Week after week, there’s a new study about the life-altering consequences of sky-high rents or a new investigation about the destructive greed of corporate landlords. It may seem like a hopeless situation, but it’s not, especially in California. Voters can stabilize the housing affordability crisis and rein in predatory landlords by voting “yes” on Proposition 33 in November.
Recent housing news hasn’t been pretty. Like many cities in California, more than half of Los Angeles households are drowning under high housing costs, according to a study by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health; Eviction Lab, a research institute at Princeton University, found that unaffordable rents cause more deaths; and corporate landlords and their front group, the California Apartment Association, are spending hundreds of millions to kill rent control and to buy influence among local and state politicians.
But there is hope.
A broad coalition of housing justice groups, labor unions, social justice organizations, and civic leaders have banded together to pass Prop 33 in California. In addition, activists and tenants have successfully passed rent regulations in such California cities as Concord, Pasadena, and Pomona – although they’ve been handcuffed because of statewide rent control restrictions.
Prop 33, sponsored by Housing Is A Human Right and AIDS Healthcare Foundation, is a simple, 23-word initiative that ends restrictions and allows cities to expand rent control. When passed, local elected leaders can swiftly stabilize the housing affordability crisis through new rent control policies, prevent people from falling into homelessness, and quickly rein in predatory landlords, who only care about charging higher and higher rents to make outsized profits on the backs of middle- and working-class Californians.
Prop 33, in other words, allows Californians to fight back – and to take charge of their futures. We won’t be victims of the greedy whims of corporate landlords anymore.
It’s an exciting opportunity for California voters. We can protect our grandparents and elderly parents on fixed incomes who can’t afford sky-rocketing rents; allow middle- and working-class families to save more money for their children’s futures, including paying for their college tuition; and help recent college graduates to gain their economic footing as they enter the workforce. Many others will be helped, too.
But corporate landlords and the California Apartment Association will do everything in their power to confuse voters, spending hundreds of millions on massive misinformation campaigns and constantly rolling out lies about rent control. Corporate landlords and the CAA, in fact, are relying on voters to fall for their dirty tricks and mudslinging – and their manipulation of mainstream media. Don’t fall for it.
Instead, Californians can grab a golden opportunity to empower themselves and defeat corporate landlords by voting “yes” on Prop 33. For once and for all, we can rein in Big Real Estate and no longer allow them to dictate our futures. In November, vote “yes” on Prop 33, and tell your family and friends to do the same.