seattle-urban-sprawl-with-colorful-trees-in-autumn-aerial-st-182914709-stockpack-adobe_stock
Seattle Urban Sprawl with colorful trees in autumn - aerial
Fix Homelessness How to rebuild human lives
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

Sensible WA Tenancy Laws Will Help Housing Stability

Originally published at The Seattle Times
Categories
Housing

The Washington Legislature is considering a bill aimed at "improving housing stability for tenants" by capping rent increases at 7% and fees at 1.5% of monthly rent. Instead of mandating rent control, lawmakers should provide housing stability by enacting smart landlord-tenant laws.

More than half of Seattle residents are renters, and the growing dysfunction in Seattle's affordable housing market offers cautionary insights into the meaning of housing stability. Last summer, the city distributed $14 million in emergency funding to affordable housing providers on the brink of collapse. If there is any picture painted by the applications for funding, it is one of housing instability.

The applications, which are public records, document what has happened in some of Seattle's affordable housing: assaults, fecal matter in the hallways and on walls, needles in the stairwells, a unit operating as a methamphetamine lab, residents engaged in arms dealing, community room couches set on fire, the rape of a homeless woman and a fire started by a resident soldering Lime Scooter batteries together.

Continue Reading at The Seattle Times

Caitlyn McKenney

Research Fellow, Center on Wealth and Poverty
Caitlyn (Axe) McKenney is a research fellow and program coordinator for Discovery Institute’s Center on Wealth & Poverty. Her work has centered on government fiscal accountability, housing, and addiction with a focus on human dignity ethics. Caitlyn is a graduate of the University of Washington, has interned for a political advocacy organization in Washington, D.C., and has participated in the Vita Institute at the University of Notre Dame. She is published in the British Journal of Psychiatry, has contributed at the Federalist, and has made local and national media appearances.