Close Menu
    Trending
    • Trump touts ‘total access’ Greenland deal as NATO asks allies to step up
    • ‘Will act accordingly’: US threatens action against Haitian council | Government News
    • Rangers acquire All-Star LHP MacKenzie Gore in win-now move
    • At Davos, Trump delivers another disturbing doozy
    • Patagonia takes drag queen Pattie Gonia to court in trademark infringement lawsuit
    • Seeking Candidates for Top IEEE Leadership Positions
    • Market Talk – January 22, 2026
    • Victoria Beckham’s Music Resurges Amid Brooklyn’s Scandal
    The Daily FuseThe Daily Fuse
    • Home
    • Latest News
    • Politics
    • World News
    • Tech News
    • Business
    • Sports
    • More
      • World Economy
      • Entertaiment
      • Finance
      • Opinions
      • Trending News
    The Daily FuseThe Daily Fuse
    Home»Opinions»Small landlords’ voices are missing in Seattle rental policy decisions
    Opinions

    Small landlords’ voices are missing in Seattle rental policy decisions

    The Daily FuseBy The Daily FuseAugust 9, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Small landlords’ voices are missing in Seattle rental policy decisions
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    What’s the plan for rental rules in Seattle? Small landlords wish to know.

    On July 29, the Metropolis Council quietly appointed a brand new slate of tenants to serve on the Renters’ Fee, a 15-member board established in 2017 “to fulfill usually and cross concepts on to Metropolis Council members who make legal guidelines, and to different officers who assist form and implement them.” 

    Since its formation, fee members have been frequent panelists at council conferences, pushing a tsunami of municipal laws that go far past the state’s residential landlord-tenant act — from “first within the nation” concepts like First in Time — that requires landlords to supply a rental settlement to the primary certified applicant who supplies a whole software — and the Roommate Law — that states, amongst different protections, that further household (very broadly outlined) can’t be denied occupancy. There’s additionally the $10 cap on late charges and everlasting winter and school-year eviction bans. 

    The snarled rules are designed to guard low-income renters however apply to all. They’re problematic when achieved at scale, particularly as Seattle is within the top five metros with the highest share of wealthy renters. They’ve led to quite a few unmitigated penalties for renters at giant (e.g., extra restrictive software standards, lack of ability to resolve issues of safety, diminished number of leases).

    No housing suppliers have been included within the creation of Seattle’s sophisticated stew of ordinances, and by 2023, town’s Rental Registration and Inspection Ordinance registry confirmed a 19.77% decrease in one- to 20-unit rental properties, shedding 9,578 items of “missing middle” rentals, which Seattle supposedly is working to expand. Most “naturally affordable housing” occurs in small, privately owned properties, but Seattle has no technique for turning the tide. Registrations in 2024 continued monitoring far under baselines set in 2018 and 2020. 

    In 2023, the city auditor studied why people had stopped operating rentals: 74% mentioned Seattle’s legal guidelines are too burdensome or tough. Just one% bought new rental property throughout the metropolis, indicating it’s uniquely problematic to take a position right here. In studying raw survey responses from over 600 former landlords, the themes are clear:

    ● It’s not definitely worth the effort anymore to be a small landlord, an excessive amount of danger and too many consistently altering guidelines.

    ● I don’t really feel like I can defend all of my tenants [nor] my non-public property … I don’t really feel bodily secure landlording with Seattle landlord legal guidelines.

    ● I’m a mother & pop operator, a senior myself & consider the principles are prohibitive for landlords that present low or cheap rents.

    ● I offered my rental, partly since you’ve made it extremely clear that small time landlords are enemy #1 within the metropolis. Time for a brand new strategy, people!

    When new council members took workplace in 2024, we hoped cheap reforms would encourage extra folks to supply rental housing, not fewer. As chair of the Housing & Human Companies committee, Councilmember Cathy Moore paused new appointments to the Renters’ Fee and devoted listening time to a variety of affordable-housing suppliers, small landlords and tenants. 

    In our expertise, Moore was effectively on track in figuring out key impacts, penalties and options to Seattle’s flawed, high-risk legal guidelines. Nonetheless, she resigned earlier than having the ability to current the revisions, which included draft laws to exchange the Renters’ Fee with a balanced Rental Housing Fee representing numerous tenant and landlord stakeholders. A powerful rental housing atmosphere requires tenants and landlords to work collectively.

    What’s subsequent? 

    Remaining councilmembers despatched a powerful business-as-usual message lately, with autopilot appointments of a nonrepresentative vary of renter activists to the present fee. 

    In the meantime, the place’s the manager department and “One Seattle” management? For 5 years, we’ve reached out constructively to metropolis departments and policymakers however have discovered no level individual for small rental operators to work with in strengthening the availability of Seattle’s family-sized and small-operator owned rental housing. 

    Will any coalition step ahead to implement the auditor’s 2023 advice to enact insurance policies that assist small leases and to contain stakeholders? For the well being of our rental ecosystem, we hope the council and mayor flip a nook in broaching the operational realities of Seattle’s regulatory quagmire, however the courageous politics of collaborative problem-solving have but to obtain greater than fleeting assist.

    Angie Gerrald: is a landlord of three rental homes in Ballard/Phinney and co-founder of Seattle Grassroots Landlords, a peer community of small rental operators.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    The Daily Fuse
    • Website

    Related Posts

    At Davos, Trump delivers another disturbing doozy

    January 22, 2026

    Lawmakers must preserve climate funding for its intended purpose   

    January 22, 2026

    We can’t let Hegseth win his war on women

    January 22, 2026

    Alarm is sounding on WA’s social insurance programs. Olympia must act

    January 21, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Anthropic’s C.E.O., Dario Amodei, on Surviving the A.I. Endgame

    February 28, 2025

    Longtime ESPN announcer Mike Patrick dies at 80

    April 22, 2025

    Standard Chartered CEO: Wharton MBA Was a ‘Waste of Time’

    June 26, 2025

    Pamela Anderson And Jamie Lee Curtis Talk Being Working Moms

    January 12, 2025

    America’s sandwich generation is overwhelmed. Can this app help?

    June 2, 2025
    Categories
    • Business
    • Entertainment News
    • Finance
    • Latest News
    • Opinions
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Tech News
    • Trending News
    • World Economy
    • World News
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms and Conditions
    • About us
    • Contact us
    Copyright © 2024 Thedailyfuse.comAll Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.