upper waypoint

Oakland Weighs Higher Ellis Act Payments as Evictions Increase

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Downtown Oakland (James Daisa/Flickr)

An Oakland City Council committee has put off action on a proposal to increase relocation payments to renters displaced by Ellis Act evictions.

The council is considering action in response to a spike in the number of such evictions in Oakland. The act, passed in the 1980s, allows evictions when landlords decide to take properties off the rental market. Ellis Act evictions have become notorious in San Francisco, where hundreds of tenants have been forced to relocate in recent years, largely due to conversion of rental properties to condominiums.

In Oakland, the pace of Ellis Act evictions has been slower, with a total of 47 Ellis filings covering 98 units between fiscal 2003-04 and 2014-15. But there are signs that's changing, with a dozen Ellis filings covering 15 units since July 1.

"This is the time to bring this to you," Connie Taylor, manager of Oakland's Rent Adjustment Program manager, told the council's Community and Economic Development Committee.

Taylor offered a two-part proposal to respond to the rise in Ellis Act evictions: an expansion of relocation payments, currently available only to low-income renters, to all displace tenants; and an increase in payments, currently set at two months of a tenant's rent, to $8,000 plus $2,500 per unit for "vulnerable residents," including low income, disabled and senior tenants and those with minor children.

Sponsored

But several landlords who addressed the panel said that the low number of Ellis Act evictions in Oakland doesn’t warrant such dramatic changes to the law.

“We don’t think that four cases per year out of 90,000 rental units necessarily is a good enough basis for rushing this through,” said Wayne Rowland, president of East Bay Rental Housing Association. "If we could just have a little bit more time to review this and provide thoughtful comment, we would really appreciate it."

City Councilman Larry Reid joined other committee members who said they want more clarity and possible adjustments made to the proposed payments.

"I just think that we're being forced in making a rushed decision," Reid said.

City staff will report back to the committee on Jan. 12.

lower waypoint
next waypoint
How Have Wage Increases Affected Fast Food Workers?SFSU President Begins Negotiations With Campus Gaza ProtestersSmall Houses Pose Solution to Housing CrisisUC Berkeley Opens Civil Rights Investigation Into Confrontation at Dean’s HomeA Family Fled Ethnic Violence in India. Its Echoes Resonate in the Bay AreaCalifornia Groundwater Surges After Torrential Rain and SnowstormsIt’s a 408 vs. 510 Showdown as San Jose Earthquakes Take on Oakland RootsWho Owns the Apartment Next Door? California Agency Says it Will Take Millions to Find OutAmor Towles on his New Short Story Collection 'Table for Two'SFMOMA’s New Collaboration with Artists with Disabilities