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CALIFORNIANS:

If you're a renter, or you might be one, or you know and like people who rent, you should vote against Proposition 98 next Tuesday, June 3.

[livejournal.com profile] gordonzola has done a fine job of explaining why at this post and previously at this other post. I'll summarize here with cut and paste bits from his post:

State Proposition 98 on the June 3 ballot will change your life and change our city forever if it passes. This dangerous measure would end all rent control in California. Worse, it would also end just-cause eviction protections. If it passes, landlords will be able to raise evict tenants for no reason other than that they want to raise the rent.

Besides attacking tenants and rent control, Prop 98 will also end a number of environmental regulations as well as zoning and land use laws. Under Prop 98, developers will be able to ignore height limits in residential neighborhoods, build on environmentally sensitive areas and bring chain stores into neighborhoods where they are now prohibited. Prop 98 will also end requirements that developers build a certain number of units which are affordable to people with low and moderate incomes.

Also likely to be ended by this language will be laws requiring landlords to give 60 day notices for large rent increases or no-fault evictions, as well as laws requiring relocation benefits for no-fault evictions. Laws limiting the amount of security deposits or limiting when a landlord can hold on to a security deposit will also end. Prop 98 is a constitutional amendment so its provisions will override all other local and state laws (and make challenging it in court especially difficult).


Please vote. Without a good showing it's likely to pass, because they put it in a boring election between two important ones.

(no subject)

Date: 2008-05-29 07:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fweebles.livejournal.com
I didn't know whether to leave this comment on this entry or the one you linked to, since it's primarily about things that you raised in your other entry, but anyways.

It sounds like California is still stuck in the hell that we in Ontario suffered through for 8 years, but managed to drag ourselves out of a few years ago. I'm going to link to Wikipedia not because it's the be-all and end-all of human knowledge, but because that particular article happens to accurately represent the situation as I understand it. :)

I was in high-school at the time, and I experienced many of the same types of "cost-cutting" measures: arts and music down the toilet, crises in health-care, highways getting built and then sold to private corporations (who, incidentally, now have the highest tolls of any highway in North America), and so on.

Glad we got out of that one, but the effects are still noticeable around here 6 years later. (Ed: I have no idea where "almost 10" came from, heh.)

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