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  • 02/13/2017 2:47 PM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    February 13, 2017 -- During a Santa Monica Rent Control Board meeting on Thursday that Chair Steve Duron described as adversarial, landlords accused the board of making regulations for the sake of doing something and a commissioner responded that the accusers were threatening democracy.

    Read More: http://surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2017/February-2017/02_13_2017_Santa_Monica_Rent_Board_Commissioner_Takes_on_Ideologues.html

  • 02/13/2017 2:30 PM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    February 13, 2017 -- The Santa Monica City Council on Tuesday will consider a proposal to draft an ordinance prohibiting employers and landlords from gathering information on the “religious affiliation” of various people connected to them.

    Called for by Council members Kevin McKeown and Sue Himmelrich, the prohibition would also apply to “housing agencies and other parties involved in seeking or providing jobs, housing, or other benefits, goods, or services.”

    Read More: http://surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2017/February-2017/02_13_2017_Santa_Monica_Council_to_Consider_Barring_Requests_for_Religious_%20Affiliation.html


  • 02/13/2017 7:30 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    With the City anticipating a whirlwind of construction as apartment complexes and building owners get their properties up to code, the City is hoping to increase tenant protections.

    The new rules would allow owners to relocate tenants to a hotel instead of paying a daily per diem or provide comparable housing if the relocation is less than six days. A 1999 seismic retrofit ordinance did not allow relocation benefits to tenants displaced by the retrofitting. Staff is asking the City Council to repeal that stipulation.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/tenant-protections-added-into-seismic-retrofit-plan/159757

  • 02/13/2017 7:24 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Measure H may present the best of both worlds to Santa Monica voters: a sales tax to support homelessness that they don’t have to pay for (at least, not for now and not in their own city.)

    Los Angeles County will ask voters to approve a quarter percent sales tax in the March 7 election. The tax would be in place for 10 years and the money will be used to prevent and fight homelessness within county borders.

    As county residents, Santa Monicans can vote for or against the measure but because voters already approved a pair of sales tax measures last year, the new increase would not be collected inside city limits.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/locals-can-provide-free-money/159730


  • 02/13/2017 7:19 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The City Council will consider Tuesday which direction to go when pursuing a new plan to buy and sell electricity in Santa Monica.

    A year ago, the Council decided to move forward to establish a local, not-for-profit, public agency to make decisions on sources of energy. The pursuit is part of an overall strategy in Santa Monica to become Carbon Neutral by 2050.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/santa-monica-to-discuss-creating-clean-energy-non-profit/159751


  • 02/10/2017 9:26 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The City Council will review new rules to streamline the building of accessory units and bring local ordinances into line with a new state law Tuesday.

    The law, Assembly Bill 2299, aims to address the housing shortage in California cities by making it easier for homeowners to build additional units in their backyards and rent them out. The argument: as the children of boomers move out of the house and on with their lives, their parents may want to bring in extra income by becoming landlords to backyard tenants. Since the houses themselves are emptying of children, allowing renters in the backyard won’t increase overall neighborhood density.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/santa-monica-paves-way-for-more-granny-units/159713


  • 02/10/2017 9:19 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    February 10, 2017 -- The City Council could soon consider a measure that would require Santa Monica landlords to assess tenants’ water bills based on actual monthly use.

    This would be a major change from the current method of Ratio Utility Billing Systems (RUBS) in which units are charged through a formula that takes the cost of the entire multifamily complex and spreads it among units based on size, number of bathrooms or other criteria.

    Also, many landlords don’t charge their tenants for water use at all.

    Read More: http://surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2017/February-2017/02_10_2017_Santa_Monica_Rent_Board_Recommends_Landlords_Install_Water_Meters_for_%20Each_Unit.html

    Rebuttal by Todd Flora at: http://smdp.com/letter-to-editor-32/159794

  • 02/09/2017 7:10 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    A new report shows the City of Santa Monica is struggling to meet its affordable housing quota, a ratio set by voters back in 1990 when they passed Proposition R, according to a new report released by the City.

    During the 2016 fiscal year, developers built seven new apartment buildings in the City. Prop R requires thirty percent of all new multi-family housing go to middle or low-income households. With 175 brand new apartments open for rent in 2016, only 34 of them were below market-rate, or just 19 percent. This is the third year in a row the City has failed to meet the benchmark.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/city-failed-to-build-enough-affordable-housing-for-third-year-in-a-row/159694


  • 02/08/2017 12:15 PM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    A coalition of state and local leaders is pressing California to lift restrictions on urban water use after the wettest winter for years.
    Water regulators in Sacramento on Wednesday will decide on a recommendation to extend the drought rules, uncertain if rain and snow will continue through spring.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/coalition-calls-for-end-to-california-drought-emergency/159685

  • 02/08/2017 11:34 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    February 8, 2017 -- The “Plaza at Santa Monica,” a major mixed-use project on City-owned land downtown that helped fuel a slow-growth ballot measure, is making the rounds in a new, scaled-down version.

    The second level would include an 11,000-square foot-public park, a 12,000-square foot “cultural amenity” and the 48 affordable housing units.It also includes 42,200 square feet of retail.

    Read More: http://surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2017/February-2017/02_08_2017_Plaza_at_Santa_Monica_Project_Scaled_Back.html

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