Washington State
House of Representatives
Office of Program Research
BILL
ANALYSIS
Housing, Human Services & Veterans Committee
SB 5825
Brief Description: Establishing a rental and vacant property registration program work group.
Sponsors: Senators Kuderer, Das, Lovelett, Nobles and Wilson, C..
Brief Summary of Bill
  • Requires the Department of Commerce to convene a work group to make recommendations on creating a statewide rental and vacant property registration program. 
Hearing Date: 2/22/22
Staff: Lena Langer (786-7192).
Background:

The Residential Landlord-Tenant Act (RLTA) regulates the creation of residential tenancies and the relationship between landlords and tenants of residential dwelling units.  Under the RLTA, local municipalities may require landlords to provide a certificate of inspection as a business license condition to operate as a landlord.  A local municipality does not need to have a business license or registration program to require that landlords provide a certificate of inspection.  A local municipality may only require a certificate of inspection on a rental property once every three years.  

 

Numerous local municipalities throughout the state have exercised this authority in establishing rental housing safety, inspection, or registration programs, with many having a goal to ensure that all rental housing units comply with specific life and safety standards and provide a safe place for tenants to live.  Some local municipalities have implemented a business license requirement for landlords.

Summary of Bill:

The Department of Commerce (Commerce) must convene a work group to make recommendations on creating a statewide rental and vacant property registration program for inventorying tenant-occupied and potentially available rental housing.  The work group must include relevant stakeholders, including, but not limited to:

  • tenant representatives;
  • multifamily housing representatives;
  • housing developer representatives; and
  • representatives from cities and counties.

 

The work group must meet at least three times.  The work must evaluate:

  • current local rental property registration and landlord licensing programs, and strategies to synthesize and collect registration information from such programs into a statewide database;
  • which property and landlord information should be collected and disclosed in a database;
  • the need to implement a rental and vacant property registration requirement;
  • the imposition of registration or licensing fees and fee amounts, use of revenue, and appropriate penalties;
  • which types of housing units should be exempted from a statewide registration requirement;
  • the use of a statewide registration program database to provide rental assistance program information to tenants and landlords;
  • the feasibility of requiring landlords to report rent rate data as part of a registration program; and
  • any other considerations discussed by the work group.

 

Commerce must issue a final report with any work group findings or recommendations to the Legislature by December 1, 2022.

 

The section requiring Commerce to convene a work group expires January 1, 2023.  

Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of the session in which the bill is passed.