Guest Opinion | Todd Hayes: Landlords Have Rights Too. Where Does the Taking of Rights Stop? Pasadena Now – Pasadena Now

Now that rent control has made it onto the ballot, I have a couple questions? Why arent gas stations being forced to lower prices? Gas is crazy high. Why arent grocery stores having to keep costs in check? Those prices are skyrocketing. I could go on, but you get the point.

Placing the burden of lowering rents on the shoulders of mom and pop landlords who are having just as difficult a time with inflation as anyone is a veiled taking of private property rights and a violation of the fifth amendment of the US Constitution. Oh, wait, violatingrights seems to be okay these days.

Ive lived in Pasadena for more than 50 years. During that time, I was both a renter and a landlord. Toward the end of my dads life, I was able to move him into a duplex I owned so I could better care for him. If this ordinance had been in place, that might not have been possible. Sorry mom and dad, youre on your own.

I understand renters are angry and hurting. But, blaming and burdening our struggling mom and pop landlords is not the solution.

Pasadena is not doing enough to create much needed affordable housing, but that is no reason to take rights away from individuals who have worked hard to achieve what the City cannot. There are approximately 3,000 mom and pop landlords in the City of Pasadena that are struggling with a worsening economy just like everyone else these individuals did not sign up to do the job that our elected officials willingly agreed to do, yet sadly, are not.

When money is taken from mom and pop landlords, they have less money to make needed repairs and the quality of rental properties goes down.

Thats a fact. But wait, according to the proposed rental ordinance, mom and pop landlords also get penalized for not making the repairs they can no longer afford to make. Hows that going to work out?

Pasadena currently has the high number of rental properties it does because it abides by reasonable State rental laws. Make the rules unreasonable, and people will stop building rental units in Pasadena. How are fewer rental units in Pasadena going to make prices go down?

It isnt.

Simple economics says the answer is to build more affordable units. To disincentivize future rental units will stop new construction. Thats what rent control does. What may help in the present will definitely hurt down the road. It will take a bad situation and make it worse.

Just like we cannot force gas stations to subsidize high gas prices, nor ask grocery stores to artificially keep prices low, we should not force mom and pop landlords to provide subsidized housing. Its not fair, and it is not the answer. We live in a country that does nottake from private individuals without just cause theres that 5th Amendment again. But this ordinance does just that.

If we want a more affordable city, the City needs to require more affordable units in all new construction it also needs to fast-track the building of affordable units on church property, explore creative reuse of existing buildings, make it easier to build affordable units in the City, and any number of things its not doing enough of right now.

Kicking the can down the road by kicking mom and pop landlords and their families is a lose-lose solution. In the long run, it will degrade our precious existing housing stock and hinder the building of new units.

Todd HayesPasadena resident and Realtor

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Guest Opinion | Todd Hayes: Landlords Have Rights Too. Where Does the Taking of Rights Stop? Pasadena Now - Pasadena Now

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