San Mateo, California, Rent Control, Measure Q (November 2016)

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Local ballot measure elections in 2016

Measure Q: San Mateo Rent Control
LocalBallotMeasures Final.png
The basics
Election date:
November 8, 2016
Status:
Defeatedd Defeated
Topic:
Local rent control
Related articles
Local rent control on the ballot
November 8, 2016 ballot measures in California
San Mateo County, California ballot measures
Local charter amendments on the ballot
See also
San Mateo, California

A measure addressing rent control was on the ballot for San Mateo voters in San Mateo County, California, on November 8, 2016. It was defeated.

A yes vote was a vote in favor of establishing a rent control commission and policies, including allowing annual rent increases equal to the Consumer Price Index increase and limiting annual rent increases to between 1 percent and 4 percent, which could be compounded in subsequent years with no single increase of more than 8 percent.
A no vote was a vote against establishing a rent control commission and policies, including allowing annual rent increases equal to the Consumer Price Index increase and limiting annual rent increases to between 1 percent and 4 percent, which could be compounded in subsequent years with no single increase of more than 8 percent.

Election results

Measure Q
ResultVotesProzentualer Anteil
Defeatedd No24,07359.99%
Yes 16,053 40.01%
Election results from San Mateo County Elections Office

Text of measure

Ballot question

The following question appeared on the ballot:[1]

"

Shall the charter amendment adding Chapter XI to the San Mateo City Charter to enact rent regulations applicable to apartment housing with an initial certificate of occupancy dated before February 1,1995; and just cause for eviction requirements applicable to apartment housing with an initial certificate of occupancy dated before the date the measure becomes effective; and establishing a Rental Housing Commission To administer and implement these regulations and requirements be adopted?[2]

Impartial analysis

The following impartial analysis of the measure was prepared by the office of the San Mateo City Attorney:

"

Under existing law, owners of residential property in San Mateo may charge any rent they wish for their property. Under existing law, a landlord may, upon proper notice, remove a tenant without giving any reason. This measure would amend the city's charter to enact new laws to limit the amount of rent a landlord may charge and to prohibit removal of a tenant without just cause, as defined by the measure.

The proposed measure would set base rents for each rental unit and would limit subsequent rent increases. For tenancies beginning on or before September 21, 2015, the base rent would be the rent charged on that date. The base rent for tenancies commenced after that date would be the rent charged upon initial occupancy. The measure would authorize the landlord to increase rents once annually by an amount equal to the increase in the Consumer Price Index, except that rents may be increased at least 1% and no more than 4% regardless of the change in the Index. The measure would authorize the landlord to bank annual increases that are not imposed and to impose them in subsequent years, provided no annual increase may exceed 8%.

The measure would allow landlords to petition for increases larger than the authorized annual increase when necessary to ensure the landlord receives a fair and resaonable rate of return. The measure would also authorize tenants to petition for rent decreases when the landlord fails to maintain the premises in a habitable condition, decreases the housing services provided, or charges rent in excess of that permitted under the measure.

The measure would estalbish a Rental Housing Commission to be appointed by the City Council. The commission would appoint hearing officers to conduct rent adjustment hearings, conduct hearings on rent adjustments, and adopt regulations to implement the measure's rent regulation provisions. The commission would be authorized to establish and impose a fee on landlords to cover the costs of administering the rent regulation program.

The proposed measure would require a landlord to have just cause to remove a tenant. Just cause would be limited to: failure to pay rent, breach of lease, nuisance, criminal activity, failure to grant reasonable access, necessary repairs, owner move-in, withdrawal of the unit from the rental market, and demolition. Landlords would be required to pay relocation assistance under certain circumstances.

The rent regulations would apply to multi-family rental units with an initial certificate of occupancy issued before February 1, 1995. They would not apply to single family homes, condominiums, owner-occupied duplexes or secondary dwelling units, hotels, hospitals, certain nonprofits, dormitories, or governmental facilities. The just cause for removal provisions would apply to the same type of units subject to the rent regulations with initial certificates of occupancy based on any date up to the effective date of the measure.

This measure is placed on the ballot by a petition signed by more than 7,119 or 15% of San Mateo voters as required by law.

[2]

—San Mateo City Attorney[1]

Full text

The full text of the measure is available here.

Support

Supporters

The following individuals signed the official argument in favor of the measure:[1]

  • Ben K. Toy, President, San Mateo United Homeowners Association
  • Rev. Dr. Penny Nixon, Religious Leader, San Mateo homeowner
  • John Ebjeter, San Mateo Planning Commission
  • Dr. Jennifer Martinez, Executive Director, Faith in Action
  • Richard W. Hedges, Community Activist

Arguments in favor

Official argument

The following official argument was submitted in favor of the measure:[1]

"

Skyrocketing rent increases threaten to destroy our community.

Hardworking families are losing their homes. Valued teachers, nurses, and public safety workers ar leaving San Mateo as rents become unaffordable.

Unfortunately, our City Council and other community leaders have not found a meaningful solution to address the rental crisis.

Measure Q is that solution and it will protect San Mateo's future.

Vote to protect San Mateo.

Vote YES on Measure Q.

Measure Q makes housing costs predictable and stable, freeing San Mateo residents from constant fear of losing their homes. Rents have skyrocketed in recent years. Wages have not kept pace, putting profound stress on our community. As we lose our family and community members, we lose San Mateo's quality of life.

Measure Q is a fair and common sense solution:

  • Allows rent to be raised 1 to 4% annually, depending on the rate of inflation (typically 2 to 3%)
  • Allows larger rent increases for increased maintenance costs or property taxes;
  • Limits evictions to specific situations (unpaid rent, illegal activity, etc.), preventing evictions just to raise rents
  • Protects families too frightened to report unsafe conditions for fear of retaliatory evictions;
  • Protects "mom and pop" landlords by completely exempting owner-occupied duplexes and in-law units;
  • Protects homeowners by completely exempting single family homes;
  • Exempts new housing (doesn't discourage new construction):
  • Rolls rents back to September 2015 levels;
  • Creates an independent Commission to administer and enforce the law, providing flexibility, accountablity, and transparency at no significant expense to the city.

San Mateo's high rents affect everyone. We're losing teachers, nurses, and other important members of our city. Restaurants can't find workers. Property values are directly related to the quality of our schools and availability of essential service personnel.

Together, we can sustain a vibrant and liveable San Mateo.

Vote YES to protect San Mateo's future. Vote YES on Measure Q.

[2]

Opposition

Opponents

The following individuals signed the official argument against the measure:[1]

  • Maurren Freschet, San Mateo City Council member
  • Diane Papan, San Mateo Council member
  • Cheryl Angeles, President & CEO, San Mateo Chamber of Commerce
  • Anna Kuhre, President Emeritus, San Mateo United Homeowners' Association
  • Claire Mack, Former Mayor

Arguments against

Official argument

The following official argument was submitted in opposition to the measure:[1]

"

We're concenred about the housing problem but Measure Q is NOT the solution. Measure Q is a flawed law that creates a self-regulating commission with no accountability to voters and gives unlimited access to our taxpayers' money. Measure Q is bad for all San Mateo residents.

MEASURE Q CREATES UNACCOUNTABLE GOVERNMENT

It gives blank check authority to an unelected bureaucracy to demand AND receive money from the City. With no obligation to repay the funds, the commission could take money from public safety, parks, libraries, street maintenance, and other essential city services. This commission will have unlimited power to levy fees and penalities, hire staff, and establish regulations - with zero accountability to taxpayers.

MEASURE Q PUTS THE CITY AND ALL RESIDENTS AT FINANCIAL RISK

Implementing Measure Q requires 10 new full-time employees and is estimated to cost $2.5 million annually. Taxpayers could be liable for other expenses the commission deems necessary. The City could be forced to defend legal challenges at taxpayers' expense, increasing costs of living for everyone and preventing the City from working on true affordable housing solutions.

MEASURE Q IS NOT AIMED AT THOSE IN NEED OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING

Measure Q left out critical language to limit subsidies to only those who actually need assistance. Measure Q would mandate privately funded subsidies to residents with high paying jobs who could afford market-rate rents while making housing even more scarce and expensive for struggling families in need of affordable housing.

Don't be fooled into believing that Measure Q will solve the housing crisis or that there will be no cost to the City and taxpayers. Measure Q will drive up rents and make housing unaffordable. The unlimited power given to this unaccountable commission is dangerous and will have untended consequences, damaging to our City and all residents.

Vote NO on Measure Q. It's bad for San Mateo.

[2]

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing local ballot measures in California

This measure was put on the ballot through a successful initiative petition campaign.

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms San Mateo Local rent control. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 San Mateo County Elections, "November 8, 2016 Presidential General Election: Ballot Measure Information," accessed October 22, 2016
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.