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 that landlords provide a certificate of inspection as a business license condition to operate as a landlord. However, 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.
The Department of Commerce (Commerce) must convene a work group to make recommendations on the creation of a statewide rental and vacant property registration program for inventorying both tenant-occupied and potentially available rental housing.
The work group must include relevant stakeholders including tenant representatives, landlord and property management representatives, multifamily housing representatives, housing developer representatives, and representatives from cities and counties, and meet at least three times to evaluate:
Commerce must issue a final report, including any work group findings and recommendations, to the Legislature by December 1, 2022.
PRO: Housing is a human right, and there is a current lack of affordable housing, with a shortage of overall units at nearly 250,000. There is no handle on how much rental housing stock is available or if rental units that are sold remain as rentals. Intent of the bill is to find out how and where to build more rental units. Any eventual database will better inform policy decisions with real-time data. An eventual state program could be a conduit for providing information or resources to landlords, especially during crises.
OTHER: The bill is not covered in the Governor's proposed budget, and there is a tight timeline in bringing stakeholders together and reporting to the Legislature by the end of the year. Likely fiscal costs couple with the tight timeline may require the need to hire a consultant to conduct work group meetings and produce recommendations. There will be eventual information technology challenges with setting up a database that will likely also require a consultant.