie Goldstein, 2019. Universal Rent Control Now
**In *Jacobin Magazine*, June 17, 2019.**
Rent control is making a comeback. Across the country, tenants and housing justice organizers are taking on the mighty real estate lobby and its political allies through a powerful escalation of legislative and electoral activity. Oregon enacted a statewide rent cap in February. In Florida, Colorado, Illinois, and Nevada, state legislators introduced bills to lift bans against rent control. And in California, despite the defeat of Prop 10 — which would have allowed the expansion of rent control — another package of legislation has been introduced that would remove state-level restrictions on rent control, make eviction protections widespread, and prevent rent gouging.
Chicago-area voters have voted overwhelmingly three times now for rent control, while in Novem­ber, the New York state senate flipped from red to blue largely on a “universal rent control” platform. Federally, Senator Elizabeth Warren has included incentives for localities to pass rent control in her new housing bill.
We face the worst renter crisis in a generation. The market has never met the needs of low-income renters, and production is [increasingly](http://www.jchs.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/harvard_jchs_americas_rental_housing_2017_0.pdf) [geared](https://www.rentcafe.com/blog/rental-market/luxury-apartments/8-out-of-10-new-apartment-buildings-were-high-end-in-2017-trend-carries-on-into-2018/) at the luxury end. The largest corporate landlords have gained an [unprecedented share](https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/blog/who-owns-rental-properties-and-is-it-changing/) of rental properties, while the deregulation of Wall Street has fueled heightened speculation. In this context, big real estate has poured [tremendous funding](https://therealdeal.com/la/2018/10/31/landlords-and-investors-spent-millions-in-effort-to-defeat-prop-10/) into public relations campaigns that allege rent control hurts renters. But powerful tenant, community, and political organizing is pushing back and demanding housing policies that are accountable to tenants' needs.
The Center for Popular Democracy, the Right to the City Alliance, and PolicyLink recently released a report, ["Our Homes, Our Future,"](https://ourhomesourfuture.org/) to highlight the critical importance of rent control. Our networks actively support tenant organizing across the country. In this report and through our affiliates' organizing, we demand that policymakers put human needs first.
Rent control matches the size and urgency of the renter crisis. Few other policies can offer meaningful relief that is as quick and
far-reaching. If rent control campaigns underway in six states and two cities succeed, [12.7 million](https://ourhomesourfuture.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/OurHomesOurFuture-2pg-Summary.pdf) renter households would be stabilized  — at little to no cost to government. If adopted nationally, [42 million](https://ourhomesourfuture.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/OurHomesOurFuture-2pg-Summary.pdf) households could be stabilized. Rent control operates by setting a predictable schedule for allowed rent increases, usually a maximum percentage. In cities where rent control already exists, it is often the [largest source](http://lghttp.58547.nexcesscdn.net/803F44A/images/nycss/images/uploads/pubs/Rent_Reg_Explainer_V6.pdf) of affordable housing. Strengthening and expanding rent control would help move us towards a more equitable, inclusive economy and society.
Jacqueline Luther, a renter in Los Angeles, puts it this way: "We need stronger rent control, to live our best lives."
{{< figure src="/images/is33-uneven-and-combined1.png" width="100%" title="Figure 1. Rent control laws by state." >}}
**A Policy That Works**
Rent control works — it effectively increases housing stability and affordability. It reaches those in need, [disproportionately](https://ourhomesourfuture.org/) [benefiting](https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01944369008975755) [low-income](http://furmancenter.org/files/FurmanCenter_FactBrief_RentStabilization_June2014.pdf) [tenants](https://www.jstor.org/stable/3146080?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents), [people](https://www.jstor.org/stable/3146080?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents) [of](http://furmancenter.org/files/FurmanCenter_FactBrief_RentStabilization_June2014.pdf) [color](https://dornsife.usc.edu/assets/sites/242/docs/Rent_Matters_PERE_Report_Final_02.pdf), [immigrants](https://b.3cdn.net/nycss/6174637efe14b4c944_l2m6b8b6d.pdf), [seniors](https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Rent_Stabilization_Board/Level_3_-_General/Final%20Report%202009%20Tenant%20Survey.pdf), [women-headed](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0094119089900272)
[households](https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Rent_Stabilization_Board/Level_3_-_General/Final%20Report%202009%20Tenant%20Survey.pdf), and those with disabilities. [The stronger](https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01944360008976096) [and](https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Rent_Stabilization_Board/Level_3_-_General/Final%20Report%202009%20Tenant%20Survey.pdf) [more](https://scholar.oxy.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=1325&context=uep_faculty) universal controls are, the [better](https://www.smgov.net/uploadedFiles/Departments/Rent_Control/Reports/Annual_Reports/2017%20Annual%20Report%20FINAL.pdf) it is at helping the most marginalized.
Rent control is first and foremost a tool that slows displacement. It helps alleviate the churn of forced moves and evictions that plague low-income tenants. It buys time for low-income communities of color under pressure from gentrification, by countering the displacement caused by rapidly rising rents — and importantly, here it is able to intervene rapidly, before it's too late. If we instead rely on new construction, which is [overwhelmingly](https://www.rentcafe.com/blog/rental-market/luxury-apartments/8-out-of-10-new-apartment-buildings-were-high-end-in-2017-trend-carries-on-into-2018/) geared at the luxury end, to "trickle down" to promote affordability, it will be too late.
In "hot" housing markets like [San Francisco](https://web.stanford.edu/~diamondr/DMQ.pdf) and [New York City](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1080/00420980500388710), few low-income households would remain in gentrifying areas were it not forrent control and public housing. As Phara Souffrant, a Caribbean-American resident of Brooklyn and leader in the Crown Heights Tenant Union says, "It's not just about the money. It's about having a ground to stand on."
Immediately after Los Angeles adopted rent control, the share of renters who moved in the prior twelve months decreased by [37%](https://www.jstor.org/stable/3146080?&seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents), with the rates dropping most for black and Latino renters. In Manhattan, tenants in rent-regulated units were [ten times as likely](http://furmancenter.org/files/FurmanCenter_FactBrief_RentStabilization_June2014.pdf) as those in market-rate units to have lived in their homes for twenty years or more (35% compared with 3%). Similar results were seen after the Santa Monica passage of rent control.
Yet in mainstream policy circles, stability as a vital benefit of rent control is neglected. Homeowners role in “anchoring” neighborhoods is typically celebrated. But for renters, economists have traditionally framed rent controls success in improving housing stability as bad — a sign of “lack of mobility” and of “inefficiency” in the allocation of housing units.
Yet for many low-income tenants, “mobility” isnt a choice, but a violent process of displacement. In the words of Vaughn Armour, a black senior in Brooklyn and leader in New York Communities for Changes campaign for universal rent control, “If I didnt have rent-stabilized housing, Id be in a shelter or in the street.”
If rent control were expanded, the [majority](https://ourhomesourfuture.org/) of beneficiaries would be
low-income. In [Los Angeles](https://www.jstor.org/stable/3146080?&seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents), low-inicome households, and black renters, gained the greatest savings after rent stabilization's passage. Rent control reaches low-income [immigrants](https://b.3cdn.net/nycss/6174637efe14b4c944_l2m6b8b6d.pdf) who are not eligible for government housing assistance. It helps slow
the displacement of [families with children](https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01944369008975755).
When renters thrive, they lift up their communities. [Cost-savings](https://nationalequityatlas.org/sites/default/files/National-Fact-Sheet.pdf) on rent would give low-income renters more resources to spend, [boosting](https://ourhomesourfuture.org/) local economies. Stable, affordable housing would promote [better health](https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0190139), [educational](http://mcstudy.norc.org/publications/files/CohenandWardrip_2009.pdf) [out­comes](http://barhii.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/BARHII-displacement-brief.pdf), and [job retention](https://academic.oup.com/socpro/article-abstract/63/1/46/1844105?redirectedFrom=fulltext). It would foster [recovery](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26562123) from illness and be protective against [domestic](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0886260511423241) [and sexual abuse](http://www.downtownwomenscenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/2016DowntownWomensNeedsAssessment-web.pdf). Whereas gentrification is linked to [decreased voter turnout](https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.0038-4941.2006.00371.x) among historically disenfranchised groups, stability would help enable strengthened social networks, community institutions, and democratic participation. "It's not just a renters' issue," says Adrian Leong, an organizer with the Chinese Progressive Association in San Francisco, who recognizes how vital low-income housing is to preserving Chinatown. "We all rely on rent control, to have a vibrant community."
Rent control supports undervalued reproductive, domestic, and care labor that is vital to the fabric of society. “The type of work I did, you cant make much money — you have to do it from your heart,” shared Gwendolyn Viola Fox Bibins, a social worker, active member of the Crown Heights Tenant Union, and Caribbean-American immigrant who has lived in the same Brooklyn home for thirty-five years. “A rent-stabilized apartment allowed me breathing space,” she says, and now despite her meager savings, it ensures a place to retire. Luther, a former foster-care youth, attained her Masters in therapy while living in rent-stabilized housing. But her sister, not as lucky to find stabilized housing, was pushed into homelessness.
{{< figure src="/images/is33-uneven-and-combined-2-611x1024.png" width="100%" title="Figure 2. Annual rent in Rent Stabilized and Non-Stabilized Units." >}}
**On “Unintended Consequences”**
The common argument against rent control goes like this: according to supply-side economics, any kind of rent regulation will dampen construction and supply. Thus, rent controls opponents say, it will ultimately lead to a worse housing shortage, and hence, even higher rents, especially for uncontrolled units.
Crucially, rent control does not, [on balance](https://dornsife.usc.edu/assets/sites/242/docs/Rent_Matters_PERE_Report_Final_02.pdf), cause rents in nonregulated units to increase. Rent control is not the driver of speculation, gentrification, or a housing shortage. In Massachusetts, California, and New Jersey, rent control slightly [improved](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0094119006000635) [affordability](https://ideas.repec.org/p/fth/harver/1985.html) in noncontrolled units or had no [harmful effect](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264275115001122) on these rents. The [evidence](http://scholar.oxy.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1325&context=uep_faculty) shows its [lifting](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0094119006000635) [or](https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Rent_Stabilization_Board/Level_3_-_General/Summary%20of%20Economic%20Studies%20Part%20I.pdf) [loosening](https://www.smgov.net/uploadedFiles/Departments/Rent_Control/Reports/Annual_Reports/2017%20Annual%20Report%20FINAL.pdf) rent control that fuels skyrocketing rents across the board.
[Empirical](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264275115001122) [evidence](https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-9906.2007.00334.x) shows that [rent control](https://www.sanjoseca.gov/DocumentCenter/View/55649) [does](https://books.google.com/books/about/Rent_Control.html?id=5AEWAQAAIAAJ) [not](https://books.google.com/books/about/Rent_Control.html?id=5AEWAQAAIAAJ) [hurt](https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-9906.1996.tb00388.x?journalCode=ujua20) [housing](https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Rent_Stabilization_Board/Level_3_-_General/Berkeley_Rent_Control_1978-1994_1998_Planning_Dept_report.pdf) [construction](http://www.urbandisplacement.org/blog/rent-control-key-neighborhood-stabilization). In fact, the two can go hand-in-hand. Firstly, in the US rent controls dont cover new construction anyway. But also, the housing market is more [complicated](http://dollarsandsense.org/archives/2019/0119barton.pdf) [than](http://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/sites/default/files/haasinstitute_rentcontrol.pdf) Econ 101 theory — overall market conditions and zoning have far greater influence on construction. And whereas housing debates focus largely on private construction, theres also the option of pairing rent control with massive *public* construction to turn housing shortages into surpluses by building public and social housing, at far greater speed than the private market.
Rent control does not necessarily lead to declines in maintenance, either. While the research can appear ambiguous, it is important to distinguish improvements in buildings cosmetic appearance from functional maintenance that is critical to health and safety. When rent control is abolished or weakened, weve seen increased gentrification and the [cosmetic building improvements](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0094119006000635) associated with it. However, [studies](https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-9906.2007.00334.x) [show](https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-9906.1996.tb00388.x?journalCode=ujua20) that rent control had no negative impact on plumbing, an indicator of functional maintenance, or on abandonment. In Washington DC, the share of physically deficient units *declined* after rent stabilization was implemented; and rent-controlled units were even less likely to be deficient than non-controlled units, despite the latter being more expensive.
Many tenants report that rent control, combined with strong code enforcement, gives them the legal mechanisms and leverage to attain improved conditions for example, by putting rent in escrow until landlords respond to repair demands. Without protection, tenants often fear asking for repairs, because eviction through rent increases can always be the retaliation.
Opponents say that compared to means-tested subsidies, rent control is “inefficient” at helping the needy, because any tenant gains are canceled by landlord losses. But whereas the largest corporate landlords would hardly miss $1,000, this amount is significant for low-income households. Economists cost-benefit analyses, which only compare dollar amounts and not their human impact, ignore such distinctions. Nor do they typically include the costs to the government or public of [homelessness](https://endhomelessness.org/resource/ending-chronic-homelessness-saves-taxpayers-money/)
and [displacement](https://www.urban.org/policy-centers/cross-center-initiatives/opportunity-ownership/projects/cost-eviction-and-unpaid-bills-financially-insecure-families-city-budgets). Rent control helps stretch limited, means-tested subsidies, which reach only a [small fraction](https://www.urban.org/research/publication/trends-housing-problems-and-federal-housing-assistance) of those in need, and with its more universal scope, can promote social equity on a larger scale.
**Vacancy Decontrol**
Rent control is most effective at keeping housing affordable for low-income tenants when its strong and covers as many units as possible. In the United States, rent controls shortcomings are oftentimes due to its lack of teeth, as over the decades, landlords and their allies in office have rolled back or watered down existing regulations (e.g. by imposing vacancy decontrol).
In California and elsewhere, rent stabilization laws permit rents to be raised without restriction, back up to market-rate, each time a tenant moves out — a provision called “vacancy decontrol.” This poison pill, imposed throughout California in 1995 and increasingly inserted in rent regulations since the 1970s, has drastically reduced affordability. In Santa Monica, before vacancy decontrol, rents for 83 percent of controlled units were affordable to low-income households; after vacancy decontrol, less than 4 percent of stabilized rental units remained affordable to such households.
“High rent vacancy decontrol,” which permanently decontrols stock once rents reach a certain threshold, has caused the hemorrhage of over 155,000 rent-regulated units in New York City since 1994. Whats more, vacancy decontrol encourages landlords to find ways to force tenants out so they can raise rent without limitation.
Most [new construction](https://www.rentcafe.com/blog/rental-market/luxury-apartments/8-out-of-10-new-apartment-buildings-were-high-end-in-2017-trend-carries-on-into-2018/), even [much of what passes as](https://shelterforce.org/2017/04/25/secret-history-area-median-income/) [|affordable"](https://www.dgphc.org/2018/05/10/ami-housing-deeply-unaffordable-for-low-income-families-part-2/) [housing](https://www.dgphc.org/2018/02/22/ami-housing-deeply-unaffordable-for-low-income-families/), is [nowhere close](https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/blog/changes-in-supply-and-demand-at-various-segments-of-the-rental-market-how-do-they-match-up/) to the scale and depth of affordability [needed](http://nlihc.org/sites/default/files/oor/OOR_2018.pdf). Truly meeting renters' needs would require mass public investment in preservation and construction at all governmental levels.
{{< figure src="/images/is33-uneven-and-combined-3-850x1024.png" width="100%" title="Figure 3. Substractions from NYCs Rent-Stabilized Housing Stock, 1994-2017." >}}
When strong, rent control can help to dampen speculation. However, truly curbing the dominance of speculative influences on rents, and ensuring broad, long-term affordability, requires that controls be paired with other interventions: massive investment in public housing and subsidies, as well as policies that limit speculative practices. Over the decades, rent-controlled stock shrinks, whether because buildings naturally age and grow decrepit, or because of removals by loophole. In order for rent control to retain its coverage over a broad portion of stock, controlled stock must be replenished through the continual inclusion of newer buildings.
Rent control preserves and deepens affordability, but by itself does not produce new units so public construction must step in. Other policies like regulating Wall Street, public banking, vacancy taxes, and community land trusts must be employed to limit and dismantle the mechanisms of real estate speculation.
Rent control is a basis for building renter power. Movements will only grow as conditions worsen for renters, and tenants organize to protect their homes and communities. The stakes are high, and the real estate opposition is enormous but there is great urgency for policymakers to rise to this political moment for rent control, for renters, and for a more just housing market.