Highland housing tech report 9-25-09 doc - ci glendale ca 2025

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AND OTHER LAWS YOU SHOULD KNOW Ordinance #5922, known as the Rental Rights Program, took effect March 14, 2019 and was created to provide housing stability and to mitigate the impact of displacement for Glendale residents. In 2024, the ordinance was updated and went into effect March 7, 2024.
under CA law, a landlord can increase the rent on a month to month tenant less than 10% at any time with a 30 day written notice. If they want to increase the rent more than 10% in a year, as they are doing with the second increase, they have to give at least a 60 day written notice before the increase takes effect.
The racial composition of Glendale includes 67.44% White, 13.34% Asian, 9.1% other race, and smaller percentages for Black or African American, Native American, Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander and multiracial populations.
Glendale does not have its own rent control with a hard cap on rent increases, like many neighboring cities do. However, Glendale does require landlords to pay relocation fees to tenants when tenants decide to move out in response to a rent increase over seven percent (7%).
Effective August 2025, the rent cap in Glendale will be 8%. Californias AB 1482 law, also known as the Tenant Protection Act, has brought docHub changes to the rental market, offering increased protections for tenants while outlining specific rights and responsibilities for landlords.
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Critics blame the lack of rent control and rise of luxury developments. No rent control is the number one reason, said Karen Kwak of the Glendale Tenant Union. Mayor Kassakhian says other rental sites show lower averages, around $3,000, and points to the citys investments in affordable housing.
Glendale follows Californias statewide rent control laws under the Tenant Protection Act of 2019. These laws limit rent increases to 5% plus the local rate of inflation each year, but not more than 10% total.
Limits on Rent Increases Landlords cannot raise rent more than 10% total or 5% plus the percentage change in the cost of living whichever is lower over a 12-month period. If the tenants of a unit move out and new tenants move in, the landlord may establish the initial rent to charge. (Civ. Code 1947.12.)